Wind Ensemble Plays Series

WIND ENSEMBLE PLAYS SERIES

Corvallis Gazette Times, OR
Nov 2 2007

Corvallis – The Oregon State University Symphonic Wind Ensemble,
directed by Christopher Chapman, will give a preview of its fall
concert, "To the Dance," at noon Thursday, Nov. 8, in the Memorial
Union lounge on the OSU campus.

The program will open with "Armenian Dances, Part I" by Alfred Reed,
which is built upon five Armenian folk songs. Movements III and I
from John Corigliano’s "Gazebo Dances" will follow that number. The
piece was originally written as a set of four-hand piano pieces.

Next will be Nathan Tanouye’s "Kokopelli’s Dance," which is the
first traditional wind band composition from this predominantly
jazz-oriented composer. The performance will conclude with John
Mackey’s "Redline Tango."

Chapman is in his second year as acting director of bands. In addition
to conducting the OSU Symphonic Wind Ensemble, he also directs the
Concert Band and Jazz Ensemble, and teaches courses in music education
and instrumental conducting.

Thursday’s program will be a sampling of the ensemble’s longer fall
concert, to be held at the LaSells Stewart Center on Nov. 15. For more
information, see or call 737-5592.

The Entertainer

2007/11/01/entertainment/entertainment_roundup/bri ef05_inbrief.txt

http://oregonstate.edu/cla/music
http://www.gazettetimes.com/articles/

Nature Minister Gives No Warnings

NATURE MINISTER GIVES NO WARNINGS

Panorama.am
18:46 02/11/2007

On his three-day visit to the province of Syunik, nature minister Aram
Harutyunyan met with several large production facilities to find out
just how much these facilities were harming the region’s nature.

"Deno Gold Mining" of Kapan was found by the minister and his
accompanying experts to not be doing anything to harm the environment
and that smoke was not being released from the facility.

"They have the issue of creating a new area for mining wastes,
as unused materials are not being put in small storage areas. Soil
is now being removed to create a place for the new storage areas,"
the ministry’s press secretary, Ardzrun Pepanyan, told a Panorama.am
journalist while talking about details of the minister’s visit,
also noting that no dirty air in the area of the mine was found.

After that, the delegation went to the Zangezur Copper Factory,
and once again, according to Pepanyan, the minister showed no
dissatisfaction. "Here the main question was about unused materials,
and how the government paid money for these materials, which the
factory was unable to sell," the press secretary said, saying everyone
agreed with the minister’s evaluation.

The same results were seen for the Agarak Copper Factory, where no
violations were registered.

Pepayan can’t say precisely whether any damage to the surrounding
nature is taking place. During the visit, the minister gave no warnings
to any of the factories for violating any laws about producing dirty
air. He only told them to be careful and alert.

Concert Dedicated To 70th Anniversary Of Composer Haroutiun Dellalia

CONCERT DEDICATED TO 70TH ANNIVERSARY OF COMPOSER HAROUTIUN DELLALIAN TO BE CONDUCTED BY CONDUCTOR EMILIO POMARICO

Noyan Tapan
Nov 1, 2007

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 1,NOYAN TAPAN. The concert of the philharmonic
orchestra of Armenia dedicated to the 70th anniversary of composer
Haroutiun Dellalian will take place in the Aram Khachatrian concert
hall on November 2 within the frameworks of the first International
Music Festival held in Yerevan.

The orchestra will perform the "Death" symphonic poem and the
Third Symphony by Haroutiun Dellalian, as well as the "Prelude"
and the Fourth Symphony by Brahms conducted by Emilio Pomarico,
a world-famous conductor.

According to the information provided by Emilio Pomarico at the
November 1 press conference, for the first time he became acquainted
with the works of Haroutiun Dellalian due to the daughter of the
composer. "I was very excited by the music of Dellalian, which is
like poetry. I became to know the Armenian people through his works,"
the conductor said. Emilio Pomarico mentioned that it is the first
time that he is conducting the work of the Armenian composer, however,
it is not excluded that he will refer to the work of Tigran Mansurian
in the near future.

