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The 12th Annual Los Angeles Greek Film Festival Preview

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LOS ANGELES – The 12th Annual Los Angeles Greek Film Festival (LAGFF) will be held on June 6-10 at the landmark Egyptian Theatre, 6712 Hollywood Blvd. in Los Angeles.

The five-day Festival celebrates the best of new films from Greek filmmakers worldwide and promotes Greek cinema and cultural exchange while bridging the gap between the filmmakers and Hollywood. This year, a record number, over 175, films were submitted, with subjects ranging from immigration and economy collapse to documentaries about the beauty and history of Greece.

Special “Orpheus Awards” are given to the most outstanding new films in the dramatic, documentary, and short film category. The theme of this year’s Orpheus Awards is “The Academy of Greeks,” paying tribute to Greek artists who have received an Academy Award or Oscar nomination since 1935. All Awards presenters will be female to reflect LAGFF support of the #TimesUp movement.

The Closing Night feature film precedes the star-studded Awards Ceremony which will be followed by a Greek feast under the Hollywood stars at the Egyptian courtyard. The Best Supporting Actor of West Side Story, George Chakiris, will be one of the honorees this year with actress Rita Moreno presenting his Award.

Tentative LAGFF Events Schedule:

June 4 – Soft Opening at UCLA (TBA)

June 6 – Red Carpet Opening Night Film & Gala with a special performance by singer-songwriter Ariana Savalas

June 7 – Film Screenings

June 8 – Film Screenings and Retrospective

June 9 – Film Screenings and Filmmakers Brunch

June 10 – Red Carpet Closing Night Film, Orpheus Awards Ceremony & Gala

LAGFF is a 501 © (3) non-profit organization and open to all filmgoers and patrons of the arts. The full program schedule and tickets are available at www.lagff.org

Follow Us: @lagff

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Short Stories, Memoir, and Poetry for Your List

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Reading literature increases our empathy and offers insights into the world through the eyes of the author. Short stories, memoirs, and poetry can often express what would remain silent otherwise and the shared experience can touch the lives of readers around the world in ways the author might not even have expected.

Short stories are a wonderful way to get your literary fix when you feel like you have no time to invest in longer works of fiction. Writers eager to pen the Great American novel are often told to begin by writing short stories, but as Stephen King noted, “A short story is a different thing altogether – a short story is like a quick kiss in the dark from a stranger.” Kinda Sorta American Dream (Tailwinds Press, 2015) by Greek-American author Steve Karas is his debut collection.

Among the stories, an unemployed autoworker finds himself at an elite seminar for aspiring Santa Clauses; and an IT specialist eagerly awaits the Mayan apocalypse in his parents’ basement as his father descends into dementia. As noted in the book’s description, “Through fourteen curiously ambivalent studies, Karas methodically examines and reconfigures the core archetypes—dot-com entrepreneurs, hard-striving immigrants, obsessive diner owners—that haunt and dominate the American psyche. Their narratives, set against a dizzying panorama that stretches from the ruins of post-2008 Detroit to the desperate paradise of suburban Florida, evoke the familiar American mythology of army bases, Manhattan high-rises, and Midwestern video stores. Yet Karas’ masterful, minimalist portraits are ambiguous and tinged with uncertainty.”

The characters are winners, losers, and hopeless visionaries on a quest to create disruption in their lives, all while doubting if change is even possible.

Steve Karas (his pseudonym) lives in Chicago with his wife and two kids. His stories have also appeared in the short-fiction anthologies Friend.Follow.Text. #storiesFromLivingOnline (Enfield & Wizenty, 2013) and Bully (KY Story, 2015), as well as literary journals like Necessary Fiction, jmww, Hobart, WhiskeyPaper, and Little Fiction. Kinda Sorta American Dream and Karas’ other works are available online. His website is steve-karas.com.

The Journey by Dionysios S. Kotsonis. Photo: Greece in Print

The Journey: From Pyrgos to the Fed and from Wall Street to Starting Eurobank by Dionysios S. Kotsonis is a memoir that brings dramatic moments in history to life. Beginning in pre-war Pyrgos where he was born in 1930 through to a successful shipping career, Kotsonis highlights the experiences that made his life so unique. From carefree childhood summers spent at his family’s Pyrgos farm to his high school years at Athens College, his studies in New York City leading to a teaching career and his appointment as a research economist at the United States Federal Reserve Bank.

During the Kennedy years, Kotsonis was in Washington, appointed as a consultant to the president’s economic advisory committee. He then spent time working on Wall Street until he returned to Greece to take on the leadership in Andreadis’ Investment Bank and was followed by his involvement in the establishment of Latsis’ Euroinvestment Bank, now the Eurobank.

Dramatic historical events in Greece, including the German Occupation, the Decemvriana clash of 1944, the Civil War, and the Metapolitefsi following the junta, as well as episodes in U.S. history, including McCarthyism, the Bay of Pigs invasion, and the Vietnam War, are recounted. The author’s wit and self-deprecation, keeps things in perspective. The book is available online at:

For those interested in adding some poetry to their list, The Complete Poems of Constantine Cavafy, translated by Daniel Mendelsohn, is a good choice in honor of Cavafy’s birthday on April 29. Born in Alexandria in 1863 to parents who both hailed from Constantinople, Cavafy was proud of his heritage and his illustrious ancestors. According to his biography, his Phanariote great-grandfather Peter Cavafy (1740-1804) was Secretary of the Ecumenical Patriarchate, while his Phanariote great-great-grandfather John Cavafy (1701-1762) was Governor of Jassium, as was his great-grandfather Michael Scarlato Pantzo (brother of Meletius, Patriarch of Alexandria), while his great-great-great-grandfather Theodosius Photiades (brother of Cyril, Bishop of Caesarea Philippi) was an Official of the Ottoman Government. Cavafy’s cosmopolitan family roots extended from Constantinople to London (via Alexandria, Trebizond, Chios, Trieste, Venice, and Vienna), and he was the youngest of seven brothers (two elder siblings, a boy and the sole girl, died in infancy). More information about Cavafy and his work is available online at www.cavafy.com.

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Greek President Congratulates first Greek Mayor in Germany

Frank Skartados, Respected NYS Assemblyman, Passes Away at 62

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MILTON, NY – Frank K. Skartados, 62, a well-respected and popular New York State Assemblyman died on Sunday, April 15th from pancreatic cancer at St. Luke’s Cornwall Hospital.

He is survived by his loving daughter Alyssa and brothers Russos and George (and wife Tina) both living in the United States. Other surviving family members are in Greece. Skartados is also survived by his beloved in-laws Myrna, Selma, Matt, Nivia and Rodrigo.

The seventh of eight children, Skartados was born on the Greek island of Astypalaia. At age 14, on July 4, 1970, he arrived in New York City with his mother. He became a U.S. citizen on November 24, 1976 and graduated from George Washington High School in upper Manhattan. Skartados later worked in the restaurant industry and eventually owned one.

His business savvy eventually allotted him the funds to educate himself at the State University of New York at New Paltz and he graduated with honors and a degree in Political Science. At the same time, he worked at the Commandant’s Office of the New York Military Academy in Cornwall, NY. Skartados went on to earn a master’s degree in International Studies at the State University of California at Sacramento.

