Event making 4th ann. of France acknowledgement of Armenian Genocide

EVENT MARKING 4TH ANNIVERSARY OF FRANCE ACKNOWLEDGEMENT OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE HELD IN MARSEILLES

PanArmenian News
Feb 17 2005

17.02.2005 16:43

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The Marseilles-based structure of the Coordination
Council has organized an event in the city Culture Center, devoted to
the 4-th anniversary of France acknowledging the Armenian Genocide.
Addressing the measure Council Chairman Jacques Tonapetian noted:
“Today when the entire world gathers in Osventsim to say a resolute
“Never again!”, the law passed by France is the only thing we can
devote to the memory of our innocent victims.” The event participants
noted that “Turkey’s possible accession to the EU will become a
political decease for Europe” and that “Turkey should stop denying
the tragedy.”

Northern Cyprus aid

Washington Times, DC
Feb 17 2005

Embassy Row

Northern Cyprus aid

Americans of Greek and Armenian heritage are trying to block the Bush
administration from sending a business delegation to Northern Cyprus
to reward ethnic Turks for supporting a U.N. plan to reunify the
island.

Greek-Cypriot voters upset Washington as well as the European Union
by rejecting the plan last year, while the isolated residents of the
Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus (TRNC) strongly supported the
measure proposed by United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan.

The TRNC is recognized only by Turkey, while the Greek-Cypriot
administration is the internationally recognized government of
Cyprus. The Greek-Cypriot side was admitted last year to the European
Union.

Aram Hamparian, executive director of the Armenian National Committee
of America, denounced the planned visit to Northern Cyprus by U.S.
business executives.

The United States also announced a $30.5 million aid package to
Northern Cyprus, while the European Unions is discussing opening
direct flights and ending the isolation of the TRNC.

Mr. Hamparian, in a memo to his organization, complained that the
Bush administration’s moves would amount to a “legitimization of the
[Turkish] occupation forces.” He added that he was responding to
alarm raised by Greek-American organizations that had contacted him.

Turkey moved troops into Northern Cyprus in 1974 after clashes
between the two ethnic communities. Greek-Cypriots call the troops
occupiers, while Turkish-Cypriots see them as a protection force.

Armenians have their own problems with Turkey, which they denounce
for refusing to recognize claims of genocide against Armenians in
1915. Turks say the modern Turkish state has no responsibility for
actions committed under the Ottoman Empire.

In Cyprus last week, U.S. Ambassador Michael Klosson announced the
aid package, saying the money will help close the “economic gap”
between the wealthier Greek-Cypriots and their poorer Turkish
neighbors.

“We also plan to focus significant attention on improving the
banking, financial, regulatory and other realities businesses face,”
Mr. Klosson said. “We plan to work with the banks and business
community to help ensure that credit is readily available to small
and medium Turkish-Cypriot businesses.”

Cypriot President Tassos Papadopoulos summoned Mr. Klosson to protest
the U.S. plans.

Mr. Klosson said later that Mr. Papadopoulos threatened “to boycott
American products and exclude U.S. companies from public tenders” on
the Greek-Cypriot side of the island.

Japan’s Shimizu To Launch Warming Gas Emission Rights Business InArm

JAPAN’S SHIMIZU TO LAUNCH WARMING GAS EMISSION RIGHTS BUSINESS IN ARMENIA

Asia Pulse
Feb 16, 2005

TOKYO, Feb 16 Asia Pulse – Shimizu Corp. (TSE:1803) intends to team up
with Mitsui & Co. (TSE:8031) and Hokkaido Electric Power Co. (TSE:9509)
to start greenhouse gas emission rights business in Armenia.

The major construction company is hoping the joint operation will
be approved as a clean-development-mechanism (CDM) business, which
allows companies to gain emission rights in exchange for cooperating
in efforts to reduce emissions in developing countries. CDM is featured
in the Kyoto Protocol, which takes effect Wednesday.

If the project is approved as a CDM business, it will be the first
such operation in Armenia. The company expects to gain approval by
the middle of this year.

Under the plan, Shimizu will build a power generation plant to produce
electricity from methane gas piped in from a waste material disposal
site. The firm intends to spend about 800 million yen on the project.

Shimizu expects the facility to eliminate about 135,000 tons of
carbon dioxide a year, which will enable the company to acquire
emission rights.

U.S. Helps Land of Noah’s Ark Steer Toward Future

State Magazine (U.S. Dept. of State)
Feb 2005
page 11-15

P O S T O F T H E M O N T H
By Kimberly Hargan

YEREVAN
U.S. Helps Land of Noah’s Ark Steer Toward Future

Armenia is a young country in an ancient land. The Republic of
Armenia has been independent in its present form only since the
dissolution of the Soviet Union in December 1991.

