One last refrain

Daily News Tribune, MA
Feb 22 2007

One last refrain

By Nicole Haley/Daily News staff
Thursday, February 22, 2007 – Updated: 12:50 AM EST

During World War II, John J. Akillian kept U.S. forces fighting
strong by keeping spirits high.
The late Waltham real estate agent made a lot of friends as a band
director in the Army entertainment corps, performing with the likes
of legendary film actor Mickey Rooney and comic actress Martha Raye.

Akillian died Sunday at the age of 85, leaving behind friends and
family whose lives he forever changed.

"He was a gentleman in every sense of the word," recalls Jennifer
LaBouliere, senior director of Community Relations at Waltham
Crossing, the assisted living facility where Akillian spent his final
days. "He just had that old school gentlemanly way about him – he was
like a Dean Martin."

Indeed Akillian was a man from a different era. A pianist, composer,
and band arranger, Akillian attended the New England Conservatory of
Music and formed a swing band in the 1930s known as the Johnny Akill
Band. The band performed in nightclubs and hotels throughout Boston
and Cape Cod.

Stationed at Camp Otis on Cape Cod during World War II, Akillian
brought his music to the U.S. armed forces, crossing paths with
several now legendary entertainers along the way.

"Tony Bennett took a liking to a lot of my father’s original
compositions," said his daughter, Louise Akillian of Lincoln. She
said her father told the future Grammy Award winning artist "no
dice."

"He was very proud of his own skills," she said, adding that she and
her sister began music lessons at a very early age at her father’s
urging.

It was at Camp Otis that Akillian met his wife, the late Virginia
(Kolodziey) Akillian, who was there as a secretary to an Army
officer. The couple married on Cape Cod and settled in Waltham where
Akillian started his real estate firm, J.G. Akillian, Inc.,
contributing to the post-war housing development boom. Of all his
passions, Louise Akillian said family was always her father’s first
priority.

"First was family and second was his music," she said. Louise
Akillian said her parents created a household dedicated to family
togetherness and rich with tradition as John Akillian was second
generation Armenian and his wife was second generation Polish.
"Together they created a very solid, very committed family."

Akillian suffered an illness and was hospitalized for nine months
last year. But he fought to come back even stronger and engineered a
recording of wartime love songs in the fall. He personally presented
the compilation to Patti Page – the country to pop music crossover
sensation who sold more records than any other female vocalist during
the 1950s – when she played at the Reagle Players theatre in
September. Akillian visited her backstage to deliver a copy of his
recording. Reached via e-mail yesterday, Page remembered Akillian as
a friend and important musician.

"I worked so many times in the Boston area and John was one of the
great musicians that always made it enjoyable," Page wrote.

Akillian continued spreading joy with his music right into the last
week of his life. Every day, Akillian practiced piano for two hours
at Waltham Crossing, LaBouliere said, much to the delight of his
fellow residents who listened eagerly from down the hall. LaBouliere,
who remembered Akillian checking into the home in a wheelchair,
described him as a determined but modest man who always dressed
impeccably. In less than a year, Akillian progressed from a
wheelchair to moving freely through the home with his cane, she said.

"He always had a smile," LaBouliere said, adding that everyone at
Waltham Crossing – from dining room servers to department heads –
knew him and loved him.

Aside from his music, Louise Akillian said her father was also an
astute historian reading up on the Middle East and Armenian history
whenever he had the chance. He consumed biographies and poetry and
was partial to watching cooking shows when relaxing in front of the
television. The renaissance man taught his daughters to indulge
passions and pursue dreams.

"He was a very determined and willful person and if there was
something he wanted to accomplish, he would," Louise Akillian said.

In addition to his daughter Louise, Akillian leaves another daughter,
Gayna Akillian of Acton; his brother Richard and his sister Anahid
Keshishian; and his grandchildren Elisabeth, Caroline, Alexander, and
Benjamin. Services were held with burial in Ridgelawn Cemetery in
Watertown.

Armeconombank is first of Armenian banks to be rated by Moody’s

Arminfo
2007-02-22 15:01:00

Armeconombank is first of Armenian banks to be rated by Moody’s agency

The Armeconombank OJSC is the first of the Armenian banks to be rated
by the Moody’s agency. ArmInfo has learnt from Russian banking sources
that the Moody’s Investors Service provided the Armeconombank with a
long-term and short-term foreign and national currency deposit rating
at B1/Non-Prime, and a financial stability rating at "E+". The
forecast on long-term deposit rating and financial stability rating is
"Stable".

