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Welcome, 77 artists, 40 different points of Attica welcomes you by singing Erotokritos an epic romance written at 1713 by Vitsentzos Kornaros

Sunday, August 11, 2013

France falls to Greece, Canada makes comeback against Jamaica in exhibition ...


France falls to Greece, Canada makes comeback against Jamaica in exhibition ...
Project Spurs
The French and Canadian National teams returned to exhibition play (Canada Saturday, France Sunday) over the weekend and in each of their matches, their opponent was the aggressor early on as Canada was able to make a comeback and win, while ...


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Illegal immigrants riot in Greece


Sydney Morning Herald

Illegal immigrants riot in Greece
eNCA
... migrants are kept under police guard early on August 11, 2013. Picture: AFP. ATHENS - A riot has broken out at a detention centre for illegal immigrants in Greece after officials told them that the maximum holding period had been extended to 18 months.
Greek police hunt migrant escapeesSydney Morning Herald
Ten Immigrants Escape Detention CenterGreek Reporter
Dozens of immigrants in Greece clash with policewww.worldbulletin.net

all 27 news articles »

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The National Rumbles And Roars At The Greek Theatre


The National Rumbles And Roars At The Greek Theatre
Neon Tommy
That destructive bent translates into an intensity coiled in Berninger's figure, and as he stepped onto the stage with the rest of the band, wine glass and bottle in hand, something between the figures on stage and the Greek Theatre's audience clicked ...

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Victims of Greek bail-out get chance of class action


Telegraph.co.uk

Victims of Greek bail-out get chance of class action
Telegraph.co.uk
Kyros's new Athens office is already co-ordinating the claims of thousands of angry bondholders, who took a 53.5pc upfront haircut on their investments in 2012's restructuring of all Greek public debt held by private creditors. The Private Sector ...


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Greek police hunt migrants who escaped immigration detention centre during riot

Greek police were today searching for eight Pakistanis and two Afghans who escaped during a riot at an immigration detention centre, where human rights groups say migrants and asylum seekers face unacceptably long periods of incarceration in often appalling conditions.



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Illegal immigrants riot against extended stay in Greek detention centre

Detainees burn mattresses, rubbish and throw stones at police. Fifty reported arrested, 10 escaped from Amygdaleza centre

Dozens of illegal immigrants being held in a Greek detention centre hurled stones at police guards and set mattresses on fire in protest over the extension of their detention, Greek police said today.

Greece, struggling to exit its worst financial crisis in decades, has become a frontier for immigrants mainly from Asia and Africa, who seek a better life in Europe but often end up living in cramped detention centres.

More than 50 out of 1,620 migrants held at the detention centre of Amygdaleza, near Athens, were arrested over the clashes, which broke out late on Saturday.

The detainees hurled water bottles and stones at guards and set rubbish bags and mattresses on fire, injuring 10 police guards. There were no reports of injured migrants, police said.

Riot police fired teargas to disperse the crowds, ending the unrest. Police said 10 migrants had escaped.

Greece has been long criticised by human rights groups over the poor conditions at reception centres and a very low rate of asylum application approvals, which makes its treatment of illegal migrants one of the toughest in the EU.

Since the economic crisis broke out, anti-immigrant sentiment has risen in a country where one worker in four is unemployed, boosting the far-right Golden Dawn party which has been ranking third in polls.


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Ten Immigrants Escape Detention Center

Riot police were dispatched on Aug. 10 to put down a riot at Greece's main migrant detention camp where detainees hurled stones at officers and set fire to their living quarters, authorities said. Authorities said 10 of the prisoners, eight Pakistanis and two Afghans, escaped although police operating patrols arrested 14 others in the area around the center. As part of the preliminary ...

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No Permits For Greek Public Buildings

While Greece requires buildings to be inspected and have permits many of those belong to municipalities and the government don’t have any including the Olympic Stadium, whose roof which is said to be in worsening condition because of a lack of maintenance. Others without permits include major sports centers and facilities in Thessaloniki as well as many buildings in Agios Kosmas of Attica. ...

