The monumentalist sculptor

The monumentalist sculptor
By Armine Ghazarian

Yerkir/arm
May 13, 2005

We all know the statues of Mother Armenia, Sasuntsi David, Tork
Angegh and we also know who their authors are. However, not many
people know that the monumentalist sculptors of those statues are
Armenian craftsmen living and working next to us.

One of them, Nerses Charkhchian, had his personal exhibition at
Yerevan State Academy of Fine Arts. 23 works were presented at the
exhibition including the Beer Lover, Wreath, Girl Playing Violin and
other works. There were also some khachkars (cross-stones) and other
items. This is Charkhchian’s second exhibition. The first was held
in 1982 in Vilnius.

“The purpose of the exhibition is to present works made of
copper. Unfortunately, copper sculpture is no longer used widely in
Armenia,” Charkhchian says adding that because of this, sculptors
working with copper do not have many students. There are only 2-3
monumentalist sculptors working with copper in Armenia.

Nerses Charkhchian was born on 1952 in Ararat region. In 1972 he
graduated from the sculpture department of Yerevan Fine Arts College.
He has been working at Yerevan Sculpture Center as monumentalist
sculptor. He is the author of statues of Tork Angegh, Vahagn, Mountain
Dance and other works. He has many works in foreign countries. He is
an honorable citizen of Vilnius.

Bleak-looking “Vodka Lemon” leaves good taste

Wisconsin State Journal (Madison, Wisconsin)
May 12, 2005 Thursday
ALL EDITION

BLEAK-LOOKING VODKA LEMON’ LEAVES GOOD TASTE

By Rob Thomas

The tiny Armenian village that’s at the center of “Vodka Lemon” looks
like it fell out of an airplane onto a frozen tundra. Little
ramshackle houses dot an otherwise vast and cold landscape where the
endless snowdrifts are only broken up by patches of ice.

Since most of the homes aren’t heated anyway, most of the locals sit
outside in the snow on rickety folding chairs, looking tiny against
the blinding white landscape. It’s like they’re living in a gigantic
Samuel Beckett play.

Somehow, this frozen burg is one of the most inviting cinematic
locations I’ve been to in a while. Director Hiner Saleem, a
long-exiled Iraqi Kurd, takes a setting and subject matter that would
be bleak drama in most filmmakers’ hands, and turns it into wry and
warm comedy.

The village has basically been forgotten about in Armenia’s
post-Soviet era, and the locals talk ruefully about the good old days
of totalitarian rule.

“The socialists pretended to do everything for us, and we pretended
to do everything for them,” one villager recalls, almost fondly.

Now, nobody’s doing much of anything; most able-bodied folk have left
town to seek their fortunes elsewhere, leaving the older residents
behind.

Widower Hamo Isko (Romen Avinian) is one of the town’s patriarchs;
with his bushy white beard and wild hair, he exudes an Omar
Sharif-like charisma as he trudges around the snow-capped landscape.
Once in a while, he gets to travel to a larger city to pick up a
letter from one of his sons, who have relocated to France and
Uzbekistan. It’s a running joke that he’s always hoping to find a
little money included, a gag that pays off big at the end of the
film.

On his bus rides to the snow-covered local cemetery to visit (and
scrape the ice off) his late wife’s grave, he notices another woman
riding the bus. She’s Nina (Lala Sarkissian), a shy and lonely woman
who works at a forlorn little roadside liquor stand. There’s a mutual
attraction there — after all, what else is there to do in this town?
— but both are still beholden to their departed loved ones.

Around this budding little romance, Saleem weaves all sorts of little
subplots and comic bits. At times his gags seem inspired by silent
comedies; a scene where Hamo staggers around the side of the highway
with a giant armoire strapped to his back, like an ant trying to
carry a graham cracker, is positively Chaplinesque. And the film ends
on a surreal image of such remarkable whimsy and good cheer that it
will keep you warm for a while after the credits roll, no matter how
cold it is outside the theater.

VODKA LEMON

***

Rated: Not rated, but contains some mild language and adult
situations.
Stars: Romen Avinain, Lala Sarkissian.
Length: 1:28.
Where: Orpheum.

