You can find a copy of the Australian Education Bill here:

We’ve developed fact sheets to help answer your questions about what the National Plan for School Improvement will mean for you and your schools.

Fact Sheets
Better Schools: National Plan for School Improvement
A new way of funding our schools
Helping great teachers do a great job
More information about your school
Support for students who need it most
Helping schools improve results
Information for teachers and school principals
Information for parents
What happens next
Australian Education Bill 2012

http://t.co/aEj9x12q

Report on launch of the Alexander the Great exhibition

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Ο Μέγας Αλέξανδρος έφθασε στο Σύδνεϋ
Με ιδιαίτερη λαμπρότητα εγκαινιάστηκε την Παρασκευή η πολυ-αναμενώμενη έκθεση «Μέγας Αλέξανδρος: θυσαυρούς 2500 χρόνων» στο Αυστραλιανό Μουσείο στο Σύδνεϋ. Έντονο το Ελληνικό στοιχείο ανάμεσα στου καλεσμένους με τον νέο Πρέσβη της Ελληνικής Δημοκρατίας, Εξοχότατο Χαράλαμπο Δαφαράνο, η κυρία Δαφαράνου, ο κ. Γενικός Πρόξενος Βασίλειος Τόλιος και η κυρία Τόλιου, και ο Πρόεδρος του Συλλόγου Ελληνο-Αυστραλών Εκπαιδευτικών, Δρ Παναγιώτη Διαμάντη.

Την έκθεση την εγκαινίασαν η Κυβερνήτης της Νέας Νοτίου Ουαλίας, Professor Marie Bashir. Χαιρετισμοί απύθηναν ο Πρέσβης της Ρωσσικής Ομοσπνδίας, κ. Βλάντιμιρ Μοροζόβ, καθώς και στελέχη του Μουσείου Ερμιτάζ Αγίας Πετρούπολης και του Αυστραλιανού Μουσείου.

Όπως τόνισε ο Ρώσος πρέσβης, η έκθεση στάλθηκε από την Αγία Πετρούπολη στα πλαίσια των εορτασμών των 70 χρόνων από την σύναψη διπλωματικών σχέσεων Ρωσίας-Αυστραλίας.

«Αυτή η έκθεση παρουσιάζει διάφορες πτυχές του Μεγάλου Αλεξάνδρου», δήλωσε ο Διευθυντής του Αυστραλιανού Μουσείου, κ. Frank Howarth. «Η κληρονομιά του μέσα από τον Ελληνισμό είναι αυτά που επηρέασε – σχέδιο, πολιτική, αρχιτεκτονική, αισθητική – καθώς και αυτούς που τον θαύμαζαν, όπως ο Ναπολέων, η Βασίλισα Χριστίνα της Σουηδίας, και η Μέγα Αικατερίνη της Ρωσίας.»

Σύμφωνα με τον κ. Howarth, «ολόκληρη η έννοια του Ελληνισμού, το τι αποτελούσε ο Ελληνικός πολιτισμός» εκφράζετε με ένα μεγάλο κομμάτι της έκθεσης: το χρυσό επιτραπέζιο ρολόϊ με την μορφή του Μεγάλου Αλεξάνδρου, εμπνευσμένο από την έναρξη του απελευθερωτικού αγώνα των Ελλήνων, της Εθνικής Παλιγεννεσίας του 1821. (βλέπε φωτό)
Από την Ελληνική Ορθόδοξη Κοινότητα ΝΝΟ παρεβρέθηκαν ο πρόεδρος κ. Χάρυ Δανάλης, ο κ. Μιχάλης Τσιλίμος και άλλα στελέχοι του φορέα. Η ΕΟΚ ΝΝΟ ήταν ένας από τους χορηγούς της εκδήλωσεις για τα εγκαίνια της έκθεσης.

Σημειώνουμε ότι είναι η δεύτερη φορά που το Αυστραλιανό Μουσείο φιλοξενεί έκθεση με θέμα τον Μακεδονικό Ελληνισμό. Η πρώτη ήταν το 1988, όταν, στα πλαίσια των εορτασμών για τα 200α γεννέθλια της Αυστραλίας, η Ελλάδα έστειλε έκθεση ευρυμάτων από την αρχαία βασιλική νεκρόπολη στην Βεργίνα.

