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  • ASBAREZ Online [02-04-2005]

    ASBAREZ ONLINE
    TOP STORIES
    02/04/2005
    TO ACCESS PREVIOUS ASBAREZ ONLINE EDITIONS PLEASE VISIT OUR
    WEBSITE AT <http://www.asbarez.com/>HTTP://WWW.ASBAREZ.COM

    1) Armenian American Republicans Participate in Presidential Inauguration Week
    Celebration
    2) Rep. Costa Joins Congressional Armenian Issues Caucus
    3) Karabagh Drafts Law on Dual Citizenship
    4) Armenian Monument Desecrated in Krasnodar
    5) ANCA Releases Cutting-edge Capital Gateway Program DVD
    6) Horizon to Mark 15th Anniversary with Celebratory Events
    7) United Human Rights Council Conducts Fact Strip Distribution
    8) Early Gorky Works Break New Ground
    9) ARS AIDS Project Receives Grant Extension
    10) Ambassador John Evans to Speak at UCLA
    11) Second Pan Armenian Film Festival in Armenia
    12) Chamlian Student Participates in Presidential Inauguration
    13) Who's the Qualified Candidate?

    1) Armenian American Republicans Participate in Presidential Inauguration Week
    Celebration

    --Kick-off Era of Closer ties with the Administration during New Term

    WASHINGTON, DC--Armenian American Republicans from around the country came to
    the Nation's Capital on Presidential Inauguration week in January to celebrate
    President George W. Bush's re-election and to step up activities with the
    Republican Party, reported the National Organization of Republican Armenians
    (NORA).
    From the main Inauguration Balls to the State sponsored functions throughout
    the week, Republican Armenians participated in a wide array of functions. For
    many, the trip to Washington was a family affair. NORA Board Member Ara
    Bedrosian and wife, Sandy, traveled to the Capital with parents and long-time
    Republican issues supporters John and Asdghig Bedrosian to join in the
    festivities. They were joined by their daughter, Ani Bedrosian, who is
    currently participating in the ANCA Capital Gateway Program and interning with
    Chairman of the House Armed Services Subcommittee on Terrorism, Rep. Jim
    Saxton
    (R-NJ).
    "It was indeed a pleasure to participate in inaugural activities this week
    and
    celebrate George Bush's re-election," noted Ara Bedrosian. "The Armenian
    American participation at this and other Republican functions continues to
    grow
    each time. The next four years will be a terrific opportunity to build on
    existing relationships with the Republican leadership in an effort to promote
    closer US-Armenia economic ties and address the key concerns of our
    community,"
    concluded Bedrosian, who also serves on the Armenian National Committee of
    America Western Region Board.
    Michigan activists Charles and Tulie Yessaian joined their son Chuck Yessaian
    Jr. in attending functions throughout the week. Chuck Yessaian was recently
    hired as legislative director for Michigan Freshman Congressman Joe Schwarz
    after serving as legislative assistant with Michigan House colleague Fred
    Upton.
    Massachusetts Republican State Committeeman Bob Semonian spoke with a number
    of key officials at the inaugural functions including close friend, Bush
    Administration Chief of Staff Andrew Card, and several Senate and House
    Republicans including House Freshman Republican Class Leader Michael McCaul
    (R-TX), South Carolina Congressman Bob Inglis, and Ohio Senators George
    Voinovich and Mike DeWine. Semonian was recently appointed Chairman of Ethnic
    Outreach for the State of Massachusetts. He has been a delegate to last seven
    Republican National Conventions. Semonian was joined on the trip by Bob
    Avakian, outgoing Chairman of the Planning Board of Bedford, MA.
    Florida Republicans Jim and Martha Batmasian participated in the week's
    activities, including the Florida Ball. In the past, Martha Batmasian was a
    Republican Candidate for State Senate in Massachusetts.
    Among others seen at the Republican galas include US Department of
    Transportation Maritime Administration Deputy Administrator John Jamian,
    former
    Connecticut State Representative Brian Flaherty, and a host of Armenian
    American Congressional staff members including Steve Karapetian, legislative
    assistant with Rep. Eric Cantor (R-VA); Elise Aronson, Chief of Staff for Rep.
    Jim Saxton (R-NJ); Keith Nahigian, on staff with Sen. John McCain.