Russia Prodded on Georgia Troop Presence

Russia Prodded on Georgia Troop Presence

AP Online
May 13, 2005

The Senate added its voice to that of President Bush in urging Russia
to withdraw its troops from the former Soviet state of Georgia.

In a resolution introduced by the Senate’s Republican and Democratic
leaders, the Senate expressed support for the end of Russian military
presence in Georgia. The resolution was approved by voice vote late
Thursday.

“More than a decade after obtaining its independence, Georgia has not
been able to rid itself of the Russian military presence,” said Senate
Majority Leader Bill Frist, R-Tenn., sponsor of the measure with
Democratic leader Harry Reid of Nevada.

“Russia has failed to fulfill its commitments,” Frist said, noting
that more than 3,000 Russian troops are still stationed in
Georgia. “It is time for these forces to leave.”

Bush raised concerns about Russian bases in Georgia during talks in
Moscow before traveling to Georgia earlier this week.

Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, who accompanied the president to
Georgia, also told a Senate hearing Thursday that the United States is
pushing Russia to end its military presence in Georgia as quickly as
possible.

Georgia and Russia have been sparring over the timetable for
withdrawal. Tbilisi wants the troops out with two years, if not
earlier, while Moscow insists it needs at least four years, if not
more than a decade to complete the job.

Russian experts said Moscow is motivated by fears its military
presence in Armenia – its closed ally in the strategic Caucasus region
_ could be at risk if it pulls out of Georgia.

Russia does not border Armenia and uses Georgian territory to move
troops and equipment to its military base there.

MOSCOW: Embassy denies special services’ part in Armenian Shooting

Russian embassy denies special services’ part in Armenian parliament shooting

ITAR-TASS news agency, Moscow
11 May 05

YEREVAN

Today the Russian embassy in Armenia strongly denied reports about the
Russian special services’ involvement in the terrorist act in the
Armenian parliament in 1999, the embassy said in a statement here.

The statement was made “in connection with recent press articles about
the alleged involvement of the Russian special services in the tragic
events in the Armenian parliament on 27 October 1999”.

“This kind of claims, which have nothing to do with reality, are being
spread by the people who are well-known for their hatred of Russia’s
democratic reforms,” the embassy noted. They “are pursuing certain
provocative objectives aimed at creating a negative image of the new
Russia in the eyes of the world community,” the statement said.

The embassy noted “in that particular case, despite the Armenian
justice system’s well-known decision on a group terrorists led by
Nairi Unanyan, a doomed attempt is being made to undermine the
centuries-old relations between the Armenian and Russian people”.

“Under orders from his ‘boss’ former FSB [Russia’s Federal Security
Service] agent Alexander Litvinenko, who fled to the UK from criminal
charges brought by the Russian Prosecutor-General’s Office and who is
patronized there by a well-known oligarch, has now made another crazy
claim,” the embassy said.

“In any case Litvinenko and the like would not succeed in driving a
wedge between Russia and Armenia and the brotherly peoples of the two
countries,” the statement said.

In various interviews Litvinenko claimed that the Main Intelligence
Directorate of the General-Staff of the Russian armed forces had
organized the terrorist act in the Armenian parliament. [Passage
omitted: recalls the incident of 27 October 1999 in the Armenian
National Assembly]

Yerevan Beer CJSC Trying to Expand Geography of Juice Export

YEREVAN BEER CJSC TRYING TO EXPAND GEOGRAPHY OF JUICE EXPORT

YEREVAN, MAY 11. ARMINFO. In May-June of the current year the
probation lot of 30 tons of Armenia natural fruit juice “Kilikia” will
be exported to Belarus, President of Yerevan Beer cjsc Ashot
Baghdasarian informed ARMINFO.

According to preliminary agreement, about 40 tons of Kilikia juice to
be exported to Belarus from Armenia every month by motor
transport. Baghdasarian mentioned that the high transport costs remain
the main problem during the export, and now the company is viewing
cheaper ways of supply. He added that the enterprise produces 9 types
of fruit juice, which are exported to Russia and the United
States. The most part of the product is sold in the local market.

