Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ASBAREZ Online [06-02-2006]

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • ASBAREZ Online [06-02-2006]

    ASBAREZ ONLINE
    TOP STORIES
    06/02/2006
    TO ACCESS PREVIOUS ASBAREZ ONLINE EDITIONS PLEASE VISIT OUR
    WEBSITE AT <http://www.asbarez.com/>HTTP://WWW.ASBAREZ. COM

    1) Armenians Gather to Celebrate Independence Day
    2) Kocharian And Aliyev to Discuss Karabagh Conflict in Bucharest
    3) ANC-PAC Endorses Congressman Adam Schiff
    4) Reception Bids Farewell to Outgoing Consul General Giragossian
    5) Turkey Shells Autonomous Kurds in Iraq
    6) Armenia Close to Victory in Chess Championship
    7) Busted!
    8) 'Son of The Community:' Paul Krekorian Receives Numerous Endorsements in
    His
    Bid to Represent Largest Armenian Community
    9) Jackie Speier Has Edge over Rivals in Democratic Primary
    10) Candidates off to Washington for 2006 Leo Sarkisian Summer Internship
    11) California Teachers and Pediatricians Support Proposition 82
    12) Professor Richard Hovannisian Spreads Genocide Awareness
    13) Element Band Wins 'Best Newcomer Album' at Armenian Music Awards

    1) Armenians Gather to Celebrate Independence Day

    --Over 7000 attend festival in Little Armenia

    LOS ANGELES (Glendale New Press/Armenian Youth Federation)--In a sign of
    their
    growing political clout, thousands of Armenians and Armenian Americans were
    joined Sunday by Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa for a street fair to
    celebrate Armenia's first independence day on May 28, 1918.
    The fair, held in the Little Armenia section of Hollywood along Hollywood
    Boulevard between Vermont and Alexandria avenues, featured 45 vendor booths
    selling everything from shish kebabs and lavash bread, to Armenian arts and
    crafts and portraits featuring traditional Armenian costumes.
    More than 7,000 people turned out for the event, organized by the Armenian
    Cultural Foundation (ACF) in cooperation with the Armenian Youth
    Federation-Western Region (AYF-WR). The festival was cosponsored by Los
    Angeles
    Council President Eric Garcetti, whose Council District 13 encompasses Little
    Armenia.
    It was the first time the event was held in Little Armenia, said Bo Patatian,
    media liaison for the Armenian Youth Federation.
    "We wanted to have it in a central place, and since 65% of the residents in
    this area are Armenian, there is no better place for this event to fit in,"
    Patatian said, adding that previous Armenian Independence Day festivals have
    been held at Glendale High School and in Pasadena.
    Armenians are blessed with two independence days, Patatian said. The
    first, in
    1918, marks the date on which the Armenian National Council declared the
    country's independence from Ottoman Turkey and the old Russian Empire. That
    first Armenian republic, however, was short-lived; in 1920, the country was
    absorbed into the former Soviet Union.
    "The real independence day is September 21, 1991," Patatian said,
    referring to
    when the modern Armenian state was born after the collapse of the Soviet
    Union.
    "But this first date still has a very important emotional connection to our
    people."
    Among those celebrating Independence Day in Little Armenia Sunday was
    Glendale
    Unified School District Board member Greg Krikorian.
    "This is the day on which Armenians first claimed independence, after
    surviving the genocide and stopping the Turkish armies," said Krikorian, who
    was also joined at the fair by Burbank Unified School District Board member
    and
    43rd Assembly District candidate Paul Krekorian. "Being here today with so
    many
    different families, friends and neighbors is an emotionally moving time, a
    time
    to be thankful for what we have here in this country, to be thankful for our
    families, a chance to get together and enjoy life."
    The highlight of the festival was a special visit by Los Angeles Mayor
    Antonio
    Villaraigosa. Mayor Villaraigosa congratulated the Armenian nation on its
    first
    independence and thanked the Armenian community for their contributions to the
    City of Los Angeles. Following his remarks, the Mayor joined the crowd to
    participate in the traditional Armenian `shoorch bar' dances and sample
    traditional Armenian cuisine.
    "This is an opportunity for all of us to celebrate not just the independence,
    but the fact that Armenians play such an important role here in Los Angeles,
    being part of the largest Armenian population outside of Armenia," said
    Villaraigosa, whose city officially declared the Hollywood neighborhood Little
    Armenia in 2000. "We appreciate all the contributions they have made and
    continue to make to our city."
    Other guests at the event included Kevin DeLeon, candidate for California's
    45th State Assembly District, and Ed Ebrahimian, General Manager for LA's
    Bureau of Street Lighting. A representative from the Consulate of Armenia in
    Los Angeles was also present to join the celebration. Speakers that day
    included Vicken Sossikian from the Armenian Revolutionary Federation and
    Haroutioun Gojoayan from the Armenian Diplomatic Corps.
    The event was organized to celebrate Armenia's first independence day. After
    600 years of Ottoman Turkish oppression, Armenia became independent on May 28,
    1918. The republic established on this date set the foundation for today's
    independent republic.
    It is important for the Armenian community to remember the significance of
    May
    28th. On this day, we not only celebrate the independence of Armenia, but also
    3000 years of history and culture. We are grateful to the City of Los Angeles
    for allowing us to celebrate this occasion on the streets of Little Armenia',
    said Nora Ounjian, event coordinator.