    2) Rep. Costa Joins Congressional Armenian Issues Caucus

    Newly Elected Congressman from Fresno to Continue His Strong Support of
    Constituent Issues

    FRESNO--Central California Democrat Jim Costa (20th Dist.) became the most
    recent in a line of Representatives who have become members of the
    Congressional Armenian Issues Caucus. He joins Representatives Jeb Bradley
    (R-NH), Ben Chandler (R-KY), Raul Grijalva (D-AZ), Eddie Bernice Johnson
    (D-TX), Jerry Moran (R-KS), Linda Sanchez (D-CA), and Joe Schwarz (R-MI), all
    of whom have added their names to the Caucus in the 109th Session of Congress.
    Rep. Costa, who was elected to Congress by a 53-47 margin last November, was
    endorsed by the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA) based on his
    long
    record of support as a State Legislator on issues of concern to Armenian
    Americans in the Central Valley. The ANCA's endorsement, coupled with the
    ANC-Fresno's dissemination of this news to Armenian American voters in Fresno,
    rallied the Armenian community to support Costa for Congress.
    "Rep. Costa has been a staunch supporter of our issues for a long time,"
    stated Hygo Ohanessian, who chairs ANC-Fresno. "Really, this is a person who
    should be on the Caucus given his history with the Armenian American community
    that he represents. His constituents will be as glad as I am to learn the
    news," concluded Ohanessian.
    Rep. Costa grew up in the Valley with Armenian farmers such as the Koligian
    family. Congressman Costa has carried the bond that tied his family to the
    Fresno Armenian community throughout his 24-year legislative career. As early
    as February 2004, then candidate Costa committed to joining the Armenian
    Issues
    Caucus if elected to Congress when he met with representatives of the local
    ANC
    at the Armenian Center in Fresno.
    Established in 1995 and co-chaired by Representatives Frank Pallone (D-NJ)
    and
    Joe Knollenberg (R-MI), the Congressional Armenian Issues Caucus is a
    bipartisan forum for the discussion of policies to foster increased
    cooperation
    between the United States and Armenian governments and to strengthen the
    enduring bonds between the American and Armenian peoples.


    3) Karabagh Drafts Law on Dual Citizenship

    STEPANAKERT (Armenpress)--Mountainous Karabagh Republic (MKR) has drafted a
    law
    that would allow citizens to carry dual citizenship.
    The republic's Foreign Affairs Minister Arman Melikian said that draft
    laws on
    MKR's diplomatic service and consulate services have also been developed,
    so as
    to coordinate the Ministry's foreign policy and its mission to protect the
    right of MKR citizens in foreign countries.
    He also revealed the laws were drafted based on the international conventions
    and legislation.


    4) Armenian Monument Desecrated in Krasnodar

    KRASNODAR (Combined Sources)--Vandals desecrated a monument dedicated to
    Armenians who founded the town of Budenovsk in Russia's southern province of
    Stavropol. The monument is housed in a complex dedicated the Founding Fathers
    of the City of Soorp Khach (Holy Cross).
    Officially dedicated in October 2004, the complex houses an 8 meter-high
    arch,
    a khachkar (cross-stone), and a stone composition.
    Krasnodar's Yerkramas newspaper reported that the vandalism may be the
    result of recent anti-Caucasus sentiments in the area, or is an act by a cult.
    Sanctioned by Russian Emperor Paul I, The city of Soorp Khach (Holy Cross,
    now
    Budennovsk) was founded in 1799 by Armenians and others who believed in the
    Armenian faith.


    5) ANCA Releases Cutting-edge Capital Gateway Program DVD

    --New "Hovig Apo Saghdejian" fellows start work in Washington, DC

    --"Youth of a Nation" interactive DVD gives an insider look at innovative job
    placement program

