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GLENDALE: Najarian No. 1 in votes

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  • GLENDALE: Najarian No. 1 in votes

    Council newcomer outpolls all; Weaver squeaks in
    By Naush Boghossian, Staff Writer

    Najarian No. 1 in votes

    Los Angeles Daily News
    Thursday, April 07, 2005

    GLENDALE -- After ballot-counting that went into the wee hours,
    Glendale College trustee Ara Najarian and three incumbents emerged
    Wednesday as the winners of four open City Council seats.

    Najarian, 44, received more than 10 percent of all votes cast in
    the election, which drew higher-than-average turnout -- about 26,100
    of the city's 101,200 registered voters. About half the voters used
    absentee ballots.

    Mayor Bob Yousefian received the second-most votes, followed by
    Councilman Frank Quintero. Fourth-place finisher Councilman Dave Weaver
    will serve two years, closing out the term of Councilman Gus Gomez,
    who left in January after he was elected to the Superior Court bench.

    "I never thought I would be the top vote-getter, but the only thing
    I can attribute it to is running a positive, clean campaign, just
    trying to reach a broad swath across the community," said Najarian,
    an attorney who campaigned on traffic and development issues.

    City Clerk candidate Ardashes Kassakhian, who established his lead
    during early returns Tuesday night, defeated eight other candidates
    to capture a post that has not previously had an open election for
    75 years. Current clerk Doris Twedt is retiring.

    "The support we've gotten has been such a humbling experience," said
    Kassakhian. "There were difficult times and there were good times,
    but after today, the real work needs to begin."

    City Treasurer Ron Borucki handily defeated challenger Phillip
    Kazanjian.

    Voters also approved 21 City Charter amendments that officials said
    generally are designed to clean up outdated provisions.

    All of the election winners will be sworn in Monday night, when the
    council also will elect a new mayor.

    In the nine-candidate race for three Glendale Unified School District
    board seats, incumbents Greg Krikorian and Chuck Sambar were re-elected
    and substitute teacher Joylene Wagner will fill the seat vacated by
    Lina Harper.

    Glendale Community College trustees Victor King, Armine Hacopian and
    Anita Gabrielian all were re-elected, edging out their only competitor,
    medical receptionist Linda Sheffield.

    This year's city election distinguished itself from others in city
    history with its record number of candidates -- 42 -- and aggressive
    fundraising.

    Of the four elected to the council, Najarian and Yousefian were among
    the top fundraisers, each collecting more than $100,000.

    But money wasn't the deciding factor for some voters.

    Vrej Agajanian, who raised more than $116,000, finished in 10th place.
    City clerk candidate Paulette Mardikian, who with the help of a loan
    from her husband raised more than $90,000, finished in fourth place.
    School board candidate Maria Rochart raised nearly $60,000 -- the
    most of all the board candidates -- and finished sixth.

    With the elections, the city of 200,000 residents -- about 80,000
    of them Armenian -- now has a council with three members of Armenian
    descent.

    "It's a reflection of the community. It's no different if there were
    80,000 Koreans in Glendale. We'd probably have three Koreans on the
    council," Yousefian said. "But we have to recognize that the ones who
    got in were the ones who had votes in all sectors of the community, so
    once again it's been proven that you need the support of all parties,
    not just Armenians, to win."

    Naush Boghossian, (818) 546-3306 [email protected]

    http://www.dailynews.com/Stories/0,1413,200~20946~2802790,00.html
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