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California Courier Online, April 6, 2006

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  • California Courier Online, April 6, 2006

    California Courier Online, April 6, 2006

    1 - Commentary
    Media Criticism Pushes State Dept.
    To Respond to Armenian Concerns
    By Harut Sassounian
    Publisher, The California Courier

    2 - Fear Fuels Turkish Denial of Genocide
    3 - KCET's Life & Times Profiles Filmmaker
    Dr. J Michael Hagopian on April 12
    4 - Commentary
    'Protestcide' - The Killing of Protest of a Denial of Genocide
    By Israel W. Charny
    5 - Prof. Ronald Grigor Suny Will
    Lecture April 14 at Merdinian
    6 - Glendale Names Annual Diamond Award
    Recipients for Achievement in the Arts
    7 - Armenian Bar Association to
    Honor Five Judges on April 12
    8 - Ararat Home Dinner Dance
    Committee Plans for April 29
    9 - LACC Screens 'Ararat' on April 23;
    Reception for Film Star David Alpay
    10 - Armenia Fund Telethon
    Story Touches Hearts
    ******************************************* ******************************
    1 - Commentary
    Media Criticism Pushes State Dept.
    To Respond to Armenian Concerns

    By Harut Sassounian
    Publisher, The California Courier
    As April 24 is drawing near, what Turks apprehensively call "the
    approaching Armenian Tsunami" is haunting not only the Turkish government
    but also officials at the State Department.
    Various newspapers have unleashed a barrage of attacks on the State
    Department in recent weeks questioning and even castigating it for not
    acknowledging the Armenian Genocide and recalling the U.S. Ambassador to
    Armenia, John Evans who had dared to utter the words, Armenian Genocide.
    The news of his recall was first reported by this writer last month.
    The following articles and editorials were published in the last two weeks:

    -- The Los Angeles Daily News headlined its March 21st article: "Status of
    U.S. ambassador to Armenia questioned." The paper quoted Cong. Adam Schiff
    as saying: "I made it clear [to the State Dept.] I thought any action taken
    against him [Amb. Evans] would merely compound the erroneous policy of the
    administration."
    -- The Los Angeles Times published a lengthy and hard-hitting editorial on
    March 22, titled: "It was genocide." It said: "the State Dept. has long
    avoided the word 'genocide,' not out of any dispute over history but out of
    deference to Turkey.... It is time to stop tiptoeing around this issue and to
    accept settled history.... Punishing an ambassador for speaking honestly
    about a 90-year-old crime befits a cynical, double-dealing monarchy, not
    the leader of the free world." The editorial concluded: "One day, the
    country that was founded as a direct repudiation of its Ottoman past will
    face its history squarely, as part of a long-overdue maturing process. Some
    day before then, we hope, the State Dept. will too." The week before this
    editorial was published, this writer along with a colleague met with the
    editorial board of the L.A. Times.
    -- The Independent (UK) published on March 23 an article titled: "Row over
    US ambassador's Armenia genocide remark." The paper reported: "protests are
    growing over the possible recall of the US ambassador in Armenia."
    -- The Fresno Bee published an editorial on March 24, titled: "Speak the
    Truth: U.S. ambassador to Armenia in hot water over use of 'genocide.'" The
    paper's editors castigated the State Dept. for threatening the career of
    Amb. Evnas by saying: "Shame on the State Department." The Fresno Bee
    called on the State Dept., Congress, the administration, as well as the
    government of Turkey to recognize the Armenian Genocide: "The facts are
    plain. The history is clear. Turkey offends the victims' survivors with its
    intransigence, but hurts itself most of all when it continues to deny what
    the entire world knows."
    -- The Glendale News Press published a front-page story on March 26,
    titled: "Officials question the fate of diplomat."
    -- The chain of McClatchy newspapers published on March 28 a lengthy
    article titled: "Genocide comment could cost Ambassador to Armenia his
    job." It reported that Cong. George Radanovich (Rep. of Calif.) has called
    the State Dept. requesting a meeting to discuss the fate of Amb. Evans.
