On Placement Of Crushing And Screening System At Sotk Mine

ON PLACEMENT OF CRUSHING AND SCREENING SYSTEM AT SOTK MINE

/ARKA/
March 14, 2011
YEREVAN

YEREVAN, March 14. / ARKA /.”GeoProMining Gold” LLC plans to build
crushing and screening system, and all the requirements for its
design and construction will be met on a timely basis, the company’s
department for press and public relations told ARKA. The crushing and
screening system will be installed at the distance of 37 kilometers
from Lake Sevan.

Crushing and screening system is a common jaw-crusher and vibrating
grid, coupled with a small conveyor-belt. The system is used to reduce
the sizes of stone pieces, the so-called “oversize” ore, which are
unsuitable for transportation by the railway, because they cause
serious damage to the carriage fleet of the South-Caucasian Railway.

To present day, “oversize” ore was crushed at Sotk mine with the help
of rock-breaker of low productivity, or with the help of blasting
operations, and currently it is planned to automate this process.

Crushing and screening system will be located within the permitted and
leased by the “GPM Gold” land (Lease Agreement No.1, dated 11.06.2010),
allotted to Sotk mine, and currently preparation of working documents
is underway.

No chemical components are used for crushing of “oversize” ore.

Currently, no any complaints have been reported at GPM Gold from
the residents of Sotk and other neighboring villages on the possible
impact of the crushing and screening system, moreover, Sotk village
administration officially reported to the company that they have no
any complaints related to the issue

There are hundreds of crushing and screening systems in Armenia,
many of which are operated in close proximity (not more than 1.5 km)
of Lake Sevan.

GPM GOLD is developing Sotk gold mine and owns Ararat gold recovery
plant .It is part of Russian GeoProMining group of companies.

GeoProMining acquired 100% of Sterlite Gold Ltd from international
Vedanta Resources in 2007 September. Sterlite Gold Ltd was the only
owner of AGRC that was later renamed GPM GOLD.

From: A. Papazian

System Of Electronic Registry Of Armenian Companies And Enterprises

SYSTEM OF ELECTRONIC REGISTRY OF ARMENIAN COMPANIES AND ENTERPRISES WILL BE LAUNCHED WITHIN TWO WEEKS

/ARKA/
March 14, 2011
YEREVAN

David Sarkisian, chief of the government staff, told journalists
today that the system of electronic registry of Armenian companies
and enterprises will be launched within two weeks. He said the system
will enable businessmen to register their companies from their homes
and the entire process will take from 15 to 20 minutes.

He said thanks to one ‘window system’ a business person may register
his or her business, to receive a trademark name, to register with
tax authorities and make all payments in electronic version. David
Sarkisian said there are already electronic systems for accepting
license applications, tax reports, patent and trademark registration.

The goal of the simplified system for registration of entrepreneurs
is to cut the number of documents and time required for business
registration. The launch of the system will allow to cut the
registration process from 18 to 5 days. In case of electronic
application the term reduces to one day.

He said over 5,700 Armenian businessmen have registered their
electronic signatures which enables business people to sent their
reports in electronic format to tax authorities and make use of other
services like electronic licensing. He said over 3,000 companies have
shifted already to submitting electronic tax reports.

The concept of e-community for 2010-2012 was approved by the government
in 2010 February. It sets out clear-cut directions, including raising
Internet accessibility across the country, spread of electronic
services in public and private sectors and ensuring cyber security.

From: A. Papazian

Sochi Meeting ‘Opened Doors’ For Karabakh Conflict – OSCE Chairperso

SOCHI MEETING ‘OPENED DOORS’ FOR KARABAKH CONFLICT – OSCE CHAIRPERSON

Tert.am
14.03.11

The meeting of Azerbaijani, Armenian and Russian presidents
in Sochi on March 5 opened doors for future negotiations, OSCE
Chairperson-in-Office, Foreign Minister of Lithuania Audronius Azubalis
said at a meeting with Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov
in Baku.

“The Sochi meeting of Azerbaijani, Armenian and Russian presidents has
opened doors for future negotiations to be more perspective”, Audronius
Azubalis was quoted by the Azerbaijani news agency APA as saying.

He also said he conducted talks with Mammadyarov in connection with
the last incident took place in the frontline and noted the importance
of withdrawing of snipers of both sides from the frontline.