According to the analysts of the Agency of Rating Marketing
Information (ArmInfo), the high ratings awarded to the Armeconombank
may be partially conditioned by its partnership relations with such
key institutional investors as the European Bank for Reconstruction
and Development, the International Finance Corporation, the
Commerzbank, the KfW. Besides, the branch network having 43
subdivisions, the firm positions in the consumer segment of market
(3rd place in the Armenian banking system), in financing the
industrial sector (4th place), and in the government securities market
(3rd place) also have a positive impact on the bank’s ratings. The
Armeconombank was the first of the Armenian banks to issue corporate
bonds. The bank holds the 5th place by attracting natural persons’
deposits. It has introduced modern methods of work regulation, and
strengthened the risk-management subdivisions.

To note, due to the "E+" financial stability rating, the Armeconombank
joined the list of the 143 banks provided with similar rating,
particularly, the Russian banks Renaissance Capital, Bank
St.Petersburg, Renaissance Capital, Gazbank, Impexbank, Uniastrumbank,
VTB 24, as well as some banks of Ukraine, Georgia and Azerbaijan. The
Moody’s B1 long-term foreign and national currency deposit rating was
awarded to the Russian Renaissance-Capital, Avtovazbank, the Ukrainian
Alpha Bank, Raiffesen Bank Aval, and some others.

PA – Visit to the UK to assess alleged electoral fraud

PRESS RELEASE
Parliamentary Assembly Communication Unit
Ref: 128a07
Tel: +33 3 88 41 31 93
Fax :+33 3 90 21 41 34
[email protected]
internet:

PACE parliamentarians visit the United Kingdom to assess alleged
electoral fraud

Strasbourg, 23.02.2007 – Two members of the Monitoring Committee of the
Council of Europe Parliamentary Assembly (PACE) will be traveling to
Brighton and London 26 and 27 February 2007 to look into allegations of
irregularities involving postal and absentee votes in the United
Kingdom.

Former German Justice Minister Herta Däubler-Gmelin (SOC) and Polish
Senator Urszula Gacek (EPP/CD) will after the visit report to the
Monitoring Committee, which will then assess whether or not electoral
fraud merits the opening of the Assembly’s "monitoring procedure".

The two parliamentarians will visit Brighton, where a Conference of the
Association of Electoral Administrators will be taking place, and
London. Meetings are scheduled notably with MP’s of the House of
Commons, the Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State, Department of
Constitutional Affairs, and representatives of the Electoral Commission,
the Department for Constitutional Affairs, the Committee of Standards in
Public Life, the Crown Prosecution Service and the Electoral Reform
Society.

The visit is in response to a motion for a resolution signed by 18
members of the Assembly, which said there was "a growing body of
evidence that widespread absent vote fraud is taking place in the United
Kingdom" and pointing out that holding free elections is an obligation
of all Council of Europe member states. The motion calls for the opening
of a monitoring procedure, which involves ongoing dialogue with a member
state on the fulfillment of its statutory obligations (democracy, rule
of law and respect for human rights), as well as periodic plenary
debates on progress made in honoring its Council of Europe commitments.

Ten of the Council of Europe’s 46 member states – Albania, Armenia,
Azerbaijan, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Georgia, Moldova, Monaco, Russia,
Serbia and Ukraine – are currently subject to monitoring, which is
obligatory for all states when they join the Organisation. A request to
open a monitoring procedure for Italy, in connection with the media
situation there, is also currently being evaluated.