He later served an internship at the United Nations Center Against Apartheid. For the next eight years he returned to the New York Military Academy to serve as chairman of the Health Department. He was also a teacher of Environmental Studies and American History.

In 2000, he made a career change and devoted his life to renovating properties in downtown Poughkeepsie, including building the Aegean Entertainment Center, the largest entertainment venue between Albany and New York City. At the same time, Skartados moved to a farm in Milton, NY where he raised goats, sheep and chickens for pleasure.

Frank Skartados’ next career move was to be elected to the New York State Assembly beginning January 2009. He temporarily lost the seat two years later by less than twenty votes. Then, in March 2012, Skartados regained the office in a special election and held it ever since, for a total of four-plus terms. Skartados’ district, the New York 104th, is in the Mid-Hudson Valley, and includes the cities of Newburgh, Beacon and Poughkeepsie and the towns of Newburgh, Marlborough and Lloyd.

He was proud to have the only district in New York whose cities and towns all border the Hudson River. As a result he focused his attention on the Hudson’s environmental protection, and helped to fund the creation of several riverside parks and trails. In addition he secured numerous grants to lower school and municipal taxes by investing in equipment, infrastructure, workforce housing and libraries.

Skartados’ popularity grew as he was elected by large majorities ranging from sixty to eighty percent of the vote. He was best known for his humble demeanor and for giving passionate speeches on issues such as education reform, support of immigrants and worker rights.

Viewing will take place at the DiDonato Funeral Services in Marlboro NY located at 1290 Route 9W on Thursday April 19 (from 2pm-4pm and 6pm-9pm), and on Friday April 20 (from 2pm-4pm and 6-8pm). A Prayer Service will take place on Friday evening at 8:30pm at the funeral home.

Funeral arrangements were entrusted to Carl J. DiDonato, Jr., of the DiDonato Funeral Service, Inc. (845)236-4300, www.didonatofuneralservice.com

(From the Poughkeepsie Journal, published on Apr. 17)

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Federation of Hellenic Societies Honors James and Makropoulos at Gala (Video)

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NEW YORK – The Federation of Hellenic Societies of Greater New York held its annual fundraising event the Greek Independence Parade Gala at Terrace on the Park in Flushing on April 15. The event honored Ahepan and well-known businessman Paul Makropoulos and the New York City Public Advocate, Letitia James.

Among those present, were the official members of the Federation, the representatives of the two major Greek-American banks, and institutional guests from Greece. President of the Federation Petros Galatoulas reiterated the encouragement for a mass turnout on 5th Avenue for the parade on April 22.

Video: TNH/Costas Bej

Both the Chairman of Greek Independence Parade Gala at Terrace on the Park, Nikolas Mpardis, and the Chairman of the Parade Committee, Nancy Papaioannou, shared the same sentiment.

The Consul General of Greece in New York, Konstantinos Koutras, called for a moment of silence for the unfortunate Greek pilot, Giorgos Baltadoros, reminding of the tragic incident that plunged Greece into mourning.

Galatoulas then acknowledged Mr. Koutras’ initiative and announced that next year an invitation to the parade will be sent to the two soldiers being held prisoner in Turkey, as he expects all will be resolved by then and the soldiers will be released.

There will be three vacant seats on the officials’ dais at the parade, one in memory of Giorgos Baltadoros and two in honor of the detained soldiers.

The award presentations followed, first to Letitia James, who will be an honorary grand marshal of this year’s parade. During her speech, she mentioned the important role played by Greek-Americans in New York, while she joked about the nickname “mavroula” that her Greek friends have given her.

“Everyone can feel the strong presence of the Greek community. Greek-Americans have offered much to the city of New York and, like other ethnic groups, are helping New York remain the most important city in the world,” she said, adding words of praise for Greek-American City Council Member Costa Constantinides, who was present and thanked her for her contribution.

Immediately afterwards, the event’s MC, Nomiki Kastanas, presented the award to Paul Makropoulos, praising his contributions to the Greek community and his business career.

“I want to thank you all. This prize is a great honor for me. It is very important to me that I can talk to my children about their Greek-American heritage and show them the parade of Greek Independence,” said Mr. Makropoulos, who also thanked his brothers in AHEPA.

Galatoulas then gave special thanks to the well-known businessman, Yiannis Kalafatis, whom he praised for his contribution to the Greek community and his low profile.

Also in attendance at the event were the Mayor of Corfu, Konstantinos Nikolouzos, as well as the Corfu Chamber of Commerce President Giorgos Chondrogiannis.

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After Andrea and Gianna Constand’s Testimony, Prosecutors Build to Conclusion of Cosby’s Case

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NORRISTOWN, Pa. (AP) — Prosecutors are building to the conclusion of their case against Bill Cosby with investigators and a pharmaceutical expert expected to take the stand beginning Tuesday in the comedian’s sexual assault retrial.

The prosecution on Monday delivered a searing one-two punch as chief accuser Andrea Constand rejected defense allegations that she concocted her story to score a big payday, and her mother testified that Cosby apologized and called himself a “sick man.”

Andrea and Gianna Constand’s testimony followed that of five additional accusers who told jurors that Cosby had drugged and assaulted them two decades earlier.

Greek-American Andrea Constand withstood a defense cross-examination that sought to expose her as a con artist who set Cosby up, leaving the witness stand at his retrial without budging from her allegation that he drugged and molested her at his suburban Philadelphia home in 2004.

“Did you ever fabricate a scheme to falsely accuse him for money?” Cosby lawyer Tom Mesereau asked her.

“No, sir,” Constand replied.

Constand, a former Temple University women’s basketball administrator, was mostly calm and composed in more than seven hours of testimony over two days.

Her mother followed her on the witness stand on Monday and was more feisty, often clashing with prosecutors and bristling when they asked her if she benefited from Andrea Constand’s $3.4 million civil settlement with Cosby.

“She didn’t buy ME a house,” Greek-American Gianna Constand snapped. “This isn’t about money.”

The mother testified about a phone conversation she said she had with Cosby about a year after the alleged assault on her daughter in which he described in graphic detail their sexual encounter and then apologized.

Gianna Constand said she was “very combative” with Cosby, demanding he tell her the medication he had given her daughter and what he had done to her.

She said Cosby told her he had given Andrea Constand a prescription drug — not the cold and allergy medicine Benadryl as he has claimed — but did not provide the name of it. She said he described how he had touched Andrea Constand’s breasts and vagina and guided her hand to his penis.

“He said to me, ‘Don’t worry, Mom, there was no penile penetration,'” Gianna Constand testified.

Gianna Constand, left, the mother of Andrea Constand, leaves the courtroom after after testifying in Bill Cosby’s sexual assault retrial at the Montgomery County Courthouse in Norristown, Pa., Monday, April 16, 2018. (Dominick Reuter/Pool Photo via AP)

She told jurors that Cosby said he “felt like a dirty old perverted man” and, at the end of the call, conceded he was a “sick man.” Her testimony prompted Cosby, sitting with his lawyers at the defense table, to open his eyes wide.

Andrea Constand told jurors last week that Cosby knocked her out with pills and then sexually assaulted her. Cosby, now 80, says Constand consented to a sexual encounter. His first trial ended with a hung jury.

At last year’s trial, Cosby’s lawyers suggested that Constand and the former “Cosby Show” star were lovers who had been intimate with each other in the past. This time, defense lawyers are trying to portray Constand as an opportunist who feigned romantic interest in him and then leveled a false accusation of sexual assault so she could file a lawsuit.