“After Sochi meeting there appeared hope for restoration of burnt
bridges. This conflict may be solved only in a peaceful way”.

An Azeri boy was reportedly killed by Karabakhi snipers. Karabakh
Foreign Ministry issued a statement and denied the accusation.

From: A. Papazian

Francophonie Days In Armenia To Feature Hover Ensemble Concert

FRANCOPHONIE DAYS IN ARMENIA TO FEATURE HOVER ENSEMBLE CONCERT

PanARMENIAN.Net
March 14, 2011 – 17:59 AMT 13:59 GMT

On March 20, Hover chamber music ensemble will perform in Armenia’s
Chamber Music Hall.

The concert will be held within the framework of Francophonie Days in
Armenia timed to the 41st anniversary of the International Organisation
of La Francophonie.

The program features works of 16-21 century French composers, as well
as those of Komitas.

A Long live Armenia! Long Live France! mega discotheque and the
concert of a famous singer Lara Fabian will take place within the
framework of Francophonie Festival 2011 due March 17-18 in Armenia.

From: A. Papazian

Those, Who Prepared The List Of Arms Importers, Have Not "Noticed" A

THOSE, WHO PREPARED THE LIST OF ARMS IMPORTERS, HAVE NOT “NOTICED” AZERBAIJAN

PanARMENIAN.Net
March 14, 2011 – 18:17 AMT 14:17 GMT

Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) has published
another data on weapons imports.

India topped the list of arms importers in the period from 2006 to
2010. It is followed by China, South Korea, Pakistan and Greece.

Strangely enough, Azerbaijan, which is the initiator of the armament
drive in South Caucasus, is not among the leaders of arms importers.

However, the paces of arming in Azerbaijan are impressing.

Basically, the countries of Near East, specifically, Turkey and
Israel, are attracted for cooperation with Azerbaijan. There are
also CIS countries – Ukraine and Belarus – among those supplying arms
to Azerbaijan.

Besides, the 2011 state budget of Azerbaijan envisages a growth in
the country’s military expenditures to bring them to 2.5bln mantas
($3.1bln) against 1.6bln mantas in 2010. 1.1bln manats will be spent
for weapons modernization.

It is not strange that Azerbaijan prefers not to conceal its arms
import and intention to produce weapons. With this, Azerbaijan tries
to convince its people that they will win in case of a new war in
Karabakh. Meanwhile, Baku again forgets that without a professional
army, which Azerbaijan lacks, all these arms will become a pile of
metal. In this case, the international organization’s neutrality
is strange, while they are designed to ensure security in the South
Caucasus.

Is not it high time for these structures to call things by their proper
names instead of spending time for making declarative statements and
peace calls?

Otherwise, there is an impression that the mission of organizations
like OSCE is not prevention of military threats, but liquidation of
consequences of military confrontations which had already taken place.

From: A. Papazian

Baku Informs OSCE CiO Of Minsk Group "Uselessness"

BAKU INFORMS OSCE CIO OF MINSK GROUP “USELESSNESS”

PanARMENIAN.Net
March 14, 2011 – 19:04 AMT 15:04 GMT

Speaker of the Azerbaijani parliament Ogtay Asadov met with OSCE
Chairperson-in-Office, Lithuanian Foreign Minister Audronius Azubalis
who is on a visit to Baku.

According to Asadov, Azerbaijan attaches importance to cooperation
with the OSCE structures. However, according to him, it is important
that “this organization exerts huger efforts for the Nagorno Karabakh
conflict settlement.”

Asadov noted that the OSCE Minsk Group’s activity has not yielded
any results yet.

Azubalis said that one of the purposes of his visit to Azerbaijan
is to hold discussions with official Baku on the existing conflicts
settlement.

Besides, matters presenting mutual interest were in the focus of the
meeting, APA reported.

From: A. Papazian

Scenes From A Marriage And Economy In Free Fall

SCENES FROM A MARRIAGE AND ECONOMY IN FREE FALL
Julian Guthrie

The Associated Press
Published: Mar 10, 2011

It was a line by Somerset Maugham about how marriage renders people
uninteresting that inspired Carol Edgarian’s new book about middle
age and middle marriage, about what happens “post-blush.”

“I read this line in ‘Razor’s Edge’ and thought, Mr. Maugham, I beg to
differ,” said Edgarian, whose new novel, “Three Stages of Amazement,”
looks at what happens in middle age, when love is no longer fresh
and potential seems no longer limitless, when dreams go unrealized
and tragedy visits.