Motion for a resolution: application to initiate a monitoring procedure
to investigate electoral fraud in the United Kingdom
< =3D/Documents/WorkingDocs/Doc06/EDOC10993.htm>

Contact : Francesc Ferrer, PACE Communication Unit,
tel +33 3 88 41 32 50 ; mobile +33 6 30 49 68 22,
[email protected]

The Parliamentary Assembly brings together 315 members from the national
parliaments of the 46 member states.
President: René van der Linden (Netherlands, EPP/CD); Secretary
General of the Assembly: Mateo Sorinas.
Political Groups: SOC (Socialist Group); EPP/CD (Group of the European
People’s Party); ALDE (Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe);

EDG (European Democratic Group); UEL (Group of the Unified European
Left).

http://assembly.coe.int/Mainf.asp?link
www.coe.int/press

BAKU: Azerbaijan Suggests Matches With Armenia To Be Held In Austria

AZERBAIJAN SUGGESTS MATCHES WITH ARMENIA TO BE HELD IN AUSTRIA, SWITZERLAND OR UKRAINE

Today, Azerbaijan
Feb 22 2007

Youth and Sports Ministry has suggested Azerbaijan-Armenia matches
in the qualifying for 2008 European championship to take place in
Austria, Switzerland or Ukraine.

Ministry’s press secretary Rafig Abbasov told APA-Sport said that
the proposals have already been sent to the UEFA.

Azerbaijan refuses to play against Armenia in Baku and Yerevan. So
we have appealed to the EUFA to hold matches in one of these three
countries, he said.

Abbasov stated that if UEFA suggests other places as a neutral field,
Azerbaijan will discuss the issue.

URL:

http://www.today.az/news/society/36902.html

Alcatel Lucent: Armenian Datacom Company To Expand Service Offering

ALCATEL LUCENT: ARMENIAN DATACOM COMPANY TO EXPAND SERVICE OFFERING OVER CONVERGED ALCATEL LUCENT IP/MPLS BACKBONE

M2 Presswire – United Kingdom
Published: Feb 21, 2007

Paris – Alcatel-Lucent (Euronext Paris and NYSE: ALU) today announced
that Armenian Datacom Company, a competitive data provider in Armenia,
selected Alcatel-Lucent to supply an IP/MPLS network to deliver
high quality data and Internet services to business and residential
customers.

Covering most of the Armenian capital city of Yerevan, Alcatel-Lucent’s
IP/MPLS network will allow Armenian Datacom to benefit from a wider
variety of service offerings and increased service flexibility. Once
deployed, the operator can provide advanced services such as high speed
Internet (HSI) and virtual private LAN services (VPLS) for corporate
customers. By running all services on a single, next generation IP
infrastructure, Armenian Datacom can achieve significant economies
of scale and maximize profitability of services while streamlined
and simplified network management tools will result in significant
operational savings.

"By leveraging Alcatel-Lucent’s IP portfolio of products, Armenian
Datacom Company can offer advanced business and residential services
for the first time in Armenia," said Armenian Datacom CEO Harald
Grytten. "Implementing Alcatel-Lucent’s leading-edge solutions gives
us the business and technology tools we need to compete and to offer
subscribers a variety of converged services."

"As an early supplier of cutting edge IP/MPLS solutions in Armenia,
we are in a position to contribute to further development and
modernization of the data infrastructure in Armenia," said Basil Alwan,
President of Alcatel-Lucent’s IP activities. "Armenian Datacom is able
to leverage the unique features of our IP/MPLS solution to provide
a new generation of services to its customers."

Armenian Datacom Company joins a list of more than 160 service
providers in over 60 countries who have selected the Alcatel-Lucent
IP portfolio, including massive, multi-year IP network and
service transformation projects at AT&T, BT, Cable & Wireless, and
Telstra. According to Ovum-RHK, Alcatel-Lucent was #2 in the IP/MPLS
Edge market segment in Q4 2006, with 19% market share.

About ADC

Armenian Datacom Company CJSC (ADC) is an Armenian-Norwegian
joint venture formed in 2006. The company is set up to provide
telecommunications services in and around the city of Yerevan
with focus on the latest available services for commercial data
communication and Internet access for an unlimited amount of
users.ADC’s vision is to invite businesses and the population of
Yerevan into a new digital world that is always available, is secure
and offers access to advanced services of today and tomorrow. ADC
is built up by a highly competent and dedicated organisation with
international IT & telecommunications experience Continuous development
ensures availability of advanced services for new customers. 24/7
support operations secure optimal subscriber connections at all
times. ADC has professional owners with extensive international
experience from telecommunications, IT and capital markets. The
combination is a small company operating telecommunications services
to the best international standards.