    -- The Washington Times published an article on March 31, titled: "Recall
    from Armenia?"
    Following this barrage of news reports and commentaries, Daniel Fried, the
    Assistant Secretary of State for European and Eurasian Affairs, addressed
    the Armenian Assembly's National Conference in Washington, D.C., on March
    27. Here are excerpts from his remarks and responses to questions from the
    audience:
    "The U.S. position on events of 1915 has not changed. We believe that a
    productive dialogue is the best way to establish a shared understanding of
    history that honors the victims of these horrific events, murders on a mass
    scale, killings without justification, deportations. Over 1.5 million
    people lost their lives, innocent victims. But we want to foster
    reconciliation and peace based on an understanding of history, not a denial
    of it. We believe that the tragedy of 1915, the killings, is of enormous
    human significance and its historical assessment should be determined not
    on the basis of politics, but introspection among civic leaders and
    scholars. This process has begun in Turkey where it needs to take place,"
    Fried said. He was interrupted by a member of the audience who shouted:
    "horse manure!"
    Fried then continued: "Sitting here with us is my old friend John Evans,
    our Ambassador in Yerevan. He is the Ambassador, remains the Ambassador,
    has... [Applause and cheers]. Like all of us, we all serve at the pleasure of
    the President. Amb. Evans came from Yerevan for the signing of the
    Millennium Challenge Account Compact this afternoon, and will be in the
    meeting this afternoon between Secretary Rice and Foreign Minister
    Oskanian. There has been a great deal of speculation. I don't discuss
    personnel issues, but since my friend is sitting here, I thought I would
    recognize Amb. John Evans [Applause]."
    When asked why foreign countries such as Turkey are permitted to dictate
    America's foreign policy vis-à-vis Armenia and Cyprus, Fried replied:
    "Third parties are not permitted to dictate our foreign policy, nor do they
    dictate our foreign policy. We have a policy which many of you disagree
    with. I understand. But we have a policy of seeking to encourage Turkey to
    reflect more seriously about subjects which have been taboo for generations
    in that country. I said earlier that process has begun in Turkey. You
    recall that the famous Turkish writer Orhan Pamuk spoke clearly about this.
    He is not the only Turk speaking out. As I said, this process has begun as
    Turkish society modernizes, and as it modernizes, as democracy in Turkey
    deepens, Turkey will have to go through what many other countries such as
    the United States have had to go through in our own history, which is
    looking back at the darker spots in our past. With respect to the United
    States, those darker spots include things like slavery and racial
    discrimination, treatment of American Indians, and in my opinion,
    internment of American citizens of Japanese origin in camps in World War
    II. Those are painful subjects. Just as dealing with the history of the
    mass killings of Armenians is painful for Turkey. And by the way, I say
    this to my Turkish friends using the same words. We keep one set of books.
    Now that process has begun in Turkey. It is certainly not going fast enough
    to satisfy you. It is not going fast enough to satisfy us. But this process
    has begun and it will, I hope, bring greater understanding to Turks of
    their own history. We will continue to have a dialogue about this as April
    24th approaches. I will not attempt to anticipate what the President will
    say. I do believe he will issue a statement on April 24th, in fact I can't
    believe there won't be one. And I expect, as we have in the past, to
    consult with the Armenian Assembly about this and to have a frank set of
    discussions before and after."
    In response to a question about "Turkey exporting its denialist tactics to
    the U.S.," Fried said: "The United States government has never denied the
    events of 1915. We do not support, what was the phrase, "export of
    denialist literature or positions." We do support efforts by Turkey to deal
    with its history more seriously. As I said, this process has begun. It has
    not ended. Efforts such as the Truth and Reconciliation Commission [the
    correct name is: "Turkish Armenian Reconciliation Commission" or TARC] were
    serious, and these were efforts in which Turkish as well as Armenian
    scholars were involved. It produced a serious look at those issues which we
    have recognized officially. This is not an easy issue. It is not an easy
    issue for the United States government, and we are not at the end of the
    road on this issue. We will continue to urge our Turkish friends to face
    difficult issues of their past seriously, and we will urge Armenia to help
    the Turks make this possible without ever sacrificing historical truth or
    your position."