Έντονο το Ποντιακό στοιχείο
Όπως θα αναμενόταν, το Ποντιακό στοιχείο είναι πολύ έντονο στην μεγαλοπρεπή έκθεση αρχαιοτήτων. Μεγάλο μέρος της έκθεσης αποτελείτε από αρχαία Ελληνικά ευρήματα από τις Ελληνικές πόλεις στις βόρειες ακτές του Ευξείνου Πόντου.

Για παράδειγμα, στην φωτό απεικονίζετε ένας γόρυτος από το Βοσπορικό Βασίλεο (σήμερα ανατολική Κριμέα και ακτές της Αζοφικής Θάλασσας). Χρυσό δημιούργημα του 350 με 325 πΧ, το 1863 ανακαλύφθηκε σε τύμβο Σκύθων στο Chertomlyk της νοτίου Ουκρανίας.

Ο γόρυτος απεικονίζει την ανακάλυψη απο τους Οδυσσέα και Διομήδη, του ήρωα του Τρωικού Πολέμου, Αχιλλέα, ανάμεσα στις γυναίκες της Σκύρου.

Το μοναδικό αυτό αντικείμενο συνδέει τα στοιχεία της έκθεσης, με επίκεντρο το πρόσωπο του Μεγάλου Αλεξάνδρου: πανάρχαιες Ελληνικές ιστορίες, Ελληνικές αποικίες στα άκρα του τότε γνωστού κόσμου, επίδραση πολιτιστική στους γύρους ‘βάρβαρους’, …

Συλλόγοι
Η ΑΧΕΠΑ ΝΝΟ και η Ποντιακή Αδελφότητα ΝΝΟ «Ποντοξενιτέας» διοργανώνουν ομάδες για να επισκεπτούν την έκθεση. Καλούντε ΟΛΟΙ οι παροικιακοί φορείς να κατέβουν στον ιστορικό αυτό χώρο δίπλα στο Hyde Park, να δηλώσουν όσο ποιό δυναμικά γίνετε την Ελληνική παρουσία.

Θέλετε να προωθήσετε την ιστορική αλήθεια για την Ελληνική ταυτότητα της Μακεδονίας; Αγοράστε εισητήρια για την έκθεση και δωρίστε τα σε μη-Ελληνικής καταγωγής φίλους και γνωστούς για Χριστουγεννιάτικα δώρα!

Η μεγαλειώδης έκθεση «Μέγας Αλέξανδρος: θυσαυρούς 2500 χρόνων» θα βρίσκετε στο Αυστραλιανό Μουσείο στη γωνία William και College Streets στο Σύδνεϋ μέχρι τις 28 Απριλίου 2013. Για περισσότερες πληροφορίες, τηλεφωνήστε στο 136 100.

Extinct wombat climbed trees like a koala

Fossils have shed light on a wombat-like creature that once lived in Australia’s rainforest canopies.

Nimbadon is thought to be a tree-dwelling marsupial that lived 15 million years ago. (Illustration: Peter Schouten)
FOSSILISED REMAINS OF AN early relative of the wombat suggest that the marsupial lived in treetops around 15 million years ago.

The ancient bones, uncovered in an outback Queensland cave in the 1990s, could be the remains of the largest known tree-climbing marsupial, according to new research.

Scientists from the University of New South Wales and the University of Adelaide examined the skeleton of the species, known as Nimbadon lavarackorum, which was discovered at the Riversleigh World Heritage fossil field. The research revealed that the 70kg marsupial was equipped with powerful limbs to scale tree trunks.

Dr Karen Black, a palaeontologist from UNSW’s School of Biological, Earth and Environmental Sciences, says it was a surprise discovery given the animal’s hefty size and close ties to the wombat.

“To have a wombat-like animal up a tree was pretty amazing,” Karen says. The largest tree-climbing marsupial alive in Australia today is the Bennett’s tree kangaroo, which can weigh up to 14kg.

Extinct marsupial climbed trees like a koala

The scientists compared the Nimbadon skeleton with bones from living animals such as the koala, brushtail possum and Malayan sun bear. Honing in on the limbs, hands and feet, the study found the Nimbadon had the most in common with the koala.

“It had highly-mobile shoulder, elbow and wrist joints, so it was flexible for grabbing branches and climbing,” says Karen. “It also had very large hands and feet with opposable thumbs, and massive claws almost identical to a koala’s.”

Karen says these traits suggest that Nimbadon behaved similarly to the modern-day koala, using the same trunk-hugging method to climb trees.

