NASA warns Emos at risk from ‘end of the world’

Source: News

Sydney completely devastated

Computer generated image of Sydney completely devastated after a mega Tsunami. This image shows what Sydney might look like if Mayan prophecies were fulfilled and life ended 21/12/2012. Picture: Sony

WHILE many are planning their large-scale end of the world celebrations, others are already hiding under their beds in anticipation of the Mayan Apocalypse of 2012, according to NASA.

NASA has issued warnings ahead of the reported ‘Doomsday’ on December 21 saying some people have been so distressed by reports of the end of the world they are already not eating or sleeping.

It all started because December 21 is the last day in an ancient Mayan calendar, and the internet has been circulating rumours that a rogue planet called Nibiru would slam into Earth, destroying us all.

Last week the Russian Government tried to put an end to the doomsday talk after people started panicking and storing up supplies so they would still have kerosene and matches after the world was smashed to smithereens.

People everywhere were taking it so seriously National Aeronautics and Space Administration  scientists have been forced to hose down the situation, publishing a fact sheet:  Beyond 2012: Why the World Won’t End.

They say there’s no planet coming to destroy us, the Earth’s rotation is not going to suddenly reverse, there’s no danger from giant solar storms, and no evidence of impending doom.

“The world will not end in 2012. Our planet has been getting along just fine for more than 4 billion years, and credible scientists worldwide know of no threat associated with 2012,” they say.

“Just as the calendar you have on your kitchen wall does not cease to exist after December 31, the Mayan calendar does not cease to exist on December 21, 2012.

“This date is the end of the Mayan long-count period but then – just as your calendar begins again on January 1 – another long-count period begins for the Mayan calendar.”

While the idea that the world is about to end is bunkum, the anxiety people are feeling about it is real.

NASA Ames Research Center astrobiologist David Morrison has warned that they received emails from young people who said they were too worried to sleep or eat, and some said they were suicidal.

“(Scientists), both within NASA and outside, recognize that this hoax with its effort to frighten people is a distraction from more important science concerns, such as global warming and loss of biological diversity,” he writes on the NASA website.

“We worry about the effect of this fear on impressionable children.

“(If) you will just use common sense I am sure you can recognise the lies.”

George Lucas plans Bay Area park featuring Yoda and Indiana Jones statues

Source: Hitfix

Star Wars fans might soon have another Yoda statue in the San Francisco Bay area to visit.

Filmmaker George Lucas plans to help build a small park in Marin County that would feature a bronze sculpture of the popular Star Wars character, along with one of Indiana Jones.

Lucas’ estate manager, Sarita Patel, said the Yoda statue would be similar to one in San Francisco’s Presidio neighborhood. That one — a full-sized replica of the Jedi sage — lies atop a fountain outside an arts center where Lucas moved most of his operations in 2005. It has become a big draw for fans.

Lucas applied for a permit Wednesday to demolish a building on the site of the planned park in San Anselmo, the town where he lives, the Marin Independent Journal reported (http://bit.ly/YsKH3u)

He announced over the summer that he planned to donate the land where the building sits to the San Anselmo Chamber of Commerce, and donate the statues for the proposed park. Lucas has since also agreed to pay for the building’s demolition.

The chamber hopes to raise $150,000 to $200,000 to create the park.

San Anselmo Town Manager Debra Stutsman said the demolition application, which includes a historical analysis of the building, will be reviewed by the town’s Planning Commission and Historical Commission.

The building, as well as a fresco inside, date back to 1945.

Patel said Lucas plans to donate the fresco to the Spanish consulate in San Francisco.

Lucas built his film operation in Marin County and had planned to put up a palatial new digital media production studio there. But he abandoned those plans earlier this year in the face of opposition from neighbors and what he said were delays in the approval process.

Australia is World’s 2nd Best Birthplace

Source: ibtimes.co.uk

A pregnant mother living in Australia is in one of the best places in the world, according to a recent survey done by The Economist’s Intelligence Unit.

In a survey by The Economist’s Intelligence Unit, the resource-rich nation, out of a possible 10 satisfaction points, scored 8.12, just 0.1 behind Switzerland, the world’s best country for a baby to be born into next year. The US, which topped the 1998 list, came in 16th.

Next in the top five were Norway, Sweden and Denmark, all Scandinavian states. New Zealand landed on the seventh place with a score of 7.95, while the last at the 80th spot was Nigeria with 4.74 points.

The list, the first after 24 years, was compiled based on a combination of surveys. Respondents were basically asked how happy they are, with objective determinants about the quality of life. On the 1998 index, Australia ranked 18th.

“Being rich helps more than anything else, but it is not all that counts; things like crime, trust in public institutions and the health of family life matter too,” Laza Kekic, the unit’s director of country forecasting services, said in a statement.

The Economist’s Intelligence Unit used indicators such as geography, demography, social and cultural characteristics, government policies and the state of the world economy.

Australia in 2011 placed second to Norway in the annual United Nations Human Development Index.

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

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.

