Renowned Greek American artist Stephen Antonakos debuts new works at the Konrad Fischer Galerie Berlin

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Stephen Antonakos’ new works in gold and marble is on display – for the first time ever – at the renowned Konrad Fischer Galerie Berlin in Germany.

The exhibit, which opened on March 8, is called Four Directions and will run until April 20.

A Greek American artist, Antonakos’ work has been exhibited internationally for five decades in over 250 group shows and 100 solo shows, including a major retrospective in Greece and the United States in 2007. More than 50 of his large scale public works have been installed in the U.S., Europe, and Japan.

A pioneer in the field of neon light, his sculptures can be found at museums in New York, Chicago, Seattle, Tacoma, Denver, Amherst and Atlanta.

Born in a mountain village in Laconia, Greece, Antonakos immigrated to the United States with his parents when he was just a baby. He grew up in New York and began painting and working with neon in the late 1950s.

His work is related to Minimalism in its intention to be seen as “real things in real space in the here and now”. He has a particular interest in bringing the architecture and the space of the site into the viewer’s experience

Since the early 1960s Antonakos’ geometric forms in neon have been exhibited in his Canvases, Panels, Walls, Rooms, and outdoor Public Installations. Throughout, the interaction of light and space has been central. A formalist, but not a didactic one, he calls his work “real things in real spaces”.

The Konrad Fischer Galerie Berlin has reconstructed a classic neon Wall from 1977. This work is titled Fragments of a Circle and it’s 3m by 5m and exemplifies how the work’s engagement with the proportions of the room is as crucial as the internal relations of its elements. This is visible also in the exhibition’s second and third Directions.

Begun in 2011, framed works of gold leaf on Mylar and Tyvek – whether cut or crumpled – may be seen as further rich explorations of reflected light within a determined space. No less than the two brand-new gold leaf Volumes, these radiant planes are not images, but objects.

Another, even newer material for Antonakos is the white marble of “Interlock 1”. Deeply incised with incomplete circles and squares that hold light and shadow, this work sits on the floor and leans on the wall, manifesting both the consistency of the artist’s concerns and their great visual and material variety.