    2) Kocharian And Aliyev to Discuss Karabagh Conflict in Bucharest

    YEREVAN (RFE/RL/Armenpress)--Armenian President Robert Kocharian will fly to
    Romania's capital Bucharest on Sunday to attend a summit of Black Sea nations
    and hold talks on Karabagh with his Azeri counterpart Ilham Aliyev.
    Romania, which initiated the summit, views regional dialogue as a key factor
    for ensuing regional stability and creating favorable conditions for economic
    development in the region, said a statement released by Kocharian's press
    office.
    Kocharian's office confirmed on Friday that the meeting with Aliyev, the
    second in four months, will take place on the sidelines of the high-level
    forum
    on Monday.
    The Armenian and Azeri Presidents will start their talks in the presence of
    their Foreign Ministers, the Minsk Group co-chairs, and the OSCE's current
    chairman in office, Belgian Foreign Minister Karel de Gucht.
    `The two heads of state will then continue their conversation in a
    tęte-ŕ-tęte
    format,' the statement said.
    The press service said that Kocharian is expected to deliver a speech at the
    summit. He is also scheduled to have a meeting with Romania's president Trayan
    Basescu and other bilateral meetings.

    3) ANC-PAC Endorses Congressman Adam Schiff

    LOS ANGELES--The Armenian National Committee Political Action Committee
    (ANC-PAC) moved this week to formally endorse Congressman Adam Schiff, who is
    running for re-election to represent the people of California's 29th
    Congressional District.
    First elected in November of 2000 after the most costly House race in US
    history, Adam Schiff is widely acknowledged as a chief architect of
    Congressional efforts to appropriately recognize the Armenian genocide. In
    2003 Congressman Schiff was awarded the ANCA-Western Region's prestigious
    Freedom Award for his pioneering efforts on advancing the Armenian Cause.
    In the 109th Congress, Representative Schiff has been an outstanding advocate
    of securing formal US recognition of the Armenian genocide. In June of 2005
    the Congressman secured a commitment from House International Relations
    Committee Chairman Henry Hyde (R-IL) to hold a markup of a resolution (HCR
    195)
    which calls for recognition of the Armenian genocide. Three months later,
    the
    Schiff measure and a similar bill by Congressman George Radanovich, were both
    overwhelmingly adopted by the House International Relations Committee. These
    Armenian genocide bills are currently pending in the House, awaiting the
    Republican Congressional leadership to bring them to the floor for a vote.
    "Congressman Schiff is an effective advocate for his constituents," commented
    ANC-PAC Chairman Leonard Manoukian. "It is clear to the Armenian community
    that Adam's energetic efforts to have the US Congress recognize the Armenian
    genocide are bringing us closer to the day when our nation will come to terms
    with the truth. The ANC-PAC encourages all Armenian American voters to cast
    their vote for Representative Schiff so that he can continue to fight for our
    community in the halls of Congress," Manoukian added.
    Congressman Schiff is a member of the Congressional Caucus on Armenian Issues
    and he represents the largest Armenian American population in the United
    States. The Congressman is a member of both the House Judiciary and
    International Relations committees. California's 29th Congressional District
    includes the communities of Alhambra, Altadena, Burbank, East Pasadena, East
    San Gabriel, Glendale, Monterey Park, Pasadena, San Gabriel, South Pasadena
    and
    Temple City.
    Adam Schiff was born on June 22, 1960 and is a graduate of Stanford
    University
    and Harvard Law School. Adam and his wife Eve have two children, a daughter,
    Alexa Marion and a son, Elijah Harris.

    The ANC-PAC is a non-partisan federally registered political action committee
    established to support campaign committees for Members of Congress who share
    the values of the Armenian American community. The ANC-PAC is at the forefront
    of efforts to ensure that the voice of the Armenian American community is
    clearly heard in our nation's capital. The ANC-PAC continues a century old
    tradition of Armenian Americans being engaged with the public policy issues
    facing national political leaders, both in the US Congress and the White
    House.