But the earliest mention of the region dates to the 13th century
B.C., in Assyrian descriptions of the kingdom of Urartu, which was
succeeded by the kingdom of Armenia in the 6th century B.C. The
biblical book of Genesis refers to Noah’s landing on Mt. Ararat,
visible directly to the south of the capital, Yerevan. (As a result
of the shifting sands of history, Mt. Ararat, located near the center
of the ancient Armenian kingdom, is now just across the border in
Turkey.)

Archaeological evidence indicates there were settlements in the
area of Yerevan from the 6th to the 3rd millennium B.C. The name
Yerevan derives from a fortress settlement, Erebuni, established in
783 B.C. The ruins of Erebuni can still be seen on a hilltop in the
city. In 301 A.D., King Trdat (Tiridates) III was converted to
Christianity by St. Gregory the Illuminator and decreed that his
kingdom would follow suit, making Armenia Armenia the world’s first
Christian nation. Around 400, Bishop Mesrop Mashtots devised an
alphabet for the Armenian language for his translation of the Bible.
The resulting literary and religious traditions have remained at
the core of Armenian identity.

Current U.S. involvement in Armenia got started in 1988 with relief
efforts following a terrible earthquake. After independence, the
country lost most of its Soviet industrial base and economic
connections. It also faced the closure of its borders to the east
(with Azerbaijan) and west (withTurkey) as a result of the conflict
in Nagorno-Karabakh. In those years, most buildings were without
central heating or electricity, so trees were cut down and a
spiderweb of overhead electrical lines grew as Armenians borrowed
electricity where they could find it.

While the first years of U.S. assistance concentrated on humanitarian
needs, it’s now aimed at development. Armenia was once considered the
Silicon Valley of the Soviet Union, providing advanced avionics for
Soviet aircraft and supercomputers. Literacy is nearly 100 percent,
reflecting the high priority placed on education. But the Armenian
economy collapsed. Recent annual growth rates from 8 to 12 percent a
year should allow the gross domestic
product this year to return to its 1991 level.

A unique factor in the U.S.-Armenian relationship is the
Armenian-American diaspora, which consists of several generations of
Armenians who fled from troubles in this corner of the world and now
call the United States home. Earlier immigrants settled around
Fresno, Calif.; Boston and Detroit. Many of the post-Soviet
immigrants have created a Little Armenia in Glendale, Calif., a
suburb of Los Angeles.

With their penchant for business, they have adapted well to life in
America, including politics. They lobby Congress enthusiastically on
behalf of their homeland. So the embassy works not only with
audiences in Armenia, but with an American “constituency” with
considerable interest in U.S. policy and actions in Armenia.

The U.S. Mission focuses on improving regional security
and stability, fostering the development of democratic institutions
and encouraging broad-based and sustainable economic
growth. State’s non-proliferation and border security
program office helps prevent the movement of materials for
weapons of mass destruction. The Bureau of International
Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs works with
Armenian authorities to combat transportation of narcotics,
money laundering and trafficking in persons. The
U.S. Agency for International Development works on
democracy and social reform, public health, economic
restructuring and energy. The Department of Defense handles
military-to-military relations and some humanitarian
assistance. The Department of Agriculture has introduced
an American-style extension service and created a marketing
assistance program. Treasury assists and trains government
officials in modern methods of budgeting and financial
control. More than 90 Peace Corps volunteers teach
English, advise small and medium enterprises, and develop
environmental awareness.

A new chancery
overlooking Lake
Yerevan, with a beautiful
view of Mt. Ararat,
is being completed.
There is no clearer
demonstration of U.S.
long-term commitment
than this state-of-theart
facility.

The staff required to manage all these programs has grown
tremendously over the last decade. The embassy building, the
former Communist Youth League headquarters, is overcrowded.
Located on a major thoroughfare, it doesn’t meet
current security or earthquake safety standards, crucial in this
seismically active zone. A new chancery overlooking Lake
Yerevan, with a beautiful view of Mt. Ararat, is being completed.
The move is scheduled for early April. There is no
clearer demonstration of U.S. long-term commitment than
this state-of-the-art facility.

Yerevan continues to be a hardship posting. Public buildings
are often minimally heated during winter, if at all.
Visitors to schools and offices will see students or staff bundled
up in thick coats, scarves and hats. Most imports come
overland through Georgia or Iran, which makes for short
supplies, high prices and some petty corruption.
International flights to Yerevan involve long layovers and latenight
arrivals.