    WASHINGTON, DC--With the release this week of a interactive DVD, recent
    Armenian university graduates have a new way to learn about the Armenian
    National Committee of America (ANCA) Capital Gateway Program and its
    groundbreaking efforts to help open doors to political and media related job
    opportunities in the nation's Capital. The "Youth of a Nation" 10-minute
    video
    highlighting the benefits and successes of the program, features interviews
    with Members of Congress and program graduates, as well as a host of resources
    for future applicants.
    Prepared by the ANCA Western Region office and unveiled at its annual gala in
    Los Angeles, "Youth of a Nation" gives potential applicants and supporters a
    chance to meet Capital Gateway fellows, hear first hand about how the program
    works, and benefit from their experiences looking for jobs in Washington, DC.
    Young film-maker and MTV "Rock-the-Vote" veteran Ara Soudjian and ANCA Western
    Region Executive Director Ardashes Kassakhian traveled to the Capital to speak
    to Capital Gateway staff, participants as well as Members of Congress to
    give a
    complete picture of the unique program. The DVD Capital Gateway Education
    project was made possible through a charitable contribution by Mr. and Mrs.
    John and Asdghig Bedrosian.
    In addition to the documentary, the Capital Gateway DVD includes an extensive
    photo gallery featuring Capital Gateway participants, past and present, as
    well
    as necessary application forms, additional information about the program and
    its successes and an on-line method to support the program. "Youth of a
    Nation" has already been shown at meetings with the UCLA Armenian Students
    Association as well as several Southern California College Campuses.
    Launched in August 2003, through a generous donation from the Cafesjian
    Family
    Foundation, the ANCA Capital Gateway Program assists Armenian Americans across
    the US in finding job opportunities on Capitol Hill or other government
    offices, the media, and think tanks in Washington, DC The program builds on
    the successful 20-year old ANCA "Leo Sarkisian" summer internship program,
    which has brought hundreds of youth leaders to Washington, DC to learn about
    the American political process and the growing role Armenian Americans play in
    advancing a broad range of advocacy issues.
    Qualified Capital Gateway Program Fellows are provided free housing and full
    use of ANCA facilities and staff support in their quest for the right job or
    internship in the Nation's Capital. More than 20 participants in the program
    have secured positions in a myriad of locations including with Members of
    Congress, US Chamber of Commerce, Export-Import Bank, Congressional Quarterly,
    Center for the Prevention of Genocide, and the American Civil Liberties Union.

    "Hovig Apo Saghdejian" Fellows Arrive in Washington, DC
    The Winter 2004 Capital Gateway Program Fellows include two "Hovig Apo
    Saghdejian" fellows from Southern California--Ani Bedrossian and Andrew
    Gregorian. Bedrosian, a recent graduate from Loyola Marymount University with
    a Bachelor of Arts in Communication Studies, is currently interning with House
    Armed Services Subcommittee on Terrorism Chairman Jim Saxton (R-NJ).
    Gregorian, a UCLA graduate with a Bachelor of Arts in Philosophy, who arrived
    in the program just last week, is currently interviewing for several positions
    on Capitol Hill. A third "Hovig Apo Saghdejian" fellow, Serouj Aprahamian of
    Orange County, California, recently completed a three-month tenure as a
    volunteer in the ANCA office, and has returned to contribute to the advocacy
    efforts of his local Armenian Youth Federation chapter.
    The Hovig Apo Saghdejian Fellowship of the Capital Gateway Program was
    created
    and named in memory of the young man, who perished in an automobile
    accident in
    June 2004. The Fellowship fund has collected nearly $60,000 to date through
    the loving efforts of Hovig's parents, Apo and Rosine Saghedejian, and sister
    Nayiri. This fund will, on an ongoing basis, sponsor fellows, by covering
    their housing and providing a full range of support services - from improving
    the design of their resumes and sharpening their interview skills, to making
    the right introductions and integrating them into the growing network of
    Armenian American public policy professionals in the nation's capital.
    "These fine young Armenians, Serouj, Ani, and Andrew - and all those that
    will
    follow - honor Hovig's legacy of respect for our Armenian heritage and
    commitment to community service," said ANCA Chairman Ken Hachikian. "Even at
    an early age, in the very best tradition of our long history, Hovig understood
    the critical importance of each generation contributing to the future of the
    Armenian nation. He rebuilt homes in Armenia, strengthened our community here
    in the United States, and got involved in local political campaigns. His
    young
    life was cut short by tragedy - and we were all deprived of a lifetime of
    service, love and friendship. Hovig's loss remains a painful tragedy for our
    community, in Fresno and around the country. He remains in our prayers, and,
    although the pain will never pass, we draw a measure of comfort, knowing that,
    in his memory, scores of young Armenians will make great contributions to our
    future as a nation."
    Hovig Apo Saghdejian was born on December 31, 1980 in Fresno, California. An
    active member of a number of community organizations, including the Armenian
    National Committee of America, Homenetmen Armenian General Athletic Union and
    Scouts, the Armenian Youth Federation and the Land and Culture
    Organization, he
    contributed to the welfare of the Armenian American community and reinforced
    his commitment to his Homeland. He visited Armenia with the Land and Culture
    Organization, and traveled to Beirut, Lebanon with the Hamazkayin Cultural
    Society to broaden his cultural understanding. At an early age, Hovig was
    already politically active, volunteering with the office of Congressman George
    Radanovich and State Assemblymember Steve Samuelian on campaign and public
    policy projects.
    In addition to the Hovig Apo Saghdejian Fellowship, the Capital Gateway
    program has received substantial support from longtime ANCA benefactors Mr.
    and
    Mrs. Frank and Barbara Hekimian and the Armenian American Veterans Post of
    Milford, Massachusetts (AAVO). Founded in 1946 by returning veterans of World
    War II and later expanded to include veterans of the Korean War, the AAVO has
    been a devoted contributor to community organizations and projects. They have
    been recognized for their generosity in newspapers, official proclamations,
    and
    through the appreciation of the many recipients of their humanitarian gifts.