    When asked a direct question about the recall of Amb. Evans, Fried provided
    the usual evasive answer: "We all serve at the pleasure of the President. I
    won't discuss personnel issues. Amb. Evans, as I said, is a friend of more
    than 20 years standing. He's our Ambassador. He's right here. He will be in
    the meetings today at the State Department, as I said. [Applause]."
    The above exchange shows that while Dan Fried was trying to be as gracious
    as possible to his Armenian hosts, he was nevertheless sticking to the
    administration's unacceptable policy of substituting euphemisms for the
    Armenian Genocide. He also continued to avoid making any forthright
    comments on Amb. Evans, despite persistent media criticisms.
    ************************************** ************************************

    2 - Fear Fuels Turkish Denial of Genocide
    By Jay Logan Rogers
    SALT LAKE CITY, UT - The Turkish government refuses to acknowledge the
    genocide committed against the Armenians, said Richard Hovannisian,
    professor of Armenian and near-eastern history at the University of
    California at Los Angeles.
    He said there are psychological reasons that Turkey refuses to admit the
    genocide occurred.
    "They don't want to believe that their grandparents could've been
    murderers," Hovannisian explained. "They also don't want to deal with the
    consequences of recognition, including contrition and restitution."
    Hovannisian commented on the contemporary interpretations of the Armenian
    genocide at the Hinckley Institute of Politics on March 23.
    Between 1915 and 1918, actions of the government of the Ottoman Empire
    (present-day Turkey) resulted in the elimination of a substantial portion
    of its Armenian minority population.
    While the exact numbers are in dispute, most scholars agree that more than
    one million Armenians were killed through outright massacres and mass
    deportations to barren deserts, where they were left to starve.
    Hovannisian's talk focused on the scholarly debate over whether the
    genocide was premeditated or a "crime of passion" that occurred suddenly
    during the tense conditions of war.
    He expressed his opinion that the elimination of the Armenians had been
    contemplated by the Ottoman government before the outbreak of war, but that
    it was wartime conditions that allowed it to turn a "final solution into an
    accomplished fact."
    The Ottoman Empire distrusted the Armenians, in part because they were a
    tight-knit Christian ethnic group in the middle of a mostly Muslim empire,
    Hovannisian said.
    While some Armenians were agitating for self-government and autonomy, most
    were not involved in any politically dissident activities, he said.
    "They were an ethnic group seen as potentially troublesome to an
    authoritarian state at war," he said.
    No official government document specifically outlining the Ottoman plan to
    eliminate Armenians has been found, although there is overwhelming evidence
    that the massacres occurred, he said.
    There may be a "smoking gun" somewhere in Turkish archives proving that the
    Ottomans premeditated the Armenian genocide, Hovannisian said, but the
    nation's government does not provide Western historians with access to
    those materials.
    Jonathan Cates, a senior in history and Middle East studies, said he
    thought it was a fair explanation of the historical event. "He gave a broad
    overview of all the current interpretations and put them in good context,"
    he said.
    Mariya Mamaeva, a senior in political science and Russian, agreed. "I think
    he has very good points and is very insightful," she said.
    ************************************************** ************************
    3 - KCET's Life & Times Profiles Filmmaker
    Dr. J Michael Hagopian on April 12
    LOS ANGELES - Life & Times, KCET television's signature local news and
    public affairs series, profiles Armenian filmmaker Michael Hagopian on
    April 12, in a segment that will also be available online at KCET.org.
    For 25 years, Hagopian has traveled the world interviewing survivors of
    the Armenian mass killings of 1915. Host Val Zavala visits with the former
    UCLA professor-turned-filmmaker at his home-based workshop, which contains
    about 400 interviews he has captured on film for his next documentary
    "Caravans Along the Euphrates." Life & Times airs Monday - Friday (6:30
    p.m. - 7 p.m..) on KCET.
