you must use one of the major browsers, like IE
5 or NS 4, and have basic Windows fonts supporting Greek
installed in your computer.
Our pages use Times
New Roman, but any
Microsoft Unicode font is fine. Note: you might have Arial on your
computer, but an older version; please download
this one before contacting us.
2. Try different encodings for the problematic page
Explorer users: right click on the
page and browse to the "Encoding" option - available also
from the "View" menu.
Netscape users go to the "View" menu, browse to the
"Character Set" option), and see if any of the various
encodings fixes your problem.