    Members of Congress Encourage Graduates to Come to Washington

    The Capital Gateway Program continues to receive praise from Members of
    Congress, who have urged graduates to take advantage of all the program has to
    offer.
    Speaking on camera in "Youth of a Nation," Rep. Anna Eshoo, an outspoken
    activist on Armenian American concerns who is of Armenian and Assyrian
    ancestry, urged young politically minded individuals to apply. "If there were
    an offer on the table to come to Washington, DC, the power center of the
    world,
    work in the Congress--not outside by inside the tent--in an office
    internship.
    If you have that offer--with housing taken care of--with the internship being
    created--why wouldn't you take advantage of it? . . . The Capital Gateway
    means that the gates will swing open, they have already been prepared for you,
    come here, learn, grow and have it be a substantive part of your life."
    Congressional Armenian Caucus Co-Chairman Frank Pallone (D-NJ) pointed the
    benefits of the Program. "It's just a great experience because you see the
    actual workings of Congress. You learn how bills are put together, how they
    respond to constituents. You certainly, as an Armenian American, would learn
    to what extent people have knowledge of Armenian issues." Rep. Pallone also
    noted the importance increasing the number of Armenian Americans active on
    Capital Hill. "It's a great learning experience obviously for the individual,
    for the young person, but I also think it helps the Members of Congress and
    other staff because the whole idea is that there is an Armenian American face
    so that people can see some of the areas of concern are and interact with
    people of all ethnic groups."
    Southern California Representatives Adam Schiff and Diane Watson were equally
    enthusiastic about the program. "This is a gateway to the Capital. It's just
    a great way for young people to come out and test the waters and see if
    this is
    the right challenge for them," explained Rep. Schiff in speaking to the "Youth
    of a Nation" team.
    "If you are just out of college and you are looking towards the future in
    terms of a career, come to the nation's capital. If you are not decided
    yet as
    to what you want to do, but you have that education, come and take a look.
    And
    maybe you can come back and take my seat, or a seat in the Senate, or--who
    knows--you could be President. That opportunity is there for you. So I
    invite
    you to come," said Rep. Watson.


