
Falling Tree in Venice Injures a Dozen People, Including Foreign Tourists
MILAN—Foreign tourists were among a dozen people injured when a 50-year-old tree fell next to a bus stop in the Italian lagoon city of Venice on Monday, authorities said.
The oak tree fell on a group of people waiting in a shaded area at Piazzale Roma, the last stop for buses and taxis ferrying visitors to and from the lagoon city from the mainland, city officials said. It wasn't immediately clear why the tree fell.

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RTÉ News
14 minutes ago
- RTÉ News
Pep Guardiola dreams of World Cup glory but has no plans to leave City anytime soon
Pep Guardiola has no plans to leave Manchester City anytime soon but the Spaniard has often thought about what it would be like to guide an international team and says he would love to take on the challenge of a World Cup or Euros campaign. "I would love to be in a World Cup, in a Euro, a Copa America," Guardiola told Reuters in an exclusive interview. "I have always thought about it. But it depends on many, many things. If it happens, it's fine. If it doesn't happen, it's more than fine as well." After winning 12 domestic top-flight titles across Spain, Germany and England, Guardiola endured a trophyless campaign with City last season, a shock to the system after so much success. While he came in for some stinging criticism over his elite squad's failure on all fronts, Guardiola said he was not interested in "proving the haters wrong" when City start afresh next season. "It's to prove myself that I can do it, I don't want to have those feeling that last season left" he added. "Because when we win, the wine tastes better afterwards, you sleep better. I don't know a manager who loses games and sleeps like a baby. It doesn't happen. You've got to worry. That's part of our life." Top of Guardiola's 'to-do list' is to win another Champions League with City and should they cross paths once more with Real Madrid, his nemesis Carlo Ancelotti will not be in the opposing dugout after the Italian took charge of Brazil. Mere mention of Ancelotti's departure was enough to put a smile on Guardiola's lips. The pair faced each other five times in the knockout rounds of the Champions League, with the Italian coming out on top in all but one. "I'm so happy for him," Guardiola said. "But I'm so happy that he's not in Madrid anymore because all the time he beats me. That I don't have to handle it anymore." The Spaniard added that it was unrealistic to expect him to win everything every year, and said that even the most successful athletes lose more than they win. "I won 12 domestic leagues in 16 years. It's not bad, I would say. But you cannot win all the time. I cannot win the Champions League all the time," he added. "Michael Jordan, the best athlete I've ever seen in my life won six NBA Championships in 15 years. Tiger Woods, one incredible golf player, Jack Nicklaus, I don't know how many he has. But they lost more Grand Slams than they won. It happens." Enjoying a short holiday in Barcelona, Guardiola said he is just trying to live a "normal life" before football pulls him back in, with City set to play in the revamped Club World Cup in the United States. "Wake up later and don't be with the players. Try to live what would be a normal life," Guardiola said. "Go to a concert, lay down on the sofa, read books. I can play golf when my body allows me. Watch series that people suggest to me during the season to watch, like I'm not able to do.


