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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, November 9, 2014

Karaloukas’ Killer Will Not Go to Jail – Court Rules Him Not Competent for Trial

BOCA RATON, FL – On March 13, Tilus Lebrun, a 42 year-old Haitian national, fatally stabbed his employer, Dimitrios Karaloukas, a 61 year-old Greek-American restaurateur who owned Jimmy the Greek Taverna in Boca Raton. Apprehended moments later in the street by police, Lebrun, still holding the murder weapon, confessed that he did it, apparently, as […] The post Karaloukas’ Killer Will Not Go to Jail – Court Rules Him Not Competent for Trial appeared first on The National Herald.


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Sororities and Fraternities clean up Mt. Pleasant

Volunteers from Central Michigan University's Greek community collected 30 bags of trash and debris on Sunday, as a part of the “Greeks Clean the ...


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A Greece Officer Shoots & Injures A Man Who Police Say Pointed A Gun At Them

Greece Police say one of their officers shot a man on Sunday after he pointed a gun at police. It happened on Stone Road at about 11:00 a.m. Police ...


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Greece officer involved in Stone Road shooting

Greece police investigate a shooting incident involving an officer at a Stone Road residence. (Photo: Lauren Petracca/@LaurenPetracca/staff ...


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Panathinaikos beats PAOK 2-1

ATEHNS, Greece — Abdul Ajagun scored one and created another as Panathinaikos secured a 2-1 away win over Greek league leaders PAOK on ...


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PAOK 2-1 home loss to Panathinaikos sees lead over Olympiakos shrink to 2 points

by  Associated Press Panathinaikos beats PAOK 2-1 Associated Press - 9 November 2014 15:07-05:00 ATEHNS, Greece (AP) — Abdul Ajagun scored one and created another as Panathinaikos secured a 2-1 away win over Greek league leaders PAOK on Sunday. Panathinaikos' win allowed defending champion Olympiakos to come within two points of PAOK after beating Panthrakikos 5-1 also Sunday. Ajagun opened the scoring in the 51st minute before Facundo Pereyra equalized for PAOK in the 64th. In the 79th, Ajagun crossed from the right, and striker Nikos Karelis netted at the second time of asking after his initial shot hit the post. Panathinaikos moves up to fifth on 16 points, six adrift of second-placed Olympiakos. Also, Giannena beat last-place Niki Volos 4-0, Kalloni won 2-0 at Panionios and Levadiakos vs. Platanias ended 0-0. News Topics: Sports, Soccer, Men's soccer, Men's sports People, Places and Companies: Greece, Western Europe, Europe Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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BC-SOC--Greek Results

by  Associated Press BC-SOC--Greek Results Associated Press - 9 November 2014 14:31-05:00 BC-SOC--Greek Results Greek Football Results ATHENS, GREECE (AP) — Results from Greek football: Greece Super League Saturday's Matches Ergotelis 2, Veria 2 Kerkyra 1, Panetolikos 2 Xanthi 2, OFI Crete 1 Sunday's Matches Olympiakos 5, Panthrakikos 1 Levadiakos 0, Platanias 0 PAS Giannina 4, Niki Volos 0 Panionios 0, Kalloni 2 PAOK Thessaloniki 1, Panathinaikos 2 Monday's Match Atromitos vs. Asteras News Topics: Soccer, Men's soccer, Sports, Men's sports People, Places and Companies: Athens, Greece, Western Europe, Europe Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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Greeks Eat Tons of Rejected Vegetables

Briam_Thessaloniki More than 5000 Greeks have eaten more than two tonnes of fruit and vegetables rejected by food stores in an event that ...