National Hellenic Museum marks 1 year in new home with exhibits about immigrants, marathons

Source: ChicagoTribune

CHRIS WALKER, CHICAGO TRIBUNE

The exhibit “American Moments: The Legacy of Greek Immigration” is shown at the National Hellenic Museum.
By Kerry Reid, Special to the Tribune
8:55 am, November 15, 2012
It’s nestled in the heart of Chicago’s (admittedly dwindling) Greektown, but as its name implies, the National Hellenic Museum has a far wider mission than just preserving the history of Chicago’s Greek community. This week, the museum, which was founded in 1983 as the Hellenic Museum and Cultural Center and took its new name in 2009, celebrates its first year in its eco-friendly 40,000-square-foot Halsted Street modernist home (designed by Demetrios Stavrianos of the Chicago office of RTKL Associates) with a pair of exhibitions celebrating the breadth of Greek and Greek-American experience.

“The Spirit of the Marathon: From Pheidippides to Today” traces the history of the most heroic athletic event this side of the Ironman triathlon — from the titular courier who brought news of the Greek triumph over the Persians in the battle of Marathon in 490 B.C., to its introduction as a competitive event at the first modern Olympics in Athens in 1896, to the inspiring story of 1946’s Boston Marathon champion, Greece’s Stylianos Kyriakides. The latter used his victory to help raise awareness and funds for his fellow Greek citizens who had been left famine-stricken after World War II.

Heroism and going the distance also figure into “American Moments: The Legacy of Greek Immigration,” which shows the wide-ranging influence of Greeks on American culture through photographs, oral history (much of which will eventually be available through the museum’s website), and an array of artifacts, including the wrestling trunks worn by “The Golden Greek” Jim Londos, one of the most popular professional wrestlers in the Great Depression, to more traditional clothing, including the foustanella, or pleated skirt, worn by museum President Connie Mourtoupalas’ grandfather on his wedding day.

Mourtoupalas, whose family emigrated from Greece to Washington, D.C., in 1966, has only been with the National Hellenic Museum for five months, but she brings extensive experience in promoting Greek culture, including 16 years as the cultural attache at the Embassy of Greece in Washington.

Mourtoupalas notes that the museum “is not only about the Greek-Americans of Chicago or of Illinois, but it’s a national repository of everything that relates to Greek immigration, and then to the life and history of the communities and its members and what they have contributed to America in general. Because the way we view this, it’s not just Greek-American history. It’s American history.”

And of course, it’s impossible to talk about traditions of Western democracy and literature without acknowledging the deep roots of ancient Greece. It was, Mourtoupalas says, very much by design that the first large exhibition the museum held in the new space, “Gods, Myths, and Mortals,” originally developed by the Children’s Museum of Manhattan, paid homage to “The Iliad” and “The Odyssey.”

Curator Bethany Fleming notes that both the museum’s large archival collection (which has not yet been organized into a permanent exhibition in the new building) and the artifacts in “American Moments” come from all over. “East Coast, West Coast, the South. And certainly the Chicago area,” she said. “The collection is primarily from the last 150 years from the Greek-American community, but we do have pieces that span back to about 1200 B.C. Some pottery as well as some Byzantine coins and things like that. But by and large, our collection is primarily the Greek-American heritage. Some of our most extensive collections are not from Chicago.”

The geographic dispersal of the Greeks in America mirrors that of other immigrant groups from the late 19th and early 20th century, Fleming notes. Many of the earliest arrivals were young men who sought work in textile mills in New England, and also in the railroads and the mines out West — often, they would later form marriages with mail-order or “picture brides” from their homeland.

A series of photographs commemorates the Ludlow Massacre of 1914, in which Louis Tikas of Crete, a union organizer for the United Mineworkers of America, was shot to death during an attack by state militia and Colorado Fuel and Iron Co. guards on a Ludlow, Colo., camp occupied by striking coal miners. Several others, including women and children, were burned to death when their tents caught fire. The fact that the attack took place on Greek Orthodox Easter added to the national outpouring of outrage.

Like many immigrants, Greeks also found work in America that meshed with their traditional skills in the old country — whether herding sheep in the American West (the museum very recently acquired the archives of an elderly Greek-American man who is the informal historian for Greeks in Montana) or diving for sponges in Tarpon Springs, Fla. There, Fleming notes, Greek immigrants defied the Jim Crow mindset and worked alongside African-American divers.

The exhibit isn’t all about the struggle for economic and political justice, of course. There is literally a sweet side to the story of Greeks in America and particularly in Chicago. If you like Dove Bars, thank a Greek — specifically, Leo Stefanos of Dove Candies and Ice Cream, who first invented the toothsome treat in 1956. Items from the early days of Dove are on display. Fleming also points out photos that show the evolution of Greeks in the restaurant and hospitality industry where they famously flourish now — from hand-pulled fruit carts to small markets to cafes and diners all over the country, including the famous Dixie Chili in Newport, Ky., founded in 1929 by Nicholas Sarakatsannis.

Greece’s current economic woes could, notes Mourtoupalas, lead to a fresh influx of Greek immigrants to the United States. And the National Hellenic Museum will be ready to capture their stories as well.