The Italian conductor also mentioned that composers are paid great
attention to in European countries. For that purpose considerable sums
are allocated to orchestras by the state budget so as they perform
the works of patriotic composers and spread their works throughout the
world. Emilio Pomarico believes that the Armenian orchestras as well
should pay attention to that fact and include more works by Armenian
composers in their repertoire.

Hard to forget: Debate over ADL stance unleashes painful memories

Hard to forget

Debate over ADL stance unleashes painful memories

By Penny Schwartz, Globe Correspondent | November 1, 2007

On a Monday evening last month, 90-year-old Kevork Norian and his
wife, Helen, left the comfort of their two-family home in Arlington
Heights, walked down the hill to Massachusetts Avenue and boarded the
MBTA bus to Arlington Town Hall to join the debate over whether their
town should maintain its connection with the No Place for Hate
program.

A few miles to the west, on the same evening, 58-year-old Rita
Goldberg drove from her Lexington home to Carey Memorial Hall in the
town’s center to address her town’s Board of Selectmen, which was
considering the same issue.

The lives of Norian and Goldberg, who do not know each other, each
have been touched by genocide, and so they both felt compelled to
attend the public hearings, speaking from deep emotional reservoirs
that stretch across generations.

Norian survived the Armenian genocide; Goldberg’s mother, Hilde, is a
Holocaust survivor. Hilde’s parents died in a Nazi concentration camp.

For Norian and Goldberg, the debate over No Place for Hate is personal
as well as political.

Both Arlington and Lexington have decided to pull out of the program
that advocates tolerance because of the program’s connection with the
Anti-Defamation League, which created it. Armenian-Americans and
others have argued that the ADL has not sufficiently recognized that
the killing of millions of Armenians during and after World War I was
a genocide committed by the Ottoman Turks.

Other local communities have also left the program as the national
leadership of the ADL prepares to consider the issue this week.

For Norian and Goldberg, the debates in their local communities
offered an opportunity to share their personal stories that shed light
on why this issue is such an emotional touchstone for Armenians and
Jews, who each look back on histories of suffering and fear.

Setting history straight

Sitting at his dining room table, Norian, who uses a hearing aid, said
he went to the meeting to bring out the truth about the Armenian
genocide. For him, the issue is not No Place for Hate but setting
history straight.

"If history is not accurate, then it is fiction," he said.

"When you are ailing and people deny it and say, ‘It’s a fabrication.
It is wrong,’ it hurts. . . . I wanted people to know the truth,"
Norian said.

He said that although the genocide is a central topic among his family
and friends, this is the first time he has told his story publicly.
"Nobody asked me," he said.

The story Norian tells is woven together from his family’s
decades-long struggle for survival and from historical records
recounted in books on the Armenian genocide he has read and reread and
which he brought to the Arlington selectmen’s meeting.

Born in Aintab, Turkey, in 1917, to an Armenian family, Norian was a
baby at the close of World War I when the widespread massacre of 1.5
million Armenians began.

Norian’s immediate family was initially exempt from deportation
because his father was forced to manufacture wartime clothing for the
Turkish military. During the political upheavals and turmoil that
dominated Turkey after the end of the war, and over the next decade,
Norian said, his family was subjected to harsh treatment and some,
including his grandparents, cousins, and several uncles, died either
>From brutal mistreatment or from cholera, the result of poor living
conditions.

"There are so many stories," Norian said, holding back tears.

Along with thousands of other Armenians, Norian’s family was forcibly
deported in 1924 to Syria, where Norian spent his youth. He met and
married his wife there, and three of their children were born in
Syria.

They joined some of her relatives in the United States in 1964,
settling in Arlington, where a fourth child was born, and where they
raised their families. Norian worked in several jobs, eventually
retiring in 1981 from a company where he supervised the production of
chemical instruments.

Coming to America changed his life, Norian said.