Resources in the company informed that in 2004 the Yerevan beer cjsc
produced 718,000 liters of fruit juice, which is 30% more as against
the same period of 2003. The exports increased by 25% and totaled
154,000 liters.

Bangkok: Fast music-database editing

Fast music-database editing

Bangkok Post – Thailand
May 11, 2005

Most multimedia players, from Winamp and Windows Media Player to Music
Match, allow you to edit the information and identity tags kept inside
most songs and some videos. As you scroll through your list of MP3s,
you can easily record or edit information such as the song title and
artist, the year of the song, the author and so on. There is even a
place for a comment of your choice.

There are a few excellent programs that allow you to “batch” this
process _ to mark many songs and note they all are rock or rap,
say. Monkey Media, reviewed in Post Database a couple or three months
ago, is excellent for this.

What was missing, until I found this week’s AppShot, was an easy, fast
way to do quick edits on song and video information without calling an
entire application to do it.

AudioShell, which only works with Windows 2000 and XP, does this at a
mouse click.

Find the song you want in Windows Explorer or similar. Right click
it. Choose Properties and you have a new, talented and complete
information editor.

With Windows alone, you can see the current details about the song,
and you can see where it could be edited _ but you can’t edit
it. Click on the new AudioShell Tag Editor tab and you can.

It’s a complete editor. It even lets you associate a photo with a song
or folder of songs, the idea being you will have a picture of the
album cover for that.

AudioShell is remarkably complete, and edits tags on Microsoft (WMA,
ASF and WMV) and Apple iTunes (AAC) files as well as more common MP3
and OGG file types.

There’s no actual program that you run. When you install AudioShell,
all the software is packed into the right click function. Just find
the file, right click and choose Properties as usual, and that is when
you finally see the choice to use AudioShell.

Generous author Eugeny Efimov of Armenia, Russia, has basic
information and the download link for the software at

Email: [email protected]

www.softpointer.com.

ANKARA: No Erdogan – Kocharian Meeting in Moscow

Journal of Turkish Weekly
May 9 2005

No Erdogan – Kocharian Meeting in Moscow

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, in Moscow today for the
ceremonies in celebration of the 60th anniversary of the end of World
War II, will first watch a procession through the Red Square, then
lay a wreath at the tomb of the unknown soldier, and finally attend a
reception hosted by Russian premier Putin at the Kremlin.

There are no plans for PM Erdogan to meet officially with Armenian
President Robert Kocharian, who will also be in Moscow for the
ceremonies.

Said Erdogan, “There is has been no request for a meeting. If we meet
by chance at the ceremony, we will shake hands, but that is a
different matter. However, I see no reason why we shouldn’t meet in
the future.” Erdogan will leave Russia this evening following the
day’s planned programs.

Turkish PM called Armenian President to establish a joint commission
to discuss the Armenian allegations. However Armenian side rejected
any attempt to discuss the historical disputes. Armenia does not
recognise Turkey’s, Azerbaijan’s and Georgia’s borders and occupies
20 percent of Azerbaijan.

Tehran: Electricity import outstrips export

Islamic Republic News Agency (IRNA), Iran
May 9 2005

Electricity import outstrips export

Tehran, May 9, IRNA

Managing Director of Power Production, Transmission and Distribution
Company (TAVANIR) said here Sunday that Iran’s electricity import
from neighbouring countries is 500,000 kw/h more than its exports,
`Iran Daily’ wrote Monday.

The daily quoted Mohammad Ahmadian as saying that Iran imports 1.2
million kw/h of electricity per year but exports 700,000 kw/h.

“Iran sells electricity to Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan”, he said,
adding that the country is also engaged in seasonal power swamps with
Armenia and Azerbaijan.

The official said that more than 300 megawatts of electricity is
traded between Iran and Turkmenistan.

“Half of the cost of imported electricity is covered by export of
electrical equipment and related engineering and technical services
to that country.”
Ahmadian added that Iran’s electricity production is expected to
increase by 3,000 megawatts in the current Iranian year (started
March 21, 2005).

