The University of Wollongong (UOW) has partnered with the Australian-American Fulbright program.
UOW will allow two scholars annually from the US to study in Wollongong under a five-year agreement.
Fulbright executive director, Professor James Arvanitakis, says the partnership will benefit scholars.
“We’re proud to welcome Wollongong into the [program], and excited for the myriad opportunities this will open up for scholars from both countries,” he said.
“We have enjoyed a strong Fulbright presence in Wollongong, with a number of prominent alumni on campus including Deputy Vice-Chancellor (Global Strategy) Alex Frino…”
“This new agreement will now see a leading American Fulbright Scholar on campus for the next five years working with Wollongong academics to further enhance their world-class research.”
The scholars will spend up to four months in Australia, at UOW, conducting their research in areas of importance to the university.
The Greek Australian community may best remember Charmian Clift as an advocate for Greek democracy in the 1960s, but that was one aspect of the charismatic columnist.
Clift and her husband George Johnston are notorious for their escapades in the Greek island of Hydra, then home to a colony of expatriate creatives.
Filmmakers Rachel Lane, of Faithfully Me (2020), and Sue Milliken, of Ladies in Black (2018), are making Clift’s essays, published in the mid-to-late 60s, the focus of a new documentary.
They are pitching ‘Life Burns High’ as a feature film that showcases Clift as one of the greatest Australian writers of the 20th century and a trailblazer of the travel writing genre.
“I read [The Life and Myth of Charmian Clift by Nadia Wheatley] and thought, ‘This is such an amazing story,” Lane tells the Greek Herald.
“It has all the hallmarks you need for a movie.”
“The timing is right to do a documentary,” Milliken adds.
It didn’t take much to convince veteran film producer Milliken, who knew Clift and Johnston personally as colleagues, to join the project.
“I was mesmerised by their charisma and artistic power. It was one of the most memorable experiences of my life, knowing them,” Milliken tells the Greek Herald.
“So when Rachel got in touch and said, ‘Would you like to work with me on the documentary?,’ I didn’t even hesitate.”
Ladies in Black writer and director Bruce Beresford with writer and producer Sue Milliken (Photo via Ausfilm)
Clift and Johnston lived in Hydra for over a decade and were responsible for the island’s transformation as an artist’s colony in the 1950s.
“Hydra provided their creative [inaudible] where they could write during the day and then do what they needed to do at night for their family. At the time, it was a very cheap way of living. So that was the attraction of Hydra,” Lane says.
“It attracted the creative bohemian lifestyle.”
“Charmian kicked off a whole genre of writing which she drew from her experience on Hydra.”
“She was so passionate about the Greek people and the cause. She never stopped loving Greece and her experience there,” Milliken adds.
Clift was involved with the Committee for the Restoration of Democracy in Greece.
“…Charmian was very supportive and very vocal for the democracy in Greece. When she came back to Australia, she was a big part of [the committee],” Lane says.
Clift returned to Australia in 1964 during her later years.
“When you come back to suburban, early ‘60s Australia, that would have seem a bit mundane, really,” Lane says.
“As Charmian landed back, she was able to see [Australia’s ultra conservatives] with the clarity that people who live here were writing these couldn’t see. That vision was what made her essays and the writing that she did about Australia so remarkable,” Milliken adds.
“It’s such an important Australian story. It says so much about Australia, expatriates, Greece, artistic endeavour and it’s a totally worthwhile story.”
Lane and Milliken have raised over $56 thousand through the Documentary Australia Foundation. Visit this link to make a donation.
Australia’s Minister for Foreign Affairs and Women, Marise Payne, will visit Greece on December 8 this year, according to The Greek Herald‘s sources.
News of the visit was initially announced by Greece’s Deputy Foreign Affairs Minister, Andreas Katsaniotis, when speaking with one of Australia’s Greek radio programs.
Greece’s Deputy Foreign Affairs Minister, Andreas Katsaniotis.
The visit aims to promote a new concept of Greek foreign policy, which has seen Greece attempting to build alliances with countries such as the United States, France, the Arab countries and now Australia, as a shield against Turkish provocations.
Earlier this year, Minister Payne held her first telephone conversation with Greece’s Foreign Minister, Nikos Dendias.
The talks held in October between the two top officials focused on their shared commitment to the International Law of the Sea, to the protection of the environment and to regional developments.
The two ministers also reaffirmed the two countries’ historic ties on the basis of common values and the Greek Australian diaspora as a bridge between Greece and Australia.
According to The Greek Herald‘s sources, during Minister Payne’s physical visit to Athens she will focus on a number of other issues concerning Greece and Australia, including a double taxation agreement between both countries which is expected to be finalised by 2022.
Victorian chief health officer Brett Sutton personally endorsed a decision to furlough staff at St Basil’s Home for the Aged in Melbourne.
