Δάντης: «Αυτό το «φάλτσο» που συνέβη σε βάρος μου δεν μπορεί να συνεχιστεί άλλο»

Δάντης: «Αυτό το «φάλτσο» που συνέβη σε βάρος μου δεν μπορεί να συνεχιστεί άλλο»

Ο Χρήστος Δάντης συχνά νιώθει ότι είναι αδικημένος και ξεσπάει μέσα από τα social media.

Ο τραγουδιστής το γεγονός ότι δεν παίζουν τα ραδιόφωνα τα τραγούδια του και ότι η δισκογραφική του εταιρεία δεν κάνει κάτι γι’ αυτό. «Θα κάνω ένα – δυο καινούργια τραγούδια , που θα αποτελέσουν την αρχή ενός νέου άλμπουμ.

Τώρα πότε θα κυκλοφορήσει αυτό και πως είναι άγνωστο καθώς έχω θέματα με τη SONY και δεν θα συνεχίσω τη συνεργασία μου μαζί τους. Όλο αυτό το «φάλτσο» που συνέβη σε βάρος μου δεν μπορεί να συνεχιστεί άλλο.

Το τραγούδι μου δεν προωθήθηκε , άρχισα να φωνάζω μέσω των socialmediaκαι τότε ξεκίνησαν να το παίζουν τα ραδιόφωνα, αλλά εκείνοι δεν το είχαν στείλει πουθενά», δήλωσε στην εφημερίδα newsο τραγουδιστής.

Μαριάντα Πιερίδη: Ο «πόλεμος» με γνωστό όμιλο και… το χρέος των 6000 ευρώ

Μαριάντα Πιερίδη: Ο «πόλεμος» με γνωστό όμιλο και… το χρέος των 6000 ευρώ
Μαριάντα Πιερίδη: Ο «πόλεμος» με γνωστό όμιλο και… το χρέος των 6000 ευρώ

«Πόλεμος» έχει ξεσπάσει ανάμεσα στην Μαριάντα Πιερίδη και τον όμιλο Λεμονή.

Η πλευρά του ομίλου ισχυρίζεται ότι η τραγουδίστρια του χρωστά 6000 ευρώ από προϊόντα που αγόρασε, την ίδια ώρα που η Μαριάντα Πιερίδη δηλώνει πως της τα είχαν κάνει δώρο. Ο όμιλος επιχειρήσεων Λεμονή έχει στείλει εξώδικο στην τραγουδίστρια με το οποίο της γνωστοποιεί το χρέος της προς εκείνη, λέγοντας πως το ποσό των 6000 ευρώ είναι αγορές ρούχων και αξεσουάρ για τις εμφανίσεις της πάνω στην πίστα. Όλα ξεκίνησαν σύμφωνα με δημοσίευμα του περιοδικού Ciao το καλοκαίρι όταν η Μαριάντα Πιερίδη απευθύνθηκε σε γνωστό όμιλο εισαγωγής των μεγαλύτερων οίκων μόδας του εξωτερικού στην Ελλάδα και με τις υποδείξεις του στυλίστα της, επέλεξε να ντυθεί με τα πιο αποκαλυπτικά φορέματα ιταλικού κολοσσού της παγκόσμιας μόδας. Ζήτησε να της τα στείλουν με δελτίο αποστολής στο οποίο αναγραφόταν το συνολικό κόστος. Η Μαριάντα Πιερίδη είχε δώσει ένα μικρό ποσοστό τότε και είχε κάνει συμφωνία πως σε μικρό χρονικό διάστημα θα αποπλήρωνε το υπόλοιπο ποσό. Σύμφωνα με την εταιρία, λόγω της πολιτική της και των δημοσίων σχέσεων, ο όμιλος της είχε κάνει κάποια κομμάτια από την συνολική παραγγελία δώρο. Εκεί φαίνεται πως… μπερδεύτηκε το πράγμα. Η Μαριάντα Πιερίδη υποστηρίζει πως έχει καταβάλλει το ποσό εξαρχής και πως τα 6000 ευρώ που η εταιρία χαρακτηρίζει ως χρέος, αντιστοιχούν στα προϊόντα που της έκανε δώρο. Η Μαριάντα Πιερίδη όπως γράφει το Ciao έγινε έξαλλη όταν πήρε στα χέρια της το εξώδικο, όμως πιστεύει ότι δεν θα είναι δύσκολο να έρθουν σε συμφωνία πο δυο πλευρές.

