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  • Greece warns of 'vicious cycle of inequality' in EU

    A top Greek official on Wednesday warned of a "widening gap" in the eurozone that separates financially stable countries such as Germany from their southern European partners that are struggling to keep up.

  • Illustration by Nancy Ohanian

    EDITORIAL: Death of the euro

    Our European cousins are just now figuring out that ditching their marks, francs, liras and drachmas to join the eurozone may not have been such a hot idea after all.

  • Illustration: IMF bailout by Linas Garsys for The Washington Times

    ROHAC: More dollars to the IMF a bad idea

    Pressure is mounting on the United States to ratify the reform of the International Monetary Fund, which the Obama administration unsuccessfully submitted for congressional approval last month. Congress should think twice before passing the reform - importantly because its thrust consists of doubling the amount the United States will owe the IMF - also known as the "quota."

  • ** FILE ** University students shout slogans outside Greece's parliament during a demonstration against education reforms, in Athens on Thursday, March 28, 2013. About 3,500 people, in two separate rallies, gathered against the reform that will see roughly one in five universities and polytechnic faculties closed or merged. (AP Photo/Thanassis Stavrakis)

    Eurozone hits record high 12 percent unemployment

    The number of people who are jobless in the 17 nations that comprise the eurozone rose by 33,000 in February, and now more than 19 million are out of work, Eurostat statistical agency reported.

  • The Washington Times

    FEULNER: Rebuilding a ruined city

    Many are warning that the United States could become the next Greece. There is no need to look across the ocean to see a poorly governed area that is deep in debt and crumbling. Just look to Detroit.

  • Illustration by Greg Groesch for The Washington Times

    GHEI: Punishing savers, Cypriot edition

    There is a deal in place that will bail out the government of Cyprus — but only after extracting more than $5 billion from bank depositors and plunging the economy into uncertainty. It virtually guarantees the island nation will stay in the recession that has been plaguing it for the past six quarters.

  • Fiscal crisis to benefit U.S. banks

    Money that's been trapped in Cyprus banks for the last two weeks could begin to cross the Atlantic and flood the American banking system starting Thursday when banks on the European island reopen, one banking expert predicts.

  • Fiscal crisis in Cyprus to benefit U.S. banks

    Money that's been trapped in Cyprus banks for the last two weeks could begin to cross the Atlantic and flood the American banking system starting Thursday when banks on the European island reopen, one banking expert predicts.

  • A Wall Street sign hangs near the New York Stock Exchange in New York. (AP Photo/Jin Lee)

    U.S. stocks fall on broad concern about Europe

    Stocks reversed an early rise on Wall Street Monday as traders returned to worrying about the European economy.

  • Review: Kratos is exhausted in latest 'God of War'

    Kratos is angry.

  • The Washington Times

    RAHN: Where will the next financial crisis begin?

    Which country will serve as the trigger for the next financial crisis? Given the continuing rise in debt-to-gross domestic product (GDP) ratios in many countries, it is apparent that a new financial crisis will occur. Most of the speculation has been about when, rather than where.

  • Life ban from Greece team for Nazi salute player

    Greek soccer player Giorgos Katidis has been banned from his national team for life after giving a Nazi salute while celebrating a goal in the topflight league.

  • AEK player in trouble over Nazi salute

    AEK Athens midfielder Giorgos Katidis has earned rebukes from politicians, fellow athletes and fans after giving a Nazi salute in celebration of a goal he scored in the Greek league.

  • Rehhagel picked to make Germany popular in Greece

    He pulled off one of soccer's greatest historic upsets. Now Otto Rehhagel has been handed a task equally challenging: to make Germany popular again in crisis-hit Greece.

  • An enraged Kratos (so what else is new?) stars in the video game God of War: Ascension.

    Zadzooks: God of War: Ascension review

    The gaming world's most-famous, bald-headed curmudgeon returns to smite all mythical evildoers across Ancient Greece in his new third-person adventure.

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