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Vivid memories of 'pure joy' on Berlin Wall anniversary

Berlin (AFP) - Germans flocked to their reunified capital Sunday to toast the 25th anniversary of the Berlin Wall's fall and swap memories of a night of "pure joy."Huddled in wintry weather for a giant street party at the Brandenburg Gate, visitors prepared for the evening's highlight of nearly 7,000 illuminated white balloons along the Wall's former route ascending into the night sky.  Sigrid Weiss from the eastern town of Fuerstenwalde, and Joachim Behrendt, who grew up in East Berlin, now live in west Germany and said they were pleased to see East Germans' courage during 28 dark years of division honoured. "We were always people who loved freedom," said Weiss, 62. "It's not that our lives were so terrible, but it was a golden cage."Behrendt, 64, worked in the so-called German Democratic Republic (GDR) organising circus tours abroad."I was able to send world-class trapeze artists to France and Japan but I couldn't even leave East Germany," he said.He called it "the bad luck of history" that he lived just 100 metres (330 feet) from where the Wall was built and ended up on the wrong side, while most of his family lived in the west.The couple, who met as teenagers in 1970, applied for permission to defect in 1986.Weiss spent six months in official custody while the regime tried to convince her to withdraw her request."But I was never one to buckle," she said with a smile.Weiss and Behrendt were eventually able to leave in 1987, just two years before the Wall would fall."I had such mixed feelings that night," Behrendt said."We had sacrificed so much and suddenly everyone could go to the West."But Weiss said that ambivalence soon gave way to "pure joy" and the couple travelled to Berlin where they "joined in taking pickaxes to the Wall."  - Spontanenous applause for 'Gorbi' - Astrid and Reinhard Gregor, west Germans from outside the Volkswagen headquarters city of Wolfsburg, travelled the more than 200 kilometres (125 miles) to Berlin to join in the anniversary celebrations.Standing outside the Adlon Hotel opposite the Brandenburg Gate, they led a spontaneous round of applause and choruses of "Gorbi, Gorbi" among onlookers as former Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, who is in town for the festivities, entered the building. The hotel set up a slab of the Wall with his visage at the entrance, in honour of the man revered in Germany for helping pave the way to the Iron Curtain's peaceful fall.Astrid, 58, a retired teacher, said her son Lars, who was eight years old when the Wall fell, used to dream of how people from the East could escape imprisonment in their own country. "He used to ask me whether they could just use a balloon to fly over the Wall," she said.She said she remembered vividly when the first East Germans weeks later were able to drive to Wolfsburg in their spluttering Trabant cars."I thought my newborn would suffocate!" she said with a laugh, remembering the clouds of engine fumes.Her husband Reinhard, 61, a retired fireman, said he and his colleagues spent the day in bitterly cold weather greeting East Germans with hot tea. "My only regret is that we weren't here in Berlin on the night of November 9," he said. Frank Marschner, a 56-year-old forester from the east German town of Neustadt, said November 9 marked the beginning of a new chapter in his life."The freedom to travel is the freedom we've enjoyed the most," he said, flanked by his wife Pia, 54."It started with a jaunt to West Berlin and it's since taken us to Canada, Greece, Cape Verde -- all over the world. Places we could never even dream of in the GDR."Join the conversation about this story »


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Vivid memories of 'pure joy' on Berlin Wall anniversary