Constand has testified that she saw the former TV star as a mentor and had previously rejected his advances. And she said her phone calls to Cosby were about basketball and had nothing to do with romance.

The defense plans to call as a witness a former Temple administrator, Marguerite Jackson, to testify that before Constand lodged her allegations against Cosby in 2005, Constand had mused to her about setting up a “high-profile person” and filing suit. Jackson has said that she and Constand worked closely together, had been friends and had shared hotel rooms several times.

Bill Cosby departs after his sexual assault retrial, Monday, April 16, 2018, at the Montgomery County Courthouse in Norristown, Pa. (AP Photo/Matt Slocum)

On Monday, Constand testified she did not “recall ever having a conversation with” Jackson.

A judge blocked Jackson from testifying at last year’s trial after Constand took the stand and denied knowing her. At the time, Judge Steven O’Neill ruled Jackson’s testimony would be hearsay.

The judge has ruled that Jackson can take the stand at the retrial but indicated he could revisit the issue after Constand was finished testifying.

The Associated Press does not typically identify people who say they are victims of sexual assault unless they grant permission, which Constand has done.


By MICHAEL R. SISAK and CLAUDIA LAUER ,  Associated Press

Andrea Constand, left, returns to the courtroom after a lunch break during Bill Cosby’s sexual assault retrial at the Montgomery County Courthouse in Norristown, Pa., Monday, April 16, 2018. (Dominick Reuter/Pool Photo via AP)

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Maria Menounos and Kevin Hart Surprised Chicagoans at the Gym

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CHICAGO (BUSINESS WIRE) – Actor and comedian Kevin Hart and Greek-American TV/radio personality Maria Menounos – Health Ambassadors for Rally HealthSM – surprised hundreds of gym goers yesterday at Midtown Athletic Club when the trio showed up to participate in fitness classes and stage a mini health festival. Their original plan to host thousands of Chicagoans at the Rally HealthFest in Maggie Daley Park was changed due to inclement weather.

Kevin Hart, Maria Menounos, Ron “Boss” Everline and Rally Health Surprised Chicagoans at Midtown Athletic Club after Rally HealthFest – a free outdoor event promoting healthy living through fun activities – scheduled in Chicago’s Maggie Daley Park was cancelled due to inclement weather. Here, Rally Health Ambassadors Kevin Hart and Maria Menounos are all smiles in Chicago after joining gymgoers in their morning workout. (Photo: Business Wire)

“The rain couldn’t dampen the vibe of positivity that our outdoor Rally HealthFest set out to deliver to the people of Chicago. It just got redirected indoors to the awesome people spending their Saturday at the club. We thank everyone for letting us crash their workout!” said Kevin Hart, Rally Health Ambassador.

“This is a classic ‘make lemonade out of lemons’ scenario. While we were disappointed that we had to cancel our Rally HealthFest in the park, we were thrilled that we were still able to meet up with a great group of people to celebrate healthy living. Our thanks to Midtown Athletic Club for hosting us with just a day’s notice!” said David Ko, president and COO, Rally Health.

As they do at the usual Rally HealthFests, Kevin, Maria and Kevin’s personal trainer Boss participated in several fitness classes including high-intensity sprints, boxing and a spin class, and chatted it up with club members about the benefits of leading a healthy lifestyle. Rally set up a photo booth and a place where people could write letters to their future selves.

“We were delighted to host Kevin, Maria and Boss at yesterday’s Rally Health event. It was a wonderful surprise for our members and an opportunity to showcase everything Midtown has to offer,” said Michael Mahoney, general manager of Midtown Athletic Club.

Rally HealthFests are free, public events sponsored by digital health company Rally Health. The events, which can draw up to 12,000 people, are designed to promote healthy living through fun activities that demonstrate four key pillars of health: MOVE, EAT, CARE, FEEL. People of all ages come out to participate in family-friendly activities focused on healthy living, for example, participating in group exercise classes and cooking demonstrations, riding stationary bikes, playing memory and brain games, learning practical health tips, and running potato-sack races in the Kids’ Zone.

About Rally Health, Inc.

Rally Health, Inc. is a consumer-centric digital health company that makes it easy for individuals to take charge of their health and collaborates with health plans, care providers, and employers to engage consumers. The company’s flagship offering is Rally®, a digital health platform featuring a suite of online and mobile solutions that help people manage their health and health care needs: Rally Engage SM focuses on personalized health and well-being support; Rally Choice® is a health benefits marketplace; and Rally Connect® offers care provider search and cost transparency. More than 30 million consumers have access to the Rally platform through more than 200,000 employers, and payers such as UnitedHealthcare, BlueCross BlueShield of South Carolina, Health Alliance, and others. With offices in Washington, D.C., San Francisco, Chicago, Minneapolis and Denver, the team behind Rally Health SM has been working together since 2010 to transform the consumer health industry. For more information, please visit www.RallyHealth.com.

About Midtown Athletic Clubs

Midtown Athletic Clubs manages a portfolio of super-premium health and fitness clubs in the U.S. and Canada, including Midtown Athletic Club and The Hotel at Midtown in Chicago. Midtown provides members and guests with the places and people to help them live healthy and happy lifestyles. Midtown Athletic Clubs feature the best of everything at world-class facilities – from spas to swimming pools, tennis to turf training, bistros to boutiques, and of course, state-of-the-art fitness. For more information, please visit www.midtown.com.

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Simotas Announces Assembly Passage of Her Legislation to Fight Pay Discrimination

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NEW YORK – Government employees throughout New York State would have the same rights and remedies as private employees when they suffer pay discrimination, under legislation (A2425) which passed the New York State Assembly on April 16 and was sponsored by Assemblymember Aravella Simotas (D-Astoria).

“When someone’s pay is discriminatory, they should have the right go into our State courts to sue for fair pay. Currently hundreds of thousands of public employees do not have that right. That makes no sense and it’s just plain wrong,” Assemblymember Simotas said.

The Simotas bill would amend the New York State Civil Service Law to expand and clarify the meaning of equal pay for equal or equivalent work, spelling out that public employees must receive fair, non-biased compensation in which sex, race or national original is not considered either directly or indirectly. The legislation explicitly gives government employees, whether they are unionized or managerial, the right to sue in State court when they’ve experienced pay discrimination, something they currently cannot do. Only private sector employees have the right to sue in state court to enforce pay equity.

“In an ideal world government employers would set an example of righteous treatment of employees, but unfortunately we live in a world where pay inequity in the public sector is very real,” Simotas said. She noted as one example the 2015 federal Equal Employment Opportunity Commission finding that for many years New York City had discriminated against more than a thousand black female administrative managers by paying them substantially less than their white male counterparts in similarly situated jobs and titles. Local 1180 of the Communication Workers of America filed that complaint with the EEOC.

Under the Simotas bill, if a government employer was found in violation of the Civil Service Law’s equal pay provisions, the employee would be entitled to back pay, compensatory and punitive damages as well as attorney fees and other costs. The employer would also be enjoined from continuing the discriminatory practice.

“When workers have access to the courts to fight pay inequities that is a powerful way to get closer to eliminating those inequities,” said Assemblymember Simotas.