Sutton told an inquest into the home, where 45 residents died after contacting COVID-19 last year, that the decision was conditional on an emergency workforce being found.
Staff at the home, who were declared close contacts, were replaced by inexperienced agency staff.
The inquest has heard that almost half of the necessary workers could not be found the day before the handover on July 22. It also heard residents had missed meals and medications within hours of the transfer.
“I think everyone understands that if there was no sign of replacement staff on [the] 22nd (2020), the handover would not take place,” officer Sutton said.
Sutton conceded his direction that staff had to furlough by close of business that day could have been clearer.
Prof Sutton said he had not been told of any specific problems in finding an emergency workforce, although he had not made any inquiries himself.
He agreed he was aware his direction would mean replacing the entire St Basil’s workforce, which would result in losing the clinical governance framework for the home, a challenging situation without enough workers with adequate experience
Under examination by counsel assisting Peter Rozen QC, Sutton said he was asked to personally endorse in writing the move to furlough staff, after the chairman of St Basil’s initially refused to follow health directions.
“This ongoing outbreak represents a significant and serious threat to public health,” Sutton wrote to the home’s chairman.
Also on Friday, the inquest was told state health authorities knew St Basil’s would be at least 30 staff short the day before it furloughed the home’s workforce.
The shortage represented almost half of the 66 workers needed to cover shifts at St Basil’s on July 22 last year, the day its workforce was sent home.
Victoria’s health department has provided another 2000 pages of evidence to the inquest as it concludes its second week of witness testimony, with one lawyer telling Victorian State Coroner John Cain that there had been no time to review the documents.
SA Health has listed a total of 15 exposure sites related to three positive COVID-19 cases, including Kalymnos Pastries at Torrensville.
The store has been listed as a low-risk casual contact site after a close contact of a Covid case visited the store between 11.15 am and 11.55 am on Tuesday.
Owner George Diakomichalis said he was notified of the exposure by health officials, who told him the shop was allowed to continue trading.
However, he said he and his wife made the decision to voluntarily close on Friday, for one day, so that the site could be cleaned.
“It’s overkill but we have a duty to protect our customers, so we’re basically cleaning the place from top to bottom – sanitising everything with bleaches and detergent” he tells The Advertiser.
“We’re one of the first places that’s been hit (in SA), but we knew it was coming and this is what we need to do to get through it and back to normality.”
George and Eleni Diakomichalis of Kalymnos Pastries, Torrensville (Photo: AAP/ Keryn Stevens)
The shop, which will reopen on Saturday, has received an outpour of support since Mr Diakomichalis took to social media on Thursday night to announce the temporary closure.
Despite the exposure, he said he agrees with the decision to open the state’s borders.
“The reality is we have to go back to normality sooner rather than later,” he said.
“There are a lot of families who have been separated for a long time, and I understand we need to be able to live with this and do the right things.”
Low-risk casual contacts must monitor for symptoms and get tested immediately if any develop.
Angela Vithoulkas is part of an all-female group of candidates lining up to dethrone Clover Moore as Sydney Lord Mayor.
Vithoulkas is the company of the Liberals’ Shauna Jarrett, the Greens’ Sylvie Ellsmore, and Unite for Sydney’s Yvonne Weldon.
The founder of the Small Business Party has received numerous anonymous phone calls demanding she drop out of the race.
“I’m already getting calls, I won’t say from who, but calls from other political parties who are telling me I’m wasting my time and saying, ‘why are you even bothering to run, you’re not going to get elected’,” she tells ABC News.
“I formed a political party in NSW, which is almost completely impossible from a red tape perspective … yet (some say) I only run in an election to get a husband.”
Angela Vithoulkas was the co-owner of VIVO café in Sydney’s CBD for 16 years. (Source: Sensible Centre)
Despite it all, the hopeful continues her campaign to secure the role ahead of NSW’s local government elections on December 4. Pre-polling voting started this week.
“The way this council operates is clearly a problem,” she tells the Daily Telegraph.
“I’m hearing all sorts of political finger-pointing – what Labor did, what Liberals did. Let’s put politics aside … The city needs to run better, it needs to be more efficient and streamlined. We need to get out of [the] way [of businesses],” she said.
“What on earth are we in the business of doing, besides growing our balance sheet to do what?”
She’s also vying to be elected as a City of Sydney councillor for a third term.
A big crowd is expected to farewell Jim Fouras on Monday at the Greek Orthodox Church in South Melbourne after he died from a heart attack earlier this month aged 83.
Fouras was the former speaker of the Queensland Parliament and Member for Ashgrove.
Member for Cooper Jonty Bush, whose electorate covers Ashgrove, said the pollie loved a chat.
“A five minute walk down the road would turn into an hour with Jim as everyone stopped to say hello,” says Bush.