Melbourne in a Greek rush as new wave of migrants arrive

Source: TheHerald

Ellie Doulgeris

Australian-born Ellie Doulgeris says relatives are planning to move here. Picture: Jake Nowakowski Herald Sun

MELBOURNE is set for a new wave of Greek migrants as the nation’s dismal economy drives away workers in search of jobs.

Fed up with unemployment above 17 per cent, hundreds of aspiring migrants have bombarded local Greek organisations looking for ways to call Melbourne home.

Department of Immigration figures show Australia is on track to record a 65 per cent increase in Greek migrants this financial year, after an influx in the last six months of 2011 as Europe’s economic woes deepened.

And Melbourne – which has more Greek-speaking people than any city outside Athens and Thessaloniki – will take the lion’s share, says Greek Orthodox Community of Melbourne president Bill Papastergiadis.

He said the organisation had been swamped with hundreds of inquiries a month from Greeks wanting migration advice.

“That really took effect once the economic situation deteriorated in Greece,” Mr Papastergiadis said.

The number of Greeks visiting Australia on short-term visas also increased, with nearly 4000 arriving last year, up 21 per cent on 2009.

Melbourne already is home to more than 300,000 Greeks, with many arriving in the 1950s and 1960s when government migration schemes sought Greeks and Italians.

Lazarus Karasavvidis said his international recruitment and training firm Skillup Australia had witnessed a tenfold increase in the number of Greek people wanting work in Melbourne in the last six months of 2011.

“The vast majority of them are young, urban professionals. They’re well qualified, they’re looking for a new home,” Mr Karasavvidis said.

Melbourne’s Ellie Doulgeris, 20, said Greek relatives planned to migrate.

“Some are willing to stick it through, but things aren’t great,” Ms Doulgeris said.

 

Hilarious new comedy by the troupe Parikia to hit the stage, To Kelepori

To Kelepouri

To Kelepouri

To Kelepori, a hilarious character-based situation comedy promises lots of laughter and fun.

It is that time of year again when the modern Greek theatre troupe Parikia is preparing intensively for the presentation of their new theatrical work.
The most recent appearance of the troupe was in a performance about Tsitsanis, organised by the Association of Thessalonians. Lefkos Pyrgos played last November at the Melbourne Town Hall, with great success.
Over the last six years, the troupe Parikia, in collaboration with the famous theatrical duo, Thanasis Papathanasiou and Michalis Reppas, have staged their works, enjoying a great success both in Greece and Australia.
The new project that the troupe will present at the end of February, has been named To Kelepouri (The Windfall). The author of the play is young and talented writer and actor, George Eliopoulos, author of numerous theatrical works: Desperados, Bedtime Stories, 4 ever, The Black Box, The Secrets of my Failure, Second Chance and others.
To Kelepouri is his last work, performed in Athens with great success in 2011-2012. It is a hilarious character-based situation comedy, about George and Bemba. George is a desperate young man who has borrowed money and the lenders are threatening. He must return the money urgently. Bemba is a very rich, bride-to-be, that must get married before she is 25. Otherwise, she will lose her inheritance.
The matchmaking is done, but things are not as George expected. The bride is an obese girl with sinister manners. Too late for George to run away. They stay together and we have an amazing story.
The comedy uniquely speaks about the dire current situation in our homeland Greece, and asks: Where can you go for little money? Where can you go for a little love? How far will one desperate father go in order to marry off his child?
With the magical weapon of comedy – the laughs are abundant in this theatrical work – the show promises an unforgettable theatrical experience.
To Kelepouri is a show for the desperate, for those in love, for family and friends, but above all for people who want to laugh from their soul.
Stella Michail, multitalented actress from Greece, is starring in the role of Bemba. Stella was invited by the troupe Parikia just for the purpose of this role.
Greek Australians had the opportunity to see Stella last May, when she toured Melbourne with a series of shows as part of the Antipodes Festival.
Beside her, Thanassis Makrigiorgos, director of the play, is also starring in the role of George.
Co-starring are Stavros Arberoris, Vaso Farais, Melina Menelaus, Nick Deves, Nick Kalianis and John Kostarakis.
Modern Greek Theatre and Thiasos Parikia is an organisation dedicated to producing high quality Greek theatre that is current and full of many laughs.
Performances of To Kelepouri begin on Saturday 23 February, in the known haunt of the troupe Parikia, the small theatre of the Kew High School.

 

Man accused of 1991 murder of Yasmin Sinodinos released on bail

Source: TheHerald

Stacey Sinodinos

Phillip Stevens and Stacey Sinodinos say they just want justice for the murder of their mother, Yasmin, in 1991.   The Advertiser

THE man accused of the infamous cold case murder of Yasmin Sinodinos has been released on bail, disappointing and upsetting the late woman’s children.