    Born in Turkey, Hagopian and his family survived these killings, also known
    as the Armenian Genocide, because his father, a skilled physician, was in
    great demand. The story of Hagopian's filmmaking career begins in Fresno,
    California, includes stops at prestigious universities, and takes viewers
    on a fascinating journey of one man's passion for communicating the history
    of his homeland through film. Hagopian has produced and directed two
    documentaries on the Armenian genocide. Now in his 80's, Hagopian's third
    and current project, "Caravans Along the Euphrates," is significant because
    it uses survivors to tell the story.
    KCET broadcasts the premiere of "Le Génocide Arménien" ("The Armenian
    Genocide"), the 2005 documentary by French filmmaker Laurence Jourdan, on
    April 17 (9 -10 p.m.). The encore of "My Son Shall Be Armenian" by
    Armenian-Canadian filmmaker Hagop Goudsouzian airs on April 24 (9 p.m. to
    10:30 p.m.), followed by a repeat of the Life & Times segment featuring
    Michael Hagopian.
    dditional information about the films and filmmakers is available on
    KCET.org.
    ************************************* **************************************

    4 - Commentary
    Introduction by Richard Kloian
    Press Liaison for IAGS
    On the heels of a number of articles denying the Armenian Genocide,
    beginning in December 2005 and for several weeks afterward, the President
    of the International Association of Genocide Scholars (IAGS), Professor
    Israel Charny, drafted a critical response to one of the publications,
    Commentary, to set the record straight and to criticize them for crossing
    the line between responsible journalism, ethical editorial control, and
    outright siding with deniers.
    The irony in this will not escape those who remember that it was the very
    same publication that many years ago published a piece on the Armenian
    Genocide by Marjorie Housepian called "The Unremembered Genocide" which
    helped trigger new interest in the Armenian Genocide. Israel Charny too
    credits that article with his first learning about the Armenian Genocide.
    In effect it was a major springboard years later to the first major
    conference on Holocaust and Genocide that was held in Tel Aviv in 1982,
    organized by Charny and others and it was the conference that for the first
    time included papers on the Armenian Genocide.

    'Protestcide' - The Killing of Protest of a Denial of Genocide
    By Israel W. Charny
    To what extent does a publication have the right to alter a Letter to the
    Editor that criticizes the publication, and then to publish their altered
    version of the letter without the full permission of the letter writer,
    especially in light of his explicit refusal to approve their revision?
    In December 2005, Commentary published a lengthy article denying the
    Armenian Genocide by one, Guenter Lewy, a retired professor who has
    previously published denials of other genocides as well, including a denial
    that the Gypsies were victims of genocide in WW II (Simon Wiesenthal
    defended the role of the Gypsies as fellow victims of the Holocaust, and on
    several occasions wrote and told passionately of seeing the Gypsies in
    Auschwitz in the barracks right next to his); and including a denial that
    the Native Americans (Indians) were victims of genocide in America. It is
    clear that Lewy has established himself as an arch specialist in denial who
    has now relegated no less than three victim peoples to some kind of status
    of sufferers other than victims of genocidal mass murder. I think that
    readers of this current Commentary piece denying there was a genocide of
    the Armenians had a right to know of the author's previous publications of
    denials (one of which was also in Commentary), but not a word was
    mentioned.
    Lewy's article in Commentary is entitled, "The first genocide of the 20th
    century?" Lewy himself mentions in his article that the International
    Association of Genocide Scholars, of which I am the current president, had
    passed a unanimous resolution some years ago confirming the validity of the
    Armenian Genocide. When Commentary was approached by a colleague as to
    whether they would publish a rejoinder to Lewy's article by me, the editor
    agreed immediately to receive a 600-word statement from me. So far to
    their credit. But then in the grotesque sequence of censorship and
    revisions of my rejoinder that follows, Commentary at first refused to
    identify my connection to the same Association that passed the resolution,
    and finally did in fact identify me as somehow affiliated with the
    Association but eliminated identifying my leadership role. A personal
    slight? Then it's irrelevant. Or is it a diminution of the significance
    of my protest? In the meantime, Commentary published a lengthy
    rejoinder by Lewy in the same issue with the following statement that, by a
    wave of the Lewy-Commentary wand removes any significance to our
    association's informed judgment: "I am less than impressed by the
    unanimous vote of the International Association of Genocide Scholars that
    the Armenian case 'was one of the major genocides of the modern era" writes
    Denier Lewy conclusively and then presumptuously slams the members of the
    association that virtually no one (but him) has done real research.