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AHEPA Rips Greek Communists for Trying to Pull Down Truman Statue

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The American Hellenic Educational Progressive Association (AHEPA), the largest Greek-American organization in the United States, denounced an attack in Athens by a Communist-led mob that tried to bring down a statue of the late President Harry Truman.

“AHEPA respects and encourages freedom of speech and the rights of individuals to gather and demonstrate peacefully,” the association’s Supreme President Carl R. Hollister said in a statement.
“However, there are certainly more productive and effective ways to express dissent or opposition than to resort to senseless acts of vandalism,” he said, praising riot police who tried to prevent yet more vandalism on the statue that has been a lighting rod target of Leftists for years and has been bombed, painted and toppled previously since being erected in 1963.

AHEPA donated the statue to honor the Truman Doctrine, which gave $2 billion in economic and military aid to the Greek government to fight off Communist guerrillas during the country’s civil war between 1946 and 1949.

The assault came as part of Communist-led protests against the US-led air strikes on Syria for using chemical weapons on civilians, including women and children, which the Communists insisted never happened and was faked, despite independent verification of the videos and photos and the scene.

The assault made headlines around the world with Communists furious that while Truman’s help was essential for Greece that it was aimed at them for trying to take control of the country during the 1946-49 Greek Civil War.

Truman provided critical military and material assistance to Greek nationalists who beat back the Communists who still exist as an irrelevant political party today with around 6 percent of the vote, where they have been hovering for years despite constant recruiting of young people and college students.

Protesters used a metal grinder to try to cut off the statue’s feet and tug it down with ropes before riot police intervened and fired tear gas to disperse the crowd. The statue suffered minor damage. At least three protesters were injured, with blood trickling from their heads, a Reuters witness said.
Several hundred Communist (KKE) supporters joined a march to the U.S. Embassy, a couple of miles from the statue.

“What we did today is a symbolic move against the U.S. and the war (in Syria),” Yorgos Perros, a member of the Communist-affiliated union PAME told the nes agency. “The statue is a symbol of imperialism and the United States in Greece.”

The 12-foot, bronze Truman statue, also not far from the prime minister’s office, has been a regular target of protesters who have vandalised or attacked it with paint against what they keep calling American imperialist policies and those upset the US backed the military junta dictatorship from 1967-74 that oppressed Leftists, also angry America backed the Turkish invasion of Cyprus in 1974.
The statue had to be removed and restored in 1986 after being bombed. Truman was U.S. President from 1945 to 1953.

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Review: Aeschylus’ The Persians Still Resonates Today

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NEW YORK – Though Aeschylus’ The Persians premiered in the City Dinoysia of Athens in 472 BCE, but it still resonates today. The play, the only surviving one in an otherwise entirely lost trilogy which one the first prize that year, is not as well-known as Aeschylus’ complete trilogy The Oresteia. The recent off Broadway production presented by the American Theatre of Actors which ran April 4-15 at the John Cullum Theatre in Manhattan led many audience members to wonder why the play is not revived more often.

The production, with Artistic Director James Jennings and directed by John DeBenedetto vividly brought the ancient play to life with a solid cast. The emotionally charged play recounts the Persians’ response to their defeat by the Greeks at the Battle of Salamis in 480 BCE, the decisive moment in the Persian War, allowing the cast to display their skills to great effect. The moving and often graphic descriptions of the aftermath of the battle highlighted the talent of each performer.

Aristotle thought the play was sympathetic to the defeated Persians, but Aristophanes saw it as a celebration of Greece’s victory in an ongoing war. Either way, the resonance of the play for audiences from ancient times to the present remained, and remains, strong, especially in view of the continuing conflicts around the world. It highlights the humanity of the people who the original audience would have seen as the “enemy.” The “us against them” mentality doesn’t hold up very well if we can identify with the characters as human beings who are suffering.

A scene from Aeschylus’ The Persians off Broadway with Anthony Paglia as the Herald. Photo: Courtesy of The Persians’ Cast

The dynamic cast included Shaun Melady as Xerxes, Sonya Rice as Queen Atossa, Richard Barreto as the Ghost of King Darius, and Anthony Paglia as the Herald. The Persian officials, deftly portrayed by Elliot Wesley, Charlie Akre, and Nick Kennedy, act as the Chorus and open the play, drawing us into the tragedy. Rice as Atossa, the widow of Darius and mother of Xerxes, conveyed the powerful emotions of her role with her impressive performance. Barreto offered a commanding stage presence befitting his kingly role, even though the king was a ghost. Melady gave a compelling performance as Xerxes struggling to come to terms with his defeat.

The revival reminds us of the constancy of human nature and the paired down set and staging allowed the actors and Aeschylus’ timeless text to shine.

The American Theatre of Actors was founded in 1976 by James Jennings, who continues as its President and Artistic Director. It is a repertory theatre company consisting of 50 actors, 20 playwrights and 10 directors. Its purpose is to promote the development of new playwrights, directors and actors and provide them a creative atmosphere in which to work without thepressures of commercial theatre. The plays are dramas and comedies dealing with the social and ethical problems of contemporary society. Over 800 new works have been presented and more than 8,000 actors have worked at ATA, including Dennis Quaid, Bruce Willis, Danny Aiello, Chazz Palminteri, William Fichtner, and Edie Falco.

A scene from Aeschylus’ The Persians off Broadway. Photo: Courtesy of The Persians’ Cast
Anthony Paglia and Sonya Rice in a scene from Aeschylus’ The Persians off Broadway. Photo: Courtesy of The Persians’ Cast
A scene from Aeschylus’ The Persians off Broadway with Richard Barreto and Sonya Rice. Photo: Courtesy of The Persians’ Cast
Shaun Melady as Xerxes with the Persian officials played by Elliot Wesley, Charlie Akre, and Nick Kennedy. Photo: Courtesy of The Persians’ Cast
A scene from Aeschylus’ The Persians off Broadway with Sonya Rice as Atossa and the Persian officials played by Elliot Wesley, Charlie Akre, and Nick Kennedy. Photo: Courtesy of The Persians’ Cast

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Physician Spyros Panos Arrested for Fraud, Identity Theft

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NEW YORK – Geoffrey S. Berman, the United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, announced on April 10 that Spyros Panos, a former orthopedic surgeon, who was previously convicted of health care fraud, was charged with wire fraud, health care fraud, and aggravated identity theft, in connection with a scheme in which he assumed the identity of a licensed orthopedic surgeon and obtained over $860,000 in payments for reviewing patient files in Workers Compensation cases.  Panos was arrested this morning at his home in Hopewell Junction, New York, and was presented before U.S. Magistrate Judge Paul E. Davison in White Plains federal court this morning.

According to the allegations contained in the Complaint unsealed:

Spyros Panos, the defendant, was an orthopedic surgeon practicing in Dutchess County and residing in Hopewell Junction (the “Panos Residence”).  In or about August 2013, Panos surrendered his license to practice medicine, and on or about October 31, 2013, he pled guilty, in United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, to a health care fraud charge (the “Health Care Fraud Charge”).  In or about April 2014, Panos began serving a 54-month sentence.  On or about September 16, 2016, Panos was released to a halfway house and then, about a month later, to home confinement.  Since March 2017, he has been serving a two-year term of supervised release.