In spite of these difficulties, an assignment to Armenia can
be rewarding. The people are warm and hospitable, often
inviting foreigners to join them in family celebrations. The
culture is rich. Traditional music and dance flourish even in
the face of competition from MTV and other sources of
global influences. You can hunt for paintings, sculptures and
handwoven carpets in open-air markets. Classical music,
opera, ballet and jazz all thrive. As the economy improves,
restaurants, cafes and clubs in Yerevan expand. The mountainous
countryside is spectacular and churches,monasteries
and other monuments from prehistoric times onward are
sprinkled throughout the country.

In a country the size of Maryland, with a population of
around three and a quarter million, it’s easy to see changes
and meet the people who benefit directly from U.S. programs.
Armenians at all levels eagerly look to the United
States for support in moving from their Soviet past into the
community of modern democratic nations. ¦
The author is the public affairs officer in Yerevan.

AT A G L A N C E
SOURCE: CIA World Factbook 2004
Country name: Armenia
Capital: Yerevan
Government: Republic
Independence: September 21, 1991 (from the Soviet Union)
Population: 3.2 million
Languages: Armenian and Russian
Total area: 29,000 square kilometers
Approximate size: Slightly smaller than Maryland
Currency: Dram (AMD)
Per capita income: $3,500
Unemployment rate: 20%
Export commodities: Diamonds, minerals, food products and energy
Export partners: Belgium (18.2%), United Kingdom (16.8%) and Israel
(15.7%)
Literacy rate: 98.6%

–Boundary_(ID_9jxECNXiKVf1ZOj4oN49cg)–

A Short Conversation with Saul Williams

TheOG.net, CA
Feb 15 2005

A Short Conversation with Saul Williams

TheOG: How’s it going Saul, how are you man?

SW: Chillin’ man, how are you?

TheOG: Can’t complain about a damn thing. So I have some questions
for you, if you got some time to answer them.

SW: Yeah definitely.

TheOG: I’m sure you’ve been getting this question a lot, but I was
wondering if you could talk about some of the differences between
producing your own record, with Saul Williams, compared to working
with Rick Rubin, on Amethyst Rock Star?

SW: Okay, cool. So, umm, well, first of all, we should be clear,
like, the majority of the music for the Amethyst Rock Star album, I
wrote that stuff as well. Rick Rubin is a producer in the rock sense
of the word – a rock producer doesn’t write the music for the band,
the rock producer sits back and says “yo you should pull up the
guitars”, or “make the drums heavier”. That’s how Rick worked with me
on the first album, and part of the confusion with that first album
stemmed from that, because I came from the hip-hop world and I was
expecting, you know, if I paid Timbaland to produce an album for me,
he’s coming with beats, right? You know, and so it was a bit
different… because I, you know, the power of Rick, and the beauty
of him, is that he sits back and pretty much trusts that the artist
he works with can bring what they have to the table. He just helps
them perfect that. So that’s how it is with that, but with this, the
Saul Williams album, the big difference was that I went into it not
expecting any body else to make anything for me…

TheOG: You knew you were going to do it all yourself.

SW: Yeah, I was clear on that. And I knew that I couldn’t really look
to anyone to make anything close to what I wanted to hear. So I had
to do it myself, because I had this music that I’m hearing in my
head, and these cats are coming to me with tracks that sound like
other people’s tracks, other people’s sounds, I was like nah I want
to hear something else. So I had to do it, in order to get those
voices and songs out of my head. It was a very fun process, it was
also dope because, at the time, I mean, I say it was dope but… I
wasn’t attached to any label, I had gotten off Rick Rubin’s label
before I created this album. And so, I created it in an environment
of pure freedom, at home. The only thing that wasn’t free was, like,
the rent, you know? I got to do it without anybody looking over my
shoulder.

TheOG: Do you feel, since the onus was on you, does that have
something to do with why you ended up making your album self-titled?

SW: Uhh, part of it, also because, I mean the real reason why the
album is self-titled is because when me and my peeps sat back trying
to think of the strongest title for an album, we realized that, like,
there’s nothing more powerful than putting your name on that shit.
Like put yourself out there, and back the fuck up, you know?

TheOG: Like, this is me, here I am?

SW: Yup.

TheOG: That’s dope. But you know, as an artist you’ve never been
confined to one medium. You broke out in ’98 with Slam, you’ve worked
with film, written and spoken words, music production, but, what
medium do you really feel the closest to?

SW: Well, I’d have to say, the true line through all of my shit is
hip-hop. So instead of saying what art form I feel closest to, I
could say that I feel closest to hip-hop culture. Whether it’s
expressing itself through film, through music, through dance, what
have you, that’s what I feel connected to. That’s the defining
element of my voice, and of our generation – it’s hip-hop, you know?
So that, growing up, there were lots of kids who were graff writers
that could also MC, that could also break, you know? That’s what I
come from. The fact that I write a little, and act a little, and do
all these things, that’s just a representation of hip-hop culture.

