ROLE OF CITIZEN-ACTIVIST, THEME OF SONS OF ITALY GALA
Former President Bill Clinton cites “historic moment”
for individuals and organizations to make a difference
Washington, DC--
May 30, 2006
The role that private individuals and non-profit
organizations can play to make the world a better
place was stressed by former president Bill Clinton
and others during a gala fund-raiser held May 25 in
Washington, D.C. by the Sons of Italy Foundation
(SIF), the nation’s largest Italian American
philanthropic organization.
Speaking at the SIF’s 18th annual National Education
& Leadership Awards (NELA) Gala, Mr. Clinton
said: “Never has there been a time in our history
when we as private individuals have had more
opportunity to do public good.” This was Mr.
Clinton’s fourth appearance at the SIF annual gala.
He came as president in 1997, 1998 and 2000.
Mr. Clinton praised the SIF and its three 2006
honorees for the considerable financial support they
have given to medical research, disaster relief,
cultural preservation and education. “Considering
how much good they have done, I’m glad they
weren’t term-limited,” he said. The three honorees
were:
- Michael Rienzi who received the SIF 2006
NELA award for his leadership in the business world
and his philanthropy. Founder of Rienzi & Sons, food
importers, he is helping to cure deaf through a
foundation he has established with New York
University’s Cochlear Implant Center.
- Robert E. Juliano who received the SIF
2006 Humanitarian Award for his continuous support
of charitable causes. A political consultant and labor
representative, he has worked with the National
Coalition for Breast Cancer; the Lions Club; Crusade
of Mercy and other charities.
- Franco Nuschese received the SIF 2006
Award for Excellence in Business for his launching of
three successful Italian restaurants in Washington,
D.C., most notable among them, the celebrity-
magnet Café Milano in Georgetown. He supports a
number of charities, including the Knock Out Abuse
dinner, which is one of Washington’s largest
fundraisers, Arts for the Aging, the American Heart
Association, Children’s National Medical Center, AIDS
research and the Juvenile Diabetes Foundation.
Nuschese and Rienzi emigrated from southern Italy
when they were teen-agers. All three are “self-made
men in the fullest sense of the word,” noted the gala
Emcee actor Joe Mantegna. “They inherited
no
family fortune or network of powerful friends that
helped them to
succeed,” he said. “What each did possess in
abundance was talent, determination and a
dedication to hard work and sacrifice. And once
they achieved success, they used their talent and
wealth to help those less fortunate.”
Also honored were 13 young Italian Americans who
received 2006 NELA scholarships. Each had to
demonstrate outstanding community service as well
as academic ability. Among the schools they will
attend next year on these scholarships are Yale,
Princeton and Oxford universities and the American
University of Rome.
Nearly 1,000 guests attended the 2006 NELA black
tie gala, which raised nearly $1.4 million. Present that
evening were: Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton,
who
introduced her husband; Sens. Christopher
Dodd, and
Frank Lautenberg; and House
Representatives Rosa
DeLauro; John Larson; Linda Sanchez; and
Loretta
Sanchez; Italy’s Ambassador to the U.S.
Giovanni
Castellaneta; NIH AIDS researcher, Dr.
Anthony
Fauci; Robert Johnson and Debra Lee of
the Black
Entertainment Television network; designer Ann
Hand, and others.
Sons of Italy Foundation
The SIF is the philanthropic arm of the Order
Sons of Italy in America (OSIA), the nation's oldest
and largest organization for people of Italian
heritage. Over the years, the SIF has contributed
more than $93 million to medical research, disaster
relief, and scholarships. The NELA Gala proceeds help
fund these philanthropic programs.
Contact:
Kylie Cafiero
Director of Communications
phone:
202/547-2900
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