In connection with medical treatment relating to Workers’ Compensation claims, a peer review may be conducted when a treating physician requests a variance in treatment.  The doctor performing the peer review is a licensed independent doctor who reviews the patient file but does not examine the patient, and writes a report opining whether the variance is appropriate.  There are companies that supply doctors who conduct such peer reviews.  Prior to being assigned to perform peer reviews, the doctor must establish that he/she has the proper credentials by providing, among other things: the schools from which the doctor earned his/her degrees and other educational credentials, the states in which he/she is licensed to practice medicine, and other pedigree and background information such as birth date and social security number.

Read the full story here.

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Trump & Stormy Daniels’ Lawyers Face-Off at Greek Restaurant

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NEW YORK – Dueling lawyers Michael Cohen and Michael Avenatti had a run-in at an Upper East Side restaurant recently, sitting at with their own separate parties at the upscale Greek restaurant, Avra on Madison Ave, the New York Post reports.

They “introduced themselves . . . they shook hands,” an Avra source told The Post. The source said the interaction wasn’t tense, and that Avra is a popular place for power players to unwind.

The encounter came after news broke that Donald Trump’s laywer Michael Cohen made a $130,000 payment to Stormy Daniels days before the 2016 presidential election.

In his first public comments about Stormy Daniels President Trump said he didn’t know about the $130,000 payment his personal attorney had made to the porn actress who alleges she had an affair with him.

Trump and his allies have hit a new level of anxiety after the raid on his personal attorney’s office, fearful of deeper exposure for Trump, his inner circle and his adult children — and more than concerned that they don’t know exactly what is in those records and electronic devices seized last week.

Daniel’s lawyer Michael Avenatti, in a tweet, he also responded to Trump’s comment about how “all lawyers” are feeling after the Cohen raid.

FILE – In this Sept. 19, 2017 file photo, President Donald Trump’s personal attorney Michael Cohen appears in front of members of the media after a closed door meeting with the Senate Intelligence Committee on Capitol Hill, in Washington. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik, File)

President Donald Trump said Sunday that all lawyers are now “deflated and concerned” by the FBI raid on his personal attorney Michael Cohen.

“Attorney Client privilege is now a thing of the past,” he tweeted. “I have many (too many!) lawyers and they are probably wondering when their offices, and even homes, are going to be raided with everything, including their phones and computers, taken. All lawyers are deflated and concerned!”

“To be clear — I am not “deflated and concerned.” I am “elated and hopeful,” Avenatti wrote. “The events of the last week reinstill the belief that NOBODY is above the law and the attorney-client privilege cannot be used by those in power to hide criminal conduct.”

(Material from the Associated Press and the New York Post was used in this report)

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Greek Jewish Shabbat on May 4-5 at Kehila Kedosha Janina

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NEW YORK – A very special Shabbat celebrating the Romaniote and Sephardic traditions of the Jews of Greece takes place on May 4-5at Kehila Kedosha Janina Synagogue and Museum, 280 Broome Street in Manhattan.

Community leaders from Greece, Seattle, Indianapolis, Portland, Miami, Atlanta, and Philadelphia will be present, including the following distinguished Hahamim: Rabbi Gabriel Negrin, Jewish Community of Athens, Greece; Rabbi Ben Hassan, Sephardic Bikur Holim Congregation, Seattle; Rabbi David Gingold-Altchek, Etz Chaim Sephardic Cong, Indianapolis; and Rabbi Nissim Elnecavé, The Sephardic Jewish Brotherhood of America.

Full Shabbat Schedule

Friday, May 4

6:45 PM Minha Afternoon Services

7:15 PM Kabbalat Shabbat & Arvith Services

Saturday, May 5

9 AM Shaharith Morning Services

12 PM Musaf Services

4 PM “The Romaniote Custom of Shaddayot” – Rabbi Negrin

4:30 PM “Teaching Levantine Sephardic Customs” – Rabbi Hassan

5 PM “Post-Expulsion Sephardic Philosophy” – Rabbi Altchek

5:30 PM Minha Afternoon Services

6 PM Seuda Shelishit & Rabbinic Panel Discussion

7:15 PM Romaniote Songs, Arvith Services & Havdala

Please RSVP to amarcus@kkjsm.org

Rabbi Gabriel Negrin is currently the Chief Rabbi of the Jewish Community of Athens. He was born to a traditional Romaniote family with heritage originally from the city of Ioannina in Northern Greece. He grew up in the Jewish Community of Athens, attending the local Jewish Community School, where he received the nickname of “the little rabbi” for his inquisitiveness and passion for Judaism. He received a Bachelors of Arts in Musicology from the Technical University of Crete. He received his Rabbinic ordination from the Shehebar Sephardic Center in Jerusalem, trained in the Romaniote Hazzanut of Greece, and is a certified mohel and shohet.

Rabbi Ben Hassan is currently the Rabbi of Sephardic Bikur Holim (SBH) Congregation in Seattle, an over 100 year old community founded by Sephardic Jews from Turkey. He was born in Manchester, England to a traditional Sephardic family of Spanish Moroccan descent and received his Rabbinic ordination from Yeshivat HaMivtar in Israel. He served as the Rabbi at the historic Sassoon Yehuda Sephardi Synagogue in Melbourne, Australia, and joined SBH in 2013 with his wife Sharona and their four daughters.

Rabbi David Gingold-Altchek is currently the Rabbi of Etz Chaim Sephardic Congregation of Indianapolis, an over 100 year old community founded by Sephardic Jews from Salonika, Monastir (Bitola), and Turkey. His family is originally from the cities of Salonika and Istanbul, and he is currently collaborating on a number of projects to help revive the Sephardic community nationwide, including the Sephardic Birthright Trip. He received his Rabbinic ordination from the Shehebar Sephardic Center in Jerusalem, served as a U.S. Army Chaplain retiring with the rank of Captain, and grew up in the Ladino Sephardic community of Florida.

Rabbi Nissim Elnecavé is an active Rabbinic educator in the New York Sephardic community, including at Kehila Kedosha Janina and the Sephardic Jewish Center of Forest Hills. He was born in Mexico City to a Turkish Ladino family and received his Rabbinical training in Jerusalem at the Shehebar Sephardic Center and Yeshivat Porat Yosef, focusing on the traditions of the Ladino-speaking Sephardic Jews of Turkey, Greece, and the Balkans. He is currently the Executive Director of the Sephardic Brotherhood and has taken an active lead in reaching out to the next generation of Sephardim and collaborating with communities across the country.

Greek Jewish Shabbat at Kehila Kedosha Janina. Photo: Kehila Kedosha Janina

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Greek Independence Day Parade History

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NEW YORK – Greek Independence Day is celebrated everywhere Greeks reside, across the globe. Parades have been a part of the commemoration since the first part of the 20th century in the United States. Towns and villages throughout Greece hold parades with schoolchildren marching in traditional costume and waving Greek flags. The armed forces parade in Athens is also held annually to commemorate Greek Independence. The history of the parade in the U.S. could easily fill the pages of a book since it follows the rich history of the Greek community. While parades have been held in many U.S. cities over the years, some of the most popular annual parades are held in New York, Chicago, Boston, Tarpon Springs, Baltimore, Detroit, and Philadelphia. The celebration of pride in our Greek heritage, history, faith, and language, along with the memories shared by family and friends lasts a lifetime.