TheOG: In terms of people you’ve been working with and artists you’ve
been collaborating with, I know you worked with KRS-One in the past,
and on Saul Williams you worked with Serj Tankian from System of a
Down and Zach de la Rocha from Rage Against the Machine? How did you
end up working with those cats?

SW: Well both of those cats – I live in LA, and both of those cats
are friends of mine. So, I came about working with them just because
they were around and because I really respect their work. You know
it’s funny, there’s a lot of ghetto cats that love System of a Down,
just because they can feel how hard that music is. And that’s
partially because the Armenian cause is closely aligned with the
African-American cause, the cause of oppressed people across the
world, and that when they sing from the roots of their oppression,
people relate to that. That’s why their music is so hard. I just
always feel System of a Down’s work, and Zach’s work with Rage
Against the Machine also. You know Zach is Puerto Rican, and Tom
Morello is the nephew of Jomo Kenyatta. Umm, these cats are all very
closely related to the cause and what have you, and so I’ve just
always felt what they’ve done, and for the opportunity to work with
them… and also, I wanted to do something a little different, you
know I didn’t want to go the regular route of, you know, I got Busta
Rhymes on this song [laughter], I wanted to do something different.

TheOG: Yeah true. Now didn’t Serj write, didn’t he compose “Talk To
Strangers”, the opening track?

SW: Yeah the music for it. That’s him on the piano.

TheOG: Damn, I have to say that….

SW: And the crazy thing was that he just did that for me out of the
blue. One day he was like “Saul I wrote a song for you on piano, I
don’t know how you’re going to feel about it but I just wrote this
for you, and you know it’s for you to do whatever you want with it.”
Isn’t that crazy?

TheOG: Man, that’s got to be a flattering feeling, to have someone
straight up write a song for you.

SW: Yeah, like wow!

TheOG: You know, I gotta say that that song is probably the most
powerful fusion of music and spoken words that I’ve ever heard. When
I first put the album on, and that track came on, I was just… I
couldn’t get past it! It ended, and I was like “rewind, rewind”.

SW: I have the same thing for it, because I was really looking for an
opening track, you know, and I wanted an opening that would put
everything into context. People would see that this is where I’m
from, but I don’t think like this, and yeah I was raised in these
sorts of surroundings but I don’t surround myself with this. I just
really wanted it to touch on so many truths, and I felt blessed
because the lyrics came the way they did. And that was of course
inspired by the music, so it was just really wonderful.

TheOG: Yeah man, I’m with you. In terms of, like, you know, critics
and people in this world, like me, that end up writing about music
and about the things that other people create, you know, the word
fusion has come up a lot in trying to describe your work and the
music you create. I just wanted to know, how do you feel about that?
If you had to describe your music, is that what you see yourself
trying to do? Do you see yourself trying to bring together different
genres and different forms?

SW: Well, if I were to really look at my work then I would say I’m
trying to bring together different people, you know? That’s the goal
of the book, the goal of the book is not to fuse a genre, but if I
can get two people who would think that they would not like each
other, to nod their heads to the same song, and for that song to make
them think, and grow, and encourage them. Let’s say those two people
are a Palestinian and an Israeli, you know, or a ghetto kid and a
suburban kid, and to get those kids, not just nodding their heads
because the beat is tight, but nodding their heads because they agree
with what’s being said and they realize that the underlying theme of
humanity is love. You know, that’s the point of my music, the idea is
to breed consciousness. That’s the point of what I do. It has little
to do with like, yo I’m a make this so that punk rock kids and
hip-hop kids can both feel it, you know like that’s there, that’s in
the music, but that’s just me, you know? That’s how I was raised. I
was raised in an all-black, you know a very black community, but was
picked on because I spoke what they said was proper, you know, and so
they were like “Damn kid you kinda talk white!”, they would say. But
at the same time, everything that would come out of my mouth would be
something that I read in some Malcolm X book or something, so I was
the most militant kid, that seemed to talk white, but I was also
literally the darkest kid in the community! It was a fusion of shit,
you know? It was a fusion of realities that were impressed upon me as
a kid, and so my artistic expression reflects that fusion, yet now
it’s pointed towards the goal of fusing humanities, of fusing
consciousness, that’s the point of all this. To get people on the
same page. To get people realizing that we are human first, not
American first, to get men realizing the importance of women, you
know, just all of these things. There is so much growth that we need
to do before we can transition into the society that we want to live
in. The point of my music is that.

