9 The Unione's provincial editorial office was on the third and top floor of an old building with a long history behind it. Originally a furniture factory in the late 1800s, after three generations the company had suffered a physiological decline. The building was abandoned and renovated in the 1930s, only to be occupied by a Nazi command during the last war. Thirty years after the conflict, there was still a pile of mattresses high enough to reach the ceiling. They were the same mattresses used by German soldiers to rest. Over the next 20 years, children had sneaked into the room to jump on rusty mattress springs. After forty years, the building was gutted and divided into many small apartments. Currently, the modest interior 6 housed the newspaper's editorial office. In that cramped

