Legal action over background music could lead to silent nights for James Pothitos allegedly failed to pay $12,795 in licence fees

Source: smh.com.au

Phonographic Performance Company of Australia chief executive Dan Rosen.

Phonographic Performance Company of Australia chief executive Dan Rosen.

Australia’s largest record labels have launched legal action against restaurants and cafes that fail to pay licensing fees for background music, which could see more patrons eating in silence.

The Phonographic Performance Company of Australia – which represents about 750 record companies – has also clamped down on fitness centres, shops and nightclubs that flout copyright laws.

But the aggressive enforcement program has infuriated many small business owners, who warn they will use other music exempt from Australian copyright protection, including US artists and most classical music.

The PPCA began Federal Court proceedings on Friday against South Yarra restaurant The Greek Deli and Taverna, which allegedly failed to pay $12,795 in licence fees over more than four years.

Lawyers for the PPCA demanded a $60,000 settlement from the restaurant’s owner, James Pothitos, and warned he could be liable for damages of $200,000 if the dispute went to court.

In August, the Federal Court ordered Collingwood restaurant The Cavallero to pay $2000 in overdue licence fees and almost $70,000 in damages and legal costs. The Smith Street restaurant has since been placed in administration.

Mr Pothitos declined to comment on the copyright dispute involving his Chapel Street restaurant while the matter was before court.

PPCA chief executive Dan Rosen said it was important to protect the rights of musicians and take action against businesses that ignored the relevant licensing fees.

”PPCA’s preference is to establish a licence with a business well and truly before it reaches court … those doing the right thing expect there will be some action taken when competitors attempt to gain an unfair advantage by obtaining a business input without incurring the appropriate costs,” Mr Rosen said.

A PPCA spokesman confirmed the Federal Court had also awarded damages against nightclubs, fitness centres and a beauty salon over the past two years.

But Restaurant and Catering Australia chief executive John Hart said the cost of recorded music in Australia was ”totally ridiculous”, with fees also collected by the Australian Performing Right Association, which represents individual artists and composers.

Mr Hart said restaurants and cafes were increasingly using music that was not covered by Australian copyright laws, or playing the radio.

”The reality is that the PPCA licence catalogue is not that large and a lot of our members are looking at other options. The fees they impose on us are just insane and I doubt whether they represent value in terms of a commercial return,” Mr Hart said.

 

 

Σε τρίμηνη άδεια ο Αρχιεπίσκοπος Αυστραλίας κ. Στυλιανός για λόγους υγείας

Ο Αρχιεπίσκοπος Αυστραλίας Στυλιανός έλαβε τρίμηνη άδεια και απέχει από τα καθήκοντα του για λόγους υγείας και ξεκούρασης, σύμφωνα με ασφαλείς πληροφορίες του «Εθνικού Κήρυκα» τόσο από την Αυστραλία, όσο και από την Αθήνα.

Καθήκοντα τοποτηρητή-αντικαταστάτη του για όσο καιρό θα βρίσκεται σε άδεια ανατέθηκαν στον Επίσκοπο Απολλωνιάδος Σεραφείμ, ο οποίος τυγχάνει και πρωτοσυγκελεύων της Αρχιεπισκοπής Αυστραλίας. Μήνυμα του «Ε.Κ.» μέσω e-mail πριν από τέσσερις ημέρες στον Επίσκοπο Σεραφείμ, παρέμεινε αναπάντητο.

Ιεράρχες του Φαναρίου είπαν στον «Ε.Κ.» ότι ο Αρχιεπίσκοπος Στυλιανός «είχε αντιμετωπίσει κάποια ασθένεια στο παρελθόν, πλην όμως είχε αποθεραπευθεί», ενώ δήλωσαν άγνοια για τα αίτια που τον ανάγκασαν να λάβει τρίμηνη άδεια και αποχή από τα καθήκοντα του.