The Federation of Hellenic Societies of Greater New York held the first Greek Parade in 1938, but it wasn’t until 1951 that the Blue and White was seen waving proudly up Fifth Avenue. The Evzones first marched in the parade in 1949 and the oldest Evzone from that historic moment currently resides in Pennsylvania and is 90 years old. According to TimeOut magazine, New York’s parade draws the largest gathering of Greeks outside of the motherland. With thousands marching and thousands watching, the parade is the culmination of the tremendous efforts by the Federation every year. With so many pre- and post-parade events, the celebration of Greek Independence is much more than just the parade itself.

Chicago’s first Greek Independence Parade was held in 1965, and as many Chicagoans will attest, it was a city-wide celebration with the route on State Street and Wacker Drive to the Eisenhower Expressway. In the spirit of the 60’s, the 1969 parade featured protesters carrying anti-junta signs. As the years went on, the parade grew and continued the march through downtown into the 1990s. By the mid-90s, the parade was moved to Greektown’s Halsted Street where it continues today.

Marchers waved the blue and white flag of Greece in Philadelphia during the Greek Independence Day parade. Photo by Costa Bej

The original Detroit Greek Parade began during World War II to raise money for war bonds for Greece, an important American ally in the fight against Fascism. The parade continued annually until the late 1960’s. Detroit’s Greek community decided to revive the parade and formed their current parade committee in 2000. An indoor celebration at the International Center in Greektown was held by the parade committee in 2001. The “resurrected” Detroit Greek Parade was held in 2002 and annually ever since.

The Boston Greek Independence Day Parade began in 1994. The 24th Boston Parade marches on Boylston Street from Prudential Tower to Charles Street and the celebration continues immediately following the Parade at the Parkman Bandstand, Boston Common with Greek folk dance performances, vendors and exhibitors, food, music, and children’s events.

FILE – The Evzones led off the Chicago Greek Independence Parade. Photo by John Ackerman

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Thalassa Benefit for Fordham’s Orthodox Christian Studies Center, May 15

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NEW YORK – The 2018 Thalassa Benefit for the Orthodox Christian Studies Center will be held on Tuesday, May 15 at Thalassa Restaurant, 179 Franklin Street (between Greenwich and Hudson Streets) in Tribeca. The Cocktail Reception and Presentation is from 6- 8:30 PM. Tickets: General Ticket: $150 per person ($135 is tax-deductible), and Young Member Ticket: $75 per person ($60 is tax-deductible). Proceeds benefit the Orthodox Christian Studies Center at Fordham University. More information is available via email: events@fordham.edu.

The Orthodox Christian Studies Center of Fordham University connects cultures, religious traditions, and academic disciplines to advance awareness and knowledge of Orthodox Christianity in public discourse. In its distinctive relationship to Roman Catholicism through the Jesuit tradition of Fordham University, as well as its location in New York City, the Orthodox Christian Studies Center is uniquely poised to engage ecumenical discussion and to foster Christian unity.

The Center supports scholarship and builds intellectual community through wide-ranging initiatives including: National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH)-supported research fellowships, the Patterson Triennial Conference on Orthodox/Catholic Dialogue, the annual Orthodoxy in America Lecture, and an undergraduate minor in Orthodox Christian Studies.

The Center also provides four distinctive avenues for academic publishing: Public Orthodoxy, the Journal of Orthodox Christian Studies, the Orthodox Christianity and Contemporary Thought book series, and the Christian Arabic Texts in Translation book series.

Dr. Aristotle Papanikolaou, left, presents an award to Michael Palamara at The Orthodox Christian Studies Center Reception with OCSC co-founder Dr. George Demacopoulos in June 2015. Photo: TNH

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Greek Designers Present Their Work at Loot: MAD About Jewelry in NYC

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NEW YORK – The Museum of Arts and Design (MAD), 2 Columbus Circle in Manhattan, has once again assembled a remarkable group of artists for their annual five-day exhibition and sale of contemporary art jewelry, with all proceeds benefiting the Museum’s programs and exhibitions.

Now in its 18th edition, Loot remains the only event in North America to provide the public with the opportunity to meet and directly acquire contemporary pieces from the most skilled, innovative, and creative jewelry artists working globally today.

Open to the public from April 17-21, this year’s Loot features a curated selection of jewelry by thirty-five international emerging and established artists. Three talented Greek artists, Katerina Anastasiou, Tassa Ganidou, and Tina Karageorgi are also among the artists this year.

Katerina Anastasiou lives and works in Athens, Greece. Her practice is based on the ancient tradition of mosaic, which originated in Greece, and which she studied at Scuola Mosaicisti del Friuli, Italy. Anastasiou is fascinated by the endless possibilities inherent in natural stones and Venetian glass tiles, or smalti, and she tests the limits of her materials in pursuit of the final form.

For the collection presented here, she focused on the direct juxtaposition of precious metal and stone to create a narrative of opposites: motion and stability, abstract forms and figurative representation, fluidity and constraint. Anastasiou approaches each of these pieces as wearable art, with the aim of bringing joy to the wearer through reflections of light and pure color, and the fusion of traditional craftsmanship and contemporary design.

Loot: MAD About Jewelry, the unique exhibition and sale is open to the public April 17-21. (Photo by TNH/Eleni Sakellis)

Born and raised in Greece, Tassa Ganidou is trained in the design and manufacture of cast jewelry. For the past two years she has focused on “non-wearable jewelry,” using jewelry-making techniques and playing with scale to create standalone jewelry sculptures. Having spent summers close to nature from an early age, Ganidou felt the need to capture a part of it: images, sounds, wood, stones, fruit, fish and birds, and the sun started taking substance in the form of jewelry. She recalls the strength she felt when wearing her early creations, and the sense of fulfillment that came out of the process. Today, she continues to use those natural found materials of the past, combining them with silver, gold, and precious stones.

She explained some of the pieces for The National Herald, noting the use of natural materials which add an individual aspect to each piece. Ganidou told TNH that she collects the various materials from her travels throughout Greece to create her designs.

Trained in ceramics, mixed media, metal sculpture, photography, and silkscreen printing, Greek designer Tina Karageorgi makes jewelry using a variety of techniques, translating works of art into wearable objects. The collection presented here focuses on porcelain, termed “the white gold” in eighteenth-century Europe—an alchemistic curiosity made of earth, water, fire, and air. This choice is informed by her love of ceramics and by her urge to touch and knead the soft material, to shape it with her hands. Precious and semiprecious stones and patinated and gilded silver complete the palette of materials. Her iconography looks at flora and fauna captured in vivid motion and vibrant color. Beyond her experience of the natural world, Karageorgi draws inspiration from a personal reading of Old Master paintings and Far Eastern artistic traditions.

“Loot remains the ultimate contemporary art jewelry shopping experience in New York,” said Loot 2018 Chair Marsy Mittlemann. “No other event offers such a variety of expressive and original jewelry from around the world. We are proud to showcase the work of contemporary jewelry artists to the public, providing a platform for their creative practice, while supporting the Museum’s education and exhibition programs.”

Tassa Ganidou with her designs at Loot: Mad About Jewelry. (Photo by TNH/Eleni Sakellis)

“The 2018 artists we invited stood out for their inspiring craftsmanship and inventiveness,” said Loot Curator Bryna Pomp. “The jewelry featured incorporates a wide range of remarkable nontraditional materials, from crocheted textiles, ecologically tie-dyed silk, felt, leather, and resin to 3D-printed nylon, titanium, safety pins, bicycle tires, X-ray film, papier-mâché, and wood.”