But Karen says the team also found some highly unusual characteristics. The Nimbadon had relatively short hind limbs, suggesting it may have hung from branches like a sloth or orangutan.

The marsupial also sported a unique bulbous snout. “Maybe it was detecting rainforest fruits with its big nose, so it possibly could have played a role as a large seed disperser in Australia’s rainforest, which no living marsupial in Australia does,” Karen says.

Fossils reveal Australian fauna evolution

It is believed the Nimbadon died out about 15 million years ago. It was around this time that Australia’s rainforests began to recede, gradually being replaced with drier landscape.

Associate professor Rod Wells, a palaeontologist at Flinders University in Adelaide, says piecing together Australia’s early fossil record, dating back to eras such as the Miocene period, is no easy task.

“This paper represents a step beyond phylogeny [the family tree of a species],” Rod says. “It is important in that it gives us an all too rare insight into the biomechanics and behaviour of a middle Miocene marsupial, arguably Australia’s largest arboreal herbivore.”

Rod hopes further research will lead to greater insights into the evolution of Australian mammal and marsupial fauna.

The findings were originally published in scientific journal PLOS ONE.

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The years and years of notes, eventuated as the book Do You Know Who I Am?

The cover of Adrianne’s book, Do You Know Who I Am?

As the daughter of Greek Cypriot parents, author Adrianne Roy would jot notes about what it was like for first generations living in England; identity struggle, dramatic events and the search for independence in what she coins a “man’s world”.

The years and years of notes, eventuated as the book Do You Know Who I Am? “The book is about the journey of that generation of Cypriots who left their sun-baked rural villages of Cyprus in the ’40s and ’50s and sailed for England hoping for a better life and found themselves in smoggy cramped post-war London with its newfound language barriers and culture clashes. It is a comedy, but with dramatic undertones which shows how those Cypriots slowly became anglicised. It is both historic and nostalgic.”

The book has already been optioned by an English film production company to turn it into an international feature film. The screenplay is currently under commission and the producers expect the script to be ready by the end of this year. “I want to put our island on the world map,” says the author. “I want the world to see our peoples journey and how inspirational they are.

It was a daunting prospect for those who uprooted from their homeland to seek a better life in a far away country with no money in their pocket, no education and no language and surviving against the odds through hardship. “In times where there were no conveniences or technology they got on with it with humour and never complained.” Humour is a large part of the book, as is the journey of the migrant.

“It was the humour that kept that generation of English Cypriots going through very hard times,” she explains. “You can hide sorrow and hardship behind humour and this is the essence of my book. The title also has a double meaning : many Cypriots use that phrase as a form of egoistic humour but underneath it hides the sadness of living a double life not knowing whether you are Cypriot or English.”

Adrianne has already started on her second book and has well and truly given up her career in law, which she has been working in for over 15 years.

“To me, writing is my fulfilment in life. Like some people have hobbies for example the gym, sports, gardening; for me writing is my hobby. It is my pleasure and my therapy.”

To purchase Do You Know Who I Am? go to amazon.co.uk

Dr James Arvanitakis was presented with the $50,000 Prime Minister’s Award for Australian University Teacher of the Year this week

Dr James Arvanitakis was presented with the $50,000 Prime Minister’s Award for Australian University Teacher of the Year this week. The lecturer from the University of Western Sydney was recognised for his innovative teaching methods that captivate and engage his students.

And now, the Greek Australian lecturer has been invited to South Africa and Europe to expose other educators to his methods of teaching. Dr Arvanitakis says he recognised for three reasons.
One is his ability to bring theoretical concepts to life and adds “it doesn’t matter if they were written in the 1800’s or today what I do is bring them to life and show how they are relevant to people in their everyday experiences”.

The second thing is he makes learning fun. For example, he has made students participate in flash mobs to showcase chaos theory and globalisation. And thirdly, he has taken his teaching to the community and spends a lot of his time and school and community education places talking about the power of a university education and teaching.

As a lecturer, Dr Arvanitakis embraces new media and social media wholeheartedly and says that “strategically”, all universities need to do, as it has revolutionised the tertiary education industry. “The lecture is almost like the physical newspaper – we all love it, but we realise we have to change to survive. I think universities are also with that.”

And he doesn’t see new media as a competition, rather he uses it to his advantage. In his lectures, he allows Facebook to be active and text messaging to allow students who would otherwise be too shy to pose a question to do so using these mediums.