The World’s Biggest Public Companies

Source: Forbes

Rank Company Country Sales Profits Assets Market Value
1

Exxon Mobil

United States $433.5 B $41.1 B $331.1 B $407.4 B
2

JPMorgan Chase

United States $110.8 B $19 B $2,265.8 B $170.1 B
3

General Electric

United States $147.3 B $14.2 B $717.2 B $213.7 B
4

Royal Dutch Shell

Netherlands $470.2 B $30.9 B $340.5 B $227.6 B
5

ICBC

China $82.6 B $25.1 B $2,039.1 B $237.4 B
6

HSBC Holdings

United Kingdom $102 B $16.2 B $2,550 B $164.3 B
7

PetroChina

China $310.1 B $20.6 B $304.7 B $294.7 B
8

Berkshire Hathaway

United States $143.7 B $10.3 B $392.6 B $202.2 B
9

Wells Fargo

United States $87.6 B $15.9 B $1,313.9 B $178.7 B
10

Petrobras-Petróleo Brasil

Brazil $145.9 B $20.1 B $319.4 B $180 B
11

BP

United Kingdom $375.5 B $25.7 B $292.5 B $147.4 B
12

Chevron

United States $236.3 B $26.9 B $209.5 B $218 B
13

China Construction Bank

China $68.7 B $20.5 B $1,637.8 B $201.9 B
14

Citigroup

United States $102.6 B $11.1 B $1,873.9 B $107.5 B
15

Gazprom

Russia $117.6 B $31.7 B $302.6 B $159.8 B
16

Wal-Mart Stores

United States $447 B $15.7 B $193.4 B $208.4 B
17

Volkswagen Group

Germany $221.9 B $21.5 B $328.7 B $79.5 B
18

Total

France $216.2 B $15.9 B $213 B $132.4 B
19

Agricultural Bank of China

China $62.4 B $14.4 B $1,563.9 B $154.8 B
20

BNP Paribas

France $119 B $7.9 B $2,539.1 B $61.5 B
21

Bank of China

China $60.8 B $15.8 B $1,583.7 B $129.1 B
22

Apple

United States $127.8 B $33 B $138.7 B $546 B
23

Banco Santander

Spain $109.6 B $6.9 B $1,624.7 B $75.6 B
24

Sinopec-China Petroleum

China $391.4 B $11.6 B $179.8 B $104.2 B
25

Toyota Motor

Japan $228.5 B $4.9 B $358.3 B $147.9 B
26

Samsung Electronics

South Korea $142.4 B $11.5 B $133.7 B $162 B
27

ConocoPhillips

United States $230.9 B $12.4 B $153.2 B $98.8 B
28

Vodafone

United Kingdom $73.5 B $12.8 B $239.2 B $131.2 B
29

ENI

Italy $143.2 B $8.9 B $178.7 B $97.6 B
30

Itaú Unibanco Holding

Brazil $75.5 B $7.4 B $426.4 B $91.2 B
31

China Mobile

Hong Kong-China $81.7 B $19.5 B $151.2 B $216.5 B
32

IBM

United States $106.9 B $15.9 B $116.4 B $238.7 B
33

AT&T

United States $126.7 B $3.9 B $270.3 B $187.3 B
34

Pfizer

United States $67.4 B $10 B $188 B $165.4 B
35

Procter & Gamble

United States $85.1 B $10.1 B $134.3 B $185.2 B
36

Mitsubishi UFJ Financial

Japan $53.3 B $7 B $2,478.8 B $74.5 B
37

Daimler

Germany $138 B $7.3 B $188.7 B $66.3 B
38

American Intl Group

United States $64.2 B $17.8 B $555.8 B $50.3 B
39

ING Group

Netherlands $139 B $7.5 B $1,653 B $35.8 B
40

Nestlé

Switzerland $89.2 B $10.1 B $119.4 B $205.4 B
41

Statoil

Norway $111.6 B $13.1 B $127.8 B $89 B
42

Microsoft

United States $72.1 B $23.5 B $112.2 B $273.5 B
43

Banco Bradesco

Brazil $79.8 B $5.9 B $397.1 B $65.3 B
44

Ford Motor

United States $136.3 B $20.2 B $178.3 B $47.5 B
45

Nippon Telegraph & Tel

Japan $124 B $6.1 B $226.6 B $60.8 B
45

AXA Group

France $132.8 B $5.6 B $947.8 B $40.6 B
47

Commonwealth Bank

Australia $49.5 B $6.9 B $713.7 B $81.6 B
47

GDF Suez

France $117.5 B $5.2 B $275.2 B $58.3 B
49

BHP Billiton

Australia $71.7 B $23.6 B $102.9 B $187.5 B
50

Allianz

Germany $134.4 B $3.3 B $832.8 B $56.3 B
50

Siemens

Germany $98.4 B $8.2 B $135.6 B $92 B
52

Deutsche Bank

Germany $65.7 B $5.4 B $2,809.4 B $47.3 B
53

Barclays

United Kingdom $66.3 B $4.7 B $2,425.2 B $49.1 B
54

Banco do Brasil

Brazil $72.4 B $6.5 B $516.3 B $45.9 B
55

MetLife

United States $70.3 B $7 B $799.6 B $40.7 B
56

Vale

Brazil $55.4 B $20.3 B $127.6 B $126.8 B
57

Telefónica

Spain $81.4 B $7 B $159.9 B $75.6 B
57

Johnson & Johnson

United States $65 B $9.7 B $113.6 B $178.8 B
59

Westpac Banking Group

Australia $44.1 B $7.2 B $651.7 B $67.5 B
59

Honda Motor

Japan $107.5 B $6.4 B $137.7 B $70.8 B
61

BMW Group

Germany $95.8 B $6.8 B $160 B $61.2 B
62

Novartis

Switzerland $58.6 B $9.1 B $117.5 B $150.4 B
63

General Motors

United States $150.3 B $9.2 B $144.6 B $40 B
64

Sumitomo Mitsui Financial

Japan $45.9 B $5.7 B $1,654.9 B $47.8 B
65

China Life Insurance

China $56 B $5.1 B $214.1 B $76.5 B
66

Verizon Communications

United States $110.9 B $2.4 B $230.5 B $112.2 B
67

Hewlett-Packard

United States $125 B $5.9 B $126.6 B $48.4 B
68

Lukoil

Russia $111.4 B $10.4 B $90.6 B $55.3 B
69

Rio Tinto

United Kingdom $60.5 B $5.8 B $119.5 B $110.2 B
70

Royal Bank of Canada

Canada $35.9 B $4.7 B $812.7 B $84.4 B
71

Rosneft

Russia $59.2 B $11.3 B $106 B $79.6 B
71

UBS

Switzerland $43.7 B $4.5 B $1,508.7 B $54.2 B
73

EDF

France $84.6 B $3.9 B $297.5 B $45.7 B
74

BASF

Germany $95.2 B $8 B $78.7 B $82.2 B
75

ENEL

Italy $103.2 B $5.4 B $220.4 B $35.4 B
76

National Australia Bank

Australia $38.2 B $5 B $730.4 B $56.3 B
77

Goldman Sachs Group

United States $36.8 B $4.4 B $923.2 B $63.5 B
78

Sanofi

France $43.2 B $7.4 B $125.3 B $103.3 B
79

ANZ

Australia $34.7 B $5.2 B $577.2 B $62.6 B
80

Merck & Co

United States $48 B $6.3 B $105.1 B $115.8 B
81

Comcast

United States $55.8 B $4.2 B $157.8 B $79.8 B
82

TD Bank

Canada $27.7 B $5.8 B $771.5 B $76.1 B
83

Bank of America

United States $115.1 B $1.4 B $2,129 B $105.2 B
83

BBVA-Banco Bilbao Vizcaya

Spain $46.7 B $3.9 B $767.7 B $43.1 B
85

Nissan Motor

Japan $105.5 B $3.8 B $128.7 B $48.1 B
85

Intel

United States $54 B $12.9 B $71.1 B $138.5 B
87

Coca-Cola

United States $46.5 B $8.6 B $80 B $158.8 B
88

PepsiCo

United States $66.5 B $6.4 B $72.9 B $101.3 B
88

Saudi Basic Industries

Saudi Arabia $50.6 B $7.8 B $88.6 B $84.4 B
90

Sberbank

Russia $31.8 B $6 B $282.4 B $74 B
91

Cisco Systems

United States $44.8 B $7 B $89.3 B $107.9 B
92

Bank of Nova Scotia

Canada $27.3 B $5.3 B $635.2 B $62.2 B
93

Anheuser-Busch InBev

Belgium $39 B $5.9 B $112.4 B $115.3 B
94

Société Générale

France $98.6 B $3.3 B $1,531.1 B $25.8 B
95

Mitsubishi Corp

Japan $62.6 B $5.6 B $136.6 B $39.7 B
96

Hyundai Motor

South Korea $70.3 B $6.9 B $94.5 B $43.6 B
97

Zurich Financial Services

Switzerland $53 B $3.5 B $365.6 B $39 B
98

Mizuho Financial

Japan $32.2 B $5 B $1,934.4 B $40.6 B
99

Glencore International

Switzerland $179.6 B $3.9 B $85.2 B $45.9 B
100

Ping An Insurance Group

China $42.2 B $3 B $362.8 B $55 B

The World’s Youngest Billionaires: 29 Under 40

Source: Forbes

There are 1,426 billionaires in the world this year. They are the wealthiest of the wealthy. But only 29 members of this elite list are under 40 years old, with that exciting combination of money and youth.

Those 29 have a total of $119 billion between them. Ten come from the technology sector, including four from social networking giant Facebook. Eleven come from the United States, the rest from countries abroad. Five are newcomers to the billionaire ranks. Read the full list below.

These 29 billionaires are all under 40 years old.

No. 1: Dustin Moskovitz
Age: 28
Net Worth: $3.8 billion
Moskovitz, Mark Zuckerberg‘s former roommate, no longer works at Facebook, the social networking giant that he co-founded. A signee of Bill Gates‘ and Warren Buffett’s Giving Pledge, Moskovitz bikes to work, flies commercial, and pitches his own tent at Burning Man.