Berlin (AFP) - Germans flocked to their reunified capital Sunday to toast the 25th anniversary of the Berlin Wall's fall and swap memories of a night of "pure joy."Huddled in wintry weather for a giant street party at the Brandenburg Gate, visitors prepared for the evening's highlight of nearly 7,000 illuminated white balloons along the Wall's former route ascending into the night sky.  Sigrid Weiss from the eastern town of Fuerstenwalde, and Joachim Behrendt, who grew up in East Berlin, now live in west Germany and said they were pleased to see East Germans' courage during 28 dark years of division honoured. "We were always people who loved freedom," said Weiss, 62. "It's not that our lives were so terrible, but it was a golden cage."Behrendt, 64, worked in the so-called German Democratic Republic (GDR) organising circus tours abroad."I was able to send world-class trapeze artists to France and Japan but I couldn't even leave East Germany," he said.He called it "the bad luck of history" that he lived just 100 metres (330 feet) from where the Wall was built and ended up on the wrong side, while most of his family lived in the west.The couple, who met as teenagers in 1970, applied for permission to defect in 1986.Weiss spent six months in official custody while the regime tried to convince her to withdraw her request."But I was never one to buckle," she said with a smile.Weiss and Behrendt were eventually able to leave in 1987, just two years before the Wall would fall."I had such mixed feelings that night," Behrendt said."We had sacrificed so much and suddenly everyone could go to the West."But Weiss said that ambivalence soon gave way to "pure joy" and the couple travelled to Berlin where they "joined in taking pickaxes to the Wall."  - Spontanenous applause for 'Gorbi' - Astrid and Reinhard Gregor, west Germans from outside the Volkswagen headquarters city of Wolfsburg, travelled the more than 200 kilometres (125 miles) to Berlin to join in the anniversary celebrations.Standing outside the Adlon Hotel opposite the Brandenburg Gate, they led a spontaneous round of applause and choruses of "Gorbi, Gorbi" among onlookers as former Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, who is in town for the festivities, entered the building. The hotel set up a slab of the Wall with his visage at the entrance, in honour of the man revered in Germany for helping pave the way to the Iron Curtain's peaceful fall.Astrid, 58, a retired teacher, said her son Lars, who was eight years old when the Wall fell, used to dream of how people from the East could escape imprisonment in their own country. "He used to ask me whether they could just use a balloon to fly over the Wall," she said.She said she remembered vividly when the first East Germans weeks later were able to drive to Wolfsburg in their spluttering Trabant cars."I thought my newborn would suffocate!" she said with a laugh, remembering the clouds of engine fumes.Her husband Reinhard, 61, a retired fireman, said he and his colleagues spent the day in bitterly cold weather greeting East Germans with hot tea. "My only regret is that we weren't here in Berlin on the night of November 9," he said. Frank Marschner, a 56-year-old forester from the east German town of Neustadt, said November 9 marked the beginning of a new chapter in his life."The freedom to travel is the freedom we've enjoyed the most," he said, flanked by his wife Pia, 54."It started with a jaunt to West Berlin and it's since taken us to Canada, Greece, Cape Verde -- all over the world. Places we could never even dream of in the GDR."Join the conversation about this story »


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Greece Police on Scene of Officer Involved Shooting

Greece Police are on scene at Stone road in Greece, where one person has been shot. Greece, N.Y. (WROC) - Greece Police are on scene at Stone road in Greece, where one person has been shot. We've been told that officers responded to the area for a call of ...


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Greece Police investigating officer-related shooting on Stone Road

According to police, the male victim was taken to the Strong Memorial Hospital. The Greece Police Chief tells us the victim is alive at the hospital.


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Thousands of Greeks feast on rejected veges

More than 5,000 Greeks have eaten over two tonnes of fruit and vegetables rejected by food stores in an event that highlighted the waste of food in ...


READ THE ORIGINAL POST AT tvnz.co.nz

Former Greek Financial Prosecutor Claims His Job Was Obstructed By Govt Officials

In an interview on Greek newspaper “Proto Thema,” and fifteen months after his resignation, former financial prosecutor Spyros Mouzakitis claimed that his work was obstructed by government officials. He further made special reference to the loans given to political parties when he was in charge of examining such cases that did not have any collateral. He said that a law passed in January 2013 by then Justice Minister Antonis Roupakiotis, establishing the institution of a Prosecutor for Corruption Crimes, was a message to him and his colleague Grigoris Peponis, to suspend the open investigations on the grounds that they no longer came under their jurisdiction. “Put your pencils down, you are inappropriate for the job,” he was told by the Justice Minister. Mousakitis pointed out that the cases they handled were then returned to the new financial prosecutors, two months after he and Peponis resigned and a transitional ordinance was passed. Mouzakitis claimed that his job was obstructed when investigating several Greeks with accounts in a Swiss branch of HSBC that were included in the so-called “Lagarde List.” He claims he was in constant threat of disciplinary actions during his probe. He further asserted that a draft law Former Justice Minister Miltiadis Papaioannou attempted to pass, tried to abolish their posts because of specific preliminary investigations they had opened and whose findings did not have government support. The case that caused the most displeasure was that on loans taken out by political parties, since many of these were given by banks without any kind of collateral.