About Alcatel-Lucent

Alcatel-Lucent (Euronext Paris and NYSE: ALU) provides solutions that
enable service providers, enterprises and governments worldwide, to
deliver voice, data and video communication services to end-users. As
a leader in fixed, mobile and converged broadband networking, IP
technologies, applications, and services, Alcatel-Lucent offers the
end-to-end solutions that enable compelling communications services
for people at home, at work and on the move. With operations in more
than 130 countries, Alcatel-Lucent is a local partner with global
reach. The company has the most experienced global services team in the
industry, and one of the largest research, technology and innovation
organizations in the telecommunications industry. Alcatel-Lucent
achieved adjusted proforma revenues of Euro 18.3 billion in 2006
and is incorporated in France, with executive offices located in
Paris. [All figures exclude impact of activities to be transferred to
Thales]. For more information, visit Alcatel-Lucent on the Internet:
_http://www.alcatel-lucent.com_ ()
Contact the Alcatel-Lucent Press Office: [email protected]_
(mailto:press@alcatel-l ucent.com)

((M2 Communications Ltd disclaims all liability for
information provided within M2 PressWIRE. Data supplied by named
party/parties. Further information on M2 PressWIRE can be obtained
at _http://www.presswire.net_ () on the world
wide web. Inquiries to [email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected]) )).

http://www.alcatel-lucent.com
http://www.presswire.net

Country Information System To Be Introduced In Armenia By Late 2007

COUNTRY INFORMATION SYSTEM TO BE INTRODUCED IN ARMENIA BY LATE 2007

Noyan Tapan
Feb 21 2007

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 21, NOYAN TAPAN. The Geodesy and Cartography Center
of the State Committee of the Real Estate Cadastre adjunct to the
RA government will complete the work on introduction of the country
information system in Armenia by late 2007. The center director
Hovsep Petrosian told NT correspondent that the concept of the
system’s introduction was approved by the government in December
2004. The system is classified by its community, marz (regional)
and republican signifiance.

According to H. Petrosian, the system’s introduction is based on
electronic community maps (scale of 1:2000), in which the technical
and qualitative descriptions of all buildings, streets and underground
communications are given.

"The introduction of a country information system in Armenia will
solve problems related to efficient planning of state governance
of local self-government bodies, as well as will help to eliminate
shortcomings," the center director noted.

Parliament Passes Bill On Relations Between Church And Government

PARLIAMENT PASSES BILL ON RELATIONS BETWEEN CHURCH AND GOVERNMENT

Armenpress
Feb 21 2007

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 21, ARMENPRESS: Armenian lawmakers have approved
today in the second reading a bill drafted to regulate relationships
between Armenian Apostolic Church and the government.

The bill stems from a constitutional amendment approved in 2005
November saying that these relationships can be regulated by
a special law. The bill, particularly, says that the Republic of
Armenia acknowledges the Armenian Apostolic Church as the national
church with the center in the Mother See of Etchmiadzin and with
its Patriarchates in Jerusalem, Constantinopolis (Istanbul) and the
Cilicia Catholicosate in Lebanon and recognizes the Armenian Church’s
exclusive mission in the spiritual life of Armenians.

The bill fixes also the Church’s historical, spiritual, cultural
and documented heritage as a basic and integral part of the Armenian
national identity.

The bill reserves a role to the Church in education, giving it a
right to found, sponsor and run various educational establishments and
teach at state-run schools a subject called The History of Armenian
Church. The bill be put to the third and final reading this week.

TBILISI: A Textbook Case In Social Integration

A TEXTBOOK CASE IN SOCIAL INTEGRATION
By David Matsaberidze

The Messenger, Georgia
Feb 20 2007

Some experts recommend that universities in ethnic minority populated
areas, such as this one in Marneuli, become bilingual

As part of its efforts to integrate Georgia’s large ethnic minorities
into the rest of society, the government is launching a new programme
to train non-ethnic Georgian teachers in predominantly Azeri Kvemo
Kartli to teach the Georgian language.

The non-Georgian teachers of Kvemo Kartli’s secondary schools will
receive special training designed mostly to target the ethnic Azeri
population of Georgia-the majority in the province. The courses will
be offered to teachers of Georgian language and literature in ethnic
Armenian and Azeri populated schools in Marneuli, Gardabani, Bolnisi
and Tsalka. They will also receive a special textbook called Tavtavi
to use as a resource.

