Our Town

Robin Hood and the Sheriff of Nottinghamopolis

One evening last month Premier Mitsotakis, the implacable Sheriff of Greece, had the nerve to sit down in front of a pretty painting by Volanakis and for two hours harangue three TV journalists (and a national-wide audience) on all the things that are going wrong in this country. It was an impressive list.

All the Family

So far as such things can be known, the failed coup against President Gorbachev was hatched before the official visit of Mr Mitsotakis to the Soviet Union accompanied by the family members with which he is so abundantly blest.

In Search of a New National Strategy

Addressing a special session of the Academy of Athens held on the tenth anniversary of Greece’s accession to the European Community, senior economist Anghelos Anghelopoulos made a direct appeal to President Karamanlis who was sitting there in front row, centre. He had just been made an honorary member of the Academy.

Climates of Change

Last month’s World Environment Day was dedicated to confronting the problems created by changes in the world’s climate. Athens, ten days later, became a living example of this confrontation.

Speak, Memory

The opening words of the Odyssey, as rendered by Vladimir Nabokov, remind us that the purpose of an epic above all is to recall heroic acts.

Baa, Baa, Black Sheep

The country recently has received some adverse publicity in the international press, for allegedly abiding by the rules, the manners or the aims of the European Community.

In Search of a New National Strategy

Addressing a special session of the Academy of Athens held on the tenth anniversary of Greece’s accession to the European Community, senior economist Anghelos Anghelopoulos made a direct appeal to President Karamanlis who was sitting there in front row, centre. He had just been made an honorary member of the Academy.

Watching CI-NI-NI: The View from the Bridge

In 1989 Constantine Karamanlis caused some nervous knuckle-cracking around here when he said that Greece reminded him of an enormous madhouse. He was a private citizen then, and people were willing to believe that the National Savior be allowed his fit of pique from the vantage of well-earned retirement.