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Músico y buen chaval.
Alberto siendo entrevistado para el libro "Condenados al humor". Tiene la pierna en alto a causa de un esguince. Estuvo sabio y discreto, como siempre. "De la música no puede salir nada malo", me decía. La mayor parte del tiempo estoy de acuerdo con él.
Tema: "Web 2.0. Su Impacto en la Organización"
Profesor Guía: Aldo Araneda
Profesor Correferente: Werner Kristjanpoller y Alberto Naranjo
Carrera: MBA
Ex Indumentis (Second-Class)
Alberto Marvelli was born on 21 March 1918 in Ferrara, Italy, the second of six children to Luigi Marvelli and Maria Mayr. He was a lively child but also very thoughtful and reserved, most sensitive to the needs of others.
Growing up, Alberto was especially influenced by his mother, who was the "Good Samaritan" of the Marvelli family and always kept open house for the poor. It was not uncommon for Alberto to see half his meal disappear right before his eyes so it could be given to the hungry. "Jesus has come, and he is hungry", his mother used to say.
Together with the highly Christian education he received from his parents, Alberto learned to be a hard worker and to defend justice and truth according to the Gospel.
In June 1930 the Marvelli family moved to Rimini and Alberto began to attend the Salesian Oratory and Catholic Action group in the parish, where his faith was nurtured and sustained, increasing his awareness of his call to holiness. He would often say, "My programme of life is summed up in one word: holy".
Alberto was very athletic and loved all kinds of sports, especially bicycling; this was providential, because it enabled him to carry out his future apostolate and works of charity and assistance.
In October 1933, following the unexpected death of his father on 7 March of that same year, Alberto began to keep a spiritual diary at age 15 in which he detailed his daily schedule: "I rise as early as possible each morning, as soon as the alarm rings; a half-hour of meditation every day, not to be neglected except for circumstances out of my control; half an hour at least dedicated to spiritual reading; Mass every morning and Holy Communion as regularly as possible; confession once a week normally and frequent spiritual direction; daily recitation of the Rosary and Angelus at noon".
When he was only 18, Alberto was elected president of Catholic Action. At Bologna University where he continued his studies, he was active in the Catholic organization, in addition to directing his Catholic Action group in Rimini. Every Saturday, upon returning home, he would give lectures, visit the poor and prepare programmes for the upcoming days. His primary concern was the plight of the poor.
Alberto graduated in 1941 with a degree in engineering and left immediately for military service, only to be exempted from it after a few months because two of his brothers were already in service.
Upon his return to Rimini, he was elected diocesan vice-president of Catholic Action. He began teaching in a high school, devoting his time to designing projects, to prayer (he was especially devoted to the Eucharist) and to helping the sick and poor.
During the Second World War, the Marvelli family was forced to move to Vergiano, seven kilometres from Rimini, because of the devastating air raids. After each bombing, however, at the risk of his own life, Alberto returned to the city to help the wounded, dying and homeless.
He gave to the poor what he had collected or bought with his own money: food, clothing, mattresses and blankets. Then, on his bicycle, he would carry what he could and distribute it to the needy. Sometimes he returned home without his shoes or even without a bicycle, all because he had given them to the neediest he met that day.
During the German occupation, Alberto was able to save many people from deportation to the concentration camps, courageously freeing them from the sealed carriages of the trains that were ready to leave the station of Santarcangelo.
After the liberation of Rimini on 23 September 1945, the Marvelli family returned to the city, now in ruins and without running water, electricity or sanitation.
The interim Authorities immediately entrusted Alberto with the allocation of housing. He proved to be an able administrator and a few months later became town councillor and a member of the Italian Society of Civil Engineers.
He also opened a soup kitchen and invited the poor to go to Mass and prayed with them, listening patiently to their troubles and worries, entrusting them all to God the Father. Alberto did not belong to any party at first, but joined the Christian Democrats after the war and became an active member of the Executive Committee. He understood politics as an important service of faith and justice to society.
He was one of the most popular candidates of the Christian Democratic Party and was respected by all, even by his political adversaries, the Communists, whose ideology he openly criticized; they acknowledged his honesty and profound dedication to the well-being of the community.