Εν τω μεταξύ, έχει ήδη αρχίσει ανάμεσα σε εκκλησιαστικούς, αλλά και πολιτικούς κύκλους, η συζήτηση της διαδοχολογίας και ήδη ακούγονται και οι επίδοξοι διάδοχοι, ανάμεσα στους οποίους συμπεριλαμβάνεται Επίσκοπος εξ’ Αυστραλίας, Μητροπολίτης ο οποίος στο παρελθόν υπηρετούσε στην Αυστραλία και τώρα περιφέρεται στην Αθήνα τελώντας κατ’ ανάθεση κηδείες, μνημόσυνα και εκφωνών λόγους κατά περίσταση σε εσπερινούς και άλλες ιεροτελεστίες, καθώς επίσης και ιεράρχης από την Αμερική.

Ο κ. Στυλιανός, ο οποίος διανύει το 78ο έτος της ηλικίας του, γεννήθηκε στις 29 Δεκεμβρίου του 1935, υπηρετεί ως Αρχιεπίσκοπος Αυστραλίας επί 38 χρόνια και συγκεκριμένα από τον Απρίλιο του 1975.

Ο Αρχιεπίσκοπος Στυλιανός ήταν ανάμεσα στους επικρατέστερους να γίνει Αρχιεπίσκοπος Αμερικής, τον Αύγουστο του 1999 έπειτα από την αποχώρηση από τον Θρόνο του Αρχιεπισκόπου Αμερικής Σπυρίδωνα, αλλά την τελευταία στιγμή ματαιώθηκε η υποψηφιότητα του και διορίστηκε ο σημερινός Αρχιεπίσκοπος Δημήτριος ουσιαστικά εξ’ ανάγκης διότι τελευταία στιγμή το Πατριαρχείο δεν μπορούσε να βρει κανέναν άλλον.

Από τότε ο κ. Στυλιανός «διέκοψε» κάθε συνάφεια και εγγύτητα με τον Πατριάρχη Βαρθολομαίο και το Φανάρι και περιορίστηκαν οι σχέσεις μόνο στα τυπικά και υπηρεσιακά, ενώ μέχρι σήμερα δεν έχει δεχθεί να συμμετάσχει στη Σύνοδο του Φαναρίου.

Σπούδασε στη Θεολογική Σχολή της Χάλκης, χειροτονήθηκε διάκονος το 1957 και πρεσβύτερος το 1958, ενώ με υποτροφία του Πατριαρχείου έκανε μεταπτυχιακές σπουδές στη Γερμανία, ενώ διεκηρύχθη διδάκτωρ με άριστα από το Πανεπιστήμιο Αθηνών. Διετέλεσε υφηγητής της Θεολογικής Σχολής του Πανεπιστημίου Θεσσαλονίκης.

Το έτος 1970 εκλέχτηκε τιτουλάριος Μητροπολίτης Μιλητουπόλεως και έξαρχος του Οικουμενικού Πατριαρχείου για το Αγιο Ορος, ενώ το 1975 εκλέχθηκε Αρχιεπίσκοπος Αυστραλίας όπου και υπηρετεί μέχρι σήμερα.

Συντέλεσε στην ίδρυση κοινοτήτων και μονών και της Θεολογικής Σχολής του Αγίου Ανδρέα. Διετέλεσε πρόεδρος του Επισήμου Διαλόγου μεταξύ Ορθοδόξου και Ρωμαιοκαθολικής Εκκλησίας, ενώ το 2003 υπέβαλλε την παραίτησή του από τον Διάλογο

* Ο κ. Θεόδωρος Καλμούκος είναι εκκλησιαστικός συντάκτης στην ομογενειακή εφημερίδα “Εθνικός Κήρυξ” απ’ όπου προέρχεται και το παραπάνω ρεπορτάζ

Sophie Mirabella nets submarine board job

Source: abc.net.au

Sophie Mirabella

Member for Indi from 2001 to 2013, Sophie Mirabella. (News Images – ABC News)

A Monash University politics lecturer says Sophie Mirabella’s appointment to the board of the Australian Submarine Corporation is not surprising.