The Adelaide Magistrates Court this morning released Timo Pasanen, 43, on bail, ordering he report three times a week to police and surrender his passport.

Unlike most bail hearings, prosecutors did not outline any details of the allegations against Pasanen, nor of the two-decade-old alleged murder, in court.

They said that, because after discussions with defence counsel, they did not object to Pasanen’s release.

Family portrait of Yasmin Sinodinos

A family portrait of SA murder victim Yasmin Sinodinos.

 

That submission appeared to catch Ms Sinodinos’ children off guard.

Sitting in the body of the court, they cried and swore audibly as Chief Magistrate Liz Bolton approved Pasanen’s release.

He will be allowed to leave the Adelaide Remand Centre sometime today and must appear in court again in April.

Yasmin Sinodinos

Date/Time: 2013:02:14 10:29:53

Outside court, Ms Sinodinos’ son, Phillip Stevens, expressed disappointment with the decision.

“It’s a joke,” he said.

“How do you think you would feel if your mum got murdered?”

Earlier, Ms Sinodinos’ children told of their grief and wish for anyone found guilty of their mother’s murder to be jailed for life.

Police last week made a breakthrough in the murder case of Ms Sinodinos, whose body was discovered in December 1991 on the side of a fire track at Anstey Hill.

Detectives last week arrested Mr Pasanen and charged him over her murder after his DNA was allegedly matched to some collected from Ms Sinodinos’ body 21 years ago.

This morning, her children Stacey Sinodinos and Mr Stevens issued a statement detailing the pain they have endured for the past 21 years.

“There are no words that can describe the hurt and anguish we have had to endure over the last 21 years from what has been taken from us,” they said.

“We have been robbed of a mother, a daughter, sister and a grandmother. We have had our family life ripped out from under us while the person responsible for this crime has walked free.”

Ms Sinodinos and Mr Stevens said they wanted justice in the form of a life sentence for anyone found guilty of the murder.

“All we want is justice and for (any) person found guilty of this crime to be put away for life as we are already doing a life sentence without our mother,” they said.

“We would like to thank everyone who has worked on our mum’s case and for never giving up and for everyone else’s support through this hard time – at least now we hope to have some sort of closure.

“Our family would appreciate some privacy while we try to come to terms with what’s just unfolded.”

 

Koza Mostra & Agathonas Iakovidis, Greek entrants for 2013.

Four songs battled it out tonight in Ellinikόs Telikόs Eurosong 2013 in the Gazi Music Hall in Athens, for the honour of representing Greece in Europe’s Favourite TV Show, and it was Alcohol Is Free by Koza Mostra & Agathonas Iakovidis that emerged as winner.

Written by Gordon Roxburgh. Topics: Malmö , 2013 , news , Greece , national selection , ERT , winner , Koza Mostra & Agathonas Iakovidis .

Links: Official Greek Eurovision website
In a show that was packed with guest appearances from many former Eurovision acts, the main focus was which of the four songs would the five member jury and the Greek televoters pick as the song and act that would fly the flag for the country in Malmö.

Despina Vandi and Giorgos Kapoutzidis presented the final and the following songs took to the stage. (winner in bold)

One Last Kiss sung by Thomai Apergi (Music: Giorgos Gekas. Lyrics: Agis Nikolakopoulos)
Angel sung by Alex Leon featuring Giorgina (Music: Alex Leon. Lyrics: Riskykid and Alex Leon)
Alcohol Is Free sung by Koza Mostra & Agathonas Iakovidis (Music: Ilias Kozas. Lyrics: Stathis Pachidis)
Hilies Kai Mia Nychtes (A thousand and one nights) sung by Aggeliki Iliadi. (Music: Kyriakos Papadopoulos. Lyricst: Ilias Philippou)

Eurovision fans were also treated to appearances by six former winners of the Eurovision Song Contest, with Vicky Leandros, Ruslana, Elena Paparizou, Marija Serifovic, Dima Bilan and Alexander Rybak who sang along with young Greek singers, and included some familair names, such as Ivi Adamou (Cyprus 2012), Eleftheria Eleftheriou (Greece 2012), Kostas Martakis (Greek National Final 2008) and Melisses (Greek National Final 2010), as well as Demy and Vegas.

Also on stage was this year’s Cypriot entrant, Despina Olympiou who performed her entry An Me Thimase.

If you missed the show, you can watch it again on our Web Tv Player.

Do you agree with the choice of song that Greece has made for 2013?

