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From the article:

The "third page" (a page once entirely dedicated to culture, in the Italian tradition) contained a main article, named "Elzeviro" which has been signed by all the directors and the major novelists, poets and journalist of the country.

I don't understand this sentence. Did the Elzeviro piece appear each day? Does it still exist? How could it be signed by all major journalists of the country? Or does it mean that over time, all major journalists wrote a piece for Elzeviro? AxelBoldt 20:47, 9 Apr 2005 (UTC)

You're right, Axel Boldt. The sentence was written by someone who didn't know much English: "which over the years has been signed by all the editors as well as major novelists, poets and journalists". This makes it sound like an autograph album. What the guy meant to say was that this section of the paper "has published contributions by all the editors as well as by major novelists..." etc. I altered it to make sense.METRANGOLO1 (talk) 18:35, 8 December 2017 (UTC)[reply]

Not each day, at the beginning. If I well remember it was on the Sunday edition and later on Monday too (the day when barbers' shops - here - are closed, just to keep some distance...). In time, several newspapers used to keep cultural articles in the third page (the "third", tout-court) quite daily, but the habit has disappeared in favour of special removable sections (so to be able to collect them) in central pages.
It was called "Elzeviro" because it was traditionally printed with the Elzevier font, drawn out by Van Dick (legend says), so to distinguish its content from other news.
Over time, most of the finest talented writers dedicated a page to something they found interesting to discuss about; it was an open space for innovative ideas, as well as for conservative ethical calls.
It certainly was an authoritative message, for the cultural classes, both for the newspaper's and the writer's fame. Yes, the result actually was a sort of ipse dixit ("you'd better read John Doe on his latest third, my dear..."); but, in the end, intellectual debates (from poetry to politics, from science to phylosophy, from theology to Sofia Loren) were all held there, on that third page, week after week.
It still exists, indeed, but it has lost the prestige it once had: maybe it was with the Seventies that we lost the habit to look for it, to read it and to enjoy it (and that's a really sad loss); this is because our journalism progressively lost some quality (and I'm friendly...) and greater writers didn't want to be involved with it any more. I believe the latest good Elzeviri I read were by Indro Montanelli, a great director and a better journalist with bright (but not always shareable) ideas, some 20 years ago or more.
Of course, the newspaper's directors always had their smaller or bigger space in the page (usually on the left side column, that we call "spalla", shoulder) and they were sometimes selected for the leading role right because of their potential success "on the third" and their capability to attract great "pens".
Let's not forget that several novelists (in the article Dino Buzzati and Calvino are mentioned, but there were really many others) left us some masterpieces: good journalism in elegant words. And, however, most intellectual Italy passed by that page, sooner or later.


"Printed"

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Is it printed (only) in Milan or published in Milan? --

Of course it is published in Milan. --Fertuno 15:16, 26 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

"Evening mail"

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Corriere della Sera comes out every morning. As far as I know, "Sera" - which does mean "evening" - refers to the fact that it's published in the North; just as "mezzogiorno" (noon) would refer to the South. Can someone confirm this?

The name refers to the fact that the newspaper used to come out in the evening. "Sera" is not used in Italian to refer to the North. thingfish 21:14, 8 May 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Isn't "Evening Courier" or "Evening Messenger" a more accurate translation of "Corriere della Sera?" I've changed the article to to say "Evening Courier". If I'm wrong, please correct the article.

"Berlusconi"

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The newspaper has however not endorsed Berlusconi's government on several issues, such as the war in Iraq.

What this sentence has to do with the rest of the context? What Berlusconi has to do with that?

Maybe it means that the newspaper "tries to keep a neutral point of view" or that "it's a right wing newspaper, but has not always supported a right govern?" or that it's "on the side of the industrials", cause the sentence was talking of industrials as share holders?.

Someone should clarify and expand, or better delete that half sentence, or make a new paragraph that need expansion that talks about the point of view of the newspaper.

Gabriele Dini Ciacci 15:56, 12 November 2007 (UTC)[reply]

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WhisperToMe (talk) 16:18, 26 April 2011 (UTC)[reply]

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