TheOG: That’s dope man, that’s real dope. I got two more for you,
one: the state of music in the world today? Do you feel optimistic,
do you feel pessimistic, I mean, how do you feel about where
we’re….

SW: Optimistic man! I feel optimistic. You know, like, I swear
hip-hop has taken a turn for the better. Like, what, the most
commercial release right now is, what, The Game album right?

TheOG: Yup.

SW: And…. that shit is dope!

TheOG: Yeah man! That “Documentary” track on there…

SW: It’s all about “Dreams” man. That [singing] “Martin Luther King
had a dream!” That shit!!!!!!

TheOG: Yeah!

SW: Yeah but the “Documentary”, where he throws all the names of the
classics out…

TheOG: Word, that’s all I am!

SW: All I ask is that the cats who take the spotlight, earn it. And
you don’t earn it by shooting or getting shot, you earn it by doing
your homework, and realizing the power of what you say. And I feel
like that’s what I’m getting from this dude. You know, The Game, I’m
like, okay, that’s alright, I hope it goes platinum! Double time! You
know, like, that’s the type of shit, it’s like it’s right, so like
yeah, I think shit is happening right now. And I hope that inspires a
lot of these young kids, you know, from whoever, from Lil Wayne on
down. To look at that and be like, okay, maybe we need to do some
homework and not just talk about the amount of money we’re making.
It’s all about the connections between what we’re doing and what’s
already been done, you know? And not just what’s already been done in
hip-hop, but, you know who the original MC in the Black community
was, the minister! You know? And the street version of that was the
pimp. Like there’s just a whole, there’s a whole long line of history
that we have to connect our work to, or else we won’t be doing our
job. Or else we’ll be confusing kids, and making people think that
money is God, that money is power, and that is corruption.

TheOG: Speaking of young people, I’m affiliated with a group of young
aspiring spoken word artists who are incarcerated at a youth
detention facility in California, and man they would love it if you
could give them some wisdom.

SW: Well, my belief is that good writing is reflective of good
reading, first of all. Now, for a lot of people, there’s a lot of
variance about what is good reading. Some people think that good
reading means that means you’re supposed to read, you know, the
Autobiography of Malcolm X, and, you know, some non-fiction books
about the state of society, and blah blah blah. Now that’s good
reading, but poetry is an aesthetic art form. Poetry is very much
about aesthetics, aesthetics is about beauty, and enhancing the sense
of truth and beauty, so that we have to study beauty if we are going
to write beautiful poetry. So we have to find some flowery writing,
we have to find not only the politics but we have to find beautiful
ways of saying what we mean, and meaningful ways of saying what we
feel. That also is learned truth. So I would say, umm, I personally
would make lot’s of trips to second hand book stores, and find odd
books that just fall off the shelves in the fiction zone, in the
science fiction zone, in the poetry zone, and all those different
sections, and read them! I would expose myself to as much amazing
literature as possible, enter in to conversations about books that
have moved me, find books that move me. I read a lot of books that
move me because they teach me how to write stuff that is moving! It’s
very much about what you read, which is to say it’s very much about
your diet, because what you read is what you ingest, so it’s also
about what you watch. If you watch a lot of bullshit and listen to a
lot of bullshit, you’re going to write a bunch of bullshit because if
that’s what you’re digesting, that’s what will come out of you! You
have to be mindful about what you put into your body, not just your
food, but what you read, what you listen to.

TheOG: Truly man. Well, that about wraps it up for me, thank you so
much for taking the time to share your thoughts with us, I’m really
glad we got the chance.

SW: No problem man, thank you.

TheOG: Alright, peace!

Credit: G-Rice Exclusively for theOG.net
Special thanks to Saul Williams

Patriarch Receives Argentine Ambassador

PATRIARCH RECEIVES ARGENTINE AMBASSADOR

ISTANBUL (Lraper Bulletin – 11/02/2005) – His Beatitude Mesrob II,
Armenian Patriarch of Istanbul and All Turkey, received on 10 February
2005, Thursday afternoon, His Excellency Sebastian L. Brugo Marco,
Ambassador of Argentina in Ankara.

During the cordial meeting, which lasted about an hour, the Patriarch
and the Ambassador exchanged information about the Armenian communities
in Turkey and Argentina. Ambassador Marco related that there are quite
a number of prominent Armenians in the higher echelons of public life,
including the army, commercial and cultural life in Argentina. He also
noted that he had served in Turkey thirty years ago as a diplomat and
had made a personal acquaintance with Patriarch Shnorhk of blessed
memory (1961-1991), who had later visited the Armenian community in
Argentina. The Ambassador then concerned himself about the Armenian
community and its problems today, and what the Patriarchal See thought
about the accession of Turkey into the European Union and also the
the tragic events ninety years ago.