Maria Vamvakinou – Hellenic Museum – Through a Child’s Eyes Exhibition

Hellenic Museum – http://www.Hellenic.org.au “Through a Child’s Eyes” is an audio-visual exhibition examining the lives of those who came to Australia as children during the period of mass assisted migration post 1952. By choosing 12 subjects representing different fields of endeavor including Education, Sport, Politics, the Arts, Medicine, Business and Law, the inter-active exhibition provides an insight into the struggles, dreams, aspirations and achievements of these child migrants.

Greek Heiress Sues After Chalet’s Picassos, Monets Vanish

A Greek heiress is fighting a legal battle in Switzerland to find out what has become of a collection of PicassoVan Gogh, Renoir, Monet, Cezanne and Degas art that she says should be part of her inheritance.

Aspasia Zaimis’s uncle, Basil Goulandris, was a billionaire shipping magnate who spent the winter months in the Alpine resort of Gstaad with his wife Elise. The Greek couple amassed a billion-dollar collection that they displayed in their chalet.

'Still Life: Coffee Pot'

“Still Life: Coffee Pot” by Vincent Van Gogh. It is among the paintings that belonged to Basil and Elise Goulandris and was exhibited in 1999 at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Andros. Source: Wikipaintings via Bloomberg

 Basil and Elise Goulandris

Basil Goulandris, a Greek shipping billionaire, and his wife Elise Goulandris, who with her husband built up an art collection including works by Van Gogh and Monet. One of Elise Goulandris’s nieces is trying to track down the collection, saying that she believes she should have inherited a part of it. Source: Aspasia Zaimis via Bloomberg

The chalet belonging to Elise Goulandris, where she hung the paintings until her death in 2000. A Swiss court is examining the claim of her niece for a share of the inheritance. Source: Aspasia Zaimis via Bloomberg

Elise Goulandris Chalet

The chalet belonging to Elise Goulandris. A Swiss court is examining the claim of her niece for a share of the inheritance. Source: Aspasia Zaimis via Bloomberg

Aspasia Zaimis

Aspasia Zaimis stands in front of the Vincent Van Gogh painting “Olive Picking” in her aunt Elise Goulandris’s chalet in Gstaad, Switzerland. The photograph was taken in the late 1980s. Source: Aspasia Zaimis via Bloomberg

Basil Goulandris died in 1994; his wife Elise in 2000. Zaimis, a legatee in Elise Goulandris’s will, contends that one- sixth of the collection should be hers after her aunt’s death.

“I am determined to find the paintings which were in the Gstaad home before my aunt’s death,” Zaimis said by phone from Greece. “I believe with all my heart that the paintings were part of my inheritance.”

Her quest has uncovered a paper trail leading from the Aegean island of Andros to Swiss depots; from a Panama trading company to a Liechtenstein foundation, according to two people familiar with the lawsuit who declined to be identified by name.

The case now winding through a Lausanne court is examining whether a sale contract dated 1985 for 83 masterpieces — at a price far below their value — is genuine, the people said.

“I do not believe that Basil sold his collection,” Zaimis said. “They were so proud of it. I cannot imagine he would have sold it for this price.”

Documents Claim

Swiss prosecutors opened a criminal investigation into the Elise Goulandris Foundation — Elise’s main heir — and the executor of her will, the art historian and curator Kyriakos Koutsomallis, on suspicion of falsifying titles of ownership, passing on false documents and duplicity in executing the will, the people said. They declined to be identified by name because of privacy restrictions in Swiss lawsuits.

“The proceedings in Switzerland are still in their initial stages,” Zaimis’s lawyer, Ron Soffer of Cabinet Soffer in Paris, said in a telephone interview.

When Elise Goulandris left Gstaad for the summer, the paintings were packed up and stored in a depot, according to the two people familiar with the case. Zaimis said she hasn’t seen them since Elise’s death.

A beauty who had counted the former French President Valery Giscard D’Estaing among her friends, Elise died while summering on the Aegean in her yacht. She had written her will in Greek and in code, according to the two people.

Art Museum

The Elise Goulandris Foundation, the chief beneficiary of her will, plans to finance the construction of a contemporary art museum in Athens, according to Koutsomallis’s lawyer, Jean- Christophe Diserens of Etude Villa Olivier in Lausanne. Goulandris also named six legatees including Zaimis, Diserens wrote in a response to e-mailed questions.

Diserens denied any wrongdoing by his client.

“The manner in which Mr. Koutsomallis fulfilled his mission as executor of the will has been approved by the heirs and Mrs. Zaimis’s co-legatees,” Diserens wrote.