"When I came here I learned so many things. When you learn more and
more, it gives you more satisfaction," he said.

The move allowed him to escape to a place where he could be free and prosper.

"I told them [the Arlington selectmen] ‘Thank you, USA, for saving us
>From hell,’ " Norian said.

Empowering

The experience of speaking out about the Armenian genocide is
incredibly important and empowering for survivors and their children,
said the Rev. Gregory V. Haroutunian, pastor of the First Armenian
Church in Belmont, which Norian and his wife attend.

Many people are not able to overcome the pain and horror to speak
publicly, as Norian did, Haroutunian said in a phone interview.

"It is literally unspeakable," he said.

"That the public would dignify this with a hearing and respond with
appropriate outrage, that is so important," Haroutunian said. "It
validates their suffering."

Advocate for tolerance

On an unseasonably warm day, Goldberg sat on her porch and said she
believes that the ADL should be pressured to recognize unequivocally
the Armenian genocide. But she came to the Lexington meeting to speak
against ending No Place for Hate, because she sees it as a unique
advocate for tolerance and a buffer against anti-Semitism.

"It seems very hasty," Goldberg said of the board’s decision to leave
the program, especially given that the national ADL will consider this
issue this week.

Goldberg, who teaches writing at Harvard, has lived with her husband,
Oliver Hart, in Lexington for nearly 25 years. Their two grown sons
attended public schools. She credits the regional ADL with having a
profound, positive impact on the town and its schools.

The call to recognize the Armenian genocide resonates powerfully with
Goldberg, who learned about the massacres at an early age from her
parents.

As a young girl, Goldberg’s mother fled her native Germany with her
parents in 1929. They settled in Amsterdam. Her mother’s best friend
was Margot Frank, the elder sister of Anne Frank, whose published
diary exposed the world to the horrors of the Nazis from the point of
view of a young girl.

As a teenager, Hilde Goldberg went into hiding and was separated from
her parents, who were later killed by the Nazis in the Auschwitz
concentration camp.

In 1945, she volunteered with the British Red Cross to help with
displaced orphans at the former Bergen-Belsen concentration camp. It
was there that she met her future husband, who had volunteered to work
as a medic at the displaced persons camp. Hilde, Oliver, and Rita, who
was only 2, came to the United States in 1950.

Goldberg was exposed to her family’s history, and the horrors of the
Holocaust, from an early age. Unlike Norian, whose personal family
history has remained largely private, Goldberg’s mother’s history is
part of the archival records at the US Holocaust Museum and has been
featured in a documentary film. Goldberg herself has written a family
memoir, not yet published.

"My background has been completely dominated by that and I have
complete sympathy with the Armenians," Goldberg said, recalling that
one of her closest childhood friends in New Jersey was an
Armenian-American whose family held strong nationalist beliefs.

"I was totally outraged by the attitude of the ADL, but it is not the
whole issue," Goldberg said in explaining why she urged the town not
to cut its ties with the No Place for Hate program.

Goldberg said that she is concerned with a certain amount of prejudice
and anti-Semitism embedded in the emotional rhetoric expressed in
letters to local newspapers by some supporters of severing ties with
the ADL.

"It pits two groups, each with a Holocaust, against each other," she
said. "Groups which should be united always."

‘We are all better for this’

Haroutunian said he was excited about the way the Jewish community has
responded to the public debate and pleased that the local ADL has
recognized the Armenian genocide. He is disappointed that the national
ADL has not been as clear-cut in its support of recognition. The
pastor said he is encouraged by cooperation between Armenian and
Jewish Americans over issues such as the genocide in Darfur.

Meanwhile, Scott Martin Kosofsky of Lexington, a historian of American
Judaism, said the local debates over the Armenian genocide and the ADL
position on it have served as community adult education at the highest
and deepest level.

"We are all better for this," he said. "It is seldom the case that big
issues such as this affect us in our daily lives."

