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At the Grand Opening of Olympia Refrigeration’s new factory in Marrickville in 1978. Yiannis Benetos (left) serves yeeros to the then Premier of NSW, Neville Wran, and his wife Jill. Between the Premier and his wife is Olympia Refrigeration’s Chris Skoufis. While Benetos opened the first yeeros shop in Sydney, Olympia Refrigeration made the upright rotisserie for his yeeros shop. Photo:Chris Skoufis 10 May 2021 1:53pm This time last year, Sydney historian, Vasilis Vasilas, would have officially launched “Little Athens: Marrickville” under the auspices of the 38th Greek Festival of Sydney; with the outbreak of COVID- 19 and its subsequent restrictions, the launch – like so many other Festival events – was postponed. ....
April 26, 2021 It was at the turn of the 20th Century that the first Greek immigrants arrived in metro Detroit and settled along Detroit’s Monroe Avenue, between Brush and St. Antoine streets. In 1912, the beginning of Greek persecution by the Ottoman Empire incited a period of peak immigration from Greece, which would last until 1917. Combined with Henry Ford’s 1914 offer of $5-per-day jobs, this caused rapid expansion of Detroit’s Greek settlement, which would one day become known as Greektown. Now a vibrant dining and entertainment district, Greektown was once a residential area as well. Some of the new Greek Detroiters worked in the automobile or railroad industries, but many became merchants, often living above or near their places of business. The area was seen as a comprehensive community where one could work, reside, shop, and recreate. “Then known as ‘Little Greece,’ Monroe Street was home to 10 grocery stores, 14 restaurants, 12 coffee houses, two ....