Former Member for Indi, Sophie Mirabella, has been appointed as a board member of the Australian Submarine Corporation (ASC).

The ASC builds and maintains ships and submarines for the Royal Australian Navy in South Australia and Western Australia.

Ms Mirabella was appointed to the board by the Minister for Industry, Mathias Cormann, for a three year term alongside senior executives Peter Iancov and Paul Rizzo.

Mr Mathias said Ms Mirabella’s legal background and experience working with the manufacturing industry would make a valuable contribution to the board.

When in federal opposition, Ms Mirabella was the Shadow Minister for Innovation, Industry and Science.

Monash University politics lecturer, Nick Economou, said Ms Mirabella’s appointment to the board was not surprising.

“Let’s not forget that politicians do have some skills that could be of some use in an exercise like that,” he said.

“I think we saw many instances of loyalty towards (Mirabella) from the Liberal Party and presumably this is reciprocated.”

Etihad works its new Greek connections in SYD, MEL and PER

Source: crikey.com.au

Aegean Airlines A321, Wikipedia Commons photo

Australia’s Greek air connections have been in a state of neglect for many years, and are something Etihad clearly intends to address with its newly announced codeshare with Greece’s largest airline, Aegean, from 30 March.

The key element isn’t the  four times weekly Aegean A320 service between Abu Dhabi and Athens on which Etihad will codeshare, as it already flies that route daily.

What matters is that Etihad gains integrated booking and selling right across the Greek market  by placing its booking code on beyond Athens connections flown by Aegean to 16 destinations in Greece and its islands, as well as ten cities elsewhere in Europe.

In its statement Etihad emphasises the benefits this will offer Australians flying to the cities on Aegean network via Abu Dhabi. It would also increase Virgin Australia’s selling opportunities to travellers flying to Greece or elsewhere in Europe.

Orianthi Nominated for Best Rock Guitarist

Source: greekreporter.com

Orianthi_595

Greek-Australian rock goddess Orianthi has been nominated for Best Rock Guitarist of 2013 by Guitar World magazine. The publication also nominated her for Favorite Guitar World Cover (she appeared on the front page of their April 2013 issue).

The 28-year-old musician, who released her third studio album Heaven in This Hell earlier this year, is up against Eric Clapton, Mark Tremonti, Jerry Cantrell and Josh Homme in the popular guitar magazine’s Best Rock Guitarist category. She’s competing with various bands and musicians for Favorite Guitar World Cover, including Led Zeppelin, The Who, Stevie Rae Vaughan, Nirvana and Black Sabbath.

It was also recently announced that Orianthi is the first act to participate in #BeMyBand, which gives aspiring musicians the opportunity to play alongside a headlining artist in a legendary venue. Drummers, guitarists, keyboard players and bassists are asked to submit a short video of their best live performances for a chance to perform with Orianthi onstage in Los Angeles.

To vote for Orianthi in the Guitar World poll, visit guitarworld.polldaddy.com. To get more info on entering for a chance to perform with her in Los Angeles, check out talenthouse.com/perform-be-my-band-orianthi

Ireland will participate in Greek rescue program

Source: tovima.gr

Irish Central Bank will return its 126 million euros of investment profits from Greek bonds to Greece

Ireland will participate in Greek rescue program

According to the Irish Examiner, Ireland is rumored to have agreed to pay 126 million euros Greece over the next few years, as part of the agreement of the midterm financial strategy plan.

Now that Ireland has officially exited its rescue program and become a “normal” Eurozone member, the Irish Central Bank must comply with the agreement to return any profits from Greek bonds to Greece, as part of the Greek rescue package.

The funds will gradually be transferred from the Irish bank to the Greek central bank from next year, with the full 126 million euros expected to be handed over by 2025.

This agreement only relates to Greek bonds, rather than any other member states currently in a rescue program and will not affect the Irish Finance Ministry’s efforts.