Patriarch Mesrob replied that compared to the Armenian community of
thirty years ago, today’s community numbers less, that is to say,
from about 60,000 to 70,000 souls, who are more assimilated into
Turkish society. About one-third of the community speaks Armenian
today, and only about one of every thirty people reads a local
Armenian paper. For the community to preserve its heritage, faith
and culture, it is of vital importance that facilities are created
for the training of priests for the churches, and teachers of Armenian
language and religious education for the Armenian minority schools. The
foundations that belong to the community should also enjoy equal
opportunity with the Muslim and secular foundations in order for the
churches, schools, the Armenian hospital, the associations and other
community organisations to be provided with the necessary financial
assistance. For all of this to be realised, the Patriarch said that
it is necessary that the laws, regulations and directoria governing
the life of the minorities in Turkey be upgraded. “This is one of
the reasons why the Patriarchal See considers it important that
Turkey becomes an EU member” Patriarch Mesrob said. “No one with a
conscience can deny what occurred ninety years ago,” continued the
Patriarch, “However, Turks and Armenians must find a way to reconcile
and to live side by side peacefully as neighbours. There is no other
alternative. To block the future of young people on both sides would
be another historic mistake!” he concluded.

Thanking the Patriarch for the open exchange of views, the Ambassador
signed the book of honour and took leave of the Patriarch, with hopes
of meeting again in the near future.

Argentine Foreign Minister His Excellency Rafael Bielsa is expected
to pay an official visit to Turkey at the end of March 2005.

ARKA News Agency – 02/08/2005

ARKA News Agency
Feb 8 2005

RA Foreign Minister is ready to start negotiations with his Azeri
colleague at any convenient case

Armenian-Iranian relations are not directed against Azerbaijan – IRI
Ambassador to AR

E-Armenia Foundation starts 2nd stage of Armenia Development Gateway
program

Presentation of a book “History, Activity and Prospects of OSCE” to
take place in Yerevan on February 9

*********************************************************************

RA FOREIGN MINISTER IS READY TO START NEGOTIATIONS WITH HIS AZERI
COLLEAGUE AT ANY CONVENIENT CASE

YEREVAN, February 8. /ARKA/. RA Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanian met
in Yerevan with OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairman Yuri Merzlyako (Russia)
and Bernard Fasye (France) and Assistant of Steven Mann (USA)
Elizabeth Ruid, RA MFA told ARKA. The parties discussed
organizational issues and exchanged views on possibility of
organization of the meeting of foreign ministers in Prague format.
Oskanian expressed readiness to start negotiations with his Azeri
colleague at any convenient case.
Note according to statements of Azeri mass media, regular Prague
meeting of RA and AR foreign ministers is scheduled for March 2. L.D.
–0–

*********************************************************************

ARMENIAN-IRANIAN RELATIONS ARE NOT DIRECTED AGAINST AZERBAIJAN – IRI
AMBASSADOR TO AR

YEREVAN, February 8. /ARKA/. Armenian-Iranian relations are not
directed against Azerbaijan, according to Trend News Agency it was
stated today by Iranian Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary
to Iran Afshar Suleimani. According to him, Azerbaijan is “the
closest neighbor and friend” for Iran. “Our relations are much closer
that Iranian-Armenian and it is related to common history, culture
and religion”. Iranian part has always tried that Iranian-Armenian
relations did not negatively affect Iranian-Azeri relations, the
diplomat stated.
Talking about the visit of the Chairman of Security Council of
Armenia Serge Sargsian in Iran, he stated that it has the character
of discussions of cooperation and cannot make any damage to
Azerbaijan. L.D. –0

*********************************************************************

E-ARMENIA FOUNDATION STARTS 2ND STAGE OF ARMENIA DEVELOPMENT GATEWAY
PROGRAM

YEREVAN, February 8. /ARKA/. E-Armenia Foundation started 2nd stage
of Armenia Development Gateway program, foundation told ARKA. Give
stage is financed by Development Gateway Foundation. Priorities of
first six-months period of present stage of the program are
development of content part of the portal (communities webguide,
education center) and of functional opportunities as well as
initiative of electronic development, namely localization of DG
market structure: in Armenian and issue of BIT@E
() magazine in Russian and English. The goal of
the program is to assist to electronic development and to represent
potential of Armenia in the field of IT. At this stage staff members
will cooperate with beneficiaries of the program including
representatives of communities (divisions State, Society,
International, Privatization, IT and Diaspora). Personnel will
cooperate will all interested structures for expanding of
beneficiaries’ network and provision of the full information on
opportunities of Armenian development.
E-Armenia Foundation realized Armenian Development Gateway program in
Armenia.
Note issue of BIT@E IT bulletin is made together by ARKA News Agency
and E-Armenia Foundation. L.D. –0–