“Once new projects become operational, the capacity to produce
electricity will rise significantly.”
He said electricity consumption reached a peak of 29,000 megawatts
last summer (June 21-September 22).

Iran exports 950 million kw/h of electricity to Armenia and
Azerbaijan annually, he said, adding that the country imports 1.5
million kw/h of electricity annually from other sources.

Launch of Armenians of New England

PRESS RELEASE
National Association for Armenian Studies and Research
395 Concord Avenue
Belmont, MA 02478
Tel: 617-489-1610
E-mail: [email protected]
Contact: Marc A. Mamigonian

NEWLY PUBLISHED ARMENIANS OF NEW ENGLAND TO BE LAUNCHED AT RECEPTION

Dr. Anny Bakalian of City University of New York will speak
at the Armenian Cultural Foundation (ACF) in Arlington on Sunday, May
22, at 3 p.m., on “The Armenians of New England: Celebrating a Culture
and Preserving a Heritage.” The event is cosponsored by the National
Association for Armenian Studies and Research (NAASR) and the ACF, and
is expected to be attended by contributors to the new publication
including Armenians of New England editor and Director of Publications
at NAASR, Marc Mamigonian.

The Armenians of New England: Celebrating a Culture and Preserving a
Heritage marked the first time a conference was held to examine an
Armenian community in North America. The publication of the conference
proceedings makes these important papers available to the general
public, and it is hoped that they will spur further research in the
field.

The book will be officially launched at the reception that will begin
with a talk by Dr. Bakalian, Associate Director of the Middle East and
Middle Eastern American Center at CUNY, author of the highly regarded
Armenian Americans: From Being to Feeling Armenian and organizer of the
successful conference, “A Century of Armenians in America: Voices from
New Scholarship,” held in New York City in October 2004.

Dr. Bakalian will use the findings in The Armenians of New England as a
bridge to a discussion of new scholarship on the Armenian-American
community. At the conclusion of her talk, she will recognize
contributing authors to the volume in attendance and encourage
discussion with them and other members of the audience. The program will
conclude with wine and Armenian delicacies.

Admission to this event is free (donations appreciated). Limited parking
is available on site. The lecture will begin promptly at 3:00 p.m.

More information about the lecture is available by contacting NAASR at
617-489-1610, faxing 617-484-1759, e-mailing [email protected], or writing to
NAASR, 395 Concord Ave., Belmont, MA 02478.

