The 100th year of St. Louis Greek Fest at St. Nicholas Greek Orthodox Church kicks off on Friday September 1st and runs through September 4th. The annual festival attracts thousands of people each year. The festival is held at St. Nicholas Greek Orthodox ...
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Friday, September 1, 2017
GREEK manufacturing activity climbs to a nine-year high
Growth in GREEK manufacturing activity accelerated in August for the third consecutive month as rising demand at home and abroad led firms to add ...
Police oversight of GREEK organizations
This past Friday, the Georgia Tech Police Department took unprecedented steps to prevent underage drinking and misdemeanors at GREEK ...
Louie's Cafe brings Texas Hots, GREEK diner menu to News building
The signature Texas hot, a Sahlen's dog with mustard, onions and a fine-grained GREEK spiced beef sauce, is $2.49. Breakfast items run from two eggs ...
Greek Festival returns to Greek Orthodox Church
… Greek food, you won’t want to miss the 59th annual Greek …
Penn State frat brothers cleared of felony charges in horrifying 'Gauntlet' hazing death
[Brendan Young Jr., walks out for a lunch break during his preliminary hearing on charges related to the hazing death of Timothy Piazza at the Penn State's Beta Theta Pi fraternity, at the Centre County Courthouse in Bellefonte, Pa., Monday, June 12, 2017.]AP Photo/Chris Knight A judge has thrown out manslaughter and assault charges against eight Penn State fraternity brothers in the hazing death of 19-year-old sophomore Tim Piazza, Philly.com reported. Piazza died in February after a hazing ritual called "The Gauntlet," an event at which pledges drank at a series of alcohol stations and consumed four to five drinks in as little two minutes. Fourteen hours after Piazza showed up to the event he was rushed to the hospital. He died the next day. Piazza's parents, Jim and Evelyn, had spoken out vigorously before the hearing about the manner in which their son died, saying the fraternity brothers had treated their son like "roadkill." The Piazzas declined to comment on the ruling, but District Attorney Stacy Parks Miller said they were "shocked" by the decision, according to Philly.com. In May, 18 members of Beta Theta Pi, as well as the national fraternity, had charges brought against them in connection with Piazza's death. Eight of the 18, along with the fraternity, were charged with involuntary manslaughter. The other charges, totaling nearly 900, included aggravated assault, tampering with evidence, hazing, and providing alcohol to minors. The judge has allowed the lesser charges to stand, including hazing and providing alcohol to minors. Piazza's death rocked Penn State's Greek life and magnified the dangers of drinking culture and hazing on campus. Since then, Penn State has issued sweeping changes to its Greek system. NOW WATCH: University Of Virginia Students And Frat Respond To The Alleged Sexual Assault Detailed In Rolling Stone Article
Brexit & Beyond: Why Brexit Talks Are Turning Tougher, German Domestic Stocks Soar, Greek Economy Grows Some More
Brexit & Beyond: Europe in Flux is The Wall Street Journal’s round-up of news and analysis of how Brexit will affect global business, economies and finance. You can sign up here. MUST READS British Secretary of State for Exiting the European Union ...
The mystery trail of 5.7 million year old fossilised footprints in Greece that could shake up our understanding of human evolution
A trail of 5.7 million-year-old fossil footprints discovered in Crete could upend the widely accepted theories on early human evolution. The new prints have a distinctly human-like form, with a similar big toe to our own and a ‘ball’ in the sole that ...
The History of Tailgating: From Ancient Greece to the Ivy League
On Saturdays and Sundays over the next several months, as the leaves turn bright colors and a chill develops in the air, millions of Americans will be sitting in football stadium parking lots, eating burgers and drinking beer. The practice of tailgating is ...
Magnitude 5.0 earthquake hits Greek island of Rhodes
ATHENS, Greece (AP) — Greek authorities say a magnitude 5.0 earthquake has struck the Aegean Sea island of Rhodes, but no injuries or damage have been reported. The Athens Institute of Geodynamics said the epicenter of Friday afternoon's quake was in the ...
The Racist GREEK Banana Scandal Is The Most Embarrassing Thing That Has Ever Happened To ...
Students at the University of Mississippi — better known as “Ole Miss” — were forced to cancel a “GREEK Life” retreat last weekend after a discarded ...