*********************************************************************

PRESENTATION OF A BOOK “HISTORY, ACTIVITY AND PROSPECTS OF OSCE” TO
TAKE PLACE IN YEREVAN ON FEBRUARY 9

YEREVAN, February 8. /ARKA/. Presentation of a book “History,
Activity and Prospects of OSCE” will take place in Yerevan on
February 9. The book was published at the initiative of OSCE and is
devoted to the 5th anniversary of OSCE activity in Armenia.
RA Minister of Foreign Affairs Vartan Oskanian, representatives of
diplomatic organizations, administration of Universities as well as
students will participate in the grand presentation of the book. A.H.
-0–

*********************************************************************

www.dgmarket.com
www.bite.gateway.am

event: Iran and the Caucasus, CSIS, February 14, 2005

Iran and the Caucasus

Alex Vatanka
Jane’s Information Group

Richard Giragosian
Abt Associates, Inc.

Russia and Eurasia Program
Caucasus Initiative

Monday, February 14, 2005
2:00-4:00 p.m.
B1-C Conference Room

Despite the renewed focus on Iran in recent months, there has been little
attention devoted to the Iranian bid for regional influence in the South
Caucasus. Although not as threatening as the proliferation issue nor as
problematic as Iran’s relationship with Russia, there has been a significant
and steady drive by the Iranian regime for greater influence among its
northern neighbors Azerbaijan and Armenia. This trend, as well as the recent
visit to Tehran by Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and the launch of the
long delayed Iran-Armenia natural gas pipeline, will be discussed by two
prominent analysts. The engagement by the Bush Administration and the
European Union to manage the Iranian challenge and the implications for
security in the Caucasus will also be examined.

Alex Vatanka is an editor and analyst with the Jane’s Information Group in
London, overseeing “Jane’s Sentinel Russia and CIS Security Assessment”
series, and is Jane’s resident expert on Iran. Responsible for monitoring
and identifying significant developments in international security, Vatanka
regularly authors articles on international affairs issues for “Jane’s
Intelligence Review” and “Jane’s Defense Weekly” and is interviewed by
broadcast news media worldwide. His most recent publication was “Iran:
Brinkmanship,” in “The World Today,” a publication of the Royal Institute of
International Affairs.

Richard Giragosian, a Washington-based analyst with Abt Associates, Inc., is
a regular contributor to Jane’s Information Group as well as other
publications including Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty (RFE/RL). He has
also published articles in The Journal of Slavic Military Studies,
Transitions Online, the Asia Times Online and the Harvard International
Review, among others, and has contributed chapters to three books dealing
with the South Caucasus. He is also a guest lecturer for the U.S. Army’s
John F. Kennedy Special Warfare Center & School at Fort Bragg. For nine
years, Giragosian served as a Professional Staff Member of the Joint
Economic Committee of the U.S. Congress.

PLEASE RSVP TO ANASTASIA HANDY BY FEBRUARY 11:
EMAIL: [email protected], TEL: (202) 775-7322

Anastasia Handy
Research Assistant
Russia and Eurasia Program
Center for Strategic and International Studies
Phone: (202) 775-7322
Fax: (202) 775-3199

Feast of St. Blaise lights way to Christ

Telegraph Herald (Dubuque, IA)
February 4, 2005 Friday

Feast of St. Blaise lights way to Christ; Catholics accept the
blessing for protection from throat illnesses

MADELIN FUERSTE

Dubuque

Students at St. Joseph the Worker School gathered for a time-honored
Catholic tradition Thursday.

They celebrated the feast of St. Blaise with the annual blessing of
the throat.

To those who have never seen it done, crossing two unlit candles over
the throat is a curious sight.

“It is one of those things that Catholics do that non-Catholics don’t
do,” said the Rev. Mark Ressler, in his first year at St. Joseph the
Worker Catholic Church in Dubuque.

Students said this is a prayer service they look forward to.

“With all the colds and flu going around right now, and we even have
a couple of kids out today, it’s kind of important. It’s kind of
reassuring,” said eighth-grader Laura Davis.

St. Blaise Day is celebrated by Catholics worldwide.

Many of the students learned about St. Blaise by researching Catholic
history in class.

For eighth-graders in teacher Jane Northrup’s class, that meant
choosing a saint, learning about that person and writing a report.

“It was a creative way to learn about them,” said eighth-grader
Lauren Siegert.