This gives them a way to educate and learn using new media. However, he also says the way the content is delivered is dependant on the course itself but says a combination of new media and the face-to-face model of delivering a lecture are both needed and are almost expected by students.

“I teach a subject called ‘contemporary societies’, and you can’t teach that without engaging with that concept – new media, new ways of communicating,” he says. The child of Greek migrants, Dr Arvanitakis says his parents instilled in him the importance of an education. And this he has carried throughout his years to today where he says he is “blown away by the positive response of the students” as well as receiving this accolade.

With the $50,000, the lecturer plans on developing new ways to deliver content and educate students. One such way is to develop an online game where students can learn about sociology whilst engaging in something similar to Angry Birds.

He has also been invited to lead teaching symposiums in South Africa, Canada and Europe and also wants to invest the money in putting together different and innovative ways to teaching such as videos.

Author of ‘Between Shades of Gray’ on the discovery of a letter from her Lithuanian grandfather

Source: HuffPostBooks

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At a recent event in Sweden, a student asked if my novel, Betweenh Shades of Gray, was primarily a search for history. I explained that it was not only a search for history, but also a search for story.
For years I recounted what I thought was my family’s story.

Then in 2005, while visiting relatives in Lithuania, I discovered I only knew part of the story, the happy part. I didn’t know that following my grandfather’s departure from Lithuania, members of his extended family were deported to Siberia.

Stalin’s deportations to Siberia had affected countless families in the countries of Lithuania, Latvia, and Estonia, yet much of the world knew nothing of it.

During that visit to Lithuania I was inspired to write a book.

One girl.

Her dream of freedom.
A voice to speak for those who would never have a chance to tell their story.
As I was writing Between Shades of Gray I felt deeply connected to my grandfather’s love of Lithuania. I longed to have a conversation with him about his experience and about our relatives who had been deported to Siberia.

Between Shades of Gray was released and I embarked on book tours worldwide. I met countless people whose families had been affected by Stalin’s terror or whose loved ones had perished in Siberia. Many people inquired about my family’s personal Siberian story, but I didn’t have any concrete details to share.

Then last April I was invited to the Balzekas Museum of Lithuanian Culture in Chicago to attend “Hope & Spirit,” an exhibition dedicated to the millions of victims of Soviet atrocities. A portion of the program, “Letters From Siberia,” displayed hundreds of letters and photographs that had made their way from Lithuanians exiled in Siberia.

Every letter, every photograph, contained a story. The exhibit was emotional, passionate, and gave attendees a rare glimpse into this little known piece of history. But walking through the aisles I felt the aching reminder that one story was still missing — my own family’s story.

Two months later I received a phone call from Dr. Audrius Plioplys, the creator and curator of “Hope & Spirit.” He explained that in 1977, a Lithuanian priest in Chicago placed an advertisement in a newspaper, requesting letters and photographs from Siberia. The priest was publishing a book to create an awareness of the deportations.

The curator further explained that his colleague, Kristina Lapienyte, had been sorting through some of the priest’s belongings at the Lithuanian Research and Studies Center in Chicago. She saw the name “Sepetys” on a folder along with the words NOT FOR PUBLICATION. Ms. Lapienyte recognized the name from Between Shades of Gray and pulled the folder to examine it.

Dr. Plioplys then delivered the unimaginable. He told me that inside the folder were six photographs and nine letters about my family in Siberia. The folder also contained a personal letter from my grandfather.

In his letter, my grandfather requested that the material in the folder not be published at that time. He feared that publication would result in negative consequences for his family still in Soviet Lithuania. Instead, he asked that the material be held for the future, for someone who might be interested in documenting the history of Lithuanians in Siberia.

My grandfather wrote the letter and sent the materials to the priest in 1977. At that time I was a tiny girl with yellow pigtails, skipping around his legs, haggling for an ice cream. We would never speak of his escape from the Soviets, the loss of his homeland, or his family members who were deported to Siberia. Instead, he sent the information off to Chicago where it would sit in a dark basement for over thirty years, waiting for someone who was interested in the story.

What are the chances that “someone” would be me and I would dedicate the book to him?
People often ask why I bother with historical fiction. Why not write commercial fiction? Through historical fiction we find hidden histories and hidden heroes. We find stories that help us evaluate past tragedies and create hope for a more just future.