GREEK asylum service releases new relocation statistics
Greece's Asylum Service on Friday published data showing that more than 18,000 asylum seekers were relocated from Greece to other countries in ...
Belgian Viewer Complains about Company Removing Cross from GREEK Church in Ad Photo
“I am outraged that the Lidl stores that sell GREEK products, erase photos of Greece, part of its landscape and its culture,” a viewer wrote to the RTL TV ...
Human Footprints Found In Greece Are 5.7 Million Years Old
Scientists say they may have found human footprints in Greece that date back to a time when it is commonly believed our ancestors were still only in Africa, potentially changing our ideas of how the species evolved and dispersed. The footprints, found ...
Meet the brothers fighting for indebted Greek homeowners
ATHENS, Greece — Leonidas Papadopoulos is a doctor, his brother Ilias an economist, and once a week they take a break from ordinary life to fight the government. They go to court every Wednesday, the day homeowners in default on mortgages lose their ...
Greece Achieves Anaemic Economic Growth in Second Straight Quarter
The Greek economy grew, albeit aneamically, for the second straight quarter, provisional figures released Friday showed. It is a development that’s positive, but nevertheless unlikely to raise hopes that the economy is on more stable ground, after 7 ...
Greek-American festival features cutlure, food and fun
TOLEDO, Ohio (WTVG) - This marks the 47th year for the annual Greek-American Festival in Toledo. The weekend tradition kicks off on Friday, Sept. 8 and runs through Sunday, Sept. 10. The event features a fully-stocked food tent, complete with favorite ...
Archbishop Ieronymos protests against violation of religious freedoms by Educartion Ministry official
Greek Orthodox Church head sends letter to Education Ministry
GDP growth below forecasts, ELSTAT provisional data reveals
Government comments figures prove Greece had turned the page
Minister of Foreign Affairs N. Kotzias' statements following his meeting with the Minister of Foreign Affairs of the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, N. Dimitrov (Skopje, 31 August 2017)
N. KOTZIAS: In Thessaloniki, where I was, the weather was just as good as here in Skopje, which means that the same sun shines on both of us. What I want to say is that I'm pleased to be here. I am pleased that your country is emerging from the crisis, has overcome its political crisis, just as we are emerging from our economic crisis. This shows how much we have in common and why Nikola and I must be optimistic. I am pleased that, after almost exactly one year, I am again in this hall, where I had the honour of addressing your diplomats. I am even more pleased to be talking again with Nikola and continuing the conversation that we initiated in Athens, in a series of telephone calls, and at every opportunity. We are discussing the major issues we are facing, the common future of our two states. I am pleased at the very positive results we had on the Confidence-Building Measures at the meeting the day before yesterday, between the large delegations from both sides – 17 members in our delegation and 25 in yours – which shows that the relations between our two countries are developing more intensively than with almost any other neighbour. We will implement all the measures. New railway lines, new pipelines for natural gas. Cooperation between universities. Cooperation between Diplomatic Academies. We talked about the issues of energy, transport, research, police cooperation, and the security of the whole region. And we'll talk again in two months, when we have the new meeting of the four Balkan countries – your country, our country, Bulgaria and Albania – where we will discuss issues of security and economic cooperation in our wider region. I must say that I am also pleased, as the Minister of Foreign Affairs of Greece, that our policy of non-interference in your country's domestic affairs was vindicated. You will have seen that, over the past two and a half years, Greece has not issued even a single announcement on the internal affairs of our friendly northern neighbour; that Greece supported and supports, with all of its power, the stability, sovereignty and territorial integrity of our friendly northern neighbour. Your stability also fuels our stability. Our growth fuels yours. There are a lot of investments, quite a lot of trade. We can develop this more. And I was pleased to tell you, in retrospect, that Greece stood up against any thought of imposing sanctions on you in the past. We have experience of the senselessness of such issues. I want to underscore – allow me Nikola, you know this, but I will say it to the media of our two countries – Greece is unwaveringly in favour of the stability of our countries and of our relations. In favour of territorial integrity and the immutability of borders throughout the region. In favour of the sovereignty of each state in its space. And we are in favour of the Euroatlantic path of the whole of the Western Balkans. We believe deeply that the accession of the countries of the Western Balkans, and in particular of our friendly northern neighbour, to the Euroatlantic structures will make our lives easier and contribute to the development of the whole region. This path requires that we develop our relations, economic and social, and that we overcome the problems and any irredentism that exists and that creates non-existent geopolitical problems, because we do not have geopolitical problems between us, we do not have