No. 2: Mark Zuckerberg
Age: 28
Net Worth: $13.3 billion
Few CEOs of any age are under more media scrutiny than Zuckerberg (who’s only 8 days older than Moskovitz). Since taking Facebook public in May 2012, and getting married days later, the hoodie-wearing founder has seen his net worth rise and fall with every fluctuation of the stock price.

No. 3: Albert von Thurn und Taxis
Age: 29
Net Worth: $1.5 billion
Albert von Thurn und Taxis first appeared in Forbes’ billionaire rankings at age 8 but officially inherited his fortune in 2001 on his 18th birthday. The eligible bachelor is also a race car driver and tours with a German auto-racing league.

No. 4: Scott Duncan
Age: 30
Net Worth: $5.1 billion
Duncan is the youngest of the four children who inherited the massive fortune of late energy pipeline entrepreneur Dan Duncan, founder of Enterprise Products Partners. Today the company owns more than 50,000 miles of natural gas, oil, and petrochemical pipelines.

No. 5: Eduardo Saverin
Age: 30
Net Worth: $2.2 billion
Facebook co-founder Saverin renounced his United States citizenship in 2011, news of which broke days before the company’s IPO and drew accusations of tax evasion. Saverin, immortalized in The Social Network as Mark Zuckerberg’s onetime best friend, settled a lengthy legal battle with Facebook, apparently receiving a 5% stake. A Brazilian citizen, he now resides in Singapore and invests in startups.

No. 6: Huiyan Yang
Age: 31
Net Worth: $5.7 billion
Yang, the daughter of the founder of real estate developer Country Garden Holdings, is once again China’s richest woman. Her father transferred his stake to the Ohio State grad before the company’s IPO in 2007.

No. 7: Fahd Hariri
Age: 32
Net Worth: $1.35 billion
Hariri is the youngest son of slain Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri. He graduated from the Ecole Spéciale d’Architecture de Paris in 2004. While still a student, he ran an interior design studio on the outskirts of the city, and sold furniture to clients in Saudi Arabia.

No. 8: Marie Besnier Beauvalot
Age: 32
Net Worth: $1.5 billion
Marie, along with siblings Emmanuel, 42, and Jean-Michel, 45, inherited French dairy giant Lactalis, producers of popular Président brie among hundreds of other cheese, milk and yogurt brands.

No. 9: Sean Parker
Age: 33
Net Worth: $2 billion
Parker is revamping his much hyped start-up, Airtime, with the hopes that the video chat site will have the impact of his other Web companies. At 19, Parker skipped college to disrupt the recording industry with music swapping site Napster. He served as Facebook’s first president at age 24.

No. 10: Ayman Hariri
Age: 34
Net Worth: $1.35 billion
Hariri is the son of slain Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri. He’s involved in running Saudi Oger, one of Saudi Arabia’s biggest construction companies, and the source of the Hariri family fortune.

No. 11: Yvonne Bauer
Age: 35
Net Worth: $2.4 billion
Bauer owns 85% of her family’s publishing empire. She is the fifth generation of the family to run the Bauer Media Group, which was founded in 1875. It publishes 570 magazines in 16 countries.

No. 12: Yoshikazu Tanaka
Age: 36
Net Worth: $1.8 billion
Founder and CEO of social-network game site operator Gree, Tanaka has faced stiff competition this year from archrival DeNA and a game initiative by NTT DoCoMo, the giant cellphone carrier. To get back on track, Tanaka moved to partner with Yahoo Japan and went on a buying spree.

No. 13: Maxim Nogotkov
Age: 36
Net Worth: $1.3 billion
Nogotkov got his start selling computer programs while in school and later began selling cordless phones. He dropped out of college in order to have more time to focus on building his business. He later founded cell phone retailer Svyaznoy.

No. 14: Alejandro Santo Domingo Davila
Age: 36
Net Worth: $11.7 billion
A Harvard history grad, Domingo Davila is the eldest son from his jet-setting beer magnate father’s second marriage. Now a managing director at a New York-based investment advisory firm, Alejandro sits on the board of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York.

No. 15: Jack Dorsey
Age: 36
Net Worth: $1.1 billion
Dorsey made a name for himself as a cofounder and leader of 140-character microblogging company Twitter, but most of his fortune is derived from his stake in mobile payment company Square. The New York University dropout is a certified masseur known for his eclectic interests, which include, among other things, punk music and clothes.

No. 16: Serra Sabanci
Age: 37
Net Worth: $1.3 billion
Sabanci is the daughter of Ozdemir Sabanci who was assassinated in 1996, and a board member of the large conglomerate Sabanci Holding.

No. 17: Nicholas Woodman
Age: 37
Net Worth: $1.3 billion
GoPro founder and CEO Nick Woodman built the first camera prototypes in his bedroom with his mom’s sewing machine and a drill. GoPro came out with its first camera, a 35-millimeter waterproof film version, in 2004. Today, the camera shoots full video in cinema quality HD, allowing anyone from professional surfer Kelly Slater to amateur snowboarders to capture their adventures.

No. 18: Chase Coleman
Age: 37
Net Worth: $1.4 billion
The hottest young money manager on the planet, Coleman cooled off a touch in 2012, but his Tiger Global hedge fund extended its impressive winning streak, finishing a third straight year with a net return in excess of 20%.

No. 19: Ryan Kavanaugh
Age: 38
Net Worth: $1 billion
Ryan Kavanaugh joins the billionaire ranks for the first time this year thanks to his movie studio, Relativity. Kavanaugh is making money by hitting singles and doubles like the recent Safe Haven, which cost $25 million to make and has grossed more than $50 million at the box office.

No. 20: Andrey Verevskiy
Age: 38
Net Worth: $1 billion
Verevskiy started trading in grain when he was 19 and founded Kernel Holding a decade later, growing it into Ukraine’s largest sunflower oil producer. Last year, Verevskiy was elected to Ukraine’s Parliament.

