Armenian wrestlers to participate in II International Tournament

Aysor.am
02.10.2009, 18:35

Armenian wrestlers to participate in II International Tournament

More that hundred athletes, including Armenian wrestlers, participate
in II International Tournament launched in Yakutsk, Russia.

In two-day-long Tournament participations from Armenia, U.S., Turkey,
Belarus, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Mongolia and Tajikistan
will fight for champion title in different weight categories.

63 thousand dollars prize money will be shared between winners giving
out $3, 000 to gold medal winners, $2,000 to those who take home a
silver and $1,000 for a bronze.

Thorbjorn Jagland Elected Council Of Europe Head

THORBJORN JAGLAND ELECTED COUNCIL OF EUROPE HEAD

Yerkir
30.09.2009 13:14
Yerevan

Yerevan (Yerkir) – The Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of
Europe elected former Norwegian premier Thorbjorn Jagland new
general secretary of the Council of Europe on Tuesday. Jagland,
also parliamentary speaker and chair of Norway’s Nobel Committee,
will replace Britain’s Terry Davis as head of the 47-nation human
rights watchdog. Davis’s five-year term ends later this year.

Jagland was supported by 165 of the 257 lawmakers taking part in
the vote.

His rival, former Polish Prime Minister Wlodzimierz Cimoszewicz,
received 80 votes.

Speaking at the Assembly after the vote, Jagland said the organization
needed reform to meet new realities.

Armenian Armeconombank To Extend Trade Credits At Lowered Rates

ARMENIAN ARMECONOMBANK TO EXTEND TRADE CREDITS AT LOWERED RATES

ARKA
Sep 30, 2009

YEREVAN, September 30. /ARKA/. Armeconombank is starting a reduced
interest rate credit program for stabilization of the economy as from
October 1, chairman of the bank’s directorial board David Sukiasyan
reported.

"We want to make a contribution to economic intensification and offer
lower interest rates to our clients," Sukiasyan told journalists
Tuesday.

Under the trade lending program loans are to be extended to trade
and import companies at from 10 to 12% p.a., depending on whether
the applicant is an Armeconombank client or not.

The program will be implemented with assistance of international
organizations and the EBRD in particular.

All credit lines opened in the bank under the trade promotion program
will be used for this purpose, Sukiasyan said.

"Armeconombank" Open Joint Stock Company was registered on August
26 1991. Over 75% of the bank’s shares belong to the principal
shareholders – EBRD (25% + 1 share) and the founders of "SIL" concern
Sukiasyan family (53.4%). The bank has 34 branches in Armenia and
Nagorno-Karabakh Republic.

According to the bank’s press service, total capital of "Armeconombank"
had exceeded 8.5 billion drams by September 28; total assets were
about 52 billion drams, credit investments – over 29 billion dr ams
and individual deposits – over 5.8 billion drams. ($1=385.71Drams).

MP From RPA: Opening Of Armenian-Turkish Border To Increase Transit

MP FROM RPA: OPENING OF ARMENIAN-TURKISH BORDER TO INCREASE TRANSIT OPPORTUNITIES OF ARMENIA DURING TRANSPORTATION FROM EU COUNTRIES TO SOUTH CAUCASUS

ArmInfo
2009-09-30 16:56:00

ArmInfo. Opening of the Armenian-Turkish border will increase
the transit opportunities of Armenia during transportation from
EU countries to the South Caucasus, Chairman of the Parliamentary
Commission on Financial-Credit and Budgetary Issues (RPA faction)
Gagik Minasyan told journalists today.

G. Minasyan said. Turkey, not being EU member, builds the market by
EU economic standards, he said. , G. Minasyan said. He added that in
case the border is opened, Armenia may also become a transit country
during transportation from EU countries to the South Caucasus, in
particular, to Georgia.

To recall, according to the management of South Caucasus Railway
(subsidiary of RRW), in case of opening of the Armenian-Turkish
border, the border logistic center will be able to serve about 6 –
8 mln tons of cargo a year.

Small Economies should keep Macroecon indicators on high level – WB

Countries with small economies should keep their main macroeconomic
indicators on a high level – WB

YEREVAN, September 26. /ARKA/. Countries with small economies should
keep their main macroeconomic indicators on a high level, as during
crisis starting conditions are important., said Asad Alam, WB Regional
Director for South Caucasus in the report `Impact of global crisis on
Armenia: short and long-term perspectives’.

The report says that it is necessary to develop a system of macro-risk
regulation in Armenia as international fluctuations are natural in the
integrated world. Alam said that it is very important to be an
initiator in the development of anti-cyclic policy which will assist in
the creation of workplaces in a short period of time and increase
competitiveness in mid-term perspectives.

He also said that rehabilitation after crisis will be slow and long for
which it is necessary to make plans for mid-term period. `During crisis
external specifications and mid-term consolidation of the budget is
inevitable, that is why we should find `golden mean’ between funding
and specification’, says the report.