    4) Reception Bids Farewell to Outgoing Consul General Giragossian

    A farewell reception for outgoing Consul General of the Republic of Armenia,
    Gagik Giragossian, and his wife Marina was held Wednesday at the "Karapetian"
    Hall of St. Garabed Church.
    The reception was organized by the Western Prelacy, under the auspices of His
    Eminence Archbishop Moushegh Mardirossian, Prelate, and hosted by benefactor
    Mrs. Ashkhen Pilavjian. In attendance were members of clergy, Central
    Executive Council member Mr. Khajag Dikijian, ARF Bureau member Dr. Viken
    Hovsepian, members of the previous and newly elected Prelacy Executive
    Council,
    representatives of the ARF Central Committee, Board of Trustees Chairmen from
    Prelacy parishes, representatives of Armenian organizations, Ladies Auxiliary
    members, members of the press, and Prelacy friends and donors.
    The reception, emceed by Archpriest Vicken Vassilian, began with a prayer by
    the Prelate and clergy members and included an artistic program by tenor Suren
    Hazarian, accompanied by Professor Levon Aprahamian on the piano.
    During the reception, remarks were made by Chairman of the previous Executive
    Council Hrair Balian, Chairman of the newly elected Council Dr. Garo Agopian,
    and ARF Central Committee representative Hovig Saliba, who expressed their
    sentiments towards the Consul General and his gracious wife, and also their
    best wishes to the couple and their family as they return to Armenia.
    In his closing remarks, the Prelate emphasized that from his very first
    day in
    office, the Consul General became a part of the Prelacy family and has since
    that time maintained a close association with the Prelacy. The Prelate assured
    that the Consul General will remain in the hearts and memories of the Armenian
    community of Los Angeles as a close friend, and that we now have a new friend
    in our homeland, Armenia.
    His Eminence commended Giragossian's efforts in maintaining fruitful
    relations
    with members of our Western Region, and before concluding his remarks, offered
    the blessings of His Holiness Aram I, Catholicos of the Great House of
    Cilicia,
    to the Giragossians, after which he presented the couple with a gold medal of
    the Catholicosate's symbol, along with a book of the lost treasures of
    Cilicia.
    Following the Prelate's remarks, Giragossian expressed his heartfelt thanks
    for this honor and gratitude for the close collaboration he had with the
    Prelacy during his term in office, stating that he will return home with these
    fond memories in his heart.
    The reception closed with the Prelate reciting "Bahbanich" and the collective
    singing of "Mer Hayrenik."

    5) Turkey Shells Autonomous Kurds in Iraq

    ANKARA (UPI/Reuters)--The Turkish military shelled Thursday Iraq's Kurdistan
    region.
    The barrage came a day after a group of Kurdish and American officials,
    including a US general, inspected Iraqi Kurdistan for evidence of purported
    illegal cross-border Turkish military operations.
    Ali Auni, an official from the ruling Kurdistan Democratic Party, said a 50
    year old shepherd was wounded in an attack in northern Iraq.
    "Yesterday morning at 11:00 AM Turkish forces shelled the village of Zawita
    and some other Kurdish villages," he said, referring to an area near the
    border.
    Turkish officials were not immediately available for comment, but last
    month a
    Turkish Government official dismissed a similar allegation as "total
    fabrication."
    Ankara habitually launches a spring offensives against fighters of the
    Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) in the southeast of Turkey near the border with
    Iraq.
    Iraqi security forces have recently been trying to stop PKK fighters based in
    mountainous and mainly Kurdish northern Iraq from crossing over the border
    into
    Turkey.
    The Turkish Government has asked US and Iraqi forces to help pressure PKK
    units based inside Iraq.
    After a recent increase in PKK attacks Turkey has sent 40,000 extra troops to
    reinforce the 220,000 already in its Kurdish areas, representing the biggest
    military build-up in years.
    Turkey and Iran are wary of the autonomy that Iraqi Kurds have established
    since the war in Iraq in 2003 and are concerned that it might provoke more
    unrest among their own large Kurdish populations.

    6) Armenia Close to Victory in Chess Championship

    TURIN (Armenpress)As of Press time, the Armenian men's chess team was leading
    with 32 points in the 11th round of the 37th World Chess Olympiad being
    held in
    Turin, Italy.
    Grand master Levon Aronian and Karen Asrian beat their rivals, and Gabriel
    Sargsian and Vladimir Hakobian drew.
    The Armenian chess players have already gained 32 points and are likely to
    win
    the Championship on Sunday, June 4.
    The women's team currently has 19 points in the Tournament.

    7) Busted!