Nearly 420 teachers will participate in the project, supported by the
Ministry of Education in collaboration with the High Commissioner of
Ethnic Minority’s Issues of the OSCE.

A representative from the press centre of the Ministry of Education
told The Messenger that Tavtavi, the new resource for teachers, is a
specially designed workbook for children in the first form. "Parts
of the book have already been distributed to some schools and have
been very well-received. It is considered a great success," she told
the paper.

Reforming textbooks for these areas is an important task, says
programme assistant to the research project History Teaching and
Representation of Ethnic Minorities in Georgia of the Swiss NGO
CIMERA, Lea Gerber. Gerber has been involved in the process of
reforming Georgian history books that she says minorities have
been completely left out of. She says this contributes to their
integration (or lack thereof) into mainstream Georgian society. "A
serious shortcoming existed in Georgia’s history textbooks when it
came to the representation of ethnic minorities that have been living
in Georgia for centuries. Their history is simply not mentioned in
the textbooks and therefore they do not have a sense of belonging
to Georgia. Therefore, the task of including ethnic minorities into
mainstream Georgian history requires special attention."

Khakha Gabunia, chairman of the Centre for Civic Integration and
Inter-ethnic Relations emphasizes the significance of the Georgian
language programme in contributing to ethnic minorities’ integration.

"I made submissions myself to the project, being one of the
coordinators. This project is very important and will play a
significant role in assisting the integration of minorities into
mainstream society. The project began in 2002. The first targeted
province was Samtskhe-Javakheti [an area predominantly populated
by ethnic Armenians], but in 2006, Kvemo Kartli was included in the
project. The Ministry of Education of Georgia is a great supporter of
projects that promote the teaching of Georgian as a secondary language
in schools that are instructing in languages other than Georgian,"
he says.

Gabunia says the teaching of Georgian is not an effort to assimilate
ethnic minorities in Georgia, "The project supports not only teaching
the state language of Georgia, but the teaching of the languages of the
ethnic minorities as well. The project is not an attempt to assimilate
various ethnic minorities of Georgia. On the contrary, it should be
seen as an invaluable contribution to the development of multiethnic
politics and the building of a multilingual society in Georgia."

Arnold Stepanian, head of the NGO For a Multinational Georgia, told
The Messenger that he has certain reservations about the proposal. "I
am in favour of the proposed multilingual programme. This is the only
real solution to develop the provinces of Kvemo Kartli and Javakheti.

But I have to admit there are some weaknesses in the project, making
me a bit sceptical about it. The local population has been too passive
while trying to implement the project. They must be more active. My
guess is that the project’s aims have not been effectively and properly
explained to the population."

Andrey Khanjin, project manager at the European Centre for Minority
Issues (ECMI), agrees that the people themselves must first be
convinced that it’s important to learn Georgian. "The majority of
the ethnic minority population do not know the state language and do
not show any real interest in learning it. In my opinion, first an
awareness raising campaign explaining the importance and advantages
of studying the state language of Georgia should be implemented and
then once they are ready, this programme should be implemented. But
we cannot force them to learn Georgian.

Khanjin believes the introduction of the Georgian language in these
areas should be a gradual process and not forced on them all at once.

"The language used in civil life in Javakheti is not Georgian. For
example, Armenians and Russians use either Russian or Armenian to
communicate. I think it would be a good idea to legalise the use
of their language [in official bodies] for some period, for example
Russian or Armenian, in Javakheti. And at the same time, the teaching
of Georgian should be facilitated as well. The languages of ethnic
minorities should not be endangered. A special document protecting the
minorities’ use of their mother tongue is important," explains Khanjin.

Another challenge for ethnic minorities is acquiring a higher
education. Not knowing Georgian is their obstacle, Khanjin says.

"This creates a brain drain of the most bright and talented young
people [form ethnic minorities] who leave Georgia to study and pursue
a career in either Armenia or Russia [if they are ethnic Armenians].

A special language course should be taught to those who want to
study at Georgian universities. A short-term solution could be the
establishment of a bilingual university in Akhalkalaki [district
centre of Samtskhe-Javakheti] where some lectures will be delivered
in Russian and others in Georgian."