geostrategic problems. In fact, we have common interests. Irredentism often converts these common interests of ours into a struggle, a culture war, as we say in political science. And that is why the education of all of the young people in all of the countries of the region, our legislation, our symbols are very important to us, and in this direction I want to underscore again that I am pleased that the government of your country, like our government, wants to develop the Confidence-Building Measures. Why do we want these measures? First, to strengthen the relations between our two states. Second, to show our societies how close we are and why we need to develop our relations. But also for each side to come to trust the other even more. Today we are not in the era we were when I took over as Minister of Foreign Affairs, when I found a situation in which many believed that your official state wanted to expand to Larisa, and that we wanted to break you up. That is, that we were heading for the fourth Balkan war. An extreme description of issues that we both want to resolve and that we will resolve, as we have agreed, because we are both peace-loving states. We believe in international agreements, in international law. We appreciate one another and believe it is good that we are neighbours. And if we have problems once in a while, remember that there are much worse neighbours than you for us and us for you. In fact, we are lucky. Because any issues we have, we can and must resolve them with sincerity in the direction we mentioned. We have read and are following the declarations of the new government with interest. We understand that these are not easy times and that it requires courage. What we often call social courage, in order for one to overcome the problems of the past. You know my well-known and favourite phrase, and many people are using it now. That history must be a school, a guide to a positive future, and not a prison. And that's how Nikola and I see it. What's more, we share a name. You know, it is the ancient name Laonikos. 'Laos' is people, and 'niko' is the victor. The one who wins over the people. With the advent of Christianity, the name went from Laonikos to Nikolaos. And then, in Greece, we shortened it further. Nikos. So we share the same name. And that's a good sign. We agree. We see our dear northern neighbour's agreement with Bulgaria as a positive development, and we will follow it with interest. And we talked about this: Whether we can, with the same pace, resolve any issues that remain between us. And I say this once more publicly, that Greece, too, wants to help with the experience it has. We have this experience because we joined the EU early, in 1981, and we joined NATO in the 1950s. We want to help, and we will respond to any request so that the already existing course for the rule of law, for the modernization and Europeanization of our northern neighbour can be completed. We, too, will benefit. And it will bring us geographically closer to the other partners in the Euroatlantic system. I want to tell you something. An international actor asked me, 'Can you resolve your problems?' I responded that, in life, we have problems constantly, even though we know, and you know this from your personal life, that every solution to a problem may create another one, but it is more developed, progressive. It is more modern, more European, I would say in today's parlance. This is not the issue. The issue is for us to put our hand on our heart and ask ourselves whether we want the problems to be resolved. We, the governments, the societies, the citizens? From my first day as Minister of Foreign Affairs, and, as I understand it, Nikola as well, we have put our hand on our heart and want to resolve the problems to the benefit of our peoples and our states. We are two states whose relations can and must be based on our both winning, on a win-win situation. And I say this from the heart – and this is the direction I worked in – and I am talking about the solution of the problems and the promotion of the Confidence-Building Measures, the cross-border cooperation, the cooperation between all of our institutions. And in this framework, within the European Union itself, we insist on the promotion, for all of us, of a culture of compromise and consensus. This is a phrase that, to my satisfaction, has now also been adopted in European documents. It is a culture that concerns the European Union itself, the relations between states and the relations between the states within the European Union itself. I also want to say something else from my heart. Greece went through a major crisis, probably the longest post-war crisis in the world. We endured. And in spite of the crisis, Greece continues to be the most powerful country in the region. I don't say this as something good for us, but as a responsibility. The richest party has the most capacities and capabilities, and it has to meet the responsibilities deriving from this. Power is not a privilege or a right. In the world we live in, our power comes with responsibility, and from this perspective we want all of the problems to be resolved, for our good neighbour to have a course towards NATO and the European Union. We want to support your country. We will do whatever we can, because we, too, are a medium-sized country in Europe and a small country in the world. We don't have huge capacities, but we want to use the capacities we have to the benefit of our neighbours as well. Our European experience and the experience we have with security issues. And we also have things to