Loot 2018 welcomes thirty-five artists from fifteen countries, most of whom have never been shown in New York. In addition to artists from Argentina (2), Denmark (2), France (5), Germany (2), Greece (3), Israel (1), Italy (4), Japan (1), Romania (1), South Korea (1), Spain (1), Switzerland (1), United Kingdom (8), and the United States (2), LOOT will feature an artist from Thailand for the first time in the event’s history.

Loot: MAD About Jewelry reflects the Museum of Arts and Design’s commitment to the exploration of materials and process, as well as its long-standing presentation of jewelry as an art form. MAD is the only American museum with a gallery dedicated to the display of both temporary jewelry exhibits and its own collection of contemporary and modern studio and art jewelry.

At left, Katerina Anastasiou wearing her jewelry designs at this year’s Loot: MAD About Jewelry. (Photo by TNH/Eleni Sakellis)
Greek designer Tina Karageorgi makes jewelry using a variety of techniques, translating works of art into wearable objects. (Photo by TNH/Eleni Sakellis)
Jewelry designed by Tassa Ganidou. (Photo by TNH/Eleni Sakellis)
Jewelry designed by Katerina Anastasiou. (Photo by TNH/Eleni Sakellis)
Jewelry designed by Tina Karageorgi. (Photo by TNH/Eleni Sakellis)

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Greek-American Sam Galeotos Running for Governor of Wyoming (Video)

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CHEYENNE, WY – Greek-American Sam E. Galeotos is running for governor in Wyoming. He told The National Herald that his “mother’s side of the family is from Thessaloniki” and “his father’s side of the family is from a village outside of Tripoli.”

During his time working in New York City, Galeotos noted that he became a TNH reader.

Galeotos was born and raised in Cheyenne. The Galeotos family established roots in Wyoming when Sam’s grandfather and his two brothers first arrived in the capital city in 1910. They quickly became a part of the local community, establishing businesses in the food service industry, and have remained active generations later. A founding member and current Parish Council President of Holy Apostles Orthodox Christian Church of Cheyenne, Galeotos and also serves on the Metropolis Council for the Greek Orthodox Metropolis of Denver. He lives with his wife Stacey and his daughters Isabella and Nicolette on their ranch near Cheyenne.

Starting his own entrepreneurial endeavors at a young age, Galeotos worked for his grandparents, selling greeting cards door-to-door, managing paper routes, selling soft drinks at Cheyenne Frontier Days, and mowing lawns. He spent summers with his father Lee, a member of both Governors Hansen’s and Hathaway’s administrations, traveling the state.

Sam Galeotos Announcement Video

“Wyoming is a place where we meet our challenges head on.” Last week, Sam Galeotos announced his candidacy for Governor of Wyoming. Watch Sam discuss conservative ideas and a fresh perspective for our state!

Posted by Sam Galeotos for Governor on Thursday, March 29, 2018

During his junior year in high school, the family relocated to Washington DC, at the end of the Hathaway administration. While there, he experienced one of the most memorable events of his youth, attending the confirmation of Governor Stanley K. Hathaway as United States Secretary of the Interior. Also memorable for the young Galeotos was that he sat next to Supreme Court Justice William Rehnquist at a reception after the event.

Returning to Wyoming during his senior year, he graduated from Cheyenne Central High School in 1976. Working at a local lumber company to earn money for college while taking classes at Laramie County Community College, Galeotos in one year began full-time at the University of Wyoming, ultimately transferring to the University of Arizona where he earned a bachelor’s degree in Business Administration, with dual majors in Accounting and Management Information Systems. He also attended The Wharton School’s Advanced Management Program at the University of Pennsylvania.

Global Businessman & Technology Leader

After college, Galeotos returned to Wyoming once again. Unfortunately, there were not many opportunities for someone with his education and background in business and technology, so he responded to an ad in the Rocky Mountain News looking to hire computer system developers. It ended up being an entrepreneurial start-up company, developing automated accounting and reporting systems for the travel industry. Even better, the company had just been acquired by Delta Air Lines and was growing quickly. After several interviews and actually receiving a rejection letter, Galeotos convinced the company’s management to hire him, and in three years worked his way to the position of vice president of marketing and product development. The company was ultimately merged into Delta, relocating Galeotos to Atlanta, GA, with a promotion overseeing sales and service for Delta’s global reservation system.

Galeotos believes strongly in supporting community Initiatives. While in Atlanta, he served with the Boys & Girls Club of Cobb County, the United Way of Metropolitan Atlanta, and the Georgia 100 Women’s Mentoring Program. He was selected as a “community hero” to carry the torch for the 1996 Olympic Games.

In 1998, Galeotos became part of the founding management team at Worldspan Travel Information Systems, a joint venture between Delta, Transworld (TWA), and Northwest Air Lines (NWA) and later became co-chief executive officer (CEO) responsible for global operations. Recruited to join Cheap Tickets Inc., as president and chief operating officer, Galeotos in one year added the duties of CEO, and was elected to the company’s board of directors. He facilitated the sale of Cheap Tickets to Cendant Corporation, and joined Cendant as CEO of strategic distribution and travel services. Cendant was a $15+ billion dollar global company employing more than 70,000 people, with a significant presence in the travel and tourism industry, owning and operating 13 hotel brands, AVIS rental car, Galileo International, and RCI. It also had significant operations in the real estate industry owning Century 21, Coldwell Banker, and ERA. At Cendant, Galeotos became president and CEO of Galileo International, a leading travel global distribution services company, while concurrently leading Cendant’s travel distribution services division. His division employed more than 5,000 people, with 10 companies operating in over 100 countries, and generated in excess of $1.5 billion dollars in annual revenues.

After fulfilling his commitments to Cendant, Galeotos returned to Wyoming where he immediately assumed responsibility for one of his greatest passions, the Boys and Girls Club of Cheyenne. At Boys and Girls Club, he drove the funding and development of a new club facility, complete with a twelve-acre recreational complex. He has started and operated ranching, farming, and retail businesses in Albany, Carbon, Goshen, and Laramie counties. Galeotos currently serves as the executive chairman of the board for Green House Data Corporation, one of Wyoming’s premier technology companies. Green House Data started in Cheyenne and has now grown to nine markets across the United States.

Galeotos is dedicated to community service, serving on boards for The Boys & Girls Club of Cheyenne, Wyoming State Travel and Tourism, Cheyenne Regional Medical Center, the University of Wyoming College of Business Advisory Council, Cheyenne Frontier Days, Saints Constantine & Helen Greek Orthodox Church, and the All Saints Foundation.

Based on his exceptional commitment and dedication to the community, Galeotos was named “Business Person of the Year” in 2016 by both the Cheyenne Board of Realtors and the Wyoming State Board of Realtors. He was elected board president of the Cheyenne Downtown Development Authority in July 2017, where he has focused on revitalization of the downtown Cheyenne historic district.

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Win or Die: 72 Years Since Kyriakides Last Greek to Win Boston Marathon (Video)

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At least for the first mile, and only if they looked up see a statue called The Spirit of the Marathon, runners in the Boston Marathon would unlikely know that the 50th anniversary race was won by last Greek to do it, under odds so difficult it was predicted he would die in the streets.