    6) Horizon to Mark 15th Anniversary with Celebratory Events

    GLENDALE--In celebration of Horizon 24 Hour Armenian TV's 15th anniversary, a
    number of festive events have been planned to mark the momentous occasion.
    After an initial kick off party, the festivities will continue with a
    Gala Concert on February 27, at the Pasadena Civic Auditorium. The
    extraordinary lineup includes special guests from Armenia Ara Gevorkian,
    popular Armenian musician and composer Nune Badalian, well-known soprano Arsen
    Grigorian, as well as Armen Movsesyan, Hovhannes Shahbazian, Armen Hayorti,
    and
    Rima Carapetyan.
    The Annual Banquet will take place at the Renaissance Banquet Hall on
    March 11, followed by a Night of Cultural Festivities at the Alex Theater on
    March 22. An invitation only event, this night will provide an opportunity for
    Horizon to express its gratitude to all those who have supported the
    station in
    all its endeavors.
    Horizon 24 Hour Armenian TV, the largest and most diversified media
    corporation in the United States and throughout the Armenian world, began as a
    half hour weekly program and grew to become a 24 hour station with national
    and
    international programming.
    Broadcast primarily in Armenian, Horizon offers Armenian-Americans
    across
    North America an exciting lineup of diverse programming from the diaspora and
    Armenia.
    With its concentration on providing comprehensive news, the channel produces
    nearly 80% of its programs, as well as a variety of documentaries. Horizon
    offers the best assortment of news, movies, music, talk shows, and children's
    shows that are uniquely Armenian.
    Designed to reflect the needs and interests of the Armenian-American
    community, Horizon is committed to delivering superior programming. With an
    unrivaled supply of news footage from around the world through correspondents
    in Armenia, Artsakh, and the diaspora, as well as television news agencies
    such
    as APTN, Reuters TV, and local news agencies, Horizon is the leading news
    source covering world and domestic affairs from the Armenian perspective.


    7) United Human Rights Council Conducts Fact Strip Distribution

    GLENDALE--In its first large-scale fact strip distribution of 2005, the United
    Human Rights Council (UHRC) members visited Armenian grocery stores in both
    Glendale and Pasadena on January 29, providing them with informative flyers
    about human rights abuses committed by the Turkish government. Store clerks
    and
    managers were urged to place the flyers on their check-out counters for
    customers to pick up.
    According to Ani Garibyan, one of the organizers of Saturday's action, the
    UHRC regularly carries out such fact strip distributions in order to raise the
    awareness of Armenian consumers' susceptible to buying Turkish products. `We
    figure that if we want to stop Armenians from buying Turkish products, the
    best
    thing to do is to directly go to the stores where they shop,' stated Garibyan.
    Several store owners received the fact strips enthusiastically, with some
    even
    insisting on putting them in the grocery bags of customers.
    In addition, the UHRC members conducted a survey of Armenian shoppers at the
    stores they visited, asking them a series of questions regarding Turkish
    products being sold in Armenian stores, including whether or not they realized
    that the Turkish government receives tax revenue from companies exporting such
    products to the US. The results will be used to help structure future
    campaigns
    aimed towards ridding Turkish products from Southern California stores.
    The United Human Rights Council (UHRC), by means of action on a grassroots
    level, works toward correcting the human rights violations of those
    governments
    who distort, deny, and delude their own history to disguise past and present
    genocides, massacres, and human rights violations. The UHRC is a collective of
    concerned citizens, including a diverse spectrum of members and supporters
    from
    various community-based organizations and student associations of universities
    and colleges.


    8) Early Gorky Works Break New Ground

    Los Angeles Exhibit Extended Through Feb. 2005

    LOS ANGELES--Arshile Gorky, widely regarded as one of the most pivotal and
    significant artists in the development of 20th century American art, became a
    lightning rod for other artists in the late 1920s and early 30s, sparking the
    genesis of what was to become the "New York School" and setting the course of
    modern art in America.
    Now, in a ground-breaking exhibition "Arshile Gorky--The Early Years," Jack
    Rutberg Fine Arts in Los Angeles is showing 66 rare works by Gorky from a
    private collection, most of which have never been exhibited before. This
    exhibition, one of the largest exhibits of Gorky's works ever presented
    outside
    of a museum, breaks new ground in addressing Gorky's earliest stylistic
    development.
    "Arshile Gorky--The Early Years" offers new references and insights into this
    legendary artist during his seminal period as he explored the avant garde
    sensibilities of the time. As Melvin P. Lader (widely regarded as the eminent
    scholar on the work of Arshile Gorky and author of numerous books on Gorky and
    abstract expressionism) notes in this exhibition catalogue's text: "As a
    group,
    the drawings and paintings mirror Gorky's stylistic evolution, up to the point
    in the late 1930s when he began to truly digest and synthesize so many of his
    early influences on the verge of finding his own unique language and style.
    Examples of his absorption of Analytic Cubism, Synthetic Cubism, and
    aspects of
    Surrealism are plentiful among these works...and they offer us the rare
    opportunity to view a good number...from a very fertile period of his artistic
    career."
    The exhibition has been made possible due to the long-standing friendship
    between Gorky and the Swiss-born American artist Hans Burkhardt, who shared a
    studio with Gorky in New York for many years, and acquired a formidable
    collection of Gorky's early works.
    Lader notes that the "Burkhardt collection Gorky drawings provides a rather
    unique opportunity to see the artist's art and ideas evolve within an
    important
    period of his artistic transformation. Drawings, by their very nature,
    register
    the artist's first impulses in creating a work. As such, they can often be of
    enormous value in understanding how an artist thinks and in tracing the
    various
    stages through which his art has progressed."
    "Arshile Gorky: The Early Years" is currently exhibited at Jack Rutberg Fine
    Arts gallery, 357 North La Brea Avenue, Los Angeles, through February, 2005.
    The exhibition is accompanied by a 96-page text with 103 color illustrations,
    and an essay by Dr. Lader, who co-curated the recent major retrospective of
    Gorky drawings at the Whitney Museum of Art in New York, and the Menil
    Collection in Houston.
    Gallery hours are Tuesday-Friday from 10:00 am to 6:00 pm and Saturdays from
    10:00 to 5:00 pm or by appointment.
    A portfolio sampling of Arshile Gorky's exhibition may be viewed at the
    gallery's web site:
    www.jackrutbergfinearts.com/JRutbergFile/JRutbergArtists/AGorky.html