And sometimes, like this time, we find the most important story. Our own.
HOPE & SPIRIT was an extensive program of exhibits, film screenings, book signings, lectures and displays of original historical materials that took place at the Balzekas Museum of Lithuanian Culture in Chicago.

This exhibit continues to be available for viewing on the HOPE & SPIRIT website. Dr. Audrius Plioplys is fielding requests for the program to travel to other cities and countries. DVDs and CDs of the program are available for purchase.

For inquiries about Hope & Spirit contact Dr. Audrius Plioplys, email: plioplysav@gmail.com

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The SourSop or the fruit from the graviola tree is a miraculous natural cancer cell killer 10,000 times stronger than Chemo

Natural Cancer Fighters – Soursop Fruit

The Soursop Fruit – Drug Co’s Don’t want you to know

Why are we not aware of this? It’s because some big corporation want to make back their money spent on years of research by trying to make a synthetic version of it for sale.

So, since you know it now you can help a friend in need by letting him know or just drink some soursop juice yourself as prevention from time to time. The taste is not bad after all. It’s completely natural and definitely has no side effects. If you have the space, plant one in your garden.
The other parts of the tree are also useful.

The next time you have a fruit juice, ask for a sour sop.

How many people died in vain while this billion-dollar drug maker concealed the secret of the miraculous Graviola tree?
This tree is low and is called graviola in Brazil , guanabana in Spanish and has the uninspiring name “soursop” in English. The fruit is very large and the subacid sweet white pulp is eaten out of hand or, more commonly, used to make fruit drinks, sherbets and such.

The principal interest in this plant is because of its strong anti-cancer effects. Although it is effective for a number of medical conditions, it is its anti tumor effect that is of most interest. This plant is a proven cancer remedy for cancers of all types.

Besides being a cancer remedy, graviola is a broad spectrum antimicrobial agent for both bacterial and fungal infections, is effective against internal parasites and worms, lowers high blood pressure and is used for depression, stress and nervous disorders.

If there ever was a single example that makes it dramatically clear why the existence of Health Sciences Institute is so vital to Americans like you, it’s the incredible story behind the Graviola tree.

The truth is stunningly simple: Deep within the Amazon
Rainforest grows a tree that could literally revolutionize what you, your doctor, and the rest of the world thinks about cancer treatment and chances of survival. The future has never looked more promising.

Research shows that with extracts from this miraculous tree it now may be possible to:
* Attack cancer safely and effectively with an all-natural therapy that does not cause extreme nausea, weight loss and hair loss
* Protect your immune system and avoid deadly infections
* Feel stronger and healthier throughout the course of the treatment
* Boost your energy and improve your outlook on life

The source of this information is just as stunning: It comes from one of America ‘s largest drug manufacturers, the fruit of over 20 laboratory tests conducted since the 1970′s! What those tests revealed was nothing short of mind numbing… Extracts from the tree were shown to:

* Effectively target and kill malignant cells in 12 types of cancer, including colon, breast, prostate, lung and pancreatic cancer.
* The tree compounds proved to be up to 10,000 times stronger in slowing the growth of cancer cells than Adriamycin, a commonly used chemotherapeutic drug!
* What’s more, unlike chemotherapy, the compound extracted from the Graviola tree selectivelyhunts
down and kills only cancer cells. It does not harm healthy cells!

The amazing anti-cancer properties of the Graviola tree have been extensively researched–so why haven’t you heard anything about it? If Graviola extract is as half as promising as it appears to be–why doesn’t every single oncologist at every major hospital insist on using it on all his or her patients?

The spine-chilling answer illustrates just how easily our health–and for many, our very lives(!)–are controlled by money and power.

Graviola–the plant that worked too well

One of America’s biggest billion-dollar drug makers began a search for a cancer cure and their research centered on Graviola, a legendary healing tree from the Amazon Rainforest.

Various parts of the Graviola tree–including the bark, leaves, roots, fruit and fruit-seeds–have been used for centuries by medicine men and native Indians in South America to treat heart disease, asthma, liver problems and arthritis. Going on very little documented scientific evidence, the company poured money and resources into testing the tree’s anti-cancerous properties–and were shocked by the results. Graviola proved itself to be a cancer-killing dynamo.

But that’s where the Graviola story nearly ended.

The company had one huge problem with the Graviola tree–it’s completely natural, and so, under federal law, not patentable. There’s no way to make serious profits from it.