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Prime Minister Samaras Meets with Greek Community in Egypt

On the sidelines of the tripartite Summit that took place in Cairo, Greek Prime Minister Antonis Samaras met with representatives of the Greek community of Egypt. “You, the Greeks of Egypt, represent the living continuity of Hellenism,” Samaras said to ...


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Kidnapping Case Comes to an End in Athens

An end was given today at the kidnapping case of a 27-year-old university student that was kidnapped from Athens, Greece. The case has been kept under wraps until today. The girl was the niece of Asteras Tripolis football team owner Giannis Kaimenakis. She was kidnapped on Friday, October 31, outside her apartment in the area of Kypseli, in downtown Athens. According to information that was made public today, the victim’s family received a note that was handed to the police for examination, where they tried to figure out if it was written by the girl. When they were convinced that it was written by her, they decided to give the kidnappers the ransom they were asking for. The kidnappers originally asked for 10 million euros but after a negotiation they settled for 82,500 euros. The family, guided by police, left the money at a designated spot in the area of Neo Iraklio, in northern Attica. The girl was later returned at the area where she was kidnapped from, in Kypseli. Police is still searching for the kidnappers.


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More than 5,000 people fed with rejected fruit and vegetables in Greek city of Thessaloniki

by  Associated Press 2 tons of rejected vegetables feeds 5,000 Greeks Associated Press - 9 November 2014 11:07-05:00 THESSALONIKI, Greece (AP) — More than 5,000 Greeks have eaten over 2 tons of fruit and vegetables rejected by food stores in an event that highlighted the waste of food in advanced societies. People lined up in the northern Greek city of Thessaloniki Sunday to eat Briam, a medley of vegetables cooked in large casseroles, as well as crepes and fruit salads. The event was part of a global campaign called "Feeding5000." The organizers said they had received the vegetables from local farmers after they had been rejected by food stores, either because of their shape or because the stores decided to cancel contracts with the farmers. They said the produce was perfectly edible and that about 30 percent of the annual global foodstuff production gets lost or wasted. News Topics: Business, General news People, Places and Companies: Greece, Thessaloniki, Western Europe, Europe Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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Kenyan Kandie wins Athens Classic Marathon, breaking race record

For the Greek organizers of the Hellenic Sports Federation (SEGAS) all 35,000 participants in the 42 kilometers course, as well as the shorter distance ...


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Turkish Navy authorized over oil crisis with Greek Cyprus

BostanoÄŸlu's statement came after a question on which rules of engagement the Turkish Navy would follow if Turkish vessels confront Greek or Israeli ...


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55th Thessaloniki International Film Festival Awards

The 55th Thessaloniki International Film Festival was completed yesterday in the northern port city of Thessaloniki, Greece. The festival ended with the traditional award ceremony, celebrating the best films of the year. “Perpetual Sadness,” directed by Mexican Jorge Perez Solano, took the top prize “Golden Alexander-Theodoros Angelopoulos” for Best Film. It tells the story of women in a remote Mexican village in the desert, where they experience solitude and the sorrow of being abandoned. The film “Next to Her,” directed by Israeli Asaf Korman, won the “Special Award-Silver Alexander.” Two sisters live together in a Haifa apartment. One is mentally retarded and the other one has to take care of her. The “Special Jury Prize-Bronze Alexander” was awarded to “The Lesson,” directed by Bulgarians Kristina Grozeva and Petar Valchanov. The film also won the Best Screenplay award. A teacher in a Bulgarian village has to choose between being a teacher and solving her family’s financial problems. The Best Female Performance award was given to Brooke Bloom from the United States for her performance in Anaj Marquardt’s “She’s Lost Control.” The Best Male Performance was given to Sverrir Gudnason from Sweden for his performance in “Flugparken” (Blowfly Park), directed by Jens Ostberg.