No. 21: John Arnold
Age: 38
Net Worth: $2.8 billion
Arnold shocked the hedge fund world in May 2012 when he announced he was calling it a career at age 38. Arnold and his wife Laura, who are signatories of the Giving Pledge, plan to devote much of their time to philanthropy. The couple have already given away more than $1.2 billion.

No. 22: Gary Fegel
Age: 39
Net Worth: $1 billion
Gary Fegel attained billionaire status in May 2011 in the wake of Glencore’s IPO. After earning his MBA from the University of St. Gallen, Fegel joined the alumina and aluminum department at the commodities titan in 2001.

No. 23: Kostyantin Zhevago
Age: 39
Net Worth: $1.5 billion
Son of a mining engineer, Kostyantin Zhevago took over Poltava Iron Ore, the largest exporter of pellets in CIS, at the age of twenty two, and in 2007 he took his mining company Ferrexpo public. An avid soccer fan, Zhevago owns FC Vorska football.

No 24: Dan Gertler
Age: 39
Net Worth: $2.2 billion
An emerging face of irresponsible capitalism in Africa, Dan Gertler took his family’s fortune in diamonds and invested it in mining assets in the Democratic Republic of Congo. While in his 20s, he became a friend of Joseph Kabila, who then ran the military and is now the DRC’s president.

No. 25: Ana Luia de Mattos Barretto Villela
Age: 39
Net Worth: $1.15 billion
Ana Lucia de Mattos Barretto Villela belongs to one of Brazil’s oldest and most distinguished banking families. She is one of the largest individual shareholders of a holding company that controls Unibanco Holding S.A., one of Brazil’s largest banks.

No. 26: Lee Seo-Hyun
Age: 39
Net Worth: $1 billion
She is the youngest daughter of Samsung Chairman Lee Kun-Hee. A graduate of the Parsons School of Design, she is vice president of the luxury goods and fashion division of Cheil Industries (part of the Samsung Group), as well as a vice president at Cheil Worldwide, Korea’s largest advertising firm.

No. 27: Fang Wei
Age: 39
Net Worth: $1.5 billion
Fang Wei is best known for buying turnaround situations, especially those in the steel industry. Fangda Group now has more than 30,000 employees across more than 10 provinces in China.

No. 28: Sergey Brin
Age: 39
Net Worth: $22.8 billion
The Google cofounder is now director of special projects at the Mountain View, Calif. search giant, leaving his counterpart Larry Page to handle most day-to-day operations. Brin oversees the company’s foray into hardware and futuristic endeavors like driverless cars and augmented reality spectacles known as Google Glass.

No. 29: Larry Page
Age: 39
Net Worth: $23 billion
Google’s cofounder and CEO since April 2011, Page saw the company through the $50 billion revenue milestone in 2012. The stock rose nearly 30% in the past year, adding more than $4 billion to Page’s net worth.

An earlier version of this article incorrectly stated that there are 23 billionaires under 40 years old on the Forbes Billionaires list. It has been updated to reflect the change.

The World’s Billionaries List – Full 2013

Source: Forbes

Net Worth Calculated March 2013
.

Rank Name Net Worth Age Source Country of Citizenship
1

Carlos Slim Helu & family

$73 B 73 telecom Mexico
2

Bill Gates

$67 B 57 Microsoft United States
3

Amancio Ortega

$57 B 76 Zara Spain
4

Warren Buffett

$53.5 B 82 Berkshire Hathaway United States
5

Larry Ellison

$43 B 68 Oracle United States
6

Charles Koch

$34 B 77 diversified United States
6

David Koch

$34 B 72 diversified United States
8

Li Ka-shing

$31 B 84 diversified Hong Kong
9

Liliane Bettencourt & family

$30 B 90 L’Oreal France
10

Bernard Arnault & family

$29 B 64 LVMH France
11

Christy Walton & family

$28.2 B 58 Wal-Mart United States
12

Stefan Persson

$28 B 65 H&M Sweden
13

Michael Bloomberg

$27 B 71 Bloomberg LP United States
14

Jim Walton

$26.7 B 65 Wal-Mart United States
15

Sheldon Adelson

$26.5 B 79 casinos United States
16

Alice Walton

$26.3 B 63 Wal-Mart United States
17

S. Robson Walton

$26.1 B 69 Wal-Mart United States
18

Karl Albrecht

$26 B 93 Aldi Germany
19

Jeff Bezos

$25.2 B 49 Amazon.com United States
20

Larry Page

$23 B 39 Google United States
21

Sergey Brin

$22.8 B 39 Google United States
22

Mukesh Ambani

$21.5 B 55 petrochemicals, oil & gas India
23

Michele Ferrero & family

$20.4 B 87 chocolates Italy
24

Lee Shau Kee

$20.3 B 85 diversified Hong Kong
24

David Thomson & family

$20.3 B 55 media Canada
26

Prince Alwaleed Bin Talal Alsaud

$20 B 58 investments Saudi Arabia
26

Carl Icahn

$20 B 77 leveraged buyouts United States
26

Thomas & Raymond Kwok & family

$20 B real estate Hong Kong
29

Dieter Schwarz

$19.5 B 73 retail Germany
30

George Soros

$19.2 B 82 hedge funds United States
31

Theo Albrecht, Jr. & family

$18.9 B 62 Aldi, Trader Joe’s Germany
32

Alberto Bailleres Gonzalez & family

$18.2 B 81 mining Mexico
33

Jorge Paulo Lemann

$17.8 B 73 beer Brazil
34

Alisher Usmanov

$17.6 B 59 steel, telecom, investments Russia
35

Iris Fontbona & family

$17.4 B 70 mining Chile
36

Forrest Mars, Jr.