Opinion: The Glitzy Film Festival With A Heart Of Gold

OPINION: THE GLITZY FILM FESTIVAL WITH A HEART OF GOLD

Deutsche Welle, Germany
Feb 19 2007

The 57th International Berlin Film festival drew to a close Saturday
with the announcement of the Competition winners. Star-studded as
it was, the event never forgot its social conscience, says DW’s
Silke Bartlick.

Every year, the entertainment spotlight turns to the German capital
for the annual Berlin Film Festival. For 10 days every February, the
city becomes the cinematic center of the world, attracting some of
the biggest names in the industry. This year’s A-list guests included
actors Clint Eastwood, Matt Damon, Charlotte Rampling and Sharon Stone,
as well as directors Francois Ozon and Bille August.

Jennifer Lopez lit up the red carpet with classic Hollywood star
wattage, vamping it up in glamorous contrast to her on-screen
character. In "Bordertown," la Lopez plays an ambitious reporter
investigating a series of mysterious murders on the Mexican border.

The movie is based on true events that took place in the early 1990s
in Ciudad Juarez, where hundreds of young women working in American
factories across the border were killed. Festival director Dieter
Kosslick even flew in several of the victims’ mothers for the press
conference.

It was a gesture of compassion, but one that was also designed to
remind the public that this glitzy event has a political agenda —
which Kosslick is at constant pains to emphasize.

This is the film festival with a social conscience, as both the movie
selection and the choice of winners demonstrate every year. Most
of the 400-off films shown during the festival serve as a comment
on the state of the world and its recent history. Themes include
discrimination, war, racism, poverty and social exclusion — as well
as courage and personal fortitude. They explore the seamier side of
capitalism and globalization and don’t shy away from controversial
topics — for example "La masseria delle allodole" (The Lark Farm) by
Italian directors Paolo and Vittorio Taviani, a movie which tackles the
Armenian genocide that took place in Turkey in the early 20th century.

So much to worthy topics. Artistically, many of the films featured
in the festival were less impressive — although they were all well
attended. Most movie showings were sold out, and thousands of people
stood in line everyday in the hope of snaring a ticket. People of all
ages and nationalities, with one thing in common — their appreciation
of intelligent cinema.

The robust business going on at the European Film Market, taking place
along side the festival, also suggests that Kosslick’s much-touted
"socially aware" festival does in fact put its money where its
mouth is. Some 70 percent of the 618 films, including more than 400
market premieres, were festival entries. So not only is the festival
showcasing cinema from around the world, it’s also helping them get
distribution.

In this respect, the festival is contributing to an international
cultural dialogue that continues long after the event has come to
an end. Another of its strong points is its Talent Campus, which
brings together several hundred young film-makers from around the
world and gives them an opportunity to meet and learn from industry
professionals. Every year, last year’s participants get to show the
fruits of their labor. It’s a resounding success — as is the entire
Berlin Film Festival.

Silke Bartlick covers culture for DW-RADIO’s German program (jp).

100 recettes de cuisine armenienne

Le Télégramme, France
17 février 2007 samedi

100 recettes de cuisine arménienne

100 recettes de cuisine arménienne. Gérard Markarian, édition
Grancher. 25 EUR.

Caviar d’aubergines, bacclavas, trama… vous avez déjà goûté à ces
plats et les avez trouvé délicieux. Grce à ce livre, vous allez
pouvoir les faire vous-même et vous offrir un voyage gustatif en
savourant les délices culinaires de l’Arménie. « Je n’ai jamais
oublié que les meilleures cuisines se conçoivent grce au dialogue.
Ce dialogue fut d’abord pour moi celui qui s’opéra entre deux
cultures, deux cuisines, deux pays : l’Arménie et la France »,
explique Gérard Markarian qui, dans cet ouvrage, marie avec bonheur
tradition et modernité. Des recettes, qui traditionnellement étaient
très riches, sont préparées en tenant compte des préoccupations
diététiques sans pour autant perdre de leurs qualités gustatives.

Coutumes et cuisine

Les produits nécessaires à la confection des recettes, comme le
boulgour, les lentilles corail ou encore les gombos… sont
disponibles dans les supermarchés et dans les épiceries fines. Soupes
; mezzés et tourchous ; viandes et volailles ; fruits de mer et
poissons ; légumes ; céréales et desserts, chaque chapitre est
présenté par un court texte qui explique l’origine des plats.