learn. The people of the country I am in today – and I thank you for the invitation – are a proud people. A people shaping their characteristics, a people who, whatever we may say in our day-to-day lives, also love our country. Each resident of this country comes to Greece an average of two and a half times a year, comes to Greece for holidays. And this is why I will say something that we discussed once in a public debate here in the Balkans. We have a little craziness and a little absurdity. There are countries that awaken to the music of the other country, we move to this music a little, trying to wake up, and then we curse this country. Then we leave our homes, we eat something, like breakfast, from this country, and then we say, "Wow, what a great country this is!". Then we go to work, we go out for a meal in the afternoon, and afterwards we say, "we are the good guys, we are older, we have this and that ...". Crazy and absurd! This is normal in life. Because in personal life or in the life of states, is there not absurdity and craziness? But deep in our hearts, if we want to be honest, we love each other and we like going to the Greek islands or to Halkidiki. I hope the road gets finished – a Greek company is also to blame – and that all of these people coming from northern Europe come to you as well as to us. Deep in our hearts, we sometimes love. Love is also a little difficult, and we are tyrannized without reason. So, to create even more trust, to resolve our problems creatively, to strike down any irredentism, which, rather than dancing in the morning to our common music and enjoying the many cultural elements we share – food and so on – grumbles and complains. It isn't just a political expression, it is an expression of life. And so as not to take that path, I will take the path of thanking Nikola for the invitation, and I also thank him for the good talks we are having and for the good talks we will have in the future. I thank him for the hospitality, and I thank all of you for the great interest you always show in how my country thinks as well, how we discuss things with your country. I think that the future belongs to our cooperation, and we have to have the courage and boldness to overcome whatever absurdity or grumbling is holding us back and let our love find expression. It is good for peoples to love each other and resolve their problems and not be inhibited. What I want to say is, irredentism is not the only thing in life. There are also beautiful sentiments, and in day-to-day life there are beautiful sentiments between our peoples. We have to foster these sentiments and strike down irredentism. Thank you very much. JOURNALIST: You said that Greece is interested in stability in the Balkans, and you asked the government in Skopje to show courage. Is there courage in Greece for supporting fYROM's accession to NATO, or for moving ahead on the resolution of the name issue? N. KOTZIAS: Thank you for the question. Greece supports the Euroatlantic path of the whole of the Balkans. The countries of the Balkans became candidate countries at the Thessaloniki Summit. For a number of countries in the region that are NATO members, this happened under the Greek Presidency. So we don't need to prove our courage. And I say that we don't need to prove our courage because this is part of our policy, and we don't do it just for others. We do it because we believe it is the right thing for Europe and we believe it is the right thing for the future of our country. For decades, we were the only NATO and EU member state in the region. This wasn't in our interest either, because it set us apart, cut us off from the other countries. As regards our neighbour's European path, we want to support it with the experts we have and, if and when it is requested of us, pass on and transfer our experience and expertise. Our experience and knowledge concern not just positive things. They also concerns our weaknesses: things we do that others shouldn't do. With regard to NATO, there are the Bucharest decisions, and through these decisions and their implementation, this country will become a NATO member. How these NATO decisions are implemented is not up to us. It is up to those who must decide. We want this dear northern neighbour to be in both NATO and the European Union. But we want this based on the rules and conditions of the European Union and NATO. And as I realise that there are sometimes highly charged feelings on such issues, at the last informal meeting of the Council of Ministers of Foreign Affairs of the European Union, in Malta, we talked extensively about Turkey, with the Europeans vacillating as to whether or not they want Turkey, and I said one thing: Turkey will decide whether or not it wants to be European. If Turkey wants to be European, it will become a member state of the European Union. If Turkey doesn't want to be European, what can we do? It's Turkey's decision. This holds true for every country. I think that in this country, where I am today, there is a European leadership and a European will, and, by extension, a European perspective. But part of the European perspective is respect for the rules and conditions and decisions of NATO and the European Union. It's not up to me.
Greece Rotary Club, Town of Greece team up for new ADA-accessible picnic tables
Greece, N.Y. – There are some new additions to town parks in Greece. The town and the Greece Rotary Club teamed up to get new ADA-accessible picnic tables in parks around the town. Rotarians dedicated time and work to build the tables and put them in the ...