$17 B 81 candy United States
36

Jacqueline Mars

$17 B 73 candy United States
36

John Mars

$17 B 76 candy United States
36

Georgina Rinehart

$17 B 59 mining Australia
40

German Larrea Mota Velasco & family

$16.7 B 59 mining Mexico
41

Mikhail Fridman

$16.5 B 48 oil, banking, telecom Russia
41

Lakshmi Mittal

$16.5 B 62 steel India
43

Aliko Dangote

$16.1 B 55 cement, sugar, flour Nigeria
44

Len Blavatnik

$16 B 55 diversified United States
44

Cheng Yu-tung

$16 B 87 diversified Hong Kong
46

Joseph Safra

$15.9 B 74 banking Brazil
47

Rinat Akhmetov

$15.4 B 46 steel, coal Ukraine
47

Leonid Mikhelson

$15.4 B 57 gas, chemicals Russia
49

Leonardo Del Vecchio

$15.3 B 77 eyeglasses Italy
49

Michael Dell

$15.3 B 48 Dell United States
51

Steve Ballmer

$15.2 B 56 Microsoft United States
52

Viktor Vekselberg

$15.1 B 55 oil, metals Russia
53

Paul Allen

$15 B 60 Microsoft, investments United States
53

Francois Pinault & family

$15 B 76 retail France
55

Vagit Alekperov

$14.8 B 62 Lukoil Russia
56

Phil Knight

$14.4 B 75 Nike United States
56

Andrey Melnichenko

$14.4 B 41 coal, fertilizers Russia
58

Dhanin Chearavanont & family

$14.3 B 73 food Thailand
58

Susanne Klatten

$14.3 B 50 BMW, pharmaceuticals Germany
58

Vladimir Potanin

$14.3 B 52 metals Russia
61

Michael Otto & family

$14.2 B 69 retail, real estate Germany
62

Vladimir Lisin

$14.1 B 56 steel, transport Russia
62

Gennady Timchenko

$14.1 B 60 oil & gas Russia
64

Luis Carlos Sarmiento

$13.9 B 80 banking Colombia
65

Mohammed Al Amoudi

$13.5 B 68 oil, diversified Saudi Arabia
66

Tadashi Yanai & family

$13.3 B 64 retail Japan
66

Mark Zuckerberg

$13.3 B 28 Facebook United States
68

Henry Sy & family

$13.2 B 88 diversified Philippines
69

Donald Bren

$13 B 80 real estate United States
69

Serge Dassault & family

$13 B 87 aviation France
69

Lee Kun-Hee

$13 B 71 Samsung South Korea
69

Mikhail Prokhorov

$13 B 47 investments Russia
73

Alexey Mordashov

$12.8 B 47 steel, investments Russia
74

Antonio Ermirio de Moraes & family

$12.7 B 84 diversified Brazil
74

Abigail Johnson

$12.7 B 51 money management United States
76

Ray Dalio

$12.5 B 63 hedge funds United States
76

Robert Kuok

$12.5 B 89 diversified Malaysia
78

Miuccia Prada

$12.4 B 63 Prada Italy
79

Ronald Perelman

$12.2 B 70 leveraged buyouts United States
80

Anne Cox Chambers

$12 B 93 media United States
81

Stefan Quandt

$11.9 B 46 BMW Germany
82

Ananda Krishnan

$11.7 B 74 telecoms Malaysia
82

Alejandro Santo Domingo Davila

$11.7 B 36 beer Colombia
82

James Simons

$11.7 B 74 hedge funds United States
82

Charoen Sirivadhanabhakdi

$11.7 B 68 drinks Thailand
86

Zong Qinghou

$11.6 B 67 beverages China
87

Dirce Navarro De Camargo & family

$11.5 B construction Brazil
87

John Fredriksen

$11.5 B 68 shipping Cyprus
89

Gerald Cavendish Grosvenor & family

$11.4 B 61 real estate United Kingdom
90

Harold Hamm

$11.3 B 67 oil & gas United States
91

Rupert Murdoch

$11.2 B 81 News Corp United States
91

John Paulson

$11.2 B 57 hedge funds United States
91

Azim Premji

$11.2 B 67 software India
94

Ernesto Bertarelli & family

$11 B 47 biotech, investments Switzerland
94

Charlene de Carvalho-Heineken

$11 B 58 Heineken Netherlands
94

Hans Rausing

$11 B 86 packaging Sweden
94

Jack Taylor & family

$11 B 90 Enterprise Rent-A-Car United States
98

Lui Che Woo

$10.7 B 83 gaming Hong Kong
98

Laurene Powell Jobs & family

$10.7 B 49 Apple, Disney United States
100

Eike Batista

$10.6 B 56 mining, oil Brazil

http://www.forbes.com/billionaires/list/#page:1_sort:0_direction:asc_search:_filter:All%20industries_filter:All%20countries_filter:All%20states

The first healed dinosaur wound discovered

Source: nationalgeographic

An illustration of a dinosaur biting an Edmontosaurus.

Tyrannosaurus rex goes after a duckbilled dinosaur in this artist’s conception.

Illustration courtesy Robert DePalma

A fossilized scar.

The scar. Photograph courtesy Robert DePalma

A scar on the face of a duckbill dinosaur received after a close encounter with a Tyrannosaurus rex is the first clear case of a healed dinosaur wound, scientists say.

The finding, detailed in the current issue of the journal Cretaceous Research, also reveals that the healing properties of dinosaur skin were likely very similar to that of modern reptiles.

The lucky dinosaur was an adult Edmontosaurus annectens, a species of duckbill dinosaur that lived in what is today the Hell Creek region of South Dakota about 65 to 67 million years ago. (Explore a prehistoric time line.)

A teardrop-shaped patch of fossilized skin about 5 by 5 inches (12 by 14 centimeters) that was discovered with the creature’s bones and is thought to have come from above its right eye, includes an oval-shaped section that is incongruous with the surrounding skin. (Related: “‘Dinosaur Mummy’ Found; Have Intact Skin, Tissue.”)

Bruce Rothschild, a professor of medicine at the University of Kansas and Northeast Ohio Medical University, said the first time he laid eyes on it, it was “quite clear” to him that he was looking at an old wound.

“That was unequivocal,” said Rothschild, who is a co-author of the new study.

A Terrible Attacker

The skull of the scarred Edmontosaurus also showed signs of trauma, and from the size and shape of the marks on the bone, Rothschild and fellow co-author Robert DePalma, a paleontologist at the Palm Beach Museum of Natural History in Florida, speculate the creature was attacked by a T. rex.