For her part, Mourtoupalas doesn’t think they will run out of material anytime soon. “In a way, being a museum that sort of navigates Greek culture and Greek history — it’s a privilege in many ways, but it also gives you a great product that speaks to a lot of people.”

ctc-arts@tribune.com

‘American Moments: The Legacy of Greek Immigration’

When: Opens Thursday

Where: National Hellenic Museum, 333 S. Halsted St.

Tickets: Free open house 6 to 9 p.m. Thursday; regular admission $7-$10 at 312-655-1234 or nationalhellenicmuseum.org

Και η Madonna χορεύει Gangnam Style!

Και η Madonna χορεύει Gangnam Style!

Όχι, που θα άφηνε η Madonna και δεν θα δοκίμαζε το Gangnam Style.

Μάλιστα δεν το έκανε απλά με τη μουσική, αλλά στη συναυλία της στο Madison Square Garden είχε και τον ίδιο τον Psy, το Νοτιοκορεάτη δημιουργό του χορού, στη σκηνή στο πλευρό της.Έμπλεξε μάλιστα το τραγούδι με το δικό της, το Give It To Me, κάνοντας ένα μικρό συνδυασμό.

Τα πήγε πάντως πολύ καλά, αν και πιστεύουμε ότι άργησε, αφού πριν από εκείνη το έχουν κάνει πολλοί σταρ της σόουμπιζ.

Τελευταία ήταν η Heidi Klum, στα πρόσφατα Ευρωπαϊκά βραβεία του MTV.

Interview with Greek Guitarist Xander Demos

Source: Hellenicnews

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By: Markos Papadatos, Contributing Editor

On Nov. 5, rock musician and guitarist Xander Demos spoke about his musical career.

According to Demos, he remarked, “My Greek heritage is pretty cool. I am exactly 50% Greek (25% Italian and 25% Russian). I have to say that one of my favorite things is the food. I love a good Gyro. I also grew up in a place called Tarpon Springs in Florida and it’s a large Greek community. Growing up there was great and I did gain a pretty good appreciation for the Greek culture. The name of my album ‘Guitarcadia’ was rooted in Greek culture as well.”

Presently, Demos noted that he is in the process of writing a follow-up album to ‘Guitarcadia’ and he is planning some new shows. “I also joined another cover band called ‘Jukebox’ and that is helping me in getting out and doing some shows locally. I am still part of the Sabbath Judas Sabbath project. I want to do more recording projects soon,” he said.

Regarding his plans for the future, he stated, “I would like to record, write and tour. I took a small break from everything at the end of the summer but I am going full-steam again.”

He noted that he would love to someday tour in Greece. “I know that people in Greece have an appreciation for my brand of metal so it would be great to tour there. Plus, I have never been there before and it would be such a fantastic reason to finally visit there,” he revealed.

Demos’ musical influences include movie composers such as Hans Zimmer, James Horner and Steve Jablonsky. “I also love Sarah Brightman. From a guitar standpoint, Shawn Lane, Eric Johnson, Steve Vai, Tony MacAlpine, Michael Romeo, Neal Schon, John Sykes and Guthrie Govan are some of my main influences,” he said.

Demos listed Amy Lee and Lita Ford as his dream female collaboration choices in music.

For hopefuls who wish to go into music, Demos remarked, “I would say that they should listen to everything they can to expand their tastes and always have an open mind when it comes to music. Try to play more than just one instrument to give yourself perspective. Take advantage of the Internet, which is something that many of my peers didn’t have growing up. There’s so much out there to learn from so relish these moments.”

For more information on Xander Demos, check out his official website: http://xanderdemos.com/

Η Άνιστον και η περιπέτεια με την μητέρα της που δε θέλει να θυμάται

Η Άνιστον και η περιπέτεια με την μητέρα της που δε θέλει να θυμάται

Και οι διάσημοι έχουν τα προβλήματά τους.

Η Τζένιφερ Άνιστον πέρασε μια από τις χειρότερες περιόδους της ζωής της όταν είχε να αντιμετωπίσει την ίδια της την μάνα.

Η Νάνσι Ντόου, το 1996, έδωσε μια συνέντευξη στην οποία δεν μιλούσε και με τα καλύτερα λόγια για την κόρη της.

Μάλιστα δημιουργήθηκε τόσος μεγάλος ντόρος που η Άνιστον όχι μόνο δεν της το συγχώρεσε αλλά δεν ήθελε να τη δει ούτε και στον γάμο της με τον Μπράντ Πιτ.

Φυσικά την απόρριψη αυτή η μητέρα της δεν την άφησε έτσι αφού κυκλοφόρησσε ένα βιβλίο με τίτλο «From Mother and Daughters to Friends».

Το βιβλίο αυτό έφερε μεγαλύτερη ρήξη στη σχέση τους. Μάνα και κόρη ξαναμίλησαν το 2005, όταν η Τζένιφερ Άνιστον χώρισε με τον Μπραντ Πιτ.