NKR State Budget Performance In 2004

NKR STATE BUDGET PERFORMANCE IN 2004

Azat Artsakh – Nagorno Karabakh Republic [NKR]
06 May 05

In 2004 NKR budget receipts totaled 4590.2 million drams surpassing
the annual plan for 2004 by 27.5 per cent. The increase in budget
receipts was determined by returns on taxes, state tax and capital
transactions. State budget outlays in 2004 totaled 14504.7 million
drams (excluding the funds of tax agencies for encouragement), which
is 94.4 per cent of the annual plan maintained in accordance with the
legislation. State budget receipts grew by 44.8 per cent or 1420.1
million drams against the year 2003. Tax collections increased by
963.7 million, returns on state tax grew by 111.1 million, other
sources of income by 125.4 million, capital transactions by 219.9
million drams In 2004 tax collections comprised 68.8 per cent of the
NKR state budget re=. ceipts. Return on state tax comprised 6.6 per
cent of the state budget recei= pts, other sources of income 13.2 per
cent, returns on capital transactions=20= 11.4 per cent. The ratio of
return on tax (including the state tax) to the G= DP is 8.1 per cent.
State budget receipts from tax collections totaled 3156.= 3 million
drams which is 130.9 per cent of the annual plan. It should be not=
ed that return on tax surpassed the level of the annual plan by about
745.3=20= million drams or 30.9 per cent. It increased by 44 per cent
since the year 2= 003. It is noteworthy that a high rate of growth
was reported in all tax rev= enues. Against 45.6 per cent of 2003 VAT
revenues comprised 43.7 per cent of= the overall tax revenues in 2004
totaling 1379.4 million drams. In 2004 VAT= revenues grew by 31.4 per
cent or 378.8 million drams against 2003. Excise=20= tax revenues
totaled about 302.4 million which comprises 9.6 per cent of ove= rall
tax revenues against 8.6 per cent of the previous year, increasing by
1= 13 million drams or 59.7 per cent against the previous year. This
growth is=20= determined by the increase in sales of taxable products
on the home and fore= ign markets. Income tax collection totaled 556
million drams increasing by 2= 6.4 per cent against the previous
year. The main source of the increase was=20= the incomes from
salaries. Profit tax revenues totaled 317.6 million drams,=20=
comprising 10.1 per cent of overall tax revenues. Against the year
2003 prof= it tax revenues increased by 35.1 per cent or 81.7 million
drams. Return on=20= stable payments of taxable businesses totaled
148.4 million drams comprising= 4.7 per cent of overall return on
tax. Return on stable payments increased=20= by 19.7 per cent or 32.6
million drams against 2003. Return on tax on trade=20= totaled about
214.2 million increasing by 35.6 per cent or 69.9 million agai= nst
2003. State tax totaled 304.9 million drams surpassing the annual
plan b= y 45.2 per cent. Against 2003 state tax collections increased
by 57.3 per ce= nt or 111.1 million drams, which is mainly determined
by the increased payme= nts of fees for license, documents given to
natural persons, state registrat= ion. Budget receipts from other
sources totaled about 607.9 million drams ri= sing by 26 per cent or
125.4 million drams against 2003. Budget receipts fro= m capital
transactions in 2003 totaled 521.1 million, of which 423.8 million=
from privatization of state property, 97.3 million from disposal of
the fun= ds considered the property of the government. Capital
receipts increased 1.7= times or by 219.8 million drams against 2003.
In 2004 NKR budget outlays to= taled 14504.6 million drams with 84.2
per cent of current expenditure and 15= 8 per cent of capital
expenditure. In 2004 budget outlays increased by 18 p=. er cent or
2208.3 million drams against 2003, which is mainly determined by=20=
the increase in salaries, social security payments, capital outlays
and expe= nditure on services. The annual plan of expenditure was
implemented by 94.4=20= per cent. Over 12212 million drams was
provided from the state budget of 200= 4 for current expenditure
(93.7 per cent of the annual plan). Salaries of ci= vil servants
totaling 3018.8 million drams comprise 24.7 per cent of current=
expenses. Expenditure on salaries increased 1.3 times or by 730.7
million d= rams against 2003. This increase was determined by the
rise in the salaries=20= of teachers and medical workers. In 2004
subsidizing totaled 1503.7 million=20= drams, which is 12.3 per cent
of current spending and 99.6 per cent of the a= nnual plan. The level
of subsidies rose by 15.6 per cent or 179.9 million dr= ams since
2003, which is mainly determined by the increase in culture, agric=
ulture and health subsidizing. In 2004 social security payments and
allowanc= es totaling 24187.4 million drams comprised 19.8 per cent
of budget expenses= , and 97.3 per cent of the annual plan (excluding
the funds of tax agencies=20= for business encouragement). Of this
440.1 million was spent on social secur= ity, 594.9 million on
pensions, and 534.3 million on subsidizing of communit= ies. With
20.7 per cent of increase in current spending expenditure on socia= l
security payments increased by 29.9 per cent, which shows that the
state b= udget of 2004 was oriented towards social security. Almost
all kinds of soci= al security payments rose against 2003. In 2004
5269.1 million drams was spe= nt from the state budget on buying
goods and services totaling 43.1 per cent= of current expenditure and
92.4 per cent of the annual plan. This index inc= reased by 623.7
million drams or 13.4 per cent against 2003. In 2004 under p=
rovisions of the state budget capital expenditure totaled 2292.6
million dra= ms, comprising 99.1 per cent of the annual plan. Capital
expenditure increas= ed by 5.4 per cent or 117.5 million drams
against 2003. Accrued debt was pre= vented.

AA.
06-05-2005

=