    No matter. Commentary commits more serious infringements to the point of
    not allowing me to voice my definite judgment about their question, "The
    first genocide of the 20th century?"
    In my letter I write about how the Turks also killed other Christian
    (therefore non-Turkish) groups such as the Assyrians and Greeks as well as
    the Armenians (the first Christian people of Europe) and that this was
    "outright genocidal murder." Commentary removed this vital statement from
    my letter. Remember, the article by Lewy they have published is asking
    explicitly if this was genocide, and the section of Letters to the Editor
    in February is re-entitled, "Genocide?" but my clear-cut rejoinder that it
    was "outright genocidal murder" was not permitted.
    Moreover, what does Lewy do? I say in my letter that I wonder if readers
    of the Jewish-sponsored Commentary (this remark by me is also censored out)
    know that the Turks were also responsible for two forced expulsions of Jews
    from Jaffa-Tel Aviv in 1914 and 1917, both of which resulted in losses of
    life of the elderly, infirm and ill. As if referring to this information,
    Lewy says to me in his rejoinder, "Mr. Charny stops short of calling these
    occurrences 'genocide,'" but he and the hard-working editor who we have
    seen manages to censor my writing so fastidiously, thus manage to get
    across a message that seems to refer to the whole bigger original issue of
    the Armenian Genocide. Now, not only have I not been allowed to say what I
    did say that there was clear-cut genocide, but it is as if claimed
    explicitly that I too don't call the Ottoman murders genocide.
    Higher-class deniers, like Lewy and Commentary, are a fascinating study in
    the propagandistic logic-defying language mechanisms they employ --
    Commentary also removed from my letter a reference to an article that
    Daphna Fromer and myself published in the British journal, Patterns of
    Prejudice in which we analyzed the language-logic of earlier deniers of the
    Armenian Genocide.
    Ultimately, my most serious criticism is that Commentary is fully
    responsible alongside of its author for publishing a bald exposition of
    denial of an established major genocide. Thus, I conclude my letter,
    "Regrettably, Mr. Lewy and Commentary too have now earned places in the
    pantheon of genocide Deniers," but -- by now you guessed it -- you will
    never see that sentence, or an earlier statement similarly critical of
    Commentary in the letter they published.
    I ask, do responsible publications in a free world have the right to censor
    and arbitrarily revise Letters to the Editor beyond considerations of
    space, bad language such as epithets, and ad hominem attacks (but not
    legitimate major criticisms of an author or the publication!)? Obviously a
    publication holds the ultimate power and can simply decline to publish a
    letter (who will
    ever know?). But to cut and revise and remove and distort the thrust of
    the original message, and fail to advise and fail to get approval of
    changes? I don't know if there are legal controls against such tampering
    with the lowly institution of a Letter to an Editor and/or op-ed writing,
    but I do know such tampering violates the "natural law" of journalistic
    integrity, and I think Commentary should be told so by an informed public.
    Israel W. Charny is the President of the International Association of
    Genocide Scholars, Editor-in-Chief, Encyclopedia of Genocide, and Executive
    Director, Institute on the Holocaust & Genocide, Jerusalem.
    An e-mail transcript of all texts and correspondence between Charny and
    Commentary is available immediately on request to [email protected].