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Father Constantinos Economos is building a new generation of Greek Orthodox parishioners

A round-up of some of our favourite recipes and food-related features this week including an interview with Louisa Shafia about her cookbook The New Persian Kitchen, an ingredient spotlight on ...

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Greece told to sell off islands and artworks

The call for a Big Fat Greek Auction came on the eve of crucial talks between Angela Merkel and the George Papadreou Two senior German MPs have demanded that Greece sell off some of its islands, historic buildings and art works as a condition of receiving a financial lifeline from the EU. The call for a Big Fat Greek Auction – which would also include ancient artefacts and stakes in state-owned ...

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Debt-laden Greece finds no buyers in 'fire sale' of national assets

Greece puts €50bn of national assets on sale in hotel ballroom but private equity firms are not interested While Greece erupted in protest again yesterday, representatives of the country's government were at Claridge's hotel trying to drum up international investors' interest in a "fire sale" of its national assets. Up for sale are 39 airports, 850 ports, railways, motorways, sewage works, a ...

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Greece will need more bailout loans by 2014, Bundesbank believes


The Guardian

Greece will need more bailout loans by 2014, Bundesbank believes
The Guardian
Germany's central bank expects Greece to need additional rescue loans from its European partners by the start of 2014 at the very latest, weekly magazine Der Spiegel reported on Sunday, citing a document from the Bundesbank. The report could rekindle a ...
Report: Bundesbank expects new bailout for Greece within months of German ...Fox News
Bundesbank report on Greece raises pressure on MerkelReuters UK
Bundesbank expects more aid for Greece by 2014: ReportEconomic Times
NASDAQ
all 24 news articles »

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UPDATE 1-Bundesbank report on Greece raises pressure on Merkel


UPDATE 1-Bundesbank report on Greece raises pressure on Merkel
Reuters
BERLIN, Aug 11 (Reuters) - German opposition parties accused Chancellor Angela Merkel on Sunday of lying before elections next month about the risks of a new bailout for Greece, after a magazine reported the Bundesbank expects it will need more ...


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Bundesbank Says Greece Needs 3d Bailout

Greek Prime Minister Antonis Samaras (L) and German Chancellor Angela Merkel have taken turns visiting each other to show support for Greek austerity programs. Two bailouts of some $319 billion from international lenders hasn't done enough to keep Greece's economy from faltering - despite harsh austerity measures as well - and the government likely will need a third rescue package next ...

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Greek Economy Loses 122B Euros

Buddy, can you spare 1,627,650,000,000,000 dimes to help out Greece? The era of austerity – brought on by generations of overspending – has caused Greece to lose nearly 50 percent of its Gross Domestic Product and cost 122 billion euros ($162.75 billion) in cuts to pay and social services, tax hikes, liquidity losses and withdrawals suffered by banks, according to Finance Ministry ...

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Bundesbank eyes more aid for Greece

Germany's central bank expects Greece to receive another bailout loan later this year or by early 2014, the German weekly Der Spiegel reported Sunday, citing an internal Bundesbank document.The bank's experts however rated the risks of the international loan program as "exceptionally high" and the Greek government's performance as "barely satisfactory," the ...

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Turkish wrestler banned for racist remarks

Turkey's Olympic medallist Riza Kayaalp was banned for six months by the International Federation of Associated Wrestling Styles (FILA) for his racist remarks against Armenians and Greeks three weeks ago. Kayaalp had targeted Greeks and Armenians in his tweets during the Gezi Park unrest in Turkey, reports Xinhua. European and World Champion Kayaalp, who had won a bronze at the 2012 London ...

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IRS Releases List Of Americans Hoping To Expatriate, Number Tops 1,000