The critical sentence in Elise’s will is that all her personal property that is not antique and fit for a museum should go to her nieces and nephews, said the two people, who have seen the will. Zaimis says the paintings aren’t antiques and should be part of her inheritance.

Panama Connection

After she filed suit, Diserens produced a contract dated 1985 showing that Basil Goulandris sold 83 masterpieces to a Panamanian company called Wilton Trading SA for $31.7 million, the people said. The company belonged to Goulandris’s sister-in- law Maria Goulandris, according to testimony given by her son Peter John Goulandris, the two people familiar with the court case said. Maria Goulandris died in 2005.

Yet a report commissioned by the Lausanne prosecutor found that the contract was printed on a type of paper that didn’t exist before 1988, according to the two people, who have seen the report. Zaimis also said she doubts that Basil Goulandris, who was suffering from Parkinson’s disease, would have been capable of signing the contract after 1988.

“He couldn’t lift plates and glasses,” she said.

The Lausanne prosecutor handling the case, Nicolas Cruchet, declined to be interviewed for this article. Diserens said he wouldn’t comment on the disputed contract, as he didn’t wish “to put into the public arena an inheritance conflict which should only be of interest to the judges.”

Shipping Fortune

Basil Goulandris took over the family-owned Orion Shipping & Trading Company in 1950, according to the website of the foundation established by the couple. He was honorary chairman of the Association of Greek Ship Owners and a member of the board of directors of the American Bureau of Shipping, the website says.

In 1992, Fortune magazine estimated his wealth at $1.5 billion. In 1995, the year after his death, Forbes estimated the family’s fortune at around $1.6 billion.

The art historian Nicholas Fox Weber remembers visiting the Goulandris’s Gstaad home in 1991 to research his biography of the French painter Balthus, a friend of the couple. Goulandris was weakened by illness and deteriorating physically and mentally, Fox Weber said.

“Elise Goulandris was very beautiful, very warm and welcoming and likeable” when he arrived at the chalet, Fox Weber said by telephone from San Francisco.

“Then I saw this Cezanne painting from 1906 of his gardener, and I was knocked off my feet,” he said. “Every painting they had was of that caliber. They weren’t just works by famous artists, they were the very quintessence of those artists.”

Chagall, Manet

Among the artworks in the list of 83 attached to the disputed sales contract are 11 by Picasso, three by Braque, five Cezanne paintings, three by Marc Chagall, two by Degas, two Gauguins, two Max Ernsts, two Manets, two Miros, two Monets, three Renoirs, two Jackson Pollock oils, a Matisse, a Klee and a Kandinsky, two people familiar with the document said.

An evaluation of a third of the works by Armand Bartos, Jr. Fine Art Inc., put their worth at $781.4 million. That evaluation includes a Van Gogh painting of olive pickers which Bartos said could alone be worth $120 million, and a Cezanne self-portrait that he valued at $60 million.

Peter John Goulandris, the son of Basil Goulandris’s brother, told the court his uncle wanted to raise money to pay debts and was therefore happy to agree to the $31.7 million price for the entire collection, two people familiar with the suit said.

Sale Terms

The paintings continued to hang in the Gstaad chalet until Elise’s death, Zaimis said. Peter John Goulandris told the Lausanne court that under the terms of the sale, his mother Maria Goulandris allowed her brother-in-law to borrow paintings for the chalet, the people said.

Yet Zaimis said that right until her death, Elise Goulandris treated the paintings as her own.

“Everything was in Switzerland, in Gstaad, but not all of it was on show,” Zaimis said. “She used to change the display from one year to the next and she had some of the paintings in France. She considered the collection as hers, and made a point of telling everyone it was hers.”

Asked whether there was any suggestion that the paintings he saw in the Gstaad chalet in 1991 were on loan to the Goulandris couple, Fox Weber, who said he gave testimony in the Lausanne court in 2010, replied “absolutely not.”

Sold Monet

Long after the date of the sales contract, Basil Goulandris continued to dispose of the artworks on the list as though they were his own, the people familiar with the lawsuit said. Included among the 83 works are two Claude Monet oils-on-canvas of Rouen cathedral.

Goulandris sold one to Galerie Beyeler AG in 1990, the people said. Claudia Neugebauer, a spokeswoman for the Basel gallery, confirmed that Goulandris sold a Monet in 1990 and that Beyeler in turn sold it to Nomura Securities Co. in Tokyo that year. She declined to reveal the price, saying the gallery archive “does not indicate further information.”

Goulandris also loaned the paintings for exhibitions. The Villa Medicis in Rome confirmed in a 2009 letter that he lent a painting by Balthus for an exhibition there in 1990, according to the two people, who said they had seen the documents.