It’s likely, though still unproven, that both the skin wound and the skull injury were sustained during the same attack, the scientists say. The wound “was large enough to have been a claw or a tooth,” Rothschild said.

Rothschild and DePalma also compared the dinosaur wound to healed wounds on modern reptiles, including iguanas, and found the scar patterns to be nearly identical.

It isn’t surprising that the wounds would be similar, said paleontologist David Burnham of the University of Kansas Biodiversity Institute, since dinosaurs and lizards are distant cousins.

“That’s kind of what we would expect,” said Burnham, who was not involved in the study. “It’s what makes evolution work—that we can depend on this.”

Dog-Eat-Dog

Phil Bell, a paleontologist with the Pipestone Creek Dinosaur Initiative in Canada who also was not involved in the research, called the Edmontosaurus fossil “a really nicely preserved animal with a very obvious scar.”

He’s not convinced, however, that it was caused by a predator attack. The size of the scar is relatively small, Bell said, and would also be consistent with the skin being pierced in some other accident such as a fall.

“But certainly the marks that you see on the skull, those are [more consistent] with Tyrannosaur-bitten bones,” he added.

Prior to the discovery, scientists knew of one other case of a dinosaur wound. But in that instance, it was an unhealed wound that scientists think was inflicted by scavengers after the creature was already dead.

It’s very likely that this particular Edmontosaurus wasn’t the only dinosaur to sport scars, whether from battle wounds or accidents, Bell added.

“I would imagine just about every dinosaur walking around had similar scars,” he said. (Read about “Extreme Dinosaurs” in National Geographic magazine.)

“Tigers and lions have scarred noses, and great white sharks have got dings on their noses and nips taken out of their fins. It’s a dog-eat-dog world out there, and [Edmontosaurus was] unfortunately in the line of fire from some pretty big and nasty predators … This one was just lucky to get away.”

Mysterious Escape

Just how Edmontosaurus survived a T. rex attack is still unclear. “Escape from a T. rex is something that we wouldn’t think would happen,” Burnham said.

Duckbill dinosaurs, also known as Hadrosaurs, were not without defenses. Edmontosaurus, for example, grew up to 30 feet (9 meters) in length, and could swipe its hefty tail or kick its legs to fell predators.

Furthermore, they were fast. “Hadrosaurs like Edmontosaurus had very powerful [running] muscles, which would have made them difficult to catch once they’d taken flight,” Bell said.

Duckbills were also herd animals, so maybe this one escaped with help from neighbors. Or perhaps the T. rex that attacked it was young. “There’s something surrounding this case that we don’t know yet,” Burnham said.

Figuring out the details of the story is part of what makes paleontology exciting, he added. “We construct past lives. We can go back into a day in the life of this animal and talk about an attack and [about] it getting away. That’s pretty cool.”

 

Greek Independence Day on the 24/3/13 at 3:30 pm at the Hellenic National Museum

20130312-113025.jpg

THE INTERNATIONAL WOMEN’S DAY MESSAGE OF DR.OLGA SARANTOPOULOS

GRIECHISCHE GESELLSCHAFT IN ÖSTERREICH
ΕΛΛΗΝΙΚΗ ΕΤΑΙΡΕΙΑ ΑΥΣΤΡΙΑΣ

​Vienna, 8th March 2013
​ ​
​THE INTERNATIONAL WOMEN’S DAY MESSAGE OF DR.OLGA SARANTOPOULOS

The March 8, International Women’s Day reminds us that the battle for fundamental social rights are everyone’s concern. It is the special day to honor the woman’s contribution in every facet of human activity, especially in the maintenance of the family institution and therefore social cohesion.

The woman above all a symbol of motherhood, guarantor of balance at home, is now a full member of a global society with equal advances in the field of economy, politics, science, the arts. The multi-layered nature of woman’s activity makes her an integral part of every human group and yet mainstay of effort for improvement and advancement.

The Woman of the Greek Diaspora is such a shining example, as she carries the burden of creating and maintaining the edifice of Hellenism in every corner of the Earth where Greeks are living. With sacrifice and bravery she faced and faces every challenge and is leading every effort to keep the Greek spirit alive.

In the current situation where values ​are affected and the global community is again in search of those ideals that will bring back into the foreground the human being, the International Women’s Day marks the need to return to the principles of solidarity, respect of human creativity .

Our world is still divided in parts in which women are still struggling for equal opportunities in education, work, decent living. And it is the duty of us all to think and finally to act,
to convince people of the countries, politicians, religious leaders, that a society is in equilibrium only when all members share equal the right to justice, peace, democracy.

The 8th of March is a day of honor to the mother, the wife, the career woman, but also a reminder that the struggle continues until in the entire world, women of every race, every nationality, whereever they come from, enjoy equal opportunities in life, education, health.

Dr.Olga Sarantopoulos
f.Secretary of the World Council of Hellenes Abroad
President of the Hellenic Society of Austria
1070 Vienna-Austria, Tel. +43 1 5268014, o.sarantopoulos@gmail.com

—————————————————-

GRIECHISCHE GESELLSCHAFT IN ÖSTERREICH ΕΛΛΗΝΙΚΗ ΕΤΑΙΡΕΙΑ ΑΥΣΤΡΙΑΣ

​Βιέννη,08.03.2013
​​ ​

ΜΗΝΥΜΑ ΔΡ. ΟΛΓΑΣ ΣΑΡΑΝΤΟΠΟΥΛΟΥ
ΓΙΑ ΤΗΝ ΠΑΓΚΟΣΜΙΑΣ ΗΜΕΡΑ ΤΗΣ ΓΥΝΑΙΚΑΣ

Η 8η Μαρτίου, Παγκόσμια Ημέρα της Γυναίκας υπενθυμίζει ότι η μάχη για την κατάκτηση θεμελιωδών κοινωνικών δικαιωμάτων είναι υπόθεση όλων μας. Είναι η ξεχωριστή μέρα που τιμούμε την γυναικεία προσφορά σε κάθε έκφανση της ανθρώπινης δραστηριότητας, ιδιαίτερα στην διατήρηση του θεσμού της οικογένειας και κατά συνέπεια της κοινωνικής συνοχής.