With all of the hubbub over Edward Snowden's citizenship status, it's easy to forget that there are thousands of Americans with slightly less remarkable circumstances who voluntary opt to give up U.S. citizenship. Under IRC section 6039G of the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPPA) of 1996, as amended, the Internal Revenue Service is required to post a list of citizens who voluntarily expatriate or abandon their American citizenship. The list is published each quarter in the Federal Registry. Last quarter's registry, published in May 2013, raised a number of eyebrows because it included the names of 679 citizens. That was the longest list of citizens opting to expatriate in more than 15 years. Until this quarter. For the second quarter of 2013, the expatriation list includes a whopping 1,130 names. That's nearly twice the length of last quarter's list and just shy of the record 1,208 names recorded during the second quarter of 1997. In contrast, the shortest list was published in the second quarter of 2009: just 15 names made the list. It's been widely speculated that most citizens on the list are leaving for tax reasons. That notion has been bolstered by the prior moves of such big names as Edward Tupper (yes, the founder of Tupperware), who bought an island off of Costa Rica to avoid taxes; co-founder Eduardo Saverin who bolted reportedly to avoid capital gains in low tax Singapore and Denise Rich, former wife of pardoned tax cheat and uber wealthy Marc Rich, who expatriated to the U.K. It's worth noting, however, that not everyone who makes the list is fleeing for tax reasons. You can renounce your U.S. citizenship for a number of reasons including running for office in a foreign country (like Andreas Papandreou who went on to become the Prime Minister of Greece)) or to retain citizenship in a foreign country that doesn't allow dual citizenship. You may also opt to give up your citizenship to protest U.S. policies or actions. And while getting your citizenship back after you've renounced isn't easy, it's not impossible. Movie actress Elizabeth Taylor did it over a period of just over ten years. Taylor was a dual citizen of the U.S. and U.K. by birth. During her first marriage to Sir Richard Burton, she attempted to renounce her citizenship but due to an alteration on the form, her renunciation was declared invalid. She signed another one a year later and that one stuck… However, in 1977, Taylor applied to be U.S. citizen again while married to her sixth husband (seventh marriage since she was married to Burton twice), John Warner. Warner, who served as Secretary of the U.S. Navy during the Nixon Administration, went on the serve in the U.S. Senate where he served for nearly 30 years. The next list will be made available sometime after the third quarter ends. Based on a lag time for publishing of between 20 and 40 days, expect to see it sometime in November 2013. -- Want more taxgirl goodness? Pick your poison: You can receive posts by email, follow me on twitter (@taxgirl) hang out with me on Facebook and check out my YouTube channel. NEW at taxgirl: you can subscribe to the podcast on the site or via iTunes (it's free).

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Greece posts �2.5b budget surplus

ATHENS: Greece's central government posted a primary budget surplus of "about ¤2.5 billion (RM10.83 billion)" in the first seven months of the year, beating an interim target for a deficit of ¤3.1 billion for the period, said deputy finance minister Christos Staikouras on Saturday. "We can, therefore, say that the national target to achieve a primary surplus at the end of the year becomes more ...

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Bundesbank expecting new bailout for Greece

Germany's central bank is expecting a new bailout for Greece by early 2014, according to a news magazine report. So far there has been no coment from the Bundesbank.

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UK wages fall among sharpest in EU

Figures show real wage value has fallen 5.5% since 2010, more than in eurozone crisis countries such as Spain and Cyprus

The value of UK workers' wages has suffered one of the sharpest falls in the EU, House of Commons library figures show.

The 5.5% reduction in average hourly wages since mid-2010, adjusted for inflation, means British workers have felt the squeeze more than those in countries hit by the eurozone crisis. Spanish workers's wages dropped by 3.3% over the same period and in Cyprus salaries fell by 3% in real terms.

Only Greek, Portuguese and Dutch wages suffered a steeper decline than the UK, the analysis showed, while they rose by 2.7% in Germany and 0.4% in France.

Across the EU as a whole the average fall in wages, adjusted for the European Central Bank' s harmonised index of consumer prices, was 0.7% and in eurozone area 0.1%.

The shadow Treasury minister, Cathy Jamieson, said: "These figures show the full scale of David Cameron's cost of living crisis. Working people are not only worse off under the Tories, we're also doing much worse than almost all other EU countries.

"Despite out of touch claims by ministers, life is getting harder for ordinary families as prices continue rising faster than wages. People on middle and low incomes have also seen tax rises and cuts to tax credits, while millionaires have been given a huge tax cut.

"Ministers keep talking about the global race, but when it comes to living standards it's clear we're losing. David Cameron and George Osborne's economic policies have badly failed over the last three years and working people are paying a heavy price.