Calendar, Sept. 1-2: Classic Boat, Victoria Fringe and GREEK festivals
GREEK Fest, with GREEK food, music, dance, children's activities and entertainment. Friday through Monday, 11 a.m.-10 p.m. at the GREEK Community ...
Yacht's Distress Call Leads to Big GREEK Marijuana Bust
A GREEK coast guard statement says a Turkish-flagged wooden sailboat that issued a distress call near the island of Nisyros was found to be carrying ...
North Shields dad stuck in GREEK hospital tells of desperate battle to fly home after injury
After jetting off to Corfu with wife Karen, their GREEK paradise quickly turned into hell after Tony was admitted into hospital with no means of getting ...
Books to Add to Your September Reading List
Greek artists and writers continue to produce powerful and moving works. Many contemporary authors are gaining international renown through translation. Ersi Sotiropoulos and Vassilis Alexakis […] The post Books to Add to Your September Reading List appeared first on The National Herald.
Trumpspeak
I had thought to end my summer commentaries with upbeat reflections on the solar eclipse and my summer viewing of vintage Greek films. That approach […] The post Trumpspeak appeared first on The National Herald.
The Light of Greece
It is undeniable that the miracle of Greek antiquity is one of the highest peaks of the accomplishments of the human spirit and continues to […] The post The Light of Greece appeared first on The National Herald.
Tsipras: Greece Has Turned a Page, as ELSTAT’s 2nd Quarter Figures Prove
ATHENS (ANA) – Economic indices are positive and the figures released by the Hellenic Statistical Authority are encouraging, Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras said on Friday in […] The post Tsipras: Greece Has Turned a Page, as ELSTAT’s 2nd Quarter Figures Prove appeared first on The National Herald.
Fire on Outskirts of Rhodes Partially Under Control
RHODES, Greece (ANA) – A wildfire that broke out on the slopes of Aghios Stefanos hill (Monte Smith), just outside the city of Rhodes, was partially […] The post Fire on Outskirts of Rhodes Partially Under Control appeared first on The National Herald.
Greece v Belgium Betting: Martinez's men can secure World Cup qualification in style
Combining a solid defence with a free-scoring frontline, Al Hain-Cole expects Les Diables Rouges to dominate the scoresheet against Skibbe's men Belgium will be hoping to confirm their place in World Cup 2018 when they travel to the Stadio Georgios ...
Yanis Varoufakis: I told Jeremy Corbyn to be a radical Remainer
Former Greek minister says 'Labour has shown greater political initiative and seriousness than Theresa May.'
Culture Ministry Fails to Include Amphipolis Monument in EU-Funded Program
Greece’s Ministry of Culture is making an effort to correct the mistake of not including the Amphipolis tomb in the National Strategic Reference Framework (NSRF) EU-funded program for 2014-2020. Culture Minister Lydia Koniordou explained that there was a misunderstanding regarding the application deadline to the Region of Central Macedonia where the site belongs. The regional […]
Aqua Vista Hotel Presents New Exhibition at Santorini’s ‘Aqua Gallery’
Aqua Vista Hotels is introducing a new exhibition titled “Think of Me”, at its own “Aqua Gallery” on Santorini. Located at the premises of the Art Hotel, “Aqua Gallery” is the group’s latest venture, aiming at promoting contemporary Greek artists and attracting art lovers. The new exhibition was inaugurated on August 26, in the presence […]
Greece is the word: Sani Resort; Eagles Villas; Ikos Oceania
Here’s why my son loves holidays in Greece: he says there’s no sightseeing. I know, I know ... but his point is that the hotels in one part of the country, where rugged hills covered with pines and olive trees roll down to sandy coves, are now so good ...
Greek life sponsors welcome back pool party
Members from Greek organizations in the National Pan-Hellenic … event and are involved in Greek life. “To be honest, I …
Macedonia Calls On Greece To Recognize 'New Reality' In Skopje
… NATO. After a meeting with Greek Foreign Minister Nokos Kotzias in … October. In Greece, local media cited unnamed sources in Greece's … following the collapse of Yugoslavia. Greece claims a historical right to …
Official figures show Greece's economy grew for a second straight quarter
ATHENS, Greece (AP) -- The Greek economy grew for the second straight quarter, provisional figures released Friday showed in a development that's likely to raise hopes that the debt-laden economy is on more stable ground following years of crisis.