It turns out the drug company invested nearly seven years trying to
synthesize two of the Graviola tree’s most powerful anti-cancer ingredients. If they could isolate and produce man-made clones of what makes the Graviola so potent, they’d be able to patent it and make their money back. Alas, they hit a brick wall. The original simply could not be replicated. There was no way the company could protect its profits–or even make back the millions it poured into research.

As the dream of huge profits evaporated, their testing on Graviola came to a screeching halt. Even worse, the company shelved the entire project and chose not to publish the findings of its research!

Luckily, however, there was one scientist from the Graviola research team whose conscience wouldn’t let him see such atrocity committed. Risking his career, he contacted a company that’s dedicated to harvesting medical plants from the Amazon Rainforest and blew the whistle.

Miracle unleashed
When researchers at the Health Sciences Institute were alerted to the news of Graviola, they began tracking the research done on the cancer-killing tree. Evidence of the astounding effectiveness of Graviola–and its shocking cover-up–came in fast and furious….

….The National Cancer Institute performed the first scientific research in 1976. The results showed that Graviola’s “leaves and stems were found effective in attacking and destroying malignant cells.” Inexplicably, the results were published in an internal report and never released to the public…

…Since 1976, Graviola has proven to be an immensely potent cancer killer in 20 independent laboratory tests, yet no double-blind clinical trials–the typical benchmark mainstream doctors and journals use to judge a
treatment’s value–were ever initiated…

A study published in the Journal of Natural Products, following a recent study conducted at Catholic University of South Korea stated that one chemical in Graviola was found to selectively kill colon cancer cells at “10,000 times the potency of (the commonly used chemotherapy drug) Adriamycin…”

The most significant part of the Catholic University of South Korea report is that Graviola was shown to selectively target the cancer cells, leaving healthy cells untouched. Unlike chemotherapy, which indiscriminately targets all actively reproducing cells (such as stomach and hair cells), causing the often devastating side effects of nausea and hair loss in cancer patients.

A study at Purdue University recently found that leaves from the Graviola tree killed cancer cells among six human cell lines and were especially effective against prostate, pancreatic and lung
cancers. Seven years of silence broken–it’s finally here!

A limited supply of Graviola extract, grown and harvested by indigenous people in Brazil, is finally available in America.

The full Graviola Story–including where you can get it and how to use it–is included in Beyond Chemotherapy: New Cancer Killers, Safe as Mother’s Milk, a Health Sciences Institute FREE special bonus report on natural substances that will effectively revolutionize the fight against cancer.
This crucial report (along with five more FREE reports) is yours ABSOLUTELY FREE with a new membership to the Health Sciences Institute. It’s just one example of how absolutely vital each report from the Institute can be to your life and those of your loved ones.

From breakthrough cancer and heart research and revolutionary Amazon Rainforest herbology to world-leading anti-aging research and nutritional medicine, every monthly Health Sciences Institute Member’s Alert puts in your hands today cures the rest of America –including your own doctor (!)–is likely to find out only ten years from now.

Hoax or Fact:
Mixture of hoax and facts.

Analysis:
The message claims that Graviola, also called Soursop is a miraculous, natural cancer cell killer which is 10,000 times stronger than Chemotherapy. It is a fact that Soursop has certain health benefits, attributed to its anti-parasitic, anti-microbial and anti-depressive properties, and recent studies have shown that it MAY have chemotherapeutic potential, but the part of the message saying it is natural cancer cell killer, 10,000 times stronger than Chemotherapy, is a certain hoax.

Soursop (scientific name – Annona muricata), also called Graviola (Portuguese), is a fruit that generally grows in the rain forests of Africa, South America, and Southeast Asia. It has other names like thorny custard apple, cherimoya and brazilian pawpaw. In various languages, this fruit is referred as: guanabana (Spanish), corossol (French), aluguntugui (Ghana), sorsaka (Papiamento), adunu (Acholi), guyabano, guanavana, durian benggala, nangka blanda, sirsak, toge-banreisi, nangka londa and zuurzak. In India, it is less known as shul-ram-fal and hanuman fal, and as mullaatha in Malayalam. The bark, leaves, root and fruits of this tree are used for traditional remedies in many countries. Graviola extracts are used for treating infections of viruses or parasites, rheumatism, arthritis, diarrhea, dysentery, depression and sickness.