It is also necessary to develop efficient program on struggling against
poverty, as even under the conditions of proper management of state
finances struggle against poverty will have some regress. According to
Alam, small countries with open economies should increase
competitiveness and dive
rsify the economy as there will be shortage of
external resources, especially in the post-crisis period. G.K. `0′

YSU plans to turn into `a global research university’ in 25 years

Yerevan State University plans to turn into `a global research
university’ in 25 years

YEREVAN, September 26, /Ð?RÐ?Ð?/. Yerevan State University rector Aram
Simonyan unveiled today am ambitious plan of turning Armenia’s
state-run university into `a global research university’ in 25 years.

`We want to become a university of global importance,’ the rector told
journalists Friday. According to him, Russia has two such
universities-the Moscow State University and the Saint Petersburg State
University. Aram Simonyan admitted that the quality of education at
Yerevan State University is not up to standards.

`We need to constantly perfect the quality of education and a lot is
being done to this end¦ I can say that no other Armenian university is
doing as much as we do,’ he said.

`Education is an expensive pleasure and we need enough resources to
solve many organizational issues,’ he said.

Yerevan State University was established in 1919. It has 20 departments
and 13,000 students. M.M.-0-

Khandohyi calls for effective cooperation within GUAM and BSECO

Kyiv Post

Khandohyi calls for effective cooperation within GUAM and BSECO
Yesterday, 15:02 | Ukrainian News

Sep 27 Sun

Acting Foreign Affairs Minister Volodymyr Khandohyi has called for a
more effective sectorial cooperation within the Organization for
Democracy and Economic Development-GUAM (Georgia, Ukraine, Azerbaijan,
and Moldova) and the Black Sea Economic Cooperation Organization
(BSECO).

The press service of the Foreign Affairs Ministry announced this in a
statement.

Khandohyi participated in a meeting of the Council of Foreign
Ministers of GUAM in New York (United States) on September 25 while
attending the 64th session of the General Assembly of the United
Nations Organization.

The foreign affairs ministers of the GUAM member-countries discussed
ways of strengthening political cooperation in preserving peace,
security, and stability in their region.

They stressed during the meeting that it was necessary to step up
GUAM’s cooperation with partner-countries and international
organizations.

The foreign affairs ministers agreed the organizational aspects of
GUAM’s operations.

They also expressed the view that it is appropriate to continue the
cooperation between GUAM and the United States.

As Ukrainian News earlier reported, President Viktor Yuschenko has
said that cooperation within GUAM has good prospects.

GUAM was founded on May 23, 2006, at a summit in Kyiv, during which
the leaders of GUAM member-states signed the organization’s charter.

Khandohyi participated in an informal meeting of the foreign affairs
ministers of BSECO member-countries in New York (United States) on
September 25 while attending the 64th session of the General Assembly
of the United Nations Organization.

The foreign affairs ministers discussed prospects for and ways of
further developing the organization and its institutions and its role
in the modern system of international economic relations during the
current financial crisis.

Khandohyi stressed that it was necessary to take quick and clear steps
to respond to m that it was necessary for the BSECO region to develop
cooperation with the European Union.

As Ukrainian News earlier reported, the member-countries of BSECO are
Albania, Azerbaijan, Bulgaria, Armenia, Greece, Georgia, Moldova,
Romania, Russia, Turkey, and Ukraine.

ANKARA: Prime Minister Erdogan addresses UN General Assembly

Sunday’s Zaman
27 September 2009, Sunday

Prime Minister ErdoÄ?an addresses UN General Assembly

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip ErdoÄ?an and US President Barack
Obama made a toast at an annual luncheon hosted by UN
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon on Wednesday during the 64th UN General
Assembly.

ErdoÄ?an also addressed the General Assembly on Thursday.

During a visit to the US this past week, ErdoÄ?an stated that he
expects to present Parliament with documents to establish diplomatic
ties with Armenia by early October, just before a critical meeting
between the two nations’ leaders. ErdoÄ?an, in a wide-ranging
foreign policy speech before faculty and students at Princeton
University, said the negotiations `have really taken us to an
important position.’ Turkey and Armenia have no diplomatic ties and
share a history of animosity stemming from the killings of Anatolian
Armenians by Ottoman Turks during World War I. Turkey denies the 1915
killings amounted to genocide but has agreed to set up a commission of
international experts on the issue under the protocol it signed with
Armenia.

In his speech ErdoÄ?an also touched upon his government’s
democratization initiative, which ultimately aims to reach a
comprehensive resolution to the decades-old Kurdish question by
granting more rights to the country’s Kurdish citizens.

`We have set off to resolve problems regarding the rule of law,
democracy and human rights,’ ErdoÄ?an said. Recalling steps that
have been taken so far, such as lifting bans on teaching and
broadcasting in Kurdish and the presence of a new state-run Kurdish
television station, ErdoÄ?an added that a new step was recently
taken, referring to the approval of teaching the Kurdish language as
part of the establishment of a `living languages’ institute at a state
university in Mardin.