GREEK Festival was a savory plunge into authentic cuisine
Driving down Mayfield the week I returned to Cleveland, I was struck by a large, sprawling banner advertising this year's “GREEK Festival,” seemingly ...
GREECE'S Economy Grows For Second Quarter In A Row
GREECE has the highest unemployment rate in the 19-country eurozone and EU as a whole at 21.7%, the EU statistics agency Eurostat said Thursday.
Varoufakis's questionable account of the origins of the Greek crisis and his surprising relations with ...
Saying that GREECE is not Iceland and/or that GREECE is part of the Euro Zone is not enough to put an end to the debate. Varoufakis's attitude, in reality, ...
Cigarettes in GREECE Market 2017- Design Competition Strategies by Identifying Who-Stands ...
"Cigarettes in GREECE, 2017", is an analytical report by that provides extensive and highly detailed current and future market trends in the Greek market ...
Bailouts End Approaching, Greece Still Seeking Debt Relief
ATHENS – With the end of three international bailouts of 326 billion euros ($388.38 billion) a year off, Greece’s Radical Left SYRIZA-led coalition is still […] The post Bailouts End Approaching, Greece Still Seeking Debt Relief appeared first on The National Herald.
SYRIZA Minister Rips Greek Firefighters, Fire Service
ATHENS – After Greece’s firefighters – working under severe budget cuts imposed by his ruling Radical Left SYRIZA-led coalition – worked for weeks to put […] The post SYRIZA Minister Rips Greek Firefighters, Fire Service appeared first on The National Herald.
Greece Will Open Arbitration Over Gold Mine Project
ATHENS – With as many as 2,400 jobs at risk, Greek Energy Minister Giorgos Stathakis said the government will take a Canadian company to arbitration […] The post Greece Will Open Arbitration Over Gold Mine Project appeared first on The National Herald.
“Between the Seas” Performing Arts Festival to Be Held in Athens
ATHENS (ANA) – Transferred for the first time ever from New York to Greece, the Mediterranean performing arts “Between the Seas” Festival will this year take […] The post “Between the Seas” Performing Arts Festival to Be Held in Athens appeared first on The National Herald.
Sold-out Blue Dream Gala Raises $300K for Charities
SOUTHAMPTON, NY – The annual Blue Dream Summer Gala, one of the largest charitable fundraisers of the Greek-American community held its annual event – a […] The post Sold-out Blue Dream Gala Raises $300K for Charities appeared first on The National Herald.
Harvey Ravages the Greeks of Houston
HOUSTON, TX – “Few and rather fortunate are those who have not been affected in one way or another by Hurricane Harvey,” former AHEPA Supreme […] The post Harvey Ravages the Greeks of Houston appeared first on The National Herald.
Investors await key US jobs report as UK manufacturing hits four-month high
A strong non-farm payrolls report on employment and wages would raise prospect of another US interest rate hike before the end of the year * UK manufacturing growth hits four-month high * European markets rise ahead of US jobs report * Eurozone factories enjoy strong demand in August 1.10pm BST Time for a look again at European markets, which have extended gains this afternoon ahead of the US non-farm payrolls at 13.30. 12.12pm BST SOME POSITIVE NEWS ON GREECE’S ECONOMY, WHICH GREW FOR A SECOND SUCCESSIVE QUARTER BETWEEN APRIL AND JUNE. GDP grew by 0.5% in the second quarter, maintaining the pace of first-quarter growth. Greek economy expands for second straight quarter https://t.co/lBhzqsTrAr pic.twitter.com/B4sVpyoMeX Continue reading...
GREEK island tourist ship crashes: Hundreds evacuated in darkness
Hundreds of ferry passengers were evacuated in an emergency after one of the largest GREEK island tourist ships ran aground in darkness last night.
Thessaloniki International Fair to Celebrate the Famous Greek Frappé Coffee
Frappé, the famous Greek iced coffee beverage, will be honored in this year’s Thessaloniki International Fair, celebrating 60 years as an essential accessory of many Greeks’ lifestyle. In this year’s 82nd TIF, the cherished frappé will have a ...