The idea that Soursop can fight cancer effectively started after a research at Purdue University’s School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences. The research concluded that the active components of the tree are a unique phytochemical substances known as annonaceous acetogenins, which MAY have chemotherapeutic potential, especially with regard to multi drug-resistant cancer cells. But these tests were only confined to test tubes, no large scale clinical trials were conducted on humans to determine the safety and efficacy of Graviola for treating cancer. Therefore, there is no significant evidence to show that Soursop works as a cure for cancer. Even Wikipedia says the same.

There is evidence indicating that the fruit’s extracts selectively inhibit the growth of human breast cancer cells by downregulating expression of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) in vitro and in a mouse model, but the effect has not been studied in humans.

Moreover, studies show that use of Soursop can have certain adverse effects in some people, especially movement disorders and nerve damage that is similar to Parkinson’s disease, which is due to the very high concentration of annonacin. Graviola also has few other side effects like lowering the blood pressure, so it should not be taken by people with low blood pressure or heart complications. The antimicrobial properties of Soursop can also kill beneficial bacteria on the skin, in the vagina and gut, which can lead to infections in long term use.
Therefore, the message saying that Graviola, i.e Soursop is 10,000 times more effective cancer killer than chemo is a hoax. However, you can find thousands of websites online selling it as a miracle fruit. We advise people not to believe them blindly, but consult a doctor or oncologist before using it.

Η Αυστραλία τίμησε την απελευθέρωση της Χίου!

Η Αυστραλία τίμησε την απελευθέρωση της Χίου!

Σύσσωμοι οι πολιτικοί στάθηκαν ιδιαίτερα στη σημαντική επέτειο και τις θυσίες που έχουν υποστεί οι Χιώτες για την ελευθερία.

Εκπρόσωποι της Ομοσπονδιακής Βουλής της Αυστραλίας αλλά και της πολιτειακής βουλής της Βικτώριας τίμησαν την εκδήλωση της Χιακής Αδελφότητας Μελβούρνης και Βικτωρίας «Ο Αδαμάντιος Κοραής» για να τιμηθεί η εκατοστή επέτειος της απελευθέρωσης της Χίου.

Ανάμεσά τους η ομοσπονδιακή βουλευτής του Εργατικού Κόμματος, Μαρία Βαμβακινού, ο πολιτειακός Φιλελεύθερος βουλευτής, Μάρι Τόμσον, η πολιτειακή σκιώδης υπουργός, Τζένη Μικάκου, και η νέα (και Χιώτισσα στην καταγωγή) βουλευτής της Βικτώριας, Τζένιφερ Κάνις.

Όλοι οι Αυστραλοί πολιτικοί στάθηκαν ιδιαίτερα στη σημαντική επέτειο και τις θυσίες που έχουν υποστεί οι Χιώτες για την ελευθερία.

Στη δική του, σύντομη ομιλία, ο πρόεδρος της Αδελφότητας, Γεώργιος Κολύβας, αναφέρθηκε στο ιστορικό της ημέρας και μεταξύ άλλων υπογράμμισε:

«Πέρασαν εκατό χρόνια από τη σημαντική επέτειο την τιμούμε σήμερα και θα την τιμάμε πάντα όπου και αν βρισκόμαστε.

Θέλω να υπογραμμίσω ότι η Χιακή Αδελφότητα κάνει ότι μπορεί για να κρατά στενούς τους δεσμούς μας με την αγαπημένη μας Χίο. Και φυσικά να διατηρεί, εδώ στην Αυστραλία τις παραδόσεις μας.

Είμαστε πάντα στο πλευρό της Ελλάδας και της Χίου μας.

Και φέτος, που το νησί γνώρισε για άλλη μια φορά καταστροφικές πυρκαγιές, η Αδελφότητά μας συμβολικά πρόσφερε ένα ποσόν σε σχετικό έρανο και καλεί και εσάς να τον ενισχύσετε».

This cyber Monday ‘greekheritage’ gets you 15% Off store-wide at the participating online shops listed below

What is Greek Cyber Monday?

Discount code greekheritage gets you 15% off at participating online stores

Cyber Monday is one of the busiest days in online purchases and a great day to shop online since many retailers take to the internet with great discounts, free shipping and more. With Christmas around the corner, Greek Reporter partnered up with some Greek-owned businesses to get our readers 15% off on all purchases. This is what we call Greek Cyber Monday and we encourage you to take a look at these Greek and Greek-American owned businesses before you shop anywhere else. Visit the participating online stores listed below and just type in the coupon/discount fields greekheritage to get 15% off store-wide.

