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Armenian Assembly Of America Reaches Out To Youth To Promote Interns

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  • Armenian Assembly Of America Reaches Out To Youth To Promote Interns

    ARMENIAN ASSEMBLY OF AMERICA REACHES OUT TO YOUTH TO PROMOTE INTERNSHIP PROGRAM

    DeFacto Agency, Armenia
    Nov 28 2006

    To expand the active involvement of young adults in the Armenian
    Assembly of America (AAA), Intern Coordinator Joseph Piatt met with
    college students to introduce them to the Assembly's Intern Programs.

    According to the information DE FACTO got at the AAA, the eight-week
    summer programs provide college students of Armenian descent the
    opportunity to intern in Washington, DC and Yerevan while taking part
    in a full schedule of educational, social and cultural activities.

    Piatt has been traveling to several East Coast universities to meet
    with Armenian student organizations, provide them with informational
    materials and discuss his own experiences as a 2004 intern in
    Washington, DC.

    Concurrently, Assembly intern alumni joined Western Office Director
    Lena Kaimian to help promote the internship programs to prospective
    students. In California, Gregory Bandikian, Armine Bazikyan, Shant
    Norhadian, Cate Norian and Nareeneh Sohbatian shared with students
    their first-hand experiences as Assembly interns while Joel Cretan
    provided a briefing on the program.

    In addition, George Houhanisin and Harry Kezelian met with students
    in Michigan while Arpi Paylan discussed her back-to-back internships
    in Washington and Yerevan with Chicago area students.

    "As a former Assembly intern, I am thrilled to see so many young
    adults interested in the Internship Program and I hope, a future that
    includes community and public service," said Board of Trustees Member
    Lisa Esayian. "As the Washington Program prepares to enter its 30th
    year, I urge students to invest in themselves, and sign up for this
    once in a lifetime opportunity."

    Students who are accepted into the Washington program will be
    placed in congressional offices, think tanks, media outlets and
    governmental agencies. Interns will have the opportunity to discuss
    Armenian-American issues during meetings with U.S Representatives,
    Senators, other government officials and noted academics through the
    Capitol Ideas and Lecture Series programs as well as gain a better
    understanding of the inner workings of the Nation's Capital.

    Meanwhile, students enrolled in the Yerevan program are typically
    placed in Armenian governmental offices and inter-governmental
    agencies. They will have the opportunity to experience life in their
    ancestral homeland while gaining valuable work experience.

    Applications for the Washington program, known as the Terjenian-Thomas
    Assembly Internship Program, as well as the Yerevan program, are
    available online at www.aaainc.org. Application deadlines are January
    15 and February 15 respectively.
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