    Yup, caught in the act, red (in this case black-ink) handed. I committed an
    error in my article last week. I neglected to insert the term `vice-` in
    front
    of `chair' when stating that an individual holding such a prominent position
    with the Armenia Fund had no business supporting a State Assembly candidate
    running against the Armenian community's `hometown' favorite, Paul Krekorian.
    I regret any inconvenience this may have caused.
    Aside from the wry observation that now, with my streak of perfection broken,
    I'm free to make more mistakes, I'll also gleefully point out someone else's
    mistake. Misery loves company and this one's a lulu. Coincidentally and
    ironically, it's that of the Quintero campaign, Krekorian's opponent!
    In the wee hours of Wednesday May 31, 2006, an alert Burbank ANC activist
    noticed what appeared to be a simple e-mail redundancy. One message sent
    twice. On closer examination, it turned out to be the Quintero campaign
    trying
    to cover its tracks. (See the two e-mails in accompanying boxwhere it reads
    `sent... by ...'). Anyone visiting the site would be `amazed' to find that Voters
    Against Election Fraud has only uncovered one case, the same as that cited by
    Quintero, of `fraud' in all of California. You know how scrupulous California
    politicians are right? President Richard Nixon, Representative Randy `Duke'
    Cunningham, State Senator Alan Robbins... Now add this fact about the
    website--it is privately registered. Who's behind it remains hidden. Kind of
    odd, don't you think, for an organization whose very name speaks to the need
    for openness?
    The obvious conclusion is, Quintero set up the bogus website as a way of
    discrediting Krekorian with the same unsubstantiated mud slinging Quintero
    indulged in last week. You'll recall he accused the Krekorian campaign of
    fraud based on `evidence' that could just as easily indicate that the culprit
    was the Quintero campaign itself. But, providentially, someone erred and sent
    out the email under the Quintero campaign banner first. So, even in
    sneakiness, they're incompetent.
    Now as a voter, forget about Armenian interests in developing political
    power,
    one is faced with an easy choice. Vote for the guy who makes baseless fraud
    accusations only to be caught engaging in fraud days later. Or, vote for the
    squeaky clean guy. Hmm, I wonder...
    But meanwhile, on Armenian cable TV, at least one of Quintero's Armenian
    supporters has seen fit to cite certain comments from my piece last week,
    deeming them inappropriate. Again, hmm, a paragon of propriety, someone
    (totally in line with any citizen's rights though it is) who for whatever
    reason is working against our community's interests has the nerve to condemn
    critiques of those defending a candidate who is clearly less than a glowing
    example of integrity.
    While I'm flattered at being read, next time, I'd appreciate being asked for
    an Armenian translation of what I've written so the nuances are not lost or
    mutilated. I'd be happy to provide it. In the interest of fairness even
    toward those opposed to my perspective, I also appreciate the absence of being
    named--it allows focus on what's being said rather than who's saying it.
    However, using my commentary as part of a legitimizing springboard to
    deception-by-half-truths rankles. Most arose in the context of attempting to
    discredit `those who today are advocating supporting the Armenian candidate'
    (this is an approximate quote representing the spirit of what was said). I'll
    address three of these misdirecting representations.
    Pointing out the fact that ANC (again, not directly named, and similarly for
    the other examples) endorsed Quintero five years ago is irrelevant, since he
    was already not endorsed just ONE year ago in his second run for Glendale
    Council, a fact that was omitted. A false claim was made that ANC did not
    endorse George Deukmejian in his first run for governor in 1982. The correct
    information is--it was a dual endorsement for him and Tom Bradley. The latter
    had actually advised ANC to go `with your man only.' But his stalwart and
    forthcoming support for Genocide recognition and being the ONLY one willing to
    do the opening remarks in J. Michael Hagopian's 1975 documentary film `The
    Forgotten Genocide' earned his spot on the ANC slate too. Finally, it's ANC's
    non-endorsement of Bill Paparian in his current congressional run on the Green
    Party ticket. I guess the fact that he's running unopposed in the Primary
    Election of his party is irrelevant. The ANC has only infrequently made
    endorsements in primary races--this too must be irrelevant. See the pattern?
    Pick something that's true. Count on your audience's lack of complete
    information or short memory. Go into full-mislead-mode.
    Let's not omit the cream of electoral idiocy, its royalty, who on the
    night of
    May 31, through their late night cable TV show were busy providing
    misdirection
    too. It wasn't enough to cost a competent Armenian a seat on the Glendale
    school board last year. Now they've jumped on the Quintero bandwagon. They
    got creamed in last year's election. So, like many sore losers, they're
    claiming fraud in that election and trying to have their lies accrue to this
    year's election. It's absurd, but there seems to be no bottom to the depths
    they're willing to sink. How credible are they? They pretend to be
    experts on
    public schools issues. However, one of them was so out of line in
    disregarding
    school policy that a ban on entry to most school district property was
    enforced
    for a period of time. Possibly related to this prohibition is an incident in
    which another parent received advice from this `consultant' not to attempt to
    resolve a problem with the school principal. Rather, the parent was told she
    should go directly to the newspaper with her grievance.
    Want more? Go to www.whoownsfrankquintero.com and see the kind of big money
    interests--energy, alcohol, gaming, prison guards, pharmaceuticals, etc. this
    guy is supported by. Or take a look at who's been paying for all those fancy,
    glossy mailers, coming to your mailbox two and three per day touting St.
    Frank. Those of his supporters getting pieces into the local papers
    portraying
    him as some latter-day Robin Hood, standing up for the interests of the
    downtrodden should check these facts out. To top it all off, Quintero was
    heard to decry the intrusion of so-called `independent expenditures' on the
    electoral process. But that's what these groups are doing for him. (At a rate
    nearly triple what Krekorian has received in such support--largely from
    unions). The duplicity is astonishing.
    There seems to be a fairly well organized effort to disenfranchise the
    Armenian community. Here's how. Quintero's campaign has written a letter to
    the Registrar of Voters, the election official in Los Angeles County, asking
    that all absentee ballots (VBMs) be segregated, that is, not counted with the
    rest. Given that at least 40% (by a recent count I heard) are Armenians'
    votes, this is clearly an effort to muddy the waters and give Quintero an
    early
    lead. Then, if the final count, including VBMs, gives Krekorian the election,
    the former will cry foul, and actually seem reasonable (can you say Florida
    2000?). This is where the game initiated last week, and referenced above, was
    leading. In addition, having Quintero's Armenian lackeys sow discord, doubt,
    and division among the relatively new voters comprising the otherwise unified
    Armenian voting community can lead to disinterest, disengagement, and finally
    non-voting--Quintero's desired result.
    What's really interesting is, some of the same people who have advocated,
    `vote for the Armenian candidate regardless,' and cried foul when a
    non-Armenian was supported over an Armenian, now are talking out the other
    side
    of their mouths. ANC and credible others have not adopted an `Armenians only'
    position. Rather, their approach has been to support the best candidate from
    the perspective of Armenian interests and who is most likely to win. Paul
    Krekorian becomes the obvious choice in the case of the 43rd. Be sure to
    vote. Be sure to vote for Paul if you're in the district.