    ********'********************** *******************************************
    5 - Prof. Ronald Grigor Suny Will
    Lecture April 14 at Merdinian
    SHERMAN OAKS, CA - The ARPA Institute will feature Prof. Ronald Grigor Suny
    at a Lecture, "Why Genocide: How can
    we Understand the Turkish Deportations and Massacres of the Ottoman
    Armenians," on April 14, at 7:30 PM in the Merdinian school auditorium.,
    1330 Riverside Dr., Sherman Oaks, Calif.
    Scholars have tried to explain the causes of the Armenian Genocide by
    reference to religious differences between Armenians and Turks or the
    racist nationalist ideology of the Young Turks and their ambitions to
    create a "Turkey for the Turks."
    Professor Suny looks at the variety of explanations that have been offered
    and suggests that in order to understand "why genocide" it is necessary to
    supplement ideological and social explanations with an exploration of the
    emotions involved.
    Suny is Charles Tilly Collegiate Professor of Social and Political History
    at the University of Michigan, and Professor Emeritus
    of Political Science and History at the University of Chicago. A graduate
    of Swarthmore College and Columbia University, he taught at Oberlin College
    (1968-1981), as visiting professor of history at the University of
    California, Irvine (1987), and Stanford University (1995-1996). He was the
    first holder of the Alex Manoogian Chair in Modern Armenian History at the
    University of Michigan (1981-1995), where he founded and directed the
    Armenian Studies Program.
    He has authored several books on contemporary Armenian, Russian and
    Caucasian history.
    Professor Suny has served as chairman of the Society for Armenian Studies
    and on the editorial Boards of Slavic Review, International Labor and
    Working-Class History, International Journal of Middle East Studies, The
    Armenian Review, Journal of the Society for Armenian Studies, and Armenian
    Forum. He has appeared numerous times on the McNeil-Lehrer News Hour, CBS
    Evening News, CNN, and National Public Radio, and has written for the New
    York Times, The Washington Post, The Los Angeles Times, The Nation, New
    Left Review, Dissent, and other newspapers and journals. He was recently
    elected President of
    the American Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies (2006).
    For more information, call Dr. Hagop Panossian at (818) 586-9660.
    **************************************** ***************************
    6 - Glendale Names Annual Diamond Award
    Recipients for Achievement in the Arts
    GLENDALE - The City of Glendale Parks, Recreation and Community Services
    Department and the Arts and Culture Commission announced the winners of the
    First Annual Diamond Awards for Achievement in the Arts. The winners will
    be recognized at a public reception on May 3, from 6 to 8 pm in the recital
    hall at Brand Library, 1601 W. Mountain.
    This new program initiated by the Arts and Culture Commission recognizes
    those artists, community members and organizations who have contributed
    substantially to the cultural life of the co
    mmunity. Nominations were solicited from the community in all categories.
    The following winners have been selected as Diamond Award recipients for
    2006: David Vartanyan, Young Artist; Mikayel Avetisyan, Artist; Lark
    Musical Society, Arts Organization; Ted Osborn, Special Recognition; Edwin
    & Hilda Navasartian, Arts Partners - Individual; Jane Friend, Lifetime
    Achievement
    Recipient Profiles
    David Vartanyan is an 8th grade student at Wilson Middle School. He is a
    prolific writer of poetry and prose. David is also the Spelling Bee Champ
    for his school.
    Mikayel Avetisyan is a conductor, composer and instructor at Glendale's
    International School of Music. He received his professional training in
    Armenia, Russia, and Europe. He was the principal conductor of the Yerevan
    Symphony Orchestra from 1994 - 1997 and the Artistic Director and Principal
    Conductor of the Armenian Philharmonic Orchestra from 1997 - 1998. He has
    successfully performed throughout the United States, France, Holland,
    Greece, Spain, Russia and Turkey. His recordings with the Moscow Symphony
    Orchestra were released in 1996 on RCA.
    Lark Musical Society was established in 1989 by Vache Barsoumian to instill
    the love of music and the arts in its students in a nurturing environment.
    Lark actively contributes to fostering an awareness of the interdependence
    of Armenian and Western musical arts.
