A eulogy for my hometown newspaper, The Washington Post
The Washington Post, founded in 1877, is not shutting its doors. Not yet. But to many of us, its change of direction is a form of demise.
The Washington Post, founded in 1877, is not shutting its doors. Not yet. But to many of us, its change of direction is a form of demise.
On Sunday, January 26, Kostas Topouzidis joined a march for the first time to honor the victims of the deadly train crash in Tempe. For two years, he had avoided most events and refrained from reading related news to shield himself from resurfacing painful memories.
A new bill aimed at enhancing transparency and publicity in print and electronic media was presented on Wednesday to the cabinet by deputy minister and government spokesperson Pavlos Marinakis.
Some think that Europe still has time to consider its alternatives, to consult to find its autonomy. But everything is pointing to the reality that time is up.
“E-send,” the systemfor receipt transmission to the Independent Authority for Public Revenue (AADE), is being upgraded so as to flag suspicious patterns that may point to tax evasion.
Court proceedings over the death of 36-year-old Antonis Karyotis, who drowned after being pushed off the Blue Horizon ferry in September 2023, concluded Thursday after 17 sessions. A verdict is expected later in the day.
The benchmark ended the day with a negligible decline and with the banks index finishing with small gains.
Looking at developments surrounding Ukraine today, I am reminded of the Gospel of Matthew’s description of what the soldiers did after Christ’s crucifixion: They divided his garments among them by casting lots.
Imprisoned Kurdish leader Abdullah Ocalan called on his militant group Thursday to lay down its arms and dissolve as part of a new bid to end a four-decade long conflict that has claimed tens of thousands of lives.