    Email #1

    From: Voters Against Election Fraud [mailto:[email protected]]
    Sent: Tuesday, May 30, 2006 10:05 PM
    To: [name withheld for privacy]
    Subject: Latest Information on Paul Krekorian's Voter Fraud Scam

    See the latest articles on Paul Krekorian's absentee ballot scam.

    Please visit www.votersagainstelectionfraud.com

    This email was sent to [name withheld for privacy], by Quintero for Assembly
    P.O. Box 251150 Glendale, CA 91225 United States
    If you do not wish to receive future e-mail from Quintero for Assembly,
    please
    click here

    Email #2

    From: Voters Against Election Fraud [mailto:[email protected]]
    Sent: Tuesday, May 30, 2006 10:21 PM
    To: [name withheld for privacy]
    Subject: Latest Information on Paul Krekorian's Voter Fraud Scam

    See the latest articles on Paul Krekorian's absentee ballot scam.

    Please visit www.votersagainstelectionfraud.com

    This email was sent to [name withheld for privacy], by Voters Against
    Election
    Fraud 2170 E. O'Keefe Mountainvew, CA 90743 United States.
    If you do not wish to receive future e-mail from Voters Against Election
    Fraud, please click here.

    8) 'Son of The Community:' Paul Krekorian Receives Numerous Endorsements in
    His
    Bid to Represent Largest Armenian Community

    By Taline Ghazarian

    LOS ANGELES--At a press conference Wednesday, representatives from various
    Armenian American organizations announced their endorsement of Paul Krekorian
    for State Assembly in the Democratic Primary for the 43rd District, which
    includes Glendale, Burbank, North Hollywood, and Los Feliz.
    As one of the most hotly contested primaries being held Tuesday, June 6, the
    race to fill the seat vacated by Dario Frommer has Burbank School Board
    President Paul Krekorian pitted against Glendale City Councilman Frank
    Quintero. The winner of the primary in this predominantly Democratic district
    will most likely win the general election in November.
    According to the Los Angeles Times, "It is Krekorian who is best prepared for
    the role."
    Krekorian has been a leader in the area for many years, having served on the
    Democratic Central Committee, various educational advisory boards, and as
    counsel to the LA Police Commission after the 1992 riots.
    As President of the Burbank School Board, Krekorian stabilized its budget,
    introduced measures to improve curriculum and help the environment, and
    implemented programs that increased academic performance.
    Due to his extensive experience and demonstrated abilities, Krekorian has
    been
    endorsed by the Armenian National Committee Political Action Committee,
    California Teacher's Association, the Los Angeles Times, the LA Weekly,
    Congressmen Frank Pallone and Brad Sherman, and the Armenian community at
    large.
    This race has special significance to Armenian Americans, who represent
    approximately 20 percent of voters and are the largest ethnic group in the
    district.
    "Armenian voters have the power of making their voices heard," said Stepan
    Boyajian of the Armenian National Committee of Burbank. "It is the duty of
    every Armenian American to vote on June 6."
    As an activist within the Armenian community, Krekorian sits on the board of
    the committee charged with disbursing assets recovered in a lawsuit against
    the
    New York Life Insurance Company, which have been wrongfully withheld since the
    Armenian genocide of 1915. He is also a member of the Armenian Film Foundation
    and an advocate of Armenian students' rights in the public school system.
    "While others may seem like friends of the Armenian community, Paul Krekorian
    is a son of the community," added Boyajian.
    Come Tuesday, Krekorian will be relying on this community to give him the
    opportunity to serve them once more, in the State Assembly. If they elect him,
    the Armenian community will be represented not by just a supporter, but by one
    of its own.

    9) Jackie Speier Has Edge over Rivals in Democratic Primary

    LOS ANGELES (Daily News/Combined Sources)--All three Democrats vying for the
    party's nomination for lieutenant governor insist they won't emulate the man
    who now holds the office, fellow Democrat Cruz Bustamante.
    The position may be historically impotent, they acknowledge, but they promise
    to actually do something meaningful with the office, unlike Bustamante, who
    all
    but disappeared from the scene.
    And while all are sincere in this idealistic belief, State Senator Jackie
    Speier, D-San Mateo, seems the most likely to live up to it.
    Recognizing that the lieutenant governor is a regent of the University of
    California and a trustee of the California State University system, she
    promises to be both a champion and watchdog for California higher education.
    Speier's rivals seem less well-focused. State Senator Liz Figueroa,
    D-Fremont,
    talks about seeking the office to be a role model for the state's children.
    And term-limited Insurance Commissioner John Garamendi speaks about using the
    post to fight global warming and other important issues--noble goals, to be
    sure, but hardly within the purview of the lieutenant governor's
    responsibilities.
    With financial scandal in the UC and a chronic lack of funding for community
    colleges, the state could use a higher education ombudsman. And it's a
    realistic, important role a Lieutenant Governor Speier could fill.
    "Jackie Speier has taken on some of Sacramento's most powerful forces--banks,
    insurance companies, prison guards, University of California administrators,
    even legislative leaders--in her crusades for the public interest," says The
    San Francisco Chronicle about this courageous public servant.
    The LA Weekly called her `a true talent in the state Senate, fighting to
    protect financial privacy, making prescription drugs more available to
    seniors,
    and demanding scrutiny of sweetheart state contracts.'
    Aside from the LA Weekly, Speier has been endorsed by The Armenian National
    Committee - Political Action Committee, The Los Angeles Daily News, Senator
    Dianne Feinstein, State Senator Jack Scott, the Sierra Club, and the
    California
    Democratic Club.