"Labour would help middle and low income families right now, including with a lower 10p starting rate of tax, action to tackle soaring energy bills and protecting tax credits for working families by reversing the tax cut for millionaires."

Labour has sought to highlight the rising cost of living in its attacks on the government's economic policies.

Incomes will be £1,520 lower in real terms in 2015 than in 2010, according to Labour analysis of Office for Budget Responsibility forecasts.

Cameron has overseen 35 consecutive months of falling real wages, more than any other prime minister on record, and spending power has dropped in every month but one under coalition rule as price rises outstrip wage increases.

Apart from Cameron, James Callaghan is the only prime minister on record to have overseen more than a year of constantly falling real wages, Labour's analysis of Office for National Statistics figures showed.

The general secretary of the GMB union, Paul Kenny, said: "The government is directly responsible for this unprecedented fall in the real value of wages in the three years since the election.

"Employers paying low wages get taxpayer subsidies in the form of tax credits to assemble a workforce for them to make decent profit margins. The government has also made it easier for employers to abuse staff and made it more difficult for them to do anything about it."

A Treasury spokeswoman said: "The economy is on the mend, but we've still got a long way to go as we move from rescue to recovery and we appreciate that times are still tough for families.

"We are on the right track, the deficit is down by a third, over one and a quarter million new private sector jobs have been created, and interest rates are at near-record lows, benefitting families and businesses."


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Aristotle, Plato and Socrates resurface in Athens amid Greece's economic crisis


Raw Story

Aristotle, Plato and Socrates resurface in Athens amid Greece's economic crisis
Raw Story
Aristotle, Plato and Socrates have resurfaced in Athens in the midst of Greece's harrowing economic crisis, brought to life by a global philosophy congress in the very locations they once frequented. “It's very important to find oneself in the place ...

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RANKED: The 30 Most Common Ethnicities In America

giant flag, building, flag on building, US flag, american flag, chinatown, little italy, nyc, sept 2011, business insider, dng

Can you guess the largest ethnic group in America?

We sorted through Census data on general, Hispanic or Latino, Asian, and American Indian populations to identify the dominant flavors in the great melting pot.

It turns out the biggest group is not the English, who once controlled the 13 colonies, nor the Irish, who came over in vast waves in the 19th century, nor the Mexicans, who cross the southern border in large numbers in search of jobs.

The largest ethnic group, at 49,206,934 people in 2011, is the Germans, who came over in waves dating back to the 1670s.

Of course, ethnicity is a tricky word, and if we were to count all Americans of Hispanic or Latino origin as one group, then that group would take a narrow lead with 49,215,563 people. For the purposes of this list, however, we are sticking with the most specific ethnicities tracked (in self-reporting surveys) by the Census.

#30 Greek: 1,319,188

Although Greek heritage has been recorded in the U.S. since the 1600s, the most substantial number of Greek immigrants came to the U.S. from the mid-1800s up until Greece's admission to the European Union in 1981. Today the U.S. is home to the largest Greek community outside of Greece.

Famous Greek Americans: Jennifer Aniston; Bob Costas; Tina Fey; John Stamos; Frank Zappa; and George Papanicolaou, creator of the Pap smear.



#29 Dominican (Dominican Republic): 1,414,551

After the fall of dictator Rafael Trujillo in 1965, the U.S. occupied the Dominican Republic in order to end a civil war. The U.S. also eased travel restrictions, and as a result, large numbers of Dominicans began immigrating to the U.S. in the late 1960s.

The states with the most Dominican Americans are New York, New Jersey, Florida, Massachusetts, and Pennsylvania.

Famous Dominican Americans include: Sammy Sosa, Junot Díaz, Oscar De La Renta, Alex Rodriguez, and Zoe Saldana. 



#28 Danish: 1,420,962

Danes have been living in the U.S. since the late 1600s, but they steadily immigrated to America for much of the 1800s before Danish immigration tapered off. California, Utah, Minnesota, and Wisconsin all have large numbers of Danish Americans.

Famous Danish Americans include: Mary Kate & Ashley Olsen, Scarlet Johansson, Lars Ulrich of Metallica, the Hanson brothers, and Iggy Pop are all Danish.



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