    9) ARS AIDS Project Receives Grant Extension

    WATERTOWN, MAThe Central Executive Board of the Armenian Relief Society, Inc.
    (ARS) recently announced that the HIV/AIDS Education and Prevention Project at
    the ARS Mother and Child Clinic in Akhurian, Armenia has been granted an
    extension. The project, funded by a grant from the World AIDS Foundation, is a
    collaborative effort between the ARS and the University of Massachusetts (UM)
    at Worcester.
    The purpose of the project is to develop a decentralized model of HIV/AIDS
    education and prevention that can be replicated throughout Armenia and
    possibly
    in other Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) countries. In addition, it
    begins to establish a climate that will support HIV health care delivery in
    the
    near future. Project team members include UM Medical School assistant
    professor
    Dr. Carol Bova, ARS Mother and Child Clinic director Dr. Sevak Avagyan, UM
    Memorial Healthcare HIV Clinic Nurse Manager/Nurse Practitioner Carol
    Jaffarian
    who is also a member of the ARS; and ARS Mother and Child Clinic executive
    director Dr. Mkhitar Mkhitaryan.
    Built in the region of Armenia devastated by the 1988 earthquake, the ARS
    Mother and Child Clinic, the first licensed and registered privately owned
    medical facility in Armenia, became operational in May 1997. Providing the
    22,000 strong population of Akhurian and six adjacent villages with free
    medical care and treatment, more than 40,000 women and children have received
    care at the clinic since its inception, and more than 450 children have been
    born to mothers followed in this clinic.
    In September 2003, the ARS celebrated the groundbreaking of a Birthing Center
    at the clinic, which will officially become operational in April, the date on
    which Armenians throughout the world will commemorate the 90th anniversary of
    the Genocide. Thus, the new ARS Birthing Center will be affirming the joy and
    final triumph of new life over violence, death, and despair.


    10) Ambassador John Evans to Speak at UCLA

    LOS ANGELES--US Ambassador to Armenia John M. Evans, will speak at UCLA on
    Thursday afternoon, February 17, at 2 p.m., in the Viewpoint Conference
    Room of
    Ackerman Union (level A).
    The Ambassador's visit to UCLA is being arranged by Professor Richard
    Hovannisian, AEF Chair in Armenian History, with the cooperation of the
    Armenian Students Association. Evans stated that he looks forward to a free
    and
    open exchange with students, faculty, and members of the public who wish to
    attend the afternoon forum. He will begin the hour with a brief overview
    titled
    "Report from Armenia--2005."
    Evans was confirmed by the Senate in June, took his oath of office in August,
    and presented his credentials in Yerevan in September 2004.
    A native of Williamsburg, Virginia, he studied Russian history at Yale
    University and Columbia University. Since entering the Foreign Service, he has
    served in a number of posts, including Tehran, Prague, Moscow, St. Petersburg,
    and Washington DC, as well as on special commissions and peace-keeping
    missions
    in Europe. His role in coordinating the American response to the Armenian
    earthquake of 1988 earned him a medal and statement of appreciation from the
    Armenian government. Prior to his appointment as Ambassador to Armenia, Evans
    directed the State Department's Office of Russian Affairs.
    Ambassador Evans will be accompanied by Donna Evans, former President of the
    World Affairs Council of Washington, DC, Robin Phillips, Mission Director for
    the US Agency for International Development, Eugenia Sidereas, the State
    Department's Desk Officer for Armenia, and Aaron Sherinian, the Embassy's
    Political Officer and Assistance Coordinator in Yerevan
    The gathering is free and open to the public. The UCLA campus map is
    available
    at <http://www.ucla.edu/map>www.ucla.edu/map.
    Contact Professor Richard Hovannisian, at [email protected], or call
    310-825-3375, MWF (9 a.m.-12 noon).


