|  This new issue of "A" has its orange cover 
                          devoted to schools, one of the themes looked at in depth 
                          inside; the back cover, on the other hand, advertises 
                          the opening of our archives - on the occasion of our 
                          thirtieth anniversary we have put back on sale the poster 
                          of Malatesta and the historical "readings" 
                          of Kropotkin, Bakunin, Malatesta and Proudhon, which 
                          were issued as supplements to the magazine in the early 
                          '70s, as well as "anarchists against fascism" 
                          from 1995 and T-shirts from the '80s reproducing a design 
                          by Germano Porro. The "ai lettori" (to the readers) page illustrates 
                          the magazine's balance-sheet, which, thanks to the slush 
                          fund, closes 2000 more or less balanced. Maria Matteo's editorial entitled "Barracks Europe" 
                          discusses militarism and the European Union. Adriano Paolella and Zelinda Carloni illustrate numerous 
                          - and in part unpublished - reasons for being against 
                          the construction of the Messina bridge. "Between Punk and Lavallière" is the 
                          title of an interview by Boris Dinescu with an anonymous 
                          Mexican anarchist, accompanied by the presentation of 
                          the "Flores Magón Libertarian Project". And then onto the schools special, illustrated by numerous 
                          photos, with the texts "Autonomy or Decentralisation?" 
                          by Francesco Codello, a head teacher, and "Autonomy 
                          or Management?" by Cosimo Scarinzi, which describes 
                          the current situation in Italy from the standpoint of 
                          a representative of the CUB teachers' trade union.Added to these are two articles devoted to Lamberto 
                          Borghi, one of the most significant figures in Italian 
                          pedagogy, who recently passed away. Francesco Codello 
                          looks back over his ideas, while Goffredo Fofi, who 
                          edited his anthology La città e la scuola 
                          (The City and the School) (published by Elèuthera), 
                          remembers Lamberto Borghi's teachings on history and 
                          method.
 The Macbeth performed in the Volterra prison 
                          yard by the Compagnia della Fortezza, made up of prisoners, 
                          is illustrated by Cristina Valenti, who takes this as 
                          a cue to reflect on the theatre of Armando Punzo. Music and Ideas by Marco Pandin presents artist 
                          and musician Fluxus, Giuseppe Chiari, and his text "suonare 
                          la città" (playing the city) from the '70s. The 15th Festival of Latin American Cinema is reviewed 
                          by Fernanda Hrelia, offering a panorama of the productions 
                          presented. On the occasion of the publication by Eleuthèra 
                          of La sovversione estetica - Arte e pensiero libertario 
                          tra ottocento e novecento (Aesthetic Subversion 
                          - Art and Libertarian Thought between the Nineteenth 
                          and Twentieth Centuries), the author Eva Civolani is 
                          interviewed by Maria Mesch. The "fatti&misfatti" column contains 
                          the obituaries of Alberto Moroni (by Dino Taddei) and 
                          Gianfranco Bertoli (by the editors), as well as a brief 
                          description of the situation of the Pygmies in the Congo, 
                          by Gianni Sartori. "A nous la liberté" by Felice Accame 
                          is devoted to Leda Rafanelli, the anarchist eccentric, 
                          and her relationship with Mussolini (when he was still 
                          a socialist). Presented in the "Libertarian Review" are 
                          the film by Bruno Bigoni "Comizi d'amore 2000" 
                          inspired by the work by Pier Paolo Pasolini, the book 
                          Falsi da ridere by Vincenzo Sparagna, published 
                          by Edizioni Malatempora, while Nadia Agustoni tells 
                          the story of a homicide involving two women that happened 
                          in Turin in 1930, from the book Delitto a Torino. 
                          Stefano Giaccone recommends a book by Valerie Wilmer 
                          on the black revolution in jazz. The postbag opens with Corrado Parisi's clear dissociation 
                          from those comrades who "vote for the lesser evil", 
                          followed by a letter from Fabio Canavesi and Marco Camenisch 
                          from Biella prison, while Patrizia "Pralina" 
                          Diamante and Horst Fantazzini write on the occasion 
                          of the imminent end to Horst's long prison history. 
                          The postbag closes with the letter sent by a total objector 
                          to military authority. |