“During last year’s election, Jim campaigned for me every day. His energy was that of a 20-year-old. He had so many stories the man could have written a dozen autobiographies. The sign of a life well lived.”
Politician Demetrios (Jim) Fouras (Photo: Queensland State Archives)
Fouras left Kalavryta for Queensland at 10 years old with very little English. He graduated with a double degree in Science and Economics from the University of Queensland.
He was the Labor member for South Melbourne between 1977 and 1986 before working as a Human Rights Commissioner investigating homelessness in Australia.
He held the seat of Ashgrove between 1989 and 2006, becoming speaker of the Legislative Assembly from 1990 to 1996.
His tenure as speaker was not without controversy. The ALP tried to dump Fouras as speaker in 1995 after the party was elected with a one-seat majority.
Fouras is survived by his wife Tanya, his children Yanoula, Athanasi, and Andreas, and seven grandchildren.
Delphi Bank has started a petition to call on the British Museum to return the Parthenon marbles to Greece.
The bank’s general manager Jim Sarris said the petition aims to “seek justice for our heritage and past generations” and raise “awareness of this social issue”.
“For Delphi Bank, it’s about the strength that lies in unity of community when fighting a common cause, and the strength of culture and heritage which comes from at long last unifying the marbles with their homeland.”
The Australians for the Return of the Parthenon Marbles Committee leads Elly Symons and George Vardas call on signatories to “make their voice heard”.
“‘We are confident Australians will lend their support to the reunification of the divided sculptures in Greece and within sight of the Parthenon monument,” the Committee said.
Artist Natalie Rompotis has partnered with the bank to create an artwork ‘L E A D T H E W A Y’ to help reinforce their message.
Artist Natalie Rompotis has partnered with the bank to create an artwork ‘L E A D T H E W A Y’ to help reinforce their message.
“Ever since its independence from Ottoman rule, Greece has been requesting from the United Kingdom, the repatriation of its – and my – cultural heritage.”
“As such, I am proud to partner with [Delphi Bank] in the creation of artworks that seek to capture the beauty and genius of this monument to humankind.”
The marbles — 17 figures and part of a frieze that decorated the 2,500-year-old Acropolis monument — were taken from the ancient temple by Lord Elgin, the British ambassador to the Ottoman Empire, in the early 19th century. They have been at the centre of a long dispute between the Greece and the United Kingdom.
Britain maintains that Elgin acquired the sculptures legally when Greece was ruled by the Ottomans. The Greek government says they were stolen and wants them returned for display in the new Acropolis Museum that opened in 2009.
The petition will be available across the bank’s branches in Victoria, New South Wales, South Australia, Queensland, and online.
The remains of seven Greek soldiers who lost their lives during the Turkish invasion of Cyprus in 1974 were returned to Greece Thursday.
Their remains were loaded onto a C-130 military plane at Larnaca airport with their relatives and Greek defence minister Nikolaos Hardalias in attendance.
“I am here to receive my brother’s remains and take them back to Greece,” said Angeliki Karagouni, sister of reserve warrant officer Charalambos Karagounis, who was among the seven.
“I am very moved, but also proud, that my brother is a hero.”
Karagouni last saw her brother when she was 14 years old. She said his absence has been painful ever since.
“I learned that the remains I’m getting show he was taken as a prisoner, abused and executed.”
“I feel proud to be taking my brother home to his birthplace,” she said.
Relatives of the soldiers received medals of honours at the ceremony.
Six of the soldiers were stationed in Eldyk, the Hellenic Force in Cyprus, and the seventh in Noratlas, the military aircraft shot down in Nicosia.
Presidential Commissioner Photis Photiou said 77 other Greek citizens on their list remain missing, with 47 unaccounted for.
The Crows selected Rachele on Thursday as pick 6 in Wednesday night’s AFL draft.
Rachele, 18, is a Greek-Italian-Australian from Shepparton and tells AFC Media the Crows are now his “second family”.
“To see how welcoming the Adelaide Crows are, my family is very comfortable with me heading here,” Rachele said.
(Photo: Rodney Braithwaite)
The midfielder shared the moment with his parents Michelle and Jason, younger twin brothers Isaac and Lucas, grandma Elizabeth, grandpa James, and Nonno Dominique.
“They were all very proud and happy for me and it was good to spend that moment with them,” Rachele said.
“They’ve been massive and very influential over the past few years and I am very grateful for them.”
Rachele’s father, of Italian heritage, works on the family’s third-generation commercial orchid in Shepparton, while his mother is Greek.
(Photo: via AFC)
“Every single year we make tomato sauce with all my uncles and cousins,” Rachele said. “Then we make salami as well – they are the two big traditions that we keep going.”
“I’ll definitely bring some of my sauce down for sure.”
Rachele is keen to head to West Lakes and get stuck into pre-season.
“I think I can bring that spark and excitement to the Crows but there’s a long way to go yet,” he said.