    11) Second Pan Armenian Film Festival in Armenia

    --Organizers invite entries for July 2005 festival

    YEREVAN--The second international "Golden Apricot" film festival will take
    place in Yerevan, Armenia July 12-17, under the theme of "crossroads."
    Striving to promote cross-cultural understanding, festival organizers have
    invite entries from throughout the world--from a variety of cultures--to
    convene in Yerevan, on the crossroads of yesterday's and today's cultures.
    Entries should depict human experience: the daily lives of ordinary people,
    their troubles and joys, their hopes and heartbreaks. There are two categories
    for the festival competition: full-length feature films and documentaries
    (full
    length and short). One Grand Prix (Golden Apricot) and one Special Mention
    will
    be presented in each category. The Special Award will be presented for
    significant contribution to the cinema world.
    The festival will have a special competition for feature, animation, and
    documentary films made by filmmakers of Armenian decent. Two Awards will be
    presented for films in this section.
    This year's Golden Apricot again presents two non-competitive categories.
    Under "Yerevan Premiers" the best art-house films of the past season will be
    screened, whereas the "Retrospective" category will present films by famous
    film directors.
    The application submission deadline is March 31, 2005. Accepted screening
    formats are film (35 mm), and video (DV, DVCAM, Beta-SP/PAL). The organizing
    committee will accept submissions on BETA NTSC or DigiBeta. Accepted preview
    formats are VHS (PAL or NTSC). The date of production has to be after July 1,
    2003.

    For detailed inquiries and application forms, contact Susanna Harutyunyan and
    Mikayel Stamboltsyan of the Golden Apricot International Film Festival, Byron
    Street, #5, Yerevan, 375009, Armenia, Tel. (?1) 564484, email: [email protected].
    The festival website is <http://www.gaiff.am/>www.gaiff.am


    12) Chamlian Student Participates in Presidential Inauguration

    LA CRESCENTA--Areni Shahinian, an 8th grade student at Chamlian Armenian
    School, was invited to participate in the Presidential Inauguration from
    January 19-23, in Washington, DC.
    Personally extending the invitation as the Chief Executive Officer of `People
    to People' program, Mary Eisenhower (granddaughter of President Dwight
    Eisenhower) had written, `Areni is one of a selected few individuals asked to
    participate in this exclusive Washington program.'
    Areni, who returned to Los Angeles last Sunday, said, `It was an
    extraordinary
    experience that I will never forget. I wish every student had such an
    opportunity.'
    Assistant to the Principal Rita Kaprielian expressed, `The administration is
    very proud that Areni was present at this significant event not only as a
    Chamlian student, but also as a young Armenian-American delegate.'


    13) Who's the Qualified Candidate?