    10) Candidates off to Washington for 2006 Leo Sarkisian Summer Internship

    GLENDALE--The Armenian National Committee of America Western Region (ANCA-WR)
    is pleased to announce that four candidates from California will be
    participating this summer in the prestigious Armenian National Committee of
    America (ANCA) Leo Sarkisian Summer Internship Program in Washington, DC.
    The Leo Sarkisian Internship Program provides young Armenian American leaders
    from the across the US the opportunity to learn first hand about the inner
    workings of the American political system. Now in its 23rd year, the program
    operates out of the ANCA headquarters in Washington, DC and runs for eight
    weeks.
    This year's participants from the Western United States include: Meri
    Davtian,
    a University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) junior studying Mass
    Communications, and minoring in Political Science and Armenian Studies; Vache
    Thomassian, a UC Berkeley junior majoring in Legal Studies and a member of the
    AYF Orange County Chapter; Babken Der Grigorian, a UCLA junior studying
    Political Science and a member of the AYF La Crescenta Chapter; and Berj
    Parseghian, a UC Santa Barbara junior studying Political Science and a member
    of the AYF Pasadena Chapter; Talar Kivork, a UCLA junior studying English and
    Political Science and a member of the San Fernando Valley AYF Chapter.
    Certain proceeds from the Aram Karamardian Memorial Fund--designated to be
    utilized solely to fund internships--will help to defray costs of this year's
    internships in Washington, DC.
    Along with additional participants from the Eastern Region and Canada,
    interns
    will be working at the ANCA national headquarters in Washington, DC, where
    they
    will focus on specific projects and participate in an intensive lecture series
    geared toward advancing their community development and activism skills.
    In response to the growing number of applicants to the Leo Sarkisian
    Internship, the ANCA-WR will hold a Western-Region internship program modeled
    after the Leo Sarkisian Internship program in Washington. Like its
    counterpart
    program in Washington, the internship will provide candidates the opportunity
    to expand their knowledge of the political arena and to develop advocacy
    skills
    by experiencing first-hand the workings of politics and public affairs at the
    state and local level. The eight week intensive program will include a weekly
    lecture series featuring ANCA activists, staff, community leaders, and media
    and government officials.
    The ANCA Leo Sarkisian Internship Program is the cornerstone of the expanded
    ANCA Capital Gateway program, designed to provide university students and
    recent graduates with opportunities to intern or find career positions on
    Capitol Hill or at other US government agencies in Washington, DC. For more
    information visit the ANCA website www.anca.org.
    For more information on these and other ANCA programs log on to www.anca.org
    or call the ANCA-WR office at (818) 500-1918.

    11) California Teachers and Pediatricians Support Proposition 82

    California's kindergarten teachers and pediatricians are backing Proposition
    82--the Preschool for All initiative--in the June 6 statewide primary
    election. The California Kindergarten Association and the American Academy of
    Pediatrics call Prop 82 a historic opportunity to provide a head start on
    learning to all four year olds in California.
    Prop 82 will guarantee a free, high-quality preschool education for every
    four
    year old in California. It will provide trained, credentialed teachers in
    every classroom and increased efforts to involve parents. By sending more
    children to quality preschools, Prop 82 will strengthen our schools and
    improve
    education for all our kids.
    A statewide poll of California kindergarten teachers by Peter D. Hart
    Research
    last year showed that 95 percent believe children who have been to preschool
    are better prepared for school.
    `As a kindergarten teacher, I can tell which kids have gone to preschool
    because I see the difference first hand,' said Armando Argandońa, President of
    the California Kindergarten Association and a kindergarten teacher in Los
    Angeles. `Preschool gives kids a head start on learning and prepares them
    socially and academically for kindergarten.'
    Studies show that children who go to quality preschool read earlier and learn
    faster. But only 20 percent of our children actually go to quality
    preschools. According to a recent survey by Fight Crime, Invest in Kids
    California, the average cost of part-day private preschool in Los Angeles
    County is $3783. That's more than one year of college tuition at a California
    State University campus, and it puts preschool out of reach for too many
    families.
    `Preschool is one of the best investments we can make in our children's
    future,' said, Dr. Robert Black, President of the American Academy of
    Pediatrics, California. `Research has shown that preschool helps kids stay on
    track in school and reduces the need for remedial and special education.
    Preschool can also help families access preventative health and developmental
    screenings to keep children healthy.'
    A 2005 study by the RAND Corporation found that the benefits of a universally
    available preschool program in California would greatly outweigh the costs.
    Economists estimated that every dollar invested in quality preschool would
    generate $2.62 in savings to California's schools, criminal justice system,
    and
    through increased tax revenue to state and local governments. In Los Angeles
    County, RAND economists estimated preschool could prevent 3,245 kids from
    dropping out of high school and reduce the number of juvenile arrests by 9,650
    per year.
    Despite the benefits of preschool, programs often have long waiting lists. A
    2005 study found that 73 percent of publicly-funded preschools--which are
    supposed to serve children from low-income families--in Los Angeles County
    have
    waiting lists.
    If passed by voters on Tuesday, Prop 82 will fund public, private, and
    nonprofit preschools, as long as they meet specified quality standards,
    including well-trained teachers. Parents will be able to choose the program
    that best fits their needs.
    Prop 82 includes strict accountability measures to protect taxpayer dollars.
    According to the Legislative Analyst, all revenues would be used for the new
    preschool program and Prop 82 provides audits and criminal penalties,
    including
    possible jail time, for misuse of funds. Preschool for All has no cost for
    99.4
    percent of California taxpayers.
    Californians are coming together to support Prop 82. The initiative has been
    endorsed by an unusual alliance of business groups and labor organizations,
    along with early childhood educators, seniors, and civic leaders. The
    California Police Chiefs and the California State Sheriff's Association--and
    more than 100 individual police chiefs, sheriffs, and district attorneys--are
    backing Prop 82 because of preschool's proven effect on reducing crime. The
    initiative is also supported by dozens of elected officials, including Senator
    Dianne Feinstein, State Superintendent of Public Instruction Jack O'Connell,
    and Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa.
    For more information on Prop 82, visit:
    <http://www.yeson82.com/>www.yeson82. com.

