Proper noun
Napolitano (plural Napolitanos)
A surname from Italian.
University of California students can look forward to the same authoritarian management style Secretary Napolitano brought to the Department of Homeland Security, hardly a bastion of free speech and open government. Doug LaMalfa
Alondra Avalos, a second-year sociology and labor studies student and a member of the Student Labor Advocacy Project of UCLA, said that under Napolitano, there was a lack of action behind words of support for undocumented students. Source: Internet
But while Napolitano was recruited as a high school All-American, Gazonas had to try and walk-on to the Warriors. Source: Internet
Berlusconi suffered facial injuries, a broken nose and two broken teeth; he was subsequently hospitalised. citation Italian president Giorgio Napolitano and politicians from all parties in Italy condemned the attack. Source: Internet
Firing them, as President Napolitano promised, is tantamount to deportation — a cruel repercussion that the students strikers were quick to point out. Source: Internet
About the last thing Napolitano and Professor Searle need now is a high profile well publicized trial here, or an ongoing case which is going to dog the hapless Carol Christ the incoming Chancellor. Source: Internet