    By Garen Yegparian

    Yes, more on elections.
    Someone should really do a PhD thesis or other study on what drives people to
    run for office, especially local, under conditions that exist in places like
    Glendale today. Some of these poor, addled candidates are in for the shocks of
    their lives. Sadly they'll also play the role of spoilers (in ways that make
    unjustly-accused-Nader-in-Florida-2004 look like an angel).
    The title of this piece begs the questions of who's making the assessment of
    qualification and in what context before getting into the actual list of
    qualifications.
    Clearly, the context is the Armenian community's interest. If for no other
    reason, then simply because many of the candidates in Glendale's races-- City
    Council, School Board, Community College Board of Trustees, City Clerk, and
    City Treasurer--pin high hopes on the Armenian vote, which has been energized
    in recent years and is a force to be reckoned with.
    As to who's doing the judging? Well, it's me. Deal with it!
    It's worth noting that, while much of this discussion is rooted in municipal
    elections, it is broadly applicable to higher, legislative-representative,
    state and federal level offices as well.
    The most obvious qualification for office is experience, training, or some
    background in a field applicable to the post sought, e.g. having been a local
    government employee--if running for city council, being a trained teacher--if
    running for school board, or coming from the world of finance--if running for
    treasurer.
    But this is obviously insufficient. Many candidates eventually become very
    good members of the bodies to which they're elected through
    on-the-job-training. What gets them in is support in the community they serve
    because they've been active in it. Maybe they're single-issue advocates, and
    that issue resonates powerfully with the constituency in question. Maybe they
    speak for an under--or un-represented minority or one that is energized by
    real
    and/or perceived injustices. Maybe they have many years of service in
    community
    organizations and/or the given municipality's boards and commissions. Maybe
    they're gadflies who get lucky because the remaining field of candidates is
    just plain lousy. Maybe they collect, or use of their own money--enough to be
    heard more loudly than the competition. Maybe the incumbents have become so
    reprehensible to the voters that an "anybody but..." attitude prevails.
    It also helps if candidates for office know whereof they speak. People do
    listen and appreciate it when someone is well versed in the relevant issues
    and
    conveys plausible solutions to perceived problems.
    Now why is all this relevant to the Armenian community? Simple. There is a
    very large number of Armenian candidates in Glendale's election this year. To
    be fair, it is in rough proportion to the percentage of the city's population
    our community constitutes, approximately 40%. Six of 18 city council
    candidates
    (with two other "ian"s not qualifying), four of nine city clerk candidates,
    one
    of two city treasurer candidates, four of nine school board candidates, and
    two
    (one an Armenian "hars") of four community college board candidates are
    Armenian.
    You'd really have to have just fallen off the turnip truck, plus severely
    banged and bumped your head in the process, to believe these candidates don't
    expect Armenians to vote for them, just because they ARE Armenian. And this is
    exactly why we as a community, through our organizations, families, and
    special
    interest sub-groupings, have the right to a say in pre-selecting these
    candidates.
    It's only fair and reasonable that if someone wants my vote through a
    guilt-by-association rationalization, then he/she ought to be open to and
    subject to my/our say-so in the matter. Of course this runs smack-dab into the
    "anyone can become president of the US" mythology that prevails in the
    country.
    And of course everyone has a right to run for any office as long as they can
    overcome the required hurdles. But when Armenians run for office in a
    jurisdiction where the Armenian vote is defining; when they implicitly,
    tacitly
    (if not explicitly and overtly) expect our community's vote; when they convey
    the sense of being "natural" representatives of our issues; then, we as a
    community have a right to speak based on our interests. These interests
    dictate
    having electable candidates run and not too many of them, otherwise the
    Armenian vote is diluted through scattering across the 'Armenian' candidates,
    and they all lose, along with the best interests of our community. In this
    very
    fashion, the same individual likely caused the loss of two different, far more
    electable, Armenian candidates in the State Assembly primaries of 1997 and
    2001.
    Some of the Armenian candidates in Glendale are qualified and credible. They
    have community service behind them, but not to our community. They are
    standing
    for election as the candidate of some other, equally legitimate, grouping with
    the city. They just expect to piggyback off the large Armenian bloc and parlay
    the two constituencies' votes into a victory. While this is smart politics and
    a tactic that's been used successfully before, it is not necessarily in the
    Armenian community's best interest. Such candidates, and those who have no
    base--therefore no hope of election, will siphon off enough votes from those
    truly representing our community to cause the latter's non-election, all to
    our
    detriment.
    Sometimes so much of this goes on, that one is tempted to toy with
    conspiratorial explanations for these phenomena. Is it just possible that we
    have become enough of a force in politics in certain jurisdictions that those
    who have their own (again, equally legitimate agenda) are trying to play
    divide-and-conquer with our community?
    So be smart, whether in Glendale or elsewhere with Armenians running for
    office, and support those candidates who will best serve our community,
    even if
    they happen not to be Armenian.


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