Η γυναίκα, πάνω από όλα σύμβολο της μητρότητας, εγγυητής της ισορροπίας στην οικογενειακή εστία, είναι σήμερα και ισότιμο μέλος μιας παγκόσμιας κοινωνίας με ισάξιες κατακτήσεις στον χώρο της οικονομίας, της πολιτικής, των επιστημών, των τεχνών. Η πολύ-επίπεδη φύση της γυναικείας δραστηριότητας την καθιστά αναπόσπαστο κομμάτι κάθε ανθρώπινης ομάδας και συνάμα στυλοβάτη της προσπάθειας για την βελτίωση και ανέλιξη της.

Η Ελληνίδα της Διασποράς είναι ένα τέτοιο λαμπρό παράδειγμα καθώς φέρει το βάρος της δημιουργίας και διατήρησης του οικοδομήματος του Ελληνισμού σε κάθε γωνιά της γης όπου υπάρχουν Έλληνες. Με αυτοθυσία και γενναιότητα αντιμετώπισε και αντιμετωπίζει κάθε πρόκληση, είναι μπροστάρης σε κάθε προσπάθεια να κρατήσουμε την Ελληνική ψυχή ζωντανή.

Στην σημερινή πραγματικότητα όπου οι αξίες πλήττονται και η παγκόσμια κοινότητα βρίσκεται και πάλι σε αναζήτηση εκείνων των ιδανικών που θα βάλουν και πάλι σε πρώτο πλάνο τον άνθρωπο, η Παγκόσμια Ημέρα της Γυναίκας σηματοδοτεί την ανάγκη επιστροφής στις αρχές της κοινωνικής αλληλεγγύης, του σεβασμού της ανθρώπινης δημιουργικότητας.

Ο κόσμος μας ακόμη και σήμερα μοιρασμένος σε μέρη που η γυναίκα εξακολουθεί να αγωνίζεται για ίσες ευκαιρίες στην εκπαίδευση, στην εργασία, στην αξιοπρεπή διαβίωση, είναι καθήκον όλων μας να προβληματιστούμε και επιτέλους να δράσουμε.

Να πείσουμε τους πολίτες των χωρών, τους πολιτικούς, τους θρησκευτικούς ηγέτες, ότι μια κοινωνία βρίσκεται σε ισορροπία μονάχα όταν όλα τα μέλη της μοιράζονται με ίσους όρους το δικαίωμα στην ισονομία, την ειρήνη, την Δημοκρατία.

Η 8η Μαρτίου είναι ημέρα τιμής στην μητέρα, την σύζυγο, την γυναίκα καριέρας, αλλά είναι και μια υπενθύμιση ότι η μάχη για την κατάκτηση της ισότητας συνεχίζεται μέχρι που σε ολόκληρο των κόσμο οι γυναίκες κάθε φυλής, κάθε εθνικότητας από όπου και να προέρχονται, να απολαμβάνουν ίσες ευκαιρίες στην ζωή, την παιδεία, την υγεία.

Δρ. Όλγα Σαραντοπούλου
τ.Γραμματέας Συμβουλίου Αποδήμου Ελληνισμού
Πρόεδρος Ελληνικής Εταιρείας Αυστρίας

1070 Vienna-Austria, Tel. +43 1 5268014, o.sarantopoulos@gmail.com

STAVENTO live in Sydney ‘PIDAO TA KYMATA TOUR’ SUNDAY 31 MARCH (EASTER LONG WEEKEND)

Source: Krazypromotions

EASTER WEEKEND GREEK NIGHT SPECTACULAR this year features special guests direct from Greece

STAVENTO Live

The trailblazing Hip Hop Group from Greece will be performing one
Sydney show at the exclusive Blue Beat Live Club in Double Bay

An up close and personal show you do not want to miss.

With numerous Number 1 hits this should be an unforgettable night.

SUNDAY 31 MARCH (EASTER LONG WEEKEND)

STAVENTO live in Sydney ‘PIDAO TA KYMATA TOUR’

featuring their #1 hits:
PIDAO TA KYMATA, SAN ERTHI I MERA, MESA SOU, THAT TA KATAFERO & MORE

Plus superstar DJ lineup:
KRAZY KON – EXARHOS (KOS) – ADONIS(BIRTHDAY SET) – MEL – DIMI GEE

Featuring
GREECE 2013 CD LAUNCH PARTY with CD giveaways on night

MERAKI TV crew will be filming live on the night

DRINK SPECIALS

Blue Beat Live Club
16-18 cross street, double bay

Tickets: $75 pre sold / $85 at door

Buy pre sold online at KRAZYMUSIC.COM.AU
or from outlets Eurobay (Brighton) Frappe (Earlwood) Giorgios
(Belmore)

For VIP lounge reservations, birthday packages or more info
call 0418 451 481
18+ event / Doors open 9.30pm

Greek ex-minister Akis Tsohatzopoulos imprisoned for eight years for tax fraud

Source: guardian.co.uk

Socialist party politician who almost became prime minister in 1990s becomes latest target of crackdown on corrupt politicians

Akis Tsohatzopoulos, ex-defence minister and leading Pasok politician, is taken to court in Athens

Akis Tsohatzopoulos, former defence minister and Pasok politician, is taken to court in Athens. He is the highest-profile politician to be jailed in decades. Photograph: EPA

A Greek court has sentenced a former defence minister to eight years in prison for failing to disclose the source of lavish wealth that made him a symbol of the corruption that has plagued the country.

Once a powerful Socialist politician who almost became prime minister in the 1990s, Akis Tsohatzopoulos has been in jail pending trial since April last year as prosecutors investigated allegations of fraudulently acquired wealth.

In the highest-profile conviction of a politician in decades, the Athens appeal court ruled on Monday that his income statements between 2006 and 2009 were false and he had failed to declare a neo-classical mansion at the foot of the ancient Acropolis when he bought it in 2009.

Greek politicians are required under law to declare the origin of their wealth.