The Guardian
14 minutes ago
- The Guardian
I knew everyone would hate my mustard shorts. That didn't stop me buying them
One day in my late teens I found a pair of jeans that fitted me nicely. This was at the newly opened Merry Hill shopping centre in the Black Country. The jeans were an odd colour but I liked the cut of my jib in them. This was until I told a schoolfriend I'd bought some mustard-coloured jeans. 'What kind of mustard?' he asked. 'Not English, surely?' I'm afraid they were. But I stuck with them, resolving to wash the colour issue away. Sadly, thanks to the ferocity of the laundering, soon after I'd got them from English mustard down to dijon, they fell apart, bringing the whole unhappy episode to an end. Forty years on, farcically, I made the same poor purchasing decision all over again. I was on holiday in the Italian mountains and came across some (English) mustard-coloured hiking shorts in an outdoor shop. They fitted so nicely that I bought two pairs. I can only imagine that the fresh alpine air had addled my mind. But from Dudley to the Dolomites, a dope's a dope. Back home, I washed them much more than I'd worn them. And the colour has shifted not a jot. Three years on, they are as mustard as they ever were. If you want to check the colour out, don some protective eyewear and Google lynx 787. Remarkably, Helly Hansen is still selling them, so I'm not ploughing as lonely a furrow as it feels. Last week, my daughters begged me never to wear the shorts anywhere apart from in my garden, while gardening, and then only if I wasn't expecting visitors. During a pause in weeding, I hatched a plan. I'd dye the bloody things. Ignoring advice that polyamide is not for being dyed, I bought some dark blue stuff, boiled my shorts in it for an hour as directed, and to my considerable delight they are mustard no more. OK, they're not exactly blue. In fact, they're exactly green. A similar green to that sported by Australian park rangers, which is fine by me. I do like the colour, which is just as well as I strongly suspect the rest of my clothes will be green too after the next wash. As for the fashion police, I've been advised it's an improvement but, to be on the safe side, best to stick to the garden for the time being. Adrian Chiles is a broadcaster, writer and Guardian columnist


Fashion Network
14 minutes ago
- Fashion Network
Bottega Veneta celebrates 50 years of its woven leather signature with a poetic campaign
Italian luxury brand Bottega Veneta is marking the 50th anniversary of intrecciato (meaning 'woven' in Italian), the leather technique that has become its signature. To celebrate five decades of artisanal excellence, the Italian label, part of the Kering luxury group, has launched a striking new campaign titled 'Craft is Our Language.' The visuals feature a series of moving hands—intertwined and interlaced like leather strips—alongside notable personalities. The story of intrecciato dates back to the 1970s when Renzo Zengiaro, the craftsman behind Bottega Veneta, introduced the weaving technique. He co-founded the house in Vicenza in 1966 with Michele Taddei. Their technique and design quickly became a reference in luxury leather goods. At the time, leather in the Veneto region—better known for ready-to-wear—was especially thin, suitable for weaving and commonly used in gloves and shoes. Zengiaro's idea was to use wider leather strips to create bags using his very own developed method. However, success came slowly. Years later, Zengiaro recalled that buyers in Paris rejected his woven leather bags, claiming they looked too much like summer straw bags. The brand halted production, kept only a few samples, and offered them to the Japanese and American markets. Customers in those regions quickly drove up demand, laying the foundation for what ultimately became Bottega Veneta's hallmark. Since then, intrecciato has been reinterpreted in numerous ways by the brand's various creative directors—across apparel, materials, and even oversized weaves. The technique has been used to craft highly coveted accessories, often widely copied. It quickly became a staple in all product categories, from jewelry and furniture to ready-to-wear. Yet the brand's new campaign barely shows its bags or products. Instead, it highlights creativity, craftsmanship, and human connection. This focus explains the use of hands—literally forming a language—as illustrated in a well-known book by Italian designer Bruno Munari. Bottega Veneta honors him through this project. The anniversary campaign 'views intrecciato not just as a technique, but as a metaphor. The interwoven leather strips, which over time became the house's hallmark, represent the bond that links individuals. It symbolizes sharing, transmission, and the collective spirit that drives Bottega Veneta's philosophy,' the house explained in a statement. Shot by photographer Jack Davison and choreographed by Lenio Kaklea, 'Craft is Our Language' is built around a series of portraits paired with images of hands. The selected figures come from the worlds of art, film, fashion, literature, music, and sport. The lineup starts with actress Lauren Hutton, who carried a Bottega Veneta woven clutch in Paul Schrader's 1980 film American Gigolo and walked the runway in 2016 for the brand's 50th anniversary wearing a modernized version of the same piece. Others featured in the campaign include designer Edward Buchanan—who served as Bottega Veneta's first ready-to-wear creative director from 1995 to 2000—Italian filmmaker Dario Argento, actress Julianne Moore, poet and sculptor Barbara Chase-Riboud, singer-songwriter Neneh Cherry, and novelist Zadie Smith.