    12) Professor Richard Hovannisian Spreads Genocide Awareness

    LOS ANGELESProfessor Richard Hovannisian, Holder of the Armenian Educational
    Foundation Chair in Modern Armenian History at UCLA, has since late March and
    throughout the month of April continued raising awareness of the Armenian
    genocide and its legacy. During this period, he traveled to Salt Lake City,
    Yerevan, Worcester, San Francisco, and Lyon, France, to deliver lectures, work
    with teachers, and participate in international symposiums on human rights and
    genocide.

    Utah to Armenia

    At the Center for Middle Eastern Studies at the University of Utah, Dr.
    Hovannisian spoke on March 27 about `The Armenian Genocide: Premeditation or
    the Radicalization of War,' in which he assessed the somewhat conflicting
    historiography about the decision-making process and perpetration of the
    Genocide.
    Hovannisian spent considerable time discussing a recent University of Utah
    Press-published volume by Professor Guenther Lewy, which is aimed at
    disqualifying the Armenian `tragedy' as genocide and builds on arguments of
    deniers and the Turkish Government. Hovanissian gave examples of factual
    errors
    in the seemingly-balanced book and how the author takes out of context what is
    actually stated in the sources he cites.
    Although Lewy insists that he has `no ax to grind,' he has in fact previously
    written volumes that discount the enormity of the Gypsy annihilation during
    World War II and the treatment of the American Indians during US colonial
    expansion.
    After Utah, Hovannisian went to Yerevan in late March and early April to
    serve
    as the co-chair of the international jury reviewing and ranking works on the
    Armenian genocide. This competition, organized by the All-Armenia Fund through
    a grant from the Boghossian Brothers, is meant to further research on the
    Armenian genocide by rewarding the most effective work on the topic.
    Two presidential prizes, each carrying a monetary gift of $10,000, were
    awarded for the best submission from a resident of Armenia and one from
    abroad.
    The jury selected Verjine Svazlian of Armenia for her work on oral history and
    the collection of the woeful songs of exile that were sung in Turkish by
    Armenian women deportees (now also published in Turkey), and Edgar Hilsenrath
    of Germany for his `Story of the Last Thought,' a powerful novel about the
    Genocide and memory, which has been translated into several languages.

    Genocide Education

    Immediately after returning to Los Angeles, Hovannisian was the keynote
    speaker on April 5 for Glendale Unified School District workshop on teaching
    about the Armenian genocide. The teachers, according to Sara Cohan, Education
    Director of Genocide Education Project which coordinated the event, were
    deeply
    moved and impressed by the `smooth and thoughtful' presentation and
    `compelling
    overview' of the Armenian experience. Hovannisian previously participated in
    similar teacher workshops coordinated by Facing History and Ourselves,
    Inc., in
    Los Angeles, Montebello, Santa Barbara, Los Gatos, San Francisco, Chicago,
    Boston, Brookline, Worcester, New York City, Annandale-on-Hudson, Long Island,
    Memphis, and West Palm Beach.
    Professor Hovanissian and Dr. Vartiter Hovannisian then traveled to Clark
    University in Worcester on April 19-20 to take part in the celebration of the
    successful completion of the fundraising campaign for the Kaloosdian-Mugar
    Chair of Armenian Genocide Studies and Modern Armenian History. This is the
    only position in Armenian Studies in the United States that carries the word
    `Genocide' in its title, with the first chair holder being Dr. Simon
    Payaslian,
    a graduate of UCLA's Armenian History program.
    During a dinner for major donors hosted by President and Mrs. Bassett at
    their
    residence, the Harrington House, Hovannisian delivered a congratulatory
    message
    and challenge to attract and support students to the program. Then, following
    an engaging public lecture by Professor Payaslian on his recent book, `United
    States Policy toward the Armenian Question and Armenian Genocide,' he
    reflected
    briefly on the issue of pragmatism versus humanitarianism in foreign policy.
    Hovannisian was also the keynote speaker at the Bay Area's commemoration of
    the Armenian genocide in San Francisco City Hall on April 25. Following the
    greetings of Mayor Gavin Newsom and remarks in Armenian by Dr. Antranig
    Kasbarian, Hovannisian addressed the large gathering on the theme of
    universalizing the Armenian experience as a way of integrating it into
    collective human memory. He noted the progress made toward that goal in recent
    years and the challenges that still have to be met in the struggle of the
    Armenian people for international recognition and condemnation of the crime
    and
    for acts of contrition and restitution by the perpetrator.