Visit Doromu.comDoromu.com is a prime online destination for gifts with Greek heritage! This online greek store was created in order to give you the ability to find unique Greek gifts and at the same time help the Greek economy, since our gifts are made in Greece or by Greeks. In addition we wanted to give Greek artists another outlet to sell their products worldwide. Here you will find Orthodox icons, komboloi, Greek sandals, Jewelry, Greek art and more.

Visit Modaqueen.comModaqueen.com is a premium online outlet store with a great selection of goods from designers such as Prada, Ferre, Burberry, Gucci, Dolce & Gabbana and many more. The store offers handbags, accessories, clothes, sunglasses, and much more in unbeatable prices.

 

Visit TenOnThird.comTenOnThird.com is the online version of the boutique  Ten on Third located on 7952 W 3rd Street in Los Angeles, CA with unique and handpicked fashion items. This stores offers an international variety of accessories and clothes form men and women.

 

 

MimiVert.com is an iconic jewelry concept in silver and enamel that reflects the spirit of today’s practical and sophisticated individuals. It was launched in 2006 and it’s rapidly emerging as an affordable luxury brand. Each piece of Mimi Vert’s “eye collection” is made to last and become an essential part of daily life. Mimi Introduces ideas that break the limits of conventional jewelry.

 

What is Cyber Monday?

Cyber Monday is a term referring to the Monday after Black Friday, the Friday following Thanksgiving in the United States, created by companies to persuade people to shop online. The term made its debut on November 28, 2005 in a Shop.org press release entitled ‘Cyber Monday.’ Cyber Monday quickly became one of the biggest online shopping days of the year. On cyber Monday most online stores give the consumers great online deals with special discounts, free shipping and much more.

Carl Charalambous, 25, stands to inherit his grandfather’s John Matsis millions

Ruling protects barber’s fortune for family

Carl Charalambous of Elders commercial

RULING: Carl Charalambous, 25, stands to inherit his grandfather’s millions. Source: The Sunday Mail (Qld)

IN THE first decision of its kind in Australia, a judge has allowed the 2001 will of a man who has severe dementia to be changed for estate and tax planning reasons alone.

John Matsis, 90, who is in a nursing home for dementia sufferers, will leave his grandsons $7.6 million worth of Australian property and 92 Greek properties, estimated to be worth $6.3 million.

The Greek migrant from the island of Rhodes, who came to Australia with his wife Despina in 1944, built up his family fortune from humble beginnings in a small Boundary St, West End, barber shop, the court heard.

His will leaves his $1.4 million West End home, where his grandsons still live with their mother Esther Charalambous, to youngest grandson, university student John Paul, 19.

The remainder of the estate will be equally shared by John Paul and his brothers, Carl Charalambous, 25, an Elders commercial real estate acting director, and Harry, 26, a software company director.

On November 1, Supreme Court Justice Ann Lyons ordered that a statutory codicil be made on behalf of Mr Matsis so that his grandsons’ inheritance would be held in three testamentary trusts.

The court heard that instead of receiving their inheritance as outright gifts, the trusts would protect the beneficiaries’ future businesses from exposure to any potential liability.

Justice Lyons accepted the submission from barrister Richard Williams that inclusion of the testamentary trusts was, or “may be”, a codicil that Mr Matsis, who is “gravely ill”, would make if he had capacity.

“This is the first time in Australia a judge has given effect to a statutory will, or codicil, for reasons of tax and asset protection,” said Brisbane wills and estates lawyer Bryan Mitchell, who was not involved in the case.

“This is a very surprising outcome.”

Mr Matsis’s properties include two West End restaurants, a shopping centre, shops and an office at Sandgate, a laundromat and office in Paddington, a Gold Coast unit and West End home.

Mr Matsis’s adopted daughter Esther Charalambous, who owns a one-third share of some of the Australian properties, is not a beneficiary of his will.

Mr Matsis, whose wife died in 2007, had wanted the wealth to be kept within the family, the court heard.

“It was clear to me that he took significant pride from the fact that he was the founder of the family fortune, that the benefit of his hard work would pass through the generations,” his solicitor David Bowles told the court. A small business award Mr Matsis received from former Prime Minister Robert Menzies took pride of place in his home, the court heard.