A common chord ties them all together

Albany Times Union, NY
April 9 2004
A common chord ties them all together
Sand Lake– Love of music helps singers and musicians with varied
backgrounds unite to perform the “Messiah”

By ERIKA GROFF, Special to the Times Union

Take a violinist, jewelry store manager and retired theater educator.
Throw in some community members from the Capital Region, all from
different