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Receive the word of truth

Since New Testament Greek is what scholars call Koiné Greek (rather than classical Greek), that was evidently the predominant dialect of the ...


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Nick de Bois MP: Why the Government's changes to the European Arrest Warrant wouldn't have ...

That's exactly what the Greek authorities did to my constituent Andrew Symeou – who was extradited to Greece in 2009 to face charges in connection ...


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Greek community celebrates Saint Nektarios' feast day: photos

St Nektarios Greek Orthodox Church in Wollongong honours the feast day of Saint Nektarios. Picture: CHRISTOPHER CHAN. St Nektarios Greek ...


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The Churchill Factor by Boris Johnson

John Crace distills the Mayor of Londons portrait of Winston Churchill down to a self-regarding 600 wordsWhat better way to begin a book about the Greatest Englishman than with me? Ive always admired Winnie and I feel sure he would have returned the favour. But back to Churchill for a while. Who was he and what did he do? To find out, I went to lunch with his grandson, Sir Nicholas Soames, at Simpsons. Sadly, after a hearty side of ox and several bottles of Chateau Margaux, Fatty dozed off before we got very far, so Ive had to rely on my amanuensis and the cuttings folder.So here am I in the bowels of the House of Commons, sitting in the very chair where Winston saved Britain in its darkest hour. While pygmies such as Halifax and Chamberlain preached appeasement, Winston alone stood firm against the Narzis. That took some guts. Imagine what Britain would have looked like under Herr Hitler? A granite version of the Pantheon of Agrippa as the Hall of the People, the Elgin Marbles given back to the Greeks, and not a Boris Bike in sight. It doesnt bear thinking about. Continue reading...


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Euro 2016: Claudio Ranieri Surprises with Historic Picks

Claudio Ranieri has brought about wonders in his latest picks for the game against the Faroe Islands for the Euro 2016 qualifiers. Greece’s last three games were dreadful to watch. That is partially the coach’s fault for being unable to put together a decent team; however no one can deny he’s not trying. Heavy-duty striker Kostas Mitroglou is asked to sit out for this game after his recent banal performances, same with pretty-boy Giorgios Samaras who hasn’t won his West Bromwich manager over and tends to keep him on the bench. In what’s considered one of the most surprising picks in years, Claudio Ranieri decided to bring on newbies Thanassis Dinas (Panathinaikos), Christos Tasoulis (Panionios) and Michalis Bakakis (AEK Athens). AEK Athens is placed currently first in the league, but in the second division. It’s the first time in the history of the Greek national team that a coach decides to bring on two players from lower divisions. It is not an unbecoming decision though, as both players (Michalis Bakakis and Petros Mandalos) are considered two of the most promising talents Greece has to offer. Unexpectedly but well-deservedly, Fanis Gekas is back on the call-sheet after his phenomenal appearances with Akhisar Belediyespor. As both Kostas Katsouranis and Giorgios Karagounis are no longer called upon, it might well be that Fanis Gekas will wear the captain’s armband in the upcoming game against the Faroe Islands on November 14. Here is the complete list with Claudio Ranieri’s recent announcement: Goalies: Orestis Karnezis (Udineze), Panagiotis Glykos (PAOK), Stefanos Kapino (Mainz) Defenders: Vasilios Torosidis, Kostas Manolas (AS Roma), Vaggelis Moras (Hellas Verona), Sokratis Papastathopoulos (Borussia Dortmund), Giorgos Karambelas (Levante), Avraam Papadopoulos (Trabzonspor), Christos Tasoulis (Panionios) Midfielders: Lazaros Christodoulopoulos (Hellas Verona), Panayotis Kone (Udineze), Andreas Samaris (Benfica), Haris Mavrias (Sunderland), Giannis Maniatis (Olympiacos), Alexandros Tziolis (PAOK), Michalis Bakakis, Petros Mandalos (AEK Athens), Thanassis Dinas (Panathinaikos) Strikers: Dimitris Salpingidis, Stefanos Athanasiadis (PAOK), Fanis Gekas (Akhisar), Nikos Karelis (Panathinaikos)