    Lyon, France

    From San Francisco, Dr. Hovannisian traveled to Lyon to participate in an
    international symposium on April 28-29 under the honorary presidency of Mary
    Robinson, former president of the Irish Republic and United Nations High
    Commissioner for Human Rights. The conference was organized by `Le Collectif
    Reconnaissance,' an alliance of fifteen human rights groups, with support from
    a variety of French academic institutions, municipal and regional
    administrations, and the French Senate and Ministry of Culture.
    The primary themes of the conference were devoted to Genocides and Crimes
    against Humanity; The Consequences of Genocides; and The Prevention of
    Genocides: Obstacles and Dynamics for Action. Each of the three themes was
    further divided into particular topics. Opening addresses were made by Jules
    Mardirossian, president of `Le Collectif Reconnaissance,' and Jean-Jack
    Queyranne, former president of the Rhone-Alpes Region.
    For the session on the political consequences of genocide, Dr. Hovannisian
    was
    asked to speak on a topic that appeared in the program with the lengthy French
    title, `The Crime and Its State Denial Are the Foundations of the Successor
    State That Oppresses the Survivors and Nourishes Antagonisms: The Example of
    the Armenian Genocide and Kemalist Turkey.' In his presentation, Hovannisian
    traced the patterns of denial from the very beginning of the Genocide in 1915
    through the forced exodus of the survivors and appropriations of Armenian
    goods
    and properties by the Kemalist regime in the 1920s. He analyzed the efforts of
    the Turkish state to deceive and to suppress memory of the crime, a campaign
    that has gone through several distinct phases and now continues into the
    twenty-first century.
    General and specific aspects of genocide and its prevention were addressed by
    the twenty-five conference participants, who included, among others, Roger
    Smith of the United States, Yair Auron of Israel, and Sevane Garibian, Janine
    Altounian, and Kevork Kepenekian of France. A powerful visual display, mounted
    under the direction of Daniel Meguerditchian, incorporated the crimes
    committed
    against the Armenians, Ukrainians, Jews, Gypsies, Cambodians, Tibetans, and
    Rwandans and other African peoples.
    While in Lyon, Professor Hovannisian also visited the newly-dedicated
    Armenian
    memorial in the heart of the city at the Place Bellecour. Designed by
    architect
    Leonardo Basmadjian, the monument includes thirty-six aesthetically-placed
    columns and a ground-level, gold-lettered stonework with a trilingual
    commemorative inscription in French, English, and Armenian: `In the memory of
    the 1,500,000 Armenians, who were exterminated by the `Young Turk' government
    during the years 1915-1918, and of the victims of all genocides and crimes
    against humanity.'

    13) Element Band Wins 'Best Newcomer Album' at Armenian Music Awards

    LOS ANGELES--Element Band, one of the hottest emerging Armenian bands,
    received
    the "Best Newcomer Album of The Year" award at the 2006 Armenian Music Awards
    on May 25, for their CD "Yev O Phe" that debuted in March.
    Since its release, "Yev O Phe" has garnered a diverse mix of listeners that
    span three generations and successfully transcended the diverse musical tastes
    prevalent in Armenian culture.
    The arrangements are bold with the sounds of flamenco, tango, and Rembetika
    wafting in and out of performances of traditional Armenian songs, which are
    never forsaken to foreign sounds. Refusing to compromise Armenian melodies,
    Element nevertheless complements them with the use of the accordion, bouzouki,
    mandolin, classical guitar, violin, and the purity of the band's vocalists to
    serve up a compelling combination of fiery Mediterranean and hauntingly raw
    Armenian.
    Just as the Armenian alphabet incorporated the two additional letters o and
    phe during the Middle Ages to better incorporate European sounds, Element's
    Armenian compositions that incorporate the sounds of Europe and the
    Mediterranean, while remaining untethered, simply free... to be uniquely
    Armenian.
    Element Band can be heard in concert on Friday, June 16 at 8:00 PM at the
    Ford
    Amphitheatre in Los Angeles. For tickets or information, call (818)
    343-4757 or
    (818) 342-6624. Visit <http://www.elementband.com/>www.elementband .com for
    additional information.

    All subscription inquiries and changes must be made through the proper carrier
    and not Asbarez Online. ASBAREZ ONLINE does not transmit address changes and
    subscription requests.
    (c) 2006 ASBAREZ ONLINE. All Rights Reserved.

    ASBAREZ provides this news service to ARMENIAN NEWS NETWORK members for
    academic research or personal use only and may not be reproduced in or through
    mass media outlets.
Working...
X