The story of Stylianos Kyriakides is of a man who ran not for himself, but for his country in the aftermath of World War II, narrowly surviving hanging at the hands of the occupying Nazis in Athens because in his pocket was his credentials as a marathoner for the 1936 Berlin Olympics, signed by two leading members of the Third Reich.

For Kyriakides, the race was “Win or Die,” – the words written on a note handed to him moments before the start by George Demeter, a Greek-American state legislator from Boston who owned a hotel and had befriended Kyriakides.

The first time was in 1938 when the Greek runner, the champion of Greece and the Balkans, although a Cypriot by birth, had to drop out of the Boston race because blisters caused by new running shoes he was given.

Then again eight years later when Kyriakides, now withered and gaunt from the hunger and famine sweeping Greece, was brought back to Boston by Demeter to win the race or die trying, so the world would know what was happening in Greece after World War II, a country split by civil war and where people were dying in the streets from hunger, carted away each morning in a morbid ritual.

The marathon, of course, is named for the aftermath of the Battle of Marathon in 490 BC – preceding by a decade the more remembered last stand of the Spartans at Thermopylae, but Greeks have not been able to win in Boston, the most celebrated marathon in the world if no longer the most important, since Kyriakides took to the starting line in 1946.

He and was nearly barred from running by race doctors who said he was too weak and might perish in the streets, his figure still gaunt from the horrors of World War II in Greece, where Civil War would ravage the still war-torn cities and countryside.

That was before Demeter jumped up and said, “He is Greek, he is running for Greece,” the doctors backed off, and then Demeter wrote a note on a piece of paper – the front and back – and clasped it to Kyriakides’ hand and told him, “Stelio, read the top now and the back at the finish – when you win.”
Kyriakides looked at the front of the note and saw the words “H Tan E Epi Tas,” the credo said to Spartan sons by their mothers before a battle to return home “With Your Shield or On It,” and knew he had to win against impossible odds even if he seemed too weak to run. Adding to his emotion was that the defending champion was Johnny Kelley, the Irish-American whom he had met in Berlin and become friendly with, and who invited him run Boston.

In 1938, the 28-year-old Greek traveled 5,000 miles by ship to take Kelley up on his invitation and run in that year’s marathon. According to an Associated Press report, Kyriakides, “kept in condition by taking long daily walks on shipboard.”

YOU CAN’T LOSE

A Boston Globe headline called him“A Modern Pheidippedes” after the mythical ancient Greek runner who, according to legend, ran from Marathon to Athens to announce the defeat of the Persians with the single word Nenikikamen.

Prognosticators gave Kyriakides a healthy chance of victory, labeling him “among the foremost contenders.” Yet he developed blisters in his feet midway through the race and was forced to drop out.
Amid his disappointment, he made a fateful prediction to Globe sportswriter Jerry Nason.

“Someday, I’ll come back, and maybe I’ll win your Marathon.”

Before Kyriakides could redeem himself, world events interfered. In April 1939, a Globe report announced Kyriakides would be unable to run in that year’s marathon because he had been drafted into the Greek army amid tensions in Europe.

When WWII ended, the 36-year-old found the strength to return to the form that had once made him an Olympian, running to bring attention to the plight of his country, running not glory or fame or money, but for the human race.

His victory came under such miraculous circumstances it was a movie and, indeed, Disney plans to make one. Heading near the end, it was Kelley and Kyriakides, having broken away from the field, running stride-for-stride, shoulder-to-shoulder, two friends determined to win, Kelley to retain his crown and Kyriakides to take it.

It was Kelley who surged first, taking what looked to be an insurmountable lead before a wavering Kyriakides, nearly hallucinating, seeing visions of the Greek flag on the Acropolis and his family having only peas to eat, looked into the crowd and saw an old man with a big mustache who yelled at him in Greek “Yia teen Ellatha, yia ta pathia sou!” for Greece and your children, it was.

Kelley said he heard the crowd yelling “The Greek! The Greek!” and looked over his shoulder to see Kyriakides run past him like a rocket. As he came across the finish line, Kyriakides turned over the note. It said Nenikikamen. We are victorious.

The game he garnered, staying another month, brought a shipload of contributions of clothing, medical supplies and other goods for his fellow Greeks. “How can you beat a guy like that?” Kelley acknowledged afterward. “He wasn’t running for himself, he was doing it for his country.”

The statue in Hopkinton, just after the start of the Boston Marathon and its twin, in Marathon, Greece, show Kyriakides running with Spiridon Loues, winner of the 1896 Olympic marathon in Athens and Pheidippides, gifts of New Balance athletic shoe company owner Jim Davis, a fellow Greek-American.

(The writer and Nick Tsiotos are co-authors of Running With Pheidippides, published by Syracuse University Press)

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Annunciation Greek Heritage and Culture Festival in Manhattan, May 12

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NEW YORK – The Parish Community of Annunciation Greek Orthodox Church, 302 West 91st Street between West End Ave. and Riverside Drive in Manhattan hosts its annual Greek Festival on Saturday, May 12, 11 AM-6 PM. The sights, sounds, and tantalizing smells transport festival-goers to the beautiful Greek Isles. The spectacular one-day Greek Festival is a family event that draws visitors from across the city and greater tri-state area. Come dance in the streets as West 91st Street transforms into a Greek “plaka” (central plaza) for the day. An Upper West Side tradition for families and singles alike, the annual Annunciation Greek Festival features traditional homemade foods, desserts, a special activities area just for the kids, continuous Greek music and dancing in the streets, and an afternoon demonstration by Annunciation’s awarding-winning Greek dance troupe.

Parishioner and self-guided tours of the church sanctuary are free, taking place throughout the day. Tours highlight an up-close look at the Byzantine style iconography and hand-carved altar facade imported from Greece over 60 years ago as well as an opportunity to learn more about the Orthodox faith. The Annunciation sanctuary boasts 6 dramatic stained glass windows and is a rare combination of 1890’s Gothic architecture and Byzantine decoration reminiscent of Orthodox churches across Greece.

The parishioners of Annunciation extend to all festival guests the familiar Greek hospitality while preparing and serving-up this year’s specially selected festival menu including freshly prepared gyros and souvlaki hot off the barbecue grill. Traditional homemade Greek desserts including, loukoumades (honey puffs) prepared hot to order, are available to eat at the festival or to take home for later.

Directions to the Upper West Side: Take the 1, 2, or 3 subway to West 96th Street.

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The Music of Epirus in Boston on April 29 (Video)

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BOSTON – Legendary folk musicians bring the Music of Epirus to Boston with a concert on April 29, 4-6 PM, featuring Petros Loukas Chalkias on clarinet, Kostas Tzimas on vocals, Vasilis Kostas on laouto, Beth Bahia Cohen on violin, and Panagiotis Georgakopoulos on ntefi.

The event takes place at Boston University’s TSAI Center, 685 Commonwealth Avenue in Boston. Tickets are available online at Eventbrite.

General admission: $40. Student with valid ID: $15. BU Staff and Faculty: $30. More information is available from The Greek Institute by phone: 617-547-4770 and on Facebook.

The post The Music of Epirus in Boston on April 29 (Video) appeared first on The National Herald.

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