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Greece Holds ‘World Record’ in Olive Oil Production

DogHouseDiaries website has created a map that shows in which product or activity each country, worldwide, has a comparative advantage, based on figures of commercial, political and social activity.  Greece holds the ‘world record’ in “olive oil production.” Although in some cases the results seem weird, the map creators claim that they have based their findings solely on official figures. According to the creators, the United Kingdom has a ‘world record’ in “fascist movements,” while Russia holds the ‘world record’ in “Raspberries and nuclear warheads” and India in “Movies.” Greece holds the ‘world record’ in “olive oil production.” This is no surprise to anyone following the recent boost in olive oil production and exports that has been officially recorded in the past few years.


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Egypt, Greece, Greek Cyprus form regional energy cooperation

In this photo provided by Egypt's state news agency MENA, Greek Cypriot leader Nicos Anastasiades, from left, Egyptian President Abdel-fattah ...


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Greece Prodded On Gay Unions

Greece's Ombudsman has chastised the government for failing to comply with European Union directives toe extend civil unions to gay couples. The post Greece Prodded On Gay Unions appeared first on The National Herald.


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Conditions in Greece’s Transplant Units Deemed ‘Tragic’

Greece ‘s transplant units in hospitals are facing serious problems due to the lack of staff and medical specialization, with the cases of the two largest transplant units, the Laiko in Athens and the Ippokratio in Thessaloniki, being indicative. As daily “To Vima” reports, there is a significant lack of anesthesiologists at the Thessaloniki hospital, while the Laiko has seen the reconstruction of its kidney transplant unit delayed for over two and a half years. The Laiko’s liver transplant unit, which operated for three years since 2006, has not had its license renewed for technical reasons, as 10 nurses are required. As such, the liver transplant unit in Thessaloniki has borne the brunt of liver transplants. Furthermore, scientists have stressed that organ donation has declined in the past five years, with the national health care system struggling to maintain interest. The national transplant organization (EOM) recently presented a survey which shows that in Greece there are seven organ donors per one million people, when the European average is 20 or more. Of the 146 reported deaths in Intensive Care Units (ICU) last year, only 62 of the deceased donated organs. According to the EOM, the doctors do not have the hospital beds to offer the care that is desperately needed, nor do they have the necessary staff to focus on organ donation when a patient dies in an ICU. The lack of ICUs and specialized staff means that far fewer organ donations are made. At present only 540 ICU beds are available in Greece, while a further 154 are unavailable due to staff shortages.


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Tripartite with Greece and Israel also being developed

Government Spokesman Nikos Christodouides on Sunday revealed preparations are underway for a tripartite meeting between Cyprus, Greece and ...


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EGYPT – GREECE – CYPRUS TRILATERAL SUMMIT CAIRO DECLARATION

We, Abdel-Fattah El Sisi, the President of the Arab Republic of Egypt, Nikos Anastasiades, the President of the Republic of Cyprus, and Antonis ...


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Sisi praises Greece, Cyprus understanding of Egyptian stances -- spokesman

The Egyptian Presidential spokesman has said President Abdel Fattah El Sisi has praised Greece and Cyprus full understanding of Egyptian stances.


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High Security Greek Jail Plans Falter

Government promises in January this year to build high-security prisons in the aftermath of terrorist escapes haven't been kept. The post High Security Greek Jail Plans Falter appeared first on The National Herald.