27 September 2009, Sunday

Whistler takes a boarder

Boston Globe

Whistler takes a boarder
Gorky collection finds unusual home in Lowell artist’s museum

Two untitled works by Arshile Gorky show the artist was experimenting
with the various styles and idioms of his modernist predecessors. Two
untitled works by Arshile Gorky show the artist was experimenting with
the various styles and idioms of his modernist predecessors.
By Sebastian Smee

Globe Staff / September 26, 2009

LOWELL – It’s all a bit bemusing, and not the easiest to explain. But
through one historical quirk and another, a small museum in Lowell
that commemorates the birthplace of James McNeill Whistler is now in
the possession of almost 30 early paintings, drawings, and prints by
Arshile Gorky, the Armenian-born progenitor of American Abstract
Expressionism.

What does Gorky have to do with Whistler? And is it not a bit strange
for a museum dedicated to the memory of Whistler to become a better
place to look at works by Gorky than works by Whistler (which are thin
on the ground, to put it generously, at the Whistler House Museum of
Art)?

These are questions to which I have no particularly illuminating
answer. But you can ponder them to your heart’s content as you take in
`Drawings & Paintings by Arshile Gorky: Mina Boehm Metzger
Collection,” a small but fascinating show celebrating a substantial
new addition to the Whistler House Museum of Art. (The museum
describes it as a `permanent loan.”)

The works are all from the collection of Mina Boehm Metzger, who
studied art under Gorky at the Grand Central Art School in New York in
the 1930s and died in 1975. She was impressed by Gorky, and she and
her husband started collecting his works. Some they received as gifts,
others were purchased.

All of them are early pieces, and many, to add to the air of mystery
around the show, remain untitled and of uncertain date. One is a
fabulously delicate, softly modeled portrait in pencil on brown
construction paper. Another is a painting, based on one by Metzger
herself, on cardboard.

Gorky,
improvised media like these, was hard-up. Three of the works have been
painted or drawn on two sides. In one case, the image on the reverse
was painted upside down, making a mounted display in the middle of the
room, with both sides visible, somewhat impractical. Museum director
Michael H. Lally has solved the dilemma by taking the unusual step of
hanging a photographic reproduction of the reverse side beside the
original.

Artistically, Gorky was not quite `Gorky” in these years. He was
still toying with the various styles and idioms of his modernist
predecessors in Europe, especially Picasso, Matisse, and Miró.

Unlike most Americans, even in the art world, Metzger was tuned in to
such influences: She frequently accompanied her husband on business
trips to Europe, where she kept abreast of developments in modern
art. All this helps account for her responsiveness to Gorky’s
work. But his personality may have played an even bigger part.

Born Vosdanig Manoog Adoian, Gorky had come to the United States in
1920 as a teenage survivor of the Armenian genocide. His mother died
of starvation in his arms. `The harsh struggles and terrible suffering
of his early life in Armenia,” write Mark Stevens and Annalyn Swan in
their biography of Gorky’s friend, Willem de Kooning, `gave him an
ancient, fated air that he was not afraid to cultivate; he sometimes
seemed to play the part of an Old Testament figure who happened to be
in New York.”

icles/2009/09/26/gorky_collection_finds_unusual_ho me_in_whistler_house_museum/

http://www.boston.com/ae/theater_arts/art

Armenian expansion issue will be brought to Turkey’s assembly

AZG DAILY #172, 25-09-2009

Armenia-Turkey

Update: 2009-09-25 00:41:08 (GMT +04:00)

ARMENIAN EXPANSION ISSUE WILL BE BROUGHT TO TURKEY’S ASSEMBLY ON
OCTOBER 10TH

According to the Turkish Sabah newspaper, Turkish Prime Minister
Erdogan announced during a speech made at Princeton University that
the Armenian expansion protocol will be brought to Turkey’s Grand
National Assembly on October 10th-11th, two days prior to the World
Cup qualification football game between the two nations.

Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan discussed both the democratic expansion
and relations with Armenia during an address to Princeton
University. During the speech, Erdogan stated that the Armenia
protocol will be handled by the Grand National Assembly two days prior
to the national football game to be played on October 24th.

Erdogan stated the following: "Deliberations between Azerbaijan and
Armenia are continuing with a fervor never before seen. With the
bilateral talks conducted by Switzerland, the steps taken towards
establishing diplomatic ties between Turkey and Armenia have now
reached a significant point. If prejudices or internal political
issues do not surface, then I do believe that the agreement prepared
will be handed over to the parliament. These steps will be taken on
either October 10th or 11th."

Erdogan also touched on the `democratic expansion’ during his speech
and stated "The movement can not take place instantaneously. We need
to go forward a bit at a time. We want to solve the major problems and
then handle the minor ones. This is not a Kurdish expansion, it is a
democratic expansion. The rights of minorities will also be an issue
dealt with in the expansion."