“Middle age and middle marriage are really interesting ground for
me,” said Edgarian, who is 48, has been married for 17 years, and has
two daughters and a stepdaughter. “The assumption for much of life
is that you are in command of where you get. But fate plays a much
larger hand. Babies die. Markets turn. People get ill. Money runs
out. You fall in love and yet the love is not enough to sustain you.

So what happens when you are tested?”

Edgarian’s new work comes 17 years after the publication of her
best-selling debut novel, “Rise the Euphrates,” about three generations
of Armenian American women living in Connecticut.

Set in San Francisco, “Three Stages of Amazement,” published this
week by Scribner and already in its third printing, tells the story
of Lena Rusch and her husband, Charlie Pepper, casting them at the
start as “part of the generation of winners” who believe that, with
“luck and push,” they “would have everything.”

The book moves from confidence to uncertainty, coming to rest tenuously
in between.

“There are these two main characters who have arrived at middle age
and have been running on the assumption of limitless potential,” said
Edgarian, sitting in a cafe near her home in lower Pacific Heights.

“The jig is up and they have to confront real limitations.”

The journey of Lena and Charlie mirrors the book’s broader context.

The story begins on New Year’s Eve 2008 and ends a year later,
a period following market meltdowns, bank failures, foreclosures
and bankruptcies, and the election of Barack Obama as the nation’s
44th president.

“There had been this false promise,” Edgarian said of the buildup to
the market crash. “Suddenly, in this country, resources felt limited
and people were forced to adjust. This was really a watershed moment
for America, a period of retrenching where we don’t know exactly
where we will end up.”

Challenges

Edgarian’s characters – whether primary, secondary or tertiary –
are faced with challenges, some convulsive, some slight. “All of my
characters are at a moment of crisis when we meet them,” Edgarian
said. “Whatever they thought was going to be life is challenged,
and they’ve got to figure out a new dance.”

Edgarian in person is similar to Edgarian in print: The surface is
gilded and lovely, confident and balanced. Underneath, though, is a
sharper edge, a darker humor, a perpetual questioning. There is an
acknowledgement that life gets messy.

Edgarian only reluctantly talks about her “classically unhappy
childhood,” spent mostly in West Hartford, Conn. Her parents, Gerald
and Barbara Edgarian, both first-generation immigrants, were like
“gas and matches,” she says with a wry laugh. They divorced, and the
family moved around. She has two older siblings and a stepsister 17
years her junior.

“I’m that cliched under-the-covers-writing girl,” Edgarian said.

“Reading and writing is how I got through my childhood. I read
everything, from drama and Tolkien to Austen. The books were my
closest friends in my young years.”

After graduating from Stanford, Edgarian worked for a high-tech public
relations firm.

“Our early client was Microsoft when it was Bill Gates and a group of
guys,” Edgarian said. “It was Palo Alto 1984, when Silicon Valley
was just starting to explode.” Edgarian was writing everything
from technical manuals and news releases to speeches for venture
capitalists.

In 1986, Edgarian attended the Squaw Valley writers’ conference to
remind herself she was a “real writer.” It was there she met her
future husband, Tom Jenks, senior editor at Scribner’s. She had a
rough 75 pages of what would become her debut novel.

“He read it and wanted to publish it,” Edgarian said. “I said I would
finish it in six months. It was published in 1994.”

Online magazine

Between “Rise the Euphrates” and “Three Stages of Amazement,”
Jenks and Edgarian had two daughters, Lucy, 15, and Liv, 9 (Jenks’
daughter Riley is 25). The two taught creative writing and launched the
online literary magazine Narrative Magazine in 2003. The magazine’s
objective is to “advance the best of storytelling in the digital
age and provide a free modern library.” The site has more than 3,000
stories in its archive.

“We have a small core staff and 100 volunteers,” Edgarian said.

Putting in up to 60 hours a week on Narrative, Edgarian has had to
“steal time” for her own writing, often starting to work after the
kids were asleep. She said that she and Jenks – a former editor for
Esquire and the Paris Review – have no safety net, and “we make it
up day to day.”

San Francisco, her adopted home, is the place where “much of what’s
good in my life has happened,” Edgarian noted. She writes in her new
novel of its splendor and ethos, of its “foggy morals”: “The city had
been crushed three times by fires and earthquakes, and each time it
rose again. Lovely, whitewashed, beguiling, it was built by dreamers
on seven square miles of whim.”