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Kandie leads Kenyan sweep of Athens Marathon, breaks course record

by  Associated Press Kenyans sweep Athens Marathon Associated Press - 9 November 2014 05:38-05:00 ATHENS, Greece (AP) — Felix Kipchirchir Kandie won the Athens Marathon Sunday, setting a new course record of 2 hours, 10 minutes and 37 seconds. Kandie broke away from compatriot Raymond Kimutai Bett after 35 kilometers to win by nearly two minutes. Bett was timed in 2:12:34. Josphat Kiptanui Chobei came in third in 2:15:38, 13 seconds ahead of fellow Kenyan Julius Kiplagat Korir. The previous course record was held by Italy's Stefano Baldini, set at the 2004 Athens Olympics. News Topics: Sports, Men's track and field, Marathons, Track and field, Men's sports People, Places and Companies: Stefano Baldini, Athens, Greece, Western Europe, Europe Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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New Record Time Set at 32nd Classic Marathon Race in Athens

The 32nd Classical Marathon Race took place this morning November 9, in Athens, Greece. Kenyan marathon runner Felix Kandie, was the big winner of this year’s race, covering 42 kilometers — from Marathon to the Panathinaic Stadium (downtown Athens) — in 2 hours, 10 minutes and 36 seconds! This is a new record time for the Marathon Race, beating the record time of Italian marathon runner Stefano Baldini, who had covered the 42 kilometer race in 2 hours, 10 minutes and 55 seconds in 2004. Baldini had won a gold medal for his achievement at the marathon race during the Athens 2004 Olympic Games. In second place at today’s 32nd Classic Marathon Race was Raymond Bett, also a marathon runner from Kenya. In third came another Kenyan runner, Ashwini K. Choubey. More than 35 thousand runners participated in today’s race, with a record number of foreign participants. Greek runner Christoforos Merousis, was the first Greek to pass the finish line after 2 hours, 25 minutes and 14 seconds. The 5 km Marathon race that began a little after 8 a.m. this morning, was the most popular race, starting from Amalias Avenue and passing through many main streets of Athens. This race was joined by almost 9 thousand participants, among of which participated many Greek celebrities. The remaining two races, the 10 km race and the 42 km race began at 9 a.m. this morning. The race is expected to be completed around 6 p.m. this afternoon. In the meantime, many streets in the city center and along the way extending from Marathon to Athens will also remain closed.


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Greek gods, demigods and quests in modern America: The Percy Jackson series

Be it the exploits of Hercules, Perseus or Odysseus or their ilk, the warrior kings of the Indian mytho-religious ethos, the knights of King Arthur, Persian princes, Arabian chieftains (Hatim Tai) and merchants (Sindbad), Russian bogatyrs Dobrynya Nikitich and Ilya Muromets, the old Spanish gentleman (of magnificent imagination but a tenuous grip on reality) of La Mancha, or the expeditions of a ...


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Greece Defies Troika Over Payments

Greece's coalition government is forging ahead with a plan to let taxpayers pay overdue bills in installments, ignoring international lenders. The post Greece Defies Troika Over Payments appeared first on The National Herald.


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Egypt, Greece, Cyprus to Turkey: Stop Drilling for Oil

Egypt, Greece and Cyprus called over the weekend to Turkey to stop drilling for crude oil and gas near Cyprus' coastline and avoid similar acts in the ...


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Greece and the Greek Islands Culture, Cuisine and History

One place in particular to explore should be Greece and the Greek Islands. Greece will not only fulfill your desire of blue skies and delightful food, but ...


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Look back in joy: the power of nostalgia

Long considered a disorder, nostalgia is now recognised as a powerful tool in the battle against anxiety and depression. Tim Adams meets the researchers proving that looking back improves the look of tomorrowIs it healthy to dwell in the past? Up until about 15 years ago most psychologists would have suggested probably not. The habit of living in memory rather than the present, of comparing how things once were with how things are now, was for several centuries thought at best a trait to avoid and at worst a root cause of depressive illness. Nostalgia was the soldiers malady a state of mind that made life in the here and now a debilitating process of yearning for that which had been lost: rose-tinted peace, happiness, loved ones. It had been considered a psychological disorder ever since the term was coined by a 17th-century Swiss army physician who attributed the fragile mental and physical health of some troops to their longing to return home nostos in Greek, and algos, the pain that attended thoughts of it. Since the turn of this century, however, things have been looking up for nostalgia. Continue reading...