Greek Patriarch Bartholomew gets honorary doctorate

Source: Hürriyet Daily News

Fener Greek Bartholomew receives his award by Boğaziçi University. DAILY NEWS photo, Emrah GÜREL

Fener Greek Bartholomew receives his award by Boğaziçi University. DAILY NEWS photo, Emrah GÜREL

Fener Greek Patriarch Bartholomew has been awarded with an honorary doctorate by Istanbul’s Boğaziçi University for his efforts in environmentalism.

Bartholomew was presented the honorary degree, the first that he has ever received in Turkey, at a ceremony that was held at the university campus yesterday. Boğaziçi University sought to bestow Bartholomew with honor “for his pioneering role in several environmental issues, including the protection of ecological balance and biodiversity in the world, providing clean tap water to wider populations across the world, and [raising awareness of] climate change.”

First doctorate from a university in Turkey

Prof. Gülay Barbarosoğlu, rector of Boğaziçi University, said they had realized that the Patriarch had never received an honorary doctorate award from a Turkish university, despite receiving such doctorates from many universities abroad.

Dr. İsmail Beşikçi become the second prominent figure who was bestowed with the honor, with his works on the Kurdish issue.

According to the university, Beşikçi was awarded “for his extraordinary contributions to the improvements in social sciences in Turkey and abroad.”

Kitchen Superstars: Michael Psilakis’ quest to make Greek go mainstream

Source: Foxnews.com

Acclaimed chef Michael Psilakis, known for his Greek comfort food, is as natural in the kitchen as he is on the small screen.

Best known as the 2012 winner of the BBC’s cooking adventure show “No Kitchen Required” — he’s also the program’s co-executive producer — he’s got many cooking awards to his name, including a Michelin star for his now-closed New York City restaurant Anthos and “Chef of the Year” by Esquire Magazine.

So it may be surprising to hear that his initial career path was headed in a very different direction.

“…when you are sitting at home and thinking to yourself, what should I eat tonight? The choices are pretty much American or Italian or Asian or Chinese or Japanese. Greek food doesn’t really fit into that equation yet.”

– Chef Michael Psilakis

“Becoming a chef chose me,” he said. “It wasn’t really something I thought about. I went to school for accounting; I was getting ready to go to law school. I started waiting on tables and fell in love with the restaurant industry.”

Psilakis was determined to take that love to the next level. He owned his first restaurant at 23. With a background in business, his main goal wasn’t churning out the dishes his restaurant served, until his chef didn’t show up for work one day. “I ran into the kitchen to do the best I could,” he says, “and really found the place that was home for me.”

Now he hopes his patrons feel as “at home” in his restaurants as he does. “I hope that I can show someone that you can use food as a vehicle to create an environment where you, your family, the people that you love will come together and create a memory that hopefully later on as you grow will bloom into more memories for your children,” he says.

But Psilakis says it took a life-altering experience to get to this place, and that his early days were more about the art of cooking. “I was really one-dimensional. Worked 18 hours a day in the kitchen. I didn’t know what was going on in the world. I didn’t know if it was raining or sunny, or the day of the week. I had no clue. And I achieved a tremendous amount of critical success from that period.

“But when my father passed away, all of that just didn’t mean as much. It wasn’t important anymore, and what I realized was that the memories that I had with him revolved around food in a way that I never used it before.”

That was the motivation that propelled him to the next level of his career. Psilakis teamed up with restaurateur and The Food Network’s Iron Chef America judge Donatella Arpaia to open a series of successful restaurants. Though the two have parted ways, they remain co-owners of New York’s Upper West Side staple, Kefi, which just reopened after a water main break flooded it.

“She became somebody who started to take interest in food. I became somebody who had an interest in restaurants. So we sort of went on our own way, but I think that the relationship that we had allowed us to develop the platform that was necessary for us to grow. And that growth allowed us both to achieve our own individual growth, which is the most important part of it.”

Right now Psilakis is interested in making Greek food a staple for American diners, beyond the five restaurants he currently owns.