In 1993, the Museum of Modern Art in New York borrowed a Miro painting, “Paysage (La Sauterelle)” for an exhibition. Though the painting is on the list of works sold to Wilton Trading in 1985, insurance documents give the name of the assured party as Basil Goulandris, the people said.

Bonnard at Auction

Since Elise Goulandris’s death, some of the paintings have been sold, the people said. An oil byPierre Bonnard, “Jeune fille s’essuyant” (Young Girl Drying Herself) was offered at Sotheby’sImpressionist and Modern Art auction in London in 2005.

In the provenance section, the catalog named Basil P. Goulandris as a previous owner and said the work came from a private European collection. That description would apply neither to Panama-based Wilton Trading, nor to Maria Goulandris, who lived in New York.

Peter John Goulandris told the court that in mid-1992, his mother Maria donated part of the collection to a foundation registered in Vaduz, Liechtenstein, called Fondation Sirina, the two people said. The foundation’s purpose is described in its statute as “promoting art in Greece and financing charitable organizations in Greece,” the people said. Goulandris said his mother also gave some works to him and his sister, they said.

Andros Exhibition

In 1999, the Basil and Elise Goulandris Foundation held an exhibition of 29 of the artworks on the list at their Museum of Contemporary Art on Andros. Elise Goulandris wrote a foreword for the catalog, “Classics of Modern Art,” which makes no mention of lenders, though she does thank those who contributed texts for the catalog and her colleagues.

Peter John Goulandris directed an e-mail enquiry to his lawyer, Dennis Glazer of Davis Polk in New York. Glazer declined to answer questions about the 1985 sale contract. He said he considers Zaimis’s claims to be “baseless.”

“Elise’s other nieces and nephews have not joined in Mrs. Zaimis’s actions, considering her claims to be invalid,” Glazer wrote in an e-mail. Elise Goulandris’s “widely known wishes” were for some artworks to be displayed in a museum to be constructed in Athens, Glazer wrote.

“Property has been acquired for this museum and advanced plans and preparations are under way for its construction,” he wrote. “The paintings in question were part of a private sales transaction agreed between Mr. Basil Goulandris and Wilton Trading S.A. almost ten years prior to his death.”

Family Opposition

Zaimis and her sister, Evanthea Veroutis-Anastasadi, together inherited a third of Elise Goulandris’s private estate, the people familiar with the will said. Co-legatees are Fleurette Karadontis, another niece of Elise, who inherited one- third. The three Canada-based children of Elise Goulandris’s brother, Robert and Edward Karadontis and Elise Karadontis Oliveira, together account for the last third.

Jacques Haldy, a Lausanne lawyer, wrote in an e-mail that he represents all the legatees aside from Zaimis. His clients, he said, oppose Zaimis’s legal endeavors. “They condemn them strongly and consider them completely unjustified,” he wrote.

Zaimis’s legal action is being partly financed by a New York art dealer, Ezra Chowaiki, who described himself as a friend and said that in return for his aid he has “a right of first refusal to purchase paintings that she might obtain.”

The case has “stripped her of all her resources,” Chowaiki said by e-mail. His gallery, Chowaiki & Co., specializes in Impressionist and modern art.

“Aspa is fighting against very wealthy adversaries,” he said. “I am not surprised that her adversaries are upset about the fact that they were not able to incapacitate her.”

Zaimis said she can’t understand why her sister and cousins are not joining her quest.

“It’s a big mystery,” said Zaimis. “Nothing makes any sense.”

Muse highlights include: Martin Gayford on London exhibitions, Jorg von Uthmann on Paris culture and Guy Collins on wine.

To contact the reporter on the story: Catherine Hickley in Berlin at chickley@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Manuela Hoelterhoff atmhoelterhoff@bloomberg.net.

Greek Cypriots choose their president

Source: NICOSIA – Agence France-Presse

Right-wing opposition leader and presidential candidate Nicos Anastasiades. AP photo

Right-wing opposition leader and presidential candidate Nicos Anastasiades. AP photo

Greek Cypriots went to the polls Feb. 17 to choose a new president after a heated election campaign focused on rescuing the recession-hit E.U. member state from bankruptcy.

Nicos Anastasiades, 66, of the rightwing main opposition Disy party, is tipped to win the first round in which 550,000 Cypriots are eligible to vote, perhaps managing to cross the 50-percent threshold that would avoid a run-off a week later.

Asked after voting in the southern town of Limassol what the stakes were in the election, Anastasiades said it was about “survival of the country and nothing else.”