    Ted Osborn has been an extremely generous and active supporter of many
    community organizations throughout his career; most recently the Alex
    Theatre and Glendale's Animation Initiative. Founder of Osborn Architects,
    Ted is retiring in April but will remain in the community as an active
    participant.
    Edwin & Hilda Navasartian were nominated by Karavan Dance Studio because
    of their commitment to the school over the last 5 years. This couple has
    supported several dance schools besides Karavan, including Baert Dance
    Center in Burbank, Krounk and Arabesq Dance Schools in Glendale
    financially, physically and emotionally during concerts and regular dance
    practice.
    Their dedication and love towards the art of dance and young artists have
    made them volunteer many hours.
    ************************************************* **************************
    7 - Armenian Bar Association to
    Honor Five Judges on April 12
    PASADENA - The Armenian Bar Association (Armenbar) will honor five
    outstanding judges on their accomplishments, retirements and
    appointments, at an evening reception on April 12, 2006 at the Rococo Room
    of Santorini Restaurant in Old Town Pasadena, California. The event is
    scheduled to begin at 6:30 p.m.
    The honorees include Federal Judge Dickran Tevrizian, Federal Magistrate
    Judge Jacqueline Chooljian, and Los Angeles County Superior Court Judges
    Richard Kolostian, Ruth Essegian and Maral Injejikian.
    "Our organization has a duty to recognize the achievements of these fine
    judges, who serve as tremendous role models for attorneys and law students
    in the legal community," said Datev Shenian, Board member of Armenbar.
    Tevrizian is a veteran Federal Court judge sitting in the Central District
    of the United States District Court. He was first appointed to the Los
    Angeles Municipal Court in 1972, at the young age of 31. At that time, he
    was the youngest person ever appointed to the bench in Los Angeles County.
    He is a nationally recognized jurist who in 1986 became the first person of
    Armenian heritage to be appointed to the federal bench. Tevrizian will be
    honored for his distinguished career in public service, and upon his change
    to senior status on the court.
    Judge Chooljian was recently appointed a Magistrate Judge for the U.S.
    District Court, Central District of California, where she will preside over
    matters in Los Angeles. Prior to her appointment, she served as an
    Assistant U.S. Attorney and Special Counsel to the U.S. Attorney for the
    Central District of California. She is the first woman of Armenian decent
    to be appointed to the federal bench.
    Judges Kolostian and Essegian have recently retired from the bench, both
    having served at the Northwest District, Van Nuys Courthouse. Kolostian
    was appointed to the superior court bench in 1980 by Governor Jerry Brown.
    At the time of his retirement in February, 2006, he was the most senior
    judge in the Los Angeles County court system, having served 32 years.
    During his distinguished term on the bench, he handled a number of matters,
    including civil, probate, family law, criminal and juvenile matters. In
    1988, he was named Trial Judge of the Year by the San Fernando Valley Bar
    Association.
    Judge Essegian was appointed in 1989 by Governor George Deukmejian. Prior
    to her appointment, she served as a Deputy City Attorney in Pasadena, and
    served as a Deputy Attorney General, handling professional licensing cases.
    From 1983 to 1987 she joined the Deukmejian administration as a Deputy
    Director and Chief of Legal affairs for the Department of Consumer Affairs.

    While on the bench, she spent considerable time handling misdemeanor cases
    out of the Van Nuys court.
    Judge Injejikian was appointed in 1985 by Governor Deukmejian, and has
    primarily handled criminal cases. She has had a distinguished career and
    has established herself as an experienced trial judge. She is being
    recognized for her elevation as the Supervising site judge of the East Los
    Angeles Branch Court of the Los Angeles County Superior Court, Central
    District.
    Armenian delicacies from the kitchen of the award winning Santorini
    Mediterranean Restaurant will be served. The fee for admission will be $25.
    for Armenbar members, $15. for students and $35. for non-members. For
    more information about the event, visit the Armenian Bar Association
    website at _www.armenianbar.org_ (http://www.armenianbar.org) .