Tsohatzopoulos told reporters shortly before he was sent back to prison that he would appeal against the sentence. “The truth was covered up and this is a legal failure. It is an unacceptable decision,” he said.

During the trial, details emerged of an opulent lifestyle that confirmed popular impressions of a self-serving elite that used public office for personal enrichment.

Soaring unemployment and painful austerity measures have deepened popular anger against the generation of politicians who led Greece into a debt crisis in 2009.

The government is trying to appease some of that anger by stepping up efforts to crack down on high-level tax evasion and fraud.

On Thursday, a former mayor of the country’s second city, Thessaloniki, was jailed for life for embezzling about €20m (£17m) in the first big corruption trial since the crisis erupted.

Tsohatzopoulos faces a further trial on charges of money laundering and using offshore companies to buy the luxurious mansion in Athens.

In addition to the prison term, he was also fined €520,000 and the mansion will be confiscated.

Tsohatzopoulos nearly became prime minister in 1996 but was narrowly defeated in an internal party vote to become chairman of the then-ruling Socialist Pasok party, now a junior partner in the ruling coalition under the prime minister, Antonis Samaras.

He last served as minister in 2004 and quit politics in 2009. He has repeatedly denied any wrongdoing in a series of affairs investigated by prosecutors, including the use of offshore companies to buy the mansion and the purchase of German submarines by Greece.

Qatari emir buys six Greek islands for a song

Source: guardian.co.uk

Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani pays €8.5m on Ionian retreats for family with seller happy to strike deal after 18 months of red tape

island of Oxia

The Greek island of Oxia, was the Qatari emir’s first purchase, which cost €5m.

The suitor is one of the world’s wealthiest men; the location happens to be the eurozone’s poorest country. But in an unlikely coming together of economic circumstances, the emir of Qatar, Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani, has opted to splash out €8.5m (£7.35m) on six idyllic isles in the Ionian sea.

Closure of the deal – the latest in a global shopping spree that has seen the sheikh’s property portfolio spread from London to Beijing – has been met with glee in Greece, the west’s most bankrupt state, and Doha, where the royal household experienced 18 months of excruciating drama to take possession of the outcrops.

“Greece is that kind of place,” said Ioannis Kassianos, Ithaca’s straight-talking Greek-American mayor. “Even when you buy an island, even if you are the emir of Qatar, it takes a year and a half for all the paperwork to go through.”

The isles, known as the Echinades, caught the oil-rich monarch’s fancy when he moored his super-yacht in the turquoise waters off Ithaca, took in the view and liked what he saw. That was four summers ago.

Qatar's Emir Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa al-Thani

Qatar’s Emir and his wife. Photograph: Yves Herman/ReutersWhen the royal eventually got off the yacht, he inquired about the pine-covered chain as he strolled about Ithaca in sandals and shorts. “They have a fund with a couple of hundred million in it,” enthused Kassianos, a former US economics professor who assumed the mayorship of Homer’s fabled isle three years ago. “And as far as I know they want to buy all 18 of the islands, the whole lot.”The purchase, the biggest private investment in Greece, appears to have been a windfall for the emir, who drove a hard bargain in a market where investors are few and far between. The first island, Oxia, initially came with a price tag of €7m before its Greek-Australian owners agreed to let it go for just under €5m. Last week, Denis Grivas, whose family has owned the title deeds to the other five almost since the foundation of modern Greece, also settled on a price.

“The islands have been in my family for over 150 years but we are not rich enough to be able to keep such valuable properties any longer,” he said, ruing the soaring taxes the crisis-hit Greek state has slapped on real estate. “We are very, very happy to see them go. They have been on the market for nearly 40 years.”

With their pristine beaches, ancient olive orchards and natural coves, the uninhabited isles are “an ideal opportunity for a solid business investment with unlimited possibilities”, says the high-end “private island online” site, describing the properties as Mediterranean pearls. “The potential for development is very big … from developing tourist-style Club Meds or hotel facilities, to villas to sell or rent.”

But the Gulf royal does not appear in any mood to create tourist resorts on the retreats. Instead, said Kassianos, his aim is to build palaces for the exclusive pleasure of his 24 children and three wives. The architects have already moved in, drawing up plans to create a private idyll, although he has run into trouble with Greek law.

“There is a stupid law because in Greece we do everything upside down,” lamented Kassianos. “That law says that whatever the size of your land, your home can be no bigger than 250 sq m. The emir has reacted to this saying his WC is 250 sq m and his kitchen alone has to be 1,000 sq m, because otherwise how is he going to feed all his guests?”

To appease the locals, the Qatari, who is also being heavily courted by the government to invest in Greece, has promised to come bearing gifts. “His people said ‘what present can we give you?’ and I said the island needs water desperately,” said Kassianos. “A study to lay a pipeline from the mainland is already under way. That’s not bad when we’ve been trying to get a new port here for the past 40 years.”

The emir plans to moor his yacht off his new property this summer. Locals on Ithaca are getting ready. An honorary citizenship beckons along with a feast fit for a very modern Homeric hero.

“The next time he comes we hope to get him and his family off his yacht and into our restaurants,” said Ithaca’s mayor.

Emir’s Grecian passion

This is not the first time the 56-year-old emir of Qatar has shown interest in Greece. Three years ago, when the country’s economic crisis erupted, the Gulf kingdom pledged to invest as much as €5bn in real estate, tourism, transport and infrastructure, including habours and airports. But perennial delays and the perils of Greece’s Byzantine bureaucracy were such that Qatar pulled out of the projects.

Last month, following a visit to Doha by the Greek prime minister, Antonis Samaras, interest was rekindled when Qatar signed up to take part in an international tender to develop Athens’ former international airport at Elliniko, one of the most sort after slices of real estate in Europe. The Gulf state has also shown interest in purchasing the famous beachfront Astir Palace hotel, once a stomping ground for celebrities outside the capital.

The emir may be rich but he is business savvy. He had wanted to buy the Ionian isle of Skorpios, where Jackie Kennedy married Aris Onassis. The deal fell through when the late shipowner’s granddaughter, Athina Onassis, refused to come down in price. She is selling for €200m.