His closest challenger for is former health minister Stavros Malas, 45, an independent backed by the currently ruling communist AKEL party. “This is a day for the most important chapter in the history of the Cypriot people to be written,” Malas said after voting in the capital.

Jim Gianopulos, Alexander Payne at the Leadership 100 Conference

Dana Point, Ca.- Photos.- Dimitrios Panagos

The 22nd Annual Leadership 100 Conference with more than 300 attendees culminated in a celebratory Grand Gala on Saturday, February 9, 2013 at The Ritz-Carlton, Laguna Niguel in Dana Point, California. Featured speakers included Jim Gianopulos, Chairman & Chief Executive Officer of Twentieth Century Fox Film, who presented a memorable audio-visual show on “Hollywood and Hellenism”; Fr. John Bakas, renowned Dean of Saint Sophia Cathedral in Los Angeles; Alexander Payne, the Academy Award winning film director, screenwriter and producer, who was introduced by his former pastor in Omaha, Nebraska, Very Rev. Fr. Eugene N. Pappas, now of Three Hierarchs Church in Brooklyn, New York; and Nia Vardalos, the Academy Award nominated screenwriter, actress and director. In addition, two prominent Leadership 100 members also spoke, Michael S. Johnson, the pioneering petroleum geologist and a member of the Board of Trustees, and Mary J. Mitchell, the fashion illustrator and author of Drawn to Fashion.

Archbishop Demetrios and Charles H. Cotros, joined by Fr. Eugene Pappas, far left, present Archbishop Iakovos Leadership 100 Award for Excellence to Alexander Payne, second from right; Charles H. Cotros and Archbishop Demetrios present Archbishop Iakovos Leadership 100.

Archbishop Demetrios and Charles H. Cotros, joined by Fr. Eugene Pappas, far left, present Archbishop Iakovos Leadership 100 Award for Excellence to Alexander Payne, second from right; Charles H. Cotros and Archbishop Demetrios present Archbishop Iakovos Leadership 100.

The program, which also included the traditional Bible Study and Lecture by His Eminence Archbishop Demetrios of America, was highlighted with the presentations by His Eminence and Charles H. Cotros of the distinguished Archbishop Leadership 100 Award for Excellence to Gianopulos, Payne, Vardalos and Johnson and Mitchell.

Cotros said: “The roster of such distinguished and accomplished speakers made this Leadership 100 Conference exceptional and memorable.”

The host was His Eminence Metropolitan Gerasimos of San Francisco, who was joined by Metropolitans Iakovos of Chicago, Methodios of Boston, Nicholas of Detroit, and Savas of Pittsburgh.

Entertainment featured musical performance by the sisters, Lexy and Stephany Prodomos, vocalist Georgia Veru, and Dean Vali & Keffe.

Conferees participated in a Hierarchal Divine Liturgy and Memorial Service for Leadership 100 Members celebrated by Archbishop Demetrios, the Very Rev. Apostolos Koufallakis, Chancellor of the Metropolis of San Francisco, and Fr. Bakas, on Sunday, February 10 at Saint Sophia Cathedral in Los Angeles.

GRANTS HIT RECORD OF $35 MILLION MEMBERSHIP REACHES HISTORIC 902

The unanimous approval of new grants by the Executive Committee meeting Wednesday, February 6, 2013 at the 22nd Annual Leadership 100 Conference brought the total of grants allocated by Leadership since its founding in 1984, to a record $35 million, while membership reached 902, according to Charles H. Cotros, Chairman of Leadership 100.

Cotros also reported an increase of 41 new members in 2013, reaching the historic total membership of 902 toward the ultimate goal of 1,000 members by our 30th Anniversary of the nation’s major Greek Orthodox charitable membership organization in 2014. Included in the new membership total, fulfilled memberships reached 501 and Leadership 100 Partners and Junior Partners increased to 118.

The new grants for 2013 total $1,319,592. The total to be distributed in 2013, including the ongoing grants, is $2,376,192. Leadership 100 has ongoing grants of $1 million per year to Holy Cross/Hellenic College for scholarships to students in the Theological School preparing for the Priesthood, $50,000 per year toward our $250,000 commitment to the Office of Vocational Ministry, and $6,600 per year for our retired Clergy.

Citing growth in the Endowment Fund portfolio, which stood at $75.4 million with total assets of $88.3 million, Cotros said, “The link between our robust growth in membership and the increase in grants is demonstrated in the growth of our portfolio and assets and is evidence of the vitality of Leadership 100 and a hopeful sign of our future in perpetuating our cherished values and heritage.”