    ************************************************* *************************
    8- Ararat Home Dinner Dance
    Committee Plans for April 29
    MISSION HILLS, Calif. - The Ararat Dinner Dance Committee is busy making
    arrangements for their annual gala dinner-dance on April 29 in the
    Deukmejian Grand Ballroom at the Ararat Home in Mission Hills.
    Plans are underway for a very enjoyable evening beginning with a festive
    social hour with delectable appetizers, followed by a dinner provided by
    Roubina of Roberts Catering.
    Armenian and American dance music will be provided by the Continental Band
    with Hovig Krikorian. Valet parking is always complimentary.
    Nora Hampar, Dinner Dance Chairman states, "We are very fortunate to have
    Senator Chuck Poochigian as our Master of Ceremonies. He's one of the
    busiest legislators in Sacramento, and has always been a friend of the
    Home."
    The Dinner Dance is known for a very brief and efficient program which all
    enjoy. The emphasis has always been on sociability, good food, enjoyable
    entertainment, music and dancing.
    Since moving this popular event from its regular November time slot into
    the spring season, the Committee hopes to bring this event into a less
    hectic season for all.
    ********************************************* ******************************
    *
    9 - LACC Screens 'Ararat' on April 23;
    Reception for Film Star David Alpay
    LOS ANGELES - The Los Angeles City College Foundation will present an
    educational screening of Atom Egoyan's 2002 film "Ararat," a dramatic tale
    which looks at the issues surrounding the Armenian Genocide, as well as a
    reception for David Alpay, the young Canadian actor who portrays the lead
    role in that film, at 4 p.m. on April 23, at LACC's Camino Theatre, 855 N.
    Vermont Avenue in East Hollywood.
    Steve Maradian, president of LACC, who is also a cosponsor of the event,
    noted that the afternoon's program is being held in recognition and
    understanding of the Armenian Genocide, which occurred in Turkey in the
    early part of this century and in which approximately 1.5 million Armenians
    lost their lives.
    The event will serve as a fundraiser to set up scholarships for Armenian
    students in the field of theatre and cinema/TV at the college. After the
    film screening, a buffet reception will be held in the adjacent Caminito
    Theatre and attendees will have the opportunity to meet Alpay.
    Critics have called "Ararat" one of Atom Egoyan's most provocative films to
    date. The film is based on Clarence Ussher's book "An American Physician
    in Turkey."
    In the film, Alpay portrays a young man, Raffi, who, after being
    interrogated by a customs officer, recounts how his life was changed during
    the making of a film about the Armenian genocide. A resident of Toronto,
    Alpay has appeared in a number of movies and TV teleplays since his debut
    in "Ararat." The film also features actors Charles Aznavour, Eric Bogosian
    and Christopher Plummer.
    For ticket information, call the LACC Foundation at (323) 953-4000, ext.
    2490.
    *************************************** ***********************************
    10 - Armenia Fund Telethon
    Story Touches Hearts
    LOS ANGELES - One of the several documentaries and segments aided during
    the 2005 Armenia Fund Telethon, touched the heart of one of the donors to
    the Annual benefit, and produced a result that one can only hope is
    reproduced many times over.
    During the past 2005 Telethon, a story produced by the Telethon production
    team featured Anush, a mother of 9 children who recently relocated to
    Garnakar village of the Mardakert Region of Karabagh.
    Despite the difficult and at times unbearable conditions her family has
    gone through, the young mother was very proud of her life. She and her
    husband are part of the ever-growing Armenian population of the fledgling
    Nagorno-Karabagh Republic.
    When asked what she needed at the moment, the woman responded with a humble
    request for a cow so she could provide her family with milk, yogurt and
    cheese.
    Touched by her needs, donor Vrej Ter Petrossian decided to help the family
    after viewing the segment last Thanksgiving Day.
    After Armenia Fund located the woman and her family in the remote village
    in northern Karabagh, Ter Petrossian facilitated for the purchase and
    transportation of a cow to the family.
    The family could not believe their eyes when they received the milk-bearing
    animal.
    Got milk?
    ******************************************** *******************************
    *
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