As she reflected on “Three Stages of Amazement,” she recalled the line
from Maugham: “When male and female, after whatever vicissitudes you
like, are at last brought together they have fulfilled their biological
function and interest passes to the generation that is to come.”

It was precisely this stage – when the drive of marriage is fulfilled
and life sets in – that excited Edgarian. “I wanted to focus on
the realities of kids, career, money, grief and disappointment,” she
said. “With marriages that last, there is a continual renewal. You lose
each other and find each other. Your horizons may not be as expansive,
but it’s a time to go deeper. I really like this time of life.”

To read The Chronicle review of Carol Edgarian’s book “Three Stages
of Amazement,” go to

From: A. Papazian

www.sfgate.com.

Worldview: Turkey’s Crackdown On The Press Smacks Of Authoritarianis

WORLDVIEW: TURKEY’S CRACKDOWN ON THE PRESS SMACKS OF AUTHORITARIANISM
By Trudy Rubin

2011 The Associated Press
Published: 03-10-2011

During my recent trip to Egypt, many young activists told me Turkey’s
democracy might be a model for them to follow.

In their minds, Turkey, with its mostly Sunni Muslim population,
has managed to meld its Muslim heritage with a state based on rule of
law and a secular constitution. However, the Turkish government has
recently been showing disturbing signs of the kind of authoritarianism
the Egyptians spurned.

In the past few weeks, Turkish authorities have detained at least
a dozen journalists whose work criticized the government. They are
accused of being part of an alleged plot to overthrow Prime Minister
Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s government after it came to power in 2002.

These journalists are only the latest of several hundred current
and former military officers, intellectuals, university presidents,
women’s rights advocates, and writers rounded up since 2007 as part
of this supposed plot. The conspiracy was purportedly initiated by
a shadowy network of military officers and ex-security operatives
called Ergenekon (the name of a mythical Turkish valley).

But Ergenekon looks more and more like an excuse for a religiously
oriented government to silence outspoken advocates of maintaining
Turkey as a secular state.

Consider the cases of two of the arrested journalists. Nedim Sener,
a highly respected reporter for Millyet, received the International
Press Institute’s 2010 “World Press Freedom Hero” award for his book
about the murder of Armenian Turkish journalist Hrant Dink (in which
he alleged that government security forces were complicit).

Ahmet Sik, another investigative journalist, had criticized a key
supporter of the government, a controversial Turkish imam named
Fetullah Gulen, who lives in self-imposed exile in Pennsylvania but
has great influence and a large following in Turkey. Sik claimed
Gulen’s movement infiltrated Turkey’s security forces.

The government prosecutor straight-facedly denied these men were
arrested for their writings, but he refused to make public any evidence
against them, citing the (endlessly) ongoing Ergenekon probe.

When the U.S. ambassador to Turkey, Frank Ricciardone, asked how the
jailing of journalists jibes with Turkey’s stated policy of supporting
a free press, Erdogan criticized him harshly. But refusing to answer
that question won’t make it go away.

The Erdogan government’s pressure on press critics has led the
international press watchdog, Reporters Without Borders, to rank
Turkey 138th among 178 countries, only two spots above Russia, where
journalists are notoriously endangered.

The press group attributes this low rank to Turkey’s “frenzied
proliferation of lawsuits, incarcerations, and court sentencing,
(all) targeting journalists.” In 2009, for example, Turkey’s Tax
Ministry levied $3 billion in fines against the Dogan media group of
newspapers and TV stations, which were critics of Erdogan, charging
he was pushing secular Turkey in too Islamic a direction.

If upheld, these draconian fines could put the media group out
of business. Using massive tax fines against opponents is all too
reminiscent of the tactics used by Russian Prime Minister Vladimir
Putin.

When the Ergenekon investigation began, some Turkish liberals hoped
it might advance civilian controls over a military that had conducted
four coups against elected governments in past decades. But the probe
has expanded into an unending witch hunt, with no end in sight.

Some of the accused have been held for years without trial. Others,
released after tough questioning, have the threat of future indictments
hanging over their heads.

The government’s case appears to be based largely on a massive
network of government wiretaps, from which tidbits are selectively
leaked to the media, creating an atmosphere of intimidation. However,
the government has yet to prove that any conspiracy actually occurred.