The new grants approved for 2013 included the following:

Greek Orthodox Telecommunications – $270,000 to produce 26 half hour original programs – 13 Bible lessons and 13 talk shows – so that Orthodox Christians and viewers of other faiths can undergo more rigorous religious education about the Greek Orthodox faith in the United States and around the world.

GOA Department of Youth & Young Adult Ministries – Metropolis Camping Ministries – $270,000 to be distributed at $30,000 per Metropolis/Direct Archdiocesan District to be used for registrant financial assistance as first priority, but also for programming, supplies, transportation, and youth protection training and background checks for staff members.

GOA Center for Family Care Grant – $163,500 – over two years – for Men’s Ministry Group -$27,500 over two years to create a formal group for adult male members of the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese; for Seminarian and Clergy Couple Care- $34,000 to support seminarian couples as they prepare to enter into a life of ministry and to clergy couples as they navigate the challenges of parish life; and for Renewal of Family Ministry – $102,000 to publish and disseminate new family ministry resources, ongoing development of current family ministry programs and resources, and the creation of a Family Ministry Flagship Program, identifying one lead parish in each Metropolis to streamline the Center for Family Care’s training programs.

Strategic Plan Grant: a cooperative effort between the Holy Eparchial Synod and the Executive Board of the Archdiocesan Council, under the leadership of His Eminence Archbishop Demetrios – $125,000 for 2013 with an option for the next two years pending review of first year progress report. The Strategic Plan Grant is designed to address the seven initiatives outlined by His Eminence Archbishop Demetrios in his 2012 Clergy-Laity Congress address: interfaith marriages, youth, vocation, disconnected Orthodox Christians, inter-Orthodox relationships, stewardship, and the preservation of Hellenism.

GOA Department of Stewardship, Outreach & Evangelism – Home Mission Parish Grant  – $101,400 to help establish new Greek Orthodox parishes and to help support small Greek Orthodox parishes striving to become self-sufficient during their critical first years of existence. Assigned priests are able to offer much-needed consistency in leadership during critical stages of parish formation and renewal, increasing the likelihood of a parish becoming self-sufficient.

Office of Inter-Orthodox, Ecumenical and Interfaith Relations – $180,000 ($90,000 a year for two years). The office seeks to “promote and strengthen the leadership of the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America within the Orthodox Christian community of the United States and also in the Inter-Church and Interfaith arenas, the coordination of pan-Orthodox ministries, through the leadership of the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese, and in greater American society.”

GOA National Forum of Church Musicians – Enhancing the Church Music Ministry of Our Parishes – $75,000  to develop Archdiocesan-wide liturgical musical activities and resources to enhance the music ministries of individual parishes by drawing young Orthodox Christians more deeply into the faith by teaching them the hymns of the Church and involving them in liturgical worship; implementing a program to train current and new choir directors to better understand their liturgical role; and providing parishes with correct English texts of common hymns so they are more properly sung by youth, chanters, choirs and congregations.

GOA Office of Vocation and Ministry – $61,600 ($30,800/year for two years) to expand the successful CrossRoad Summer Institute, a ten-day program for sixty (60) high-achieving Orthodox Christian high school juniors and seniors to help cultivate the next generation of clergy and lay leaders for the Greek Orthodox Church and for American society.

GOA Department of Marriage and Family – The Intermarriage Challenge: Opportunity for Outreach – $54,400 and option of $60,000 next year pending review of first year progress report to create an outreach program for intermarried couples and their families predicated on the development and formation of an outreach committee in each local parish in the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese.

GOA Department of Family and Ministry – $50,000 to create and publish an Orthodox Wedding and Family Bible designed in the Orthodox tradition, produced for purchase in the Orthodox marketplace and geared to Orthodox married couples and their families.

International Orthodox Christian Charities – Orthodox Community Action Network – $178,941 over two years ($82,870 in 2013 and $96,071 in 2014) to expand the first phase of the formal creation of a national Orthodox Community Action Network (Orthodox CAN!) to nurture and activate the Orthodox Christian value of philanthropy by promoting Orthodox Christian volunteerism across all age groups in the United States by  responding effectively to natural and man-made disasters in the United States, effectively engaging in Orthodox social action initiatives in local communities, and preparing Orthodox Christian youth to serve.

Orthodox Christian Prison Ministry (OCPM) – $20,372 to provide pastoral care to hundreds of Orthodox Christian men and women in prison partly because of the lack of recognition of Orthodox Christianity as a legitimate faith in some areas but mostly because there is a shortage of priests trained in how to make visits to prisons, targeting OCPM 12 cities where there is a need for trained priests to attend to their flocks in prison.