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86-Year-Old Serb Guards Over World War I Dead in Greece

Thessaloniki, Greece: Stooped and unsteady, Djordje Mihailovic walks among rows of discolored marble crosses of Serb soldiers slain a century ago in the horrors of World War I.For over half a ...


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Egypt, Greece, Greek Cypriot Administration agree to fight terrorism

Al-Sisi said his country would seek to fully exploit agreements it previously signed with Greece and the Greek Cypriot Administration in all fields CAIRO Egypt, Greece and the Greek Cypriot Administration on Saturday underlined the need for their joint ...


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Serb, 86, Watches Over Greek Cemetery

For more than 50 years, Djordje Mihailovic has been a caretaker at Thessaloniki's Allied War Cemetery in northern Greece. The post Serb, 86, Watches Over Greek Cemetery appeared first on The National Herald.


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Magnitude 5.1 Earthquake Hits Cephalonia

A strong 5.1-magnitude tremor has hit just west of the island of Cephalonia in the Ionian Sea, western Greece. The quake, which hit at 1:15 a.m. local time (2315 GMT), had its epicenter 5 kilometres underwater, the Athens Geodynamic Institute reports. There have been no immediate reports of damage or injuries. A 4.7-magnitude quake hit the island Friday. An 5.7-magnitude earthquake on January caused widespread damage in the island, leaving hundreds homeless for days as their homes suffered severe damage and more than a dozen people were injured.


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Culinary Conversation: Recipes from my vacation — it's Greek to me

It is a popular Greek food consisting of small pieces of meat — usually pork, chicken or lamb — and sometimes vegetables grilled on a skewer.


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St. Nicholas women baking baklava for love of church and community

Holiday season is approaching, and the women of St. Nicholas Greek Orthodox Church are cooking up little pieces of heaven for their annual baklava ...


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Time for Greece to Lead on Kosovo

After the International Olympics Committee can Greece lead on EU foreign policy by recognizing Kosovo? Greece can contribute to the EU by being active in policy areas where there is no direct financial cost.


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Prosecutor: Heroin charge won't be reduced

CANANDAIGUA — A drug charge will not be reduced for the Greece woman accused of driving a Rochester man to South Main Street in ...


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Abu Dhabi-backed $1.2bn Greek deal approved

Greek auditors have unblocked a $1.2bn sale of a prime seaside property at the abandoned Athens airport of Hellenikon, court officials said on Friday, ...


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Tim Winton: 'By the time I was five I knew. Hospital was trouble'

Many of lifes extreme human moments, good and bad, take place in hospitals but how do we really feel about them? Acclaimed Australian novelist Tim Winton explores his own complicated attitude to an institution that has loomed large in his lifeIn 1995, veteran folk singer Loudon Wainwright III released a typically mordant song in which he catalogued the births, breakdowns, deaths and near misses of friends and family. Somehow all the health campuses of memory coalesce as a single monolithic entity, a site of inescapable mortality. That hospital, Wainwright senses, will never be done with him; it will always be there, waiting.Hospital. The word itself carries historical notions of shelter, respite and hospitality. The modern institution remains a refuge, a place of deliverance. Its a bulwark against chaos. Anyone whos ever needed a hospital in a hurry knows the other-worldly sanctuary it promises. In the Greek islands 30 years ago I once sat in a small boat holding my infant sons scalp together with my thumbs as we beat into a gale towards the prospect of harbour and hospital. Although the clinic we were trying so desperately to reach was a seedy little affair Id previously avoided, during that rocky passage it became in my mind a citadel of hygiene and expertise. In extremis, we yearn for that hospital, and yet at any other time, if youre anything like me, the very word brims with dread. Like the ageing Canadian strummer, I have a lifelong preoccupation with that hospital, an aversion I refuse to call a phobia.A pale and wizened creature was carried into our house If I squinted a little he looked a bit like my dadI imagined limbs plastered into gothic contortions, bandaged heads in which black mouths gaped and pulsed like anemonesSuffering is supposed to be ennobling but being in hospital could make even a saint cruel and peevish Continue reading...


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