“In 5,800 original pages [of Ergenekon charges] there is not one
shred of proof that this organization exists,” said Gareth Jenkins,
a Turkey specialist who has written extensively on the affair. He
has read the entire indictment. “They [the Turkish government] have
created a fictional organization, and used it to go after their
political opponents,” he said.

The Erdogan government rejects such claims, but does nothing to dispel
them by bringing the probe to a conclusion. That contradiction casts
a shadow over Turkish democracy and its aspirations to enter the
European Union. It also undercuts the hope that Ankara can provide
the model Egyptian democrats seek.

E-mail Trudy Rubin at [email protected].

From: A. Papazian

Editorial: Freer Economies Endure Quakes Better

EDITORIAL: FREER ECONOMIES ENDURE QUAKES BETTER

The Associated Press.
Published: 03-10-2011

As we know in California, earthquakes can be the ultimate in
devastation. They’re so terrifying because the very earth shakes
out from under you. So we sympathize with the victims of Japan’s
8.9-magnitude earthquake March 11, which was followed by a tsunami.

Preliminary death tolls ran to more than 1,000.

But it could have been worse. Japan is one of the most developed
nations in the world, with an extensive capitalist economy. It’s
not perfect. Some protectionism and high taxes of recent years have
retarded Japan’s growth. And Prime Minister Naoto Kan has warned of
a “Greece-like” debt crisis. Well, it’s not quite that bad. Unlike
Greece, whose debt mostly is owned by foreign banks, Japan’s government
debt mostly is owned by Japanese banks and persons, giving it more
flexibility.

It’s this strong, developed economy that has prevented many more
casualties. “Nations that are richer and more plugged into the
global economy have proven more resilient in national disasters,”
Dan Griswold told us; he’s director of the Center for Trade Policy
Studies at the libertarian Cato Institute. “Nothing will protect you
from an 8.9 earthquake. But a lot more people would be dead if Japan
were a poor and isolated country.”

A good example was Haiti’s earthquake last year. One of the poorest
nations in the world, its shoddy buildings crumbled under a 7.0
earthquake. It’s still not known exactly how many died, but ABC News
reported in January that Haiti’s “government has revised upward its
previous estimate of the death toll from 230,000 to 316,000, meaning
about 3 percent of Haiti’s entire population perished.”

On the Heritage Foundation’s Index of Economic Freedom, Japan ranks
20th out of 179 countries, and Haiti 133rd. (The United States is
ninth.) Even before the earthquake, Heritage noted, Haiti’s anti-market
problems included: “Protection of investors and property is severely
compromised by weak enforcement, a paucity of updated laws to handle
modern commercial practices, and a dysfunctional and resource-poor
legal system. … Corruption is perceived as rampant.”

A 6.9 earthquake in Armenia in 1988 killed about 25,000 people.

Armenia had been forced into the Soviet Union and its socialist
economic system in 1922, and so lived in penury. The earthquake
brought rare glimpses of truth from the controlled communist media of
the day. Komsomolskaya Pravda, a communist newspaper, asked, “Where
were the seismologists, the architects and the construction workers
that drafted and built the houses that fell apart like matchboxes?”

Shoddily constructed nine-story buildings became “common graves
for many.”

Armenia’s agony, showcasing the economic disaster of socialism, was
a catalyst for the end of the Soviet empire in 1991, the same year
Armenia became independent.

As with the Armenian and Haitian earthquakes, global foreign aid will
be flowing into Japan, especially from the United States. California
earthquake rescue experts are the best in the world and will be helping
out. The quick transportation of relief workers and supplies is another
benefit of the interlocking global economy that did not exist for such
major past quakes as those in San Francisco in 1906 or Tokyo in 1923.

Economically, Japan has been staggered. Honda, Toyota and other
stocks are down. Global oil prices dropped as a drop in Japanese
demand was anticipated. The prices of other commodities also may be
affected. Early reports were that five Japanese steel mills closed
to assess structural damage; according to Reuters, that may increase
prices due to shortages.

“The tremors from this will reverberate throughout the world economy
for months, if not years,” Griswold observed. “It will have a huge
impact on commodities. We prosper together, and feel each other’s
pain.”