(c) Copyright 2007 The New York Times Company

Source: icles/2007/11/01/hard_to_forget/

http://www.boston.com/news/local/massachusetts/art

No Increase Of Budget Allocations To The Public TV And Radio Company

NO INCREASE OF BUDGET ALLOCATIONS TO THE PUBLIC TV AND RADIO COMPANY ENVISAGED

armradio.am
31.10.2007 18:10

State budget 2008 does not envisage increase of financing for the
Public Television and Radio Company of Armenia. In 2007 the Company
will receive 138 million AMD from the state budget, and revenues
equal to 425 million AMD are expected from commercials, according to
the President of the Coucil of Public Television and Radio Company
of Armenia Alexan Harutyunyan.

Although the budget revenues are not going to increase, in 2008
the Public TV will start accomplishing a number of television film
projects. For this purpose 33 million AMD will be provided to the
"Yerevan" Film Studio from the state budget. However, the main
expenses will be covered by commercial revenues and allocations from
foreign partners.

"Starting January 1st the network of satellite broadcasting of the
Public Television will change completely. In particular, the Latin
American serials will be replaced by programs our compatriots from
the Diaspora are interested in," Alexan Harutyunyan said.

Next year the Public TV will start shooting "Sardarapat" film,
which will be concluded in 2009. The film will be dedicated to the
90th anniversary of the battle. It is going to be shot jointly by
French and Russian colleagues, and it can have great success in the
European, as well as the American cinema market. The film is of great
patriotic importance.

Why Do Teachers Give Higher Marks?

WHY DO TEACHERS GIVE HIGHER MARKS?

KarabakhOpen
31-10-2007 19:16:50

The marks of the General Certificate of Education were not important to
admittance to universities a few years ago. Now these marks matter, and
if some students work hard to get higher marks, others hire coaches,
yet there are others who use their parent’s connections.

According to the department of education of the City Hall of
Stepanakert, at the end of the academic year of 2006-2007 the ministry
of education held a test at high schools, and the marks suggested that
the marks their teachers give them are exaggerated. For instance,
of 171 A grade students only 5 got an excellent mark, and 26 got a
good mark. 44.4 percent got an unsatisfactory mark.

On the whole, 82 percent of marks of the test did not coincide with
the marks given by teachers.

In 2008 Monthly Wage Of Teachers Will Rise To 89thousand Drams

IN 2008 MONTHLY WAGE OF TEACHERS WILL RISE TO 89 THOUSAND DRAMS

Lragir
Oct 31 2007
Armenia

In 2008 the monthly wage of teachers will go up to 89 thousand drams,
said the deputy minister of finance and economy Pavel Safaryan
during the discussion of the budget bill. The salary rises by about
21 percent, he said.

At the same time, the deputy minister said from 2008 the monthly
wage of the administrative staff of schools will be raised from 60
thousand to 136 thousand drams, as well as the monthly wage of the
technical staff will rise by 10 percent and total 25.4 thousand drams.

The salaries of the staff of special schools will also rise,
Safaryan said. According to the deputy minister, the monthly wage
of the teachers of special schools will go up from 57.8 thousand to
89.6 thousand drams from 2008, the administrative staff’s monthly
wage will rise from 60.9 thousand to 135.6 thousand, the technical
staff’s will rise from 25 thousand to 26.7 thousand.

Teachers’ Salaries To Reach 90 Thousand Dram

TEACHERS’ SALARIES TO REACH 90 THOUSAND DRAM

Panorama.am
31/10/2007

It is foreseen in the 2008 budget that 103.7 billion dram will be
set aside for education, an increase by 17 billion dram over last
year’s amount. This was revealed by Finance and Economy Vice-Minister
Bavel Safaryan during discussions in Parliament. In his words, this
amount is 2.95% of the year’s national budget, as opposed to last
year’s 2.8%. Safaryan said this increase is part of the 2008-2010
social program.

