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Jeana Vithoulkas

Dialogue

Laws needed to curb morally corrupt behaviour of our corporate citizens

Jeana Vithoulkas makes the case for providing legislative sanctions for when corporate Australia breaches is corporate and civic responsibilities.

Dialogue

Absence and silence

Jeana Vithoulkas tells how a visit to a photographic exhibition with an old friend changed their view of each other.

Dialogue

Why can’t they flirt?

Jeana Vithoulkas muses on the Anglo-Celtic propensity to get plastered and act like an idiot.

Dialogue

Sex, taxi drivers and the state of contemporary Greece

Jeana Vithoulkas bemoans the contemporary malaise which is eating away at Greece.

Life

A Venetian journey to Zakynthos

A summer holiday in Venice and Zakynthos has Jeana Vithoulkas reflecting on the inter-relationships in our sense of the past and our place in it.

Dialogue

Who does The Age write for?

Jeana Vithoulkas questions whether The Age reflects the cultural diversity of Melbourne in its editorial policies.

Dialogue

Aussie Rules… but my little boy may get hurt

Jeana Vithoulkas shares the contradictory feelings she felt as she watched her boy play AFL footy for the first time.

Dialogue

Our future is not in Bulleen

Jean Vithoulkas questions whether Bulleen is an appropriate site and location for the development of a new Greek community centre.

Dialogue

Punctuality is not a universal virtue

Jean Vithoulkas asks whether punctuality is a universal virtue.

Dialogue

Let’s stand up and make a difference

Jean Vithoulkas praises the first generation of the Greek left for their activism and calls on the current generation of Australian Greeks to show the same commitment.

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