On the evening of 5 October 1946, as Alberto was cycling to attend a meeting for the local elections, for which he was a candidate, he was run over by an army truck and died a few hours later without regaining consciousness. He was 28 years old.
The scheduled elections were held as news of his death spread throughout the city, and many citizens decided to vote for him just the same. His mother, however, was elected in his place.
Da:
POP GALLERY
Studi pittorici seriali
di Giovanni Di Mascolo
Stampa digitale ad edizione limitata, autenticata e firmata dall'autore
Formato Cm. 50 x 50
Luis Solórzano ¡Un compromiso permanente con el Desarrollo de los pueblos de la Región Central del Perú
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Giaccometti, Bergell GR (CH)
Plaubel Makina 67, Nikkor 80mm f2.8
Kodak Ektar 100, Tetenal self-development C-41
alberto also writes for ekosystem. you can find his lowdown on the madrid streetart / graffitii scene here
madrid, spain
c. 1203 – 1280
San Alberto was born at their family castle at Lauingen, Germany, on the banks of the Danube, about 1203 and studied at the University of Padua. In 1223, the eldest son of the Count of Bollstadt was received into the Dominican Order by Blessed Jordan of Saxony in 1223. He attributed his vocation to the Virgin Mary to whom he bore a tender devotion. He soon excelled in his studies and taught in Cologne and in other major cities of Germany earning him a widespread reputation for his learning and intellect. Twice he served as Regent Master of Theology at the University of Paris where he received his doctorate in 1245.
In 1248, he was named Regent of the Studia Generalia in Cologne. Among his students in Paris and Cologne was Saint Thomas Aquinas, whose genius he early perceived and proclaimed and who was to be his close friend and comrade in intellect until his death.
In 1254, Alberto was elected Provincial of the German Province. He went to Rome in 1256 to defend the mendicant orders against the attacks by William Saint Armour and while there served as personal theologian to the Pope. Alberto resigned his Provincialate in 1259 to devote himself to study and with Peter of Tarantasia and Saint Thomas Aquinas drew up new study curriculum for the Dominicans.
In 1260 he became the Bishop of Ratisbon but resigned two years later to resume teaching at Cologne. He was active in the Council of Lyons in 1274, working for the reunion of the Greek Church with Rome. In extreme old age, he walked halfway across Europe to fiercely and brilliantly defend a thesis of Saint Thomas that was being challenged at the university in 1277. San Alberto was one of the great intellects of the medieval Church. He was one of the first and among the greatest natural scientists.
His knowledge of biology, chemistry, physics, astronomy, geography (one of his treatises proved the earth to be round) was so encyclopaedic. He wrote profusely on logic, metaphysics, mathematics, the Bible and theology. He pioneered the Scholastic method, so brilliantly developed by his pupil and disciple, Saint Thomas Aquinas, by applying Aristotelian methods to revealed doctrine. His brilliance and erudition caused him to be called “The Universal Doctor “ by his contemporaries. San Alberto Magno died on November 15, 1280.
Tour de France 2011.
Stage 20 Saturday 23 July.
Individual time-trial.
Grenoble > Grenoble 42.5 km.
Passage Uriage-les-Bains (D280).
Stage 20 result :
1 Tony Martin (Ger) HTC-Highroad 0:55:33
2 Cadel Evans (Aus) BMC Racing Team 0:00:07
3 Alberto Contador Velasco (Spa) Saxo Bank Sungard 0:01:06
4 Thomas De Gendt (Bel) Vacansoleil-DCM Pro Cycling Team 0:01:29
5 Richie Porte (Aus) Saxo Bank Sungard 0:01:30
6 Jean-Christophe Peraud (Fra) AG2R La Mondiale 0:01:33
7 Samuel Sanchez Gonzalez (Spa) Euskaltel-Euskadi 0:01:37
8 Fabian Cancellara (Swi) Leopard Trek 0:01:42
9 Peter Velits (Svk) HTC-Highroad 0:02:03
10 Rein Taaramae (Est) Cofidis, Le Credit En Ligne
More results : www.letour.fr/2011/TDF/LIVE/us/2000/classement/index.html