Little is known about St. Blaise, who was Bishop Blaise of Sebaste in
Armenia in the 4th century. He lived at a time when Christians
endured great persecution. As the story goes, St. Blaise was warned
in a message from God to escape to the hills, and he took refuge in a
cave. He eventually was taken prisoner and returned to the governor.
On the way he encountered a boy choking on a fish bone and cured him.
Hence the tradition as it is practiced today.

The candles used in the service are blessed the day before during the
Feast of the Presentation of the Lord.

During Thursday’s prayer service, which was open to the public and
attended by St. Joseph’s first through eighth grades, Ressler said
the candles signified that “Christ is the light of the world.”

Those attending prayed for “protection from illness of the throat and
from colds, sore throats, flu and other sickness.”

The annual St. Blaise Day blessing of the throats was one of many
school activities taking place during Catholic Schools week, which
ends today.

GRAPHIC: Olivia Dodds, a second-grader at St. Joseph the Worker
School in Dubuque, has her throat blessed during a Mass on Thursday
celebrating the feast day of St. Blaise, the patron of throat
ailments.

Carnegie Prez Gregorian To Pay Tribute to Success of High Schools

Carnegie President Vartan Gregorian To Pay Tribute to
Success of High Schools

Hamilton County Schools Earn High Marks In ‘Schools
for a New Society’ Initiative

Business Wire
Thursday, February 3, 2005

CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. — Academic improvement in Hamilton County public
high schools will be recognized and celebrated Thursday during a
day-long visit by Carnegie Corp. of New York President Vartan
Gregorian.

Dr. Gregorian will be the featured speaker at a celebration at Red
Bank High School to document the improvement of Hamilton County high
schools following a mid-day speech to the downtown Rotary Club. The
event at Red Bank High, which features participation from area high
schools, begins at 3:30 p.m. As part of his visit on Thursday,
Dr. Gregorian will present a video on the “Schools for a New Society”
reform effort, which includes a segment on Hamilton County.

“Three years into the Schools for a New Society initiative, we are
seeing solid results and improvements in student achievement,
attendance, and attitude,” said Dr. Jesse Register, Hamilton County
Schools superintendent. “Hamilton County students know they will
receive personalized instruction and attention from educators and
others who believe in their future. We are proud of the chance to
showcase our achievements for the agency that gave us the financial
opportunity to see these things happen.”

The Hamilton County school system is one of only seven public school
systems nationwide chosen to participate in Schools for a New Society,
a high school reform program funded with an $8 million grant from the
Carnegie Corp. of New York. Awarded in 2001 for a five-year period,
the Carnegie grant funds innovative programs in 16 Hamilton County
high schools with the goal of raising academic achievement. The grant
was awarded to the Public Education Foundation on behalf of the
Hamilton County school system. The Public Education Foundation is
contributing $6 million in matching local funds.

Dr. Gregorian is beginning a tour of the seven school systems funded
by Schools for a New Society grants. Chattanooga was chosen as the
starting point for the tour because of the results the Hamilton County
schools have achieved through the grant, said Dan Challener, president
of the Public Education Foundation.

“Three years ago, Hamilton County competed against more than 20 other
school systems nationwide for these prestigious grants,” Challener
said. “We were chosen because of the broad-based input our reform plan
received from educators, students, parents, and business and community
leaders. Now, our community has demonstrated to the Carnegie Corp. why
we were a good choice. It is an honor for Chattanooga to be the site
of the first stop on Dr. Gregorian’s tour.”

President of the Carnegie Corp. of New York since 1997, Dr. Gregorian
also served as president of Brown University for eight years. He is a
noted historian, educator, author and humanitarian and has received
numerous honors and awards for his academic and philanthropic
accomplishments.

Dr. Gregorian will be joined at the Red Bank High School celebration
by Dr. Register, Challener and Hamilton County Mayor Claude Ramsey.

Due to the wide diversity of Hamilton County’s high schools, each
school has developed its own unique blueprint for reform through the
Schools for a New Society program. Four basic goals have been
addressed:

* Establishing a more challenging and engaging curriculum
* Improving teaching through more professional development
* Creating a more challenging and relevant curriculum
* Allowing more flexibility to meet student needs more effectively

The special needs of ninth-graders adjusting to high school are also
addressed, with each high school developing its own transition plan
for freshmen.

Through the Carnegie grant, most Hamilton County high schools now
include career academies. Examples include a construction academy at
East Ridge High, a health academy at Red Bank High, and an academy of
industry, technology and business systems at Brainerd High. All
academies combine college preparatory courses with a career theme.
Contact:

Hamilton County Schools
Rich Bailey, 423-580-2479

Source: Hamilton County Schools

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