The Vice-Minister also added that the average teacher salary would be
89.6 thousand dram, as opposed to the current 56.3 thousand dram. The
salaries of administrative personnel are to increase more than twofold,
to 136 thousand dram, compared to the current 60 thousand dram. The
salaries of service personnel will increase to 25.4 thousand dram,
a 10% increase.

As to financing science in Armenia, 6.8 billion dram has been
allocated, compared to this year’s 5.9 billion dram. This amounts to
.25% of the national budget. Safaryan said that this increase will
be used to increase salaries, as the current 38 thousand dram becomes
50 thousand dram. Those with doctorates will also receive increases,
as well as doctoral candidates.

We note that the permanent committee of the National Assembly will
begin discussions on November 2. Before November 6, deputies and
committee members must present their suggestions to the National
Assembly, after which they will be sent to the government.

Republican Party Does Not Need To Remind The Former Ruling In Armeni

REPUBLICAN PARTY DOES NOT NEED TO REMIND THE FORMER RULING IN ARMENIA REGIME OF SOMETHING, IT RECALLED ITSELF WITH A RALLY ON 26 OCTOBER, THE RPA VICE-CHAIRMAN THINKS

arminfo
2007-10-30 16:24:00

ArmInfo. Republican party of Armenia does not need to remind the former
ruling in Armenia regime, headed by the first Armenian president,
of something, as he himself recalled negative recollections by the
rally on 26 October, in Yerevan, the RPA vice-chairman, deputy Galust
Sahakyan said at Pastarq today.

When commenting on Levon Ter-Petrosyan’s blaming the present
administration, in particular the RPA leader, Prime Minister Serzh
Sarkisyan, Galust Sahakyan said that one should present specific
and constructive programmes at the meeting but not blame somebody
of something. RPA has never blamed somebody and is not going to
do that. As for Ter-Petrosyan blaming the RPA leader, the RPA and
the people will reply to that over the election campaign and the
presidential election, when they will assess the work implemented by
any political force, Sahakyan emphasized.

Asked if the RPA will change its tactics because of Levon
Ter-Petrosyan’s running for president, Sahakyan replied that there is
difference for the RPA candidate for president to compete with three
or ten candidates. For this reason, the tactics will fluctuate. But
one should not expect for any cardinal changing of the tactics,
Sahakyan said. He also disproved the rumours massaged in local mass
media that, – Sahakyan said.

How Will Turkish Turmoil End?

HOW WILL TURKISH TURMOIL END?
By Richard R. Nelken

Sun-Sentinel.com, FL
Oct 29 2007

The situation concerning the Ottoman Turkish genocide of the Armenian
people during the first World War is sad. Germany takes responsibility
for the Holocaust and they are now our friends. Turkey not only denies
the genocide, but now also threatens us.

Aram Khachaturian, a Russian composer of Armenian heritage, spoke
out when the Soviets permitted him to about the terrible slaughter
of innocent Armenian men, women and children.

William Saroyan, who wrote the story Human Comedy, was the son of
Armenian parents who immigrated to the United States. He never ceased
to bring attention to the horrible tragedy of the Armenian massacre.

Franz Werfel , a German/Jewish writer who wrote Jakobowsky and the
Colonel and the story of The Song of Benadette,made a detailed study
of the genocide which resulted in the earth-shattering indictment in
the book Forty Days of Musa Dagh.

This writer, who spent 14 years in Israel, met a number of elders
who remembered the cruelty of Turks when they held the Mandate for
Palestine. So, now here we are, a resolution in both houses of Congress
has almost brought about a severe crisis relating to our relationship
with Turkey. Turkey has good economic relations with Israel.

Could this possible rift affect our relations with Israel? Could this
effect the supplies to our troops in Iraq, 70 percent of which goes
through Turkey? Will Turkey attack the Kurds using the excuse Kurdish
rebels attacked Turkish soldiers? Is this Congressional resolution
morally correct? Yes! Is this resolution wise? Who knows? Life is
so complicated.

Richard R. Nelken is a resident of Boca Raton.

fl-forun29turksnboct29,0,6628752.story

http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/opinion/s