Social media also are playing a role. People around the world watched
reports in real-time on TV and Internet sites. At 4:36 am Friday, we
got a phone call from the Tsunami Hotline, part of AlertOC, warning
that “some areas could experience dangerous waves and tidal surges
along the beaches. Stay out of the water.” This time it wasn’t too
bad for us. Next time the warning might save hundreds of lives along
our coast.

In Japan, although the temblor disrupted some networks, people in
Japan and elsewhere immediately were tweeting away on Twitter and
posting on Facebook, including photos and YouTube videos. Reported
KVTB.com in Boise, Idaho, “Late Thursday night, Twitter lit up with
people wondering if their friend, Iko Vannoy, a former Boise State
student who is now working in Japan, was OK.

“Iko responded very quickly, letting her friends know she was safe,
but it was one of the scariest moments of her life. ‘I thought I was
going to die! It was like watching a movie,’ Iko said via Twitter.”

What a relief to Iko’s friends; and a comfort to Iko that her friends
cared so much.

As relief efforts proceed, it’s worth emphasizing that free markets
and free trade were essential to lessening the damage done by the
earthquake and tsunami. Freedom just doesn’t bring prosperity; it
saves lives.

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From: A. Papazian

http://earthquake.usgs.gov/earthquakes/recenteqsww/Quakes/usc0001xgp.php

Preserving Folk Culture

PRESERVING FOLK CULTURE
By Lu Ann Franklin

Times
Published: 03-10-2011

MUNSTER | With a whirl of vibrant colors, Duquesne University’s
Tamburitzans celebrated the cultural heritage of Eastern Europe in
music and dance on stage Sunday at Munster High School.

The troupe of 31 full-time college students from Pittsburgh returned
to the Calumet area as part of this year’s 80-plus concert series
that takes them more than 40,000 miles across the U.S.

Sunday’s appreciative multigenerational audience journeyed with
the students through such cultures as Croatia, Serbia, Bavaria,
Slovenia, Hungary, Bulgaria, Slovakia, Poland, Russia, Armenia,
Ukraine, Macedonia and Greece.

The Calumet Region’s ethnic mix is similar to Pittsburgh’s, and the
Tamburitzans’ performances here always draw large crowds, said Paul
G. Stafura, managing director of the troupe since 1973.

“Munster High School is one of our favorite places to perform because
the audience is so supportive,” Stafura said.

Everything about the energetic performance is authentic, he said.

Songs are sung in many languages and dialects, and the dances represent
a multitude of traditional European styles. Musicians play folk
instruments, from mandolins and violins to the upright bass as well as
pipes and trumpets. And the more than 400 original costumes worn during
a single performance are researched and authentically reproduced.

Preserving the ethnic heritage of Eastern Europe countries and its
neighbors continues to be the mission of the Duquesne University
Tamburitzans, now in the group’s 74th year, Stafura said.

Many performers are of Eastern European heritage and began performing
the music and dances of these cultures as young children.

Sophomore Nick Jovonovich, 20, of Pittsburgh, hails from a Northwest
Indiana family. His father, Nick, and his godfather, Mickey Josic,
of Schererville, formed a popular folk band, the Jandran Tamburitza
Orchestra, that performed throughout the Calumet Region in the 1970s
and ’80s. The broadcast journalism major said his mother, Nena,
was in a junior Tamburitza group during her youth.

Christine Tate, 18, a freshman from Oak Creek, Wis., also grew up
performing in Eastern European groups.

“I was in a Croatian group since the age of 7. It’s a family
tradition,” said Tate, who sings in a Greek trio and dances Serbian,
Bulgarian and Moldovan dances during the two-hour performance “I’ll
probably have my own children perform in Croatian groups.”

Four of the Tamburitzan troupe are international students from
Macedonia and Bulgaria, Stafura said.

In addition to performing, the 31 students load and unload the touring
bus, iron costumes, work with sound equipment and set up the stage
prior to the show.

All the performers go through rigorous auditions to become part of
the Tamburitzans, and those chosen receive scholarships, he said. The
pace is hectic.

They are all full-time students majoring in such disciplines as
education, biology, accounting, marketing, physics and pharmacy,
Stafura said.

“On Saturday, we were in Buffalo (New York) performing. We drove all
night and arrived at Munster High School at 11 a.m.,” he said. “We’ll
be back in Pittsburgh at 5 a.m. Monday, and these students will go back
to class. We’ve already had our spring break and spent it performing
in Florida.”

The Associated Press.

From: A. Papazian