Article Selection

The Green-eyed Princess of Archanes

IN July 1975, in the tenth year of its excavations, the Greek Ar¬chaeological Society at Archanes under the direction of John Sakellarakis uncovered an unplundered Mycenean tholos tomb in Archanes, a large Cretan village. It is situated south of Iraklion, about ten miles beyond Knossos.

Folk Art and Life on Skyros

THE BEACH at Kalamitsa on the island of Skyros with its gold-flecked sands cradles a clear green-turquoise sea. Far down the beach are a few homes inhabited by elderly couples who eke out a living from their fields and from the sea.

A Bright Exception

THE summer of 1975 will be a landmark in Greek History. For the first time virtually the entire leadership of a regime found itself in a court of law accused of treason and sedition.

A Unique Institution

Early last fall the students and staff of the American Farm School gathered in front of the main gate to greet a bus carrying a group of Cypriot refugees. As the bus approached, the girls and boys talked and joked, delighted to be released from their school routine. Among the staff there was hardly a face that was not taut with emotion: many of them had arrived as refugees from Asia Minor at these very gates in the tumultuous years after 1921.

A Superstar Centre

FOR SOME time now Rhodes has been the Majorca of the Aegean. Practically every cruise ship plying the eastern Mediterranean touches down there. In recent years as many as 150 charter and regularly scheduled flights arrived weekly from northern Europe and elsewhere.

The Scales of Justice

IN ADDITION to the first anniversary marking the Junta-inspired coup in Cyprus (July 15, 1974) and the reestablishment of democracy in Greece, two events monopolized public interest last month: the conviction of Cavalry Captain Kotsaris for the murder of a prisoner at the racetrack during the first days of the April 21, 1967 coup in Greece, and the Supreme Court decision that high treason is an ‘instantaneous’ crime.

This is the Balkans

CONSTANTINE Karamanlis had two goals when he again laid eyes on Greece from the ramp of the French Presidential plane which brought him back to Athens on July 23, 1974. The first was to revise the Constitution of 1952. The second was to disengage the country from what many considered to be the suffocating embrace of the U.S.A.