“I am trying my best to take Greek food out of the genre it’s sat in for a long time and bring it into the mainstream. People here in New York – and maybe in the U.S. – look at Italian food as American food today. Like when you are sitting at home and thinking to yourself, what should I eat tonight? The choices are pretty much American or Italian or Asian or Chinese or Japanese. Greek food doesn’t really fit into that equation yet.”

He hopes his newest un-named venture, under construction in Brooklyn, will do just that. He believes the simplicity, accessibility and familiarity of Mediterranean ingredients are what surprise most people about the cuisine. And more importantly, back to his roots, the idea of sitting around a table, enjoying a meal, and making it an experience — an experience that’s even surprised him.

“Who would have thought 15 years ago that I would be cooking food, owning a restaurant in Manhattan, as many restaurants that I have owned, traveled the world, cooked for unbelievable people, presidents, kings? It’s just been a magic carpet ride. You never really sit down and think OK, this is what I want to do with my life and it’s going to end up like this. For me, it was just taking it as it comes, and fortunately, it’s worked out pretty well.”

Minister awards 2013 HSC in Modern Greek

The ceremony saw students receive a Certificate for Excellence from the Minister in front of their families and senior representatives from across the education sectors.

2013 highlights include:

Modern Greek Beginners
Rhonda Douroukis – Georges River College Oatley Senior Campus

Modern Greek Continuers
Fotini Kapsabelis – St Spyridon College (Maroubra)

Modern Greek Extension
Dionisia Kolevris – Open High School (RANDWICK)

Classical Greek Continuers
Kim Zhang – Pymble Ladies’ College

Over 70,000 students will have access to their HSC results from 6.00am tomorrow (Wednesday 18 December).

Results are available online and by SMS using a secure system requiring a Student Number and HSC PIN. For more information on HSC results go to studentsonline.bos.nsw.edu.au

The Board of Studies HSC Results Inquiry Centre 1300 13 83 23 will be open from 9 am for students with questions about their HSC results.

Minister awards 2013 HSC first in course recipients

Source: det.nsw.edu.au

l
Media release

The Minister for Education Adrian Piccoli today presented 2013 HSC students with First in Course Awards at an event at Australian Technology Park.

“Any student who receives their HSC has worked hard, and I congratulate all students who have completed their exams this year,” Mr Piccoli said.

“HSC courses are demanding and the assessment and examination process is designed to challenge students.

“To claim the First in Course spot is a great honour for these students, and they, their teachers and their families should be very proud.

“The First in Course Awards acknowledge the highest achieving student in each HSC course, where the result is in the highest possible band for that course.

“The HSC is a world-class credential and coming first demonstrates and extremely high level of achievement on an international level.

“Completing the HSC requires immense dedication from students, and support from both teachers and parents,” Mr Piccoli said.

The ceremony saw students receive a Certificate for Excellence from the Minister in front of their families and senior representatives from across the education sectors.

2013 highlights include:

Awards made to 121 students in 112 courses

Equal first place in nine courses

Three students receiving a First in Course Award for more than one course

83 of the 121 recipients are young women, and 38 are young men

12 students live in regions outside of Sydney, including students from: Inverell, Grafton, Hermidale, Coonamble, Griffith, Wagga Wagga, and two students from Cooma.

This year marked the first examination of the Financial Services course. This course is designed to provide students with skills and knowledge to seek a job straight from school or as a sound foundation for higher level education or university studies.

Over 70,000 students will have access to their HSC results from 6.00am tomorrow (Wednesday 18 December).

Results are available online and by SMS using a secure system requiring a Student Number and HSC PIN. For more information on HSC results go to studentsonline.bos.nsw.edu.au

The Board of Studies HSC Results Inquiry Centre 1300 13 83 23 will be open from 9 am for students with questions about their HSC results.

List of students who won awards
http://www.dec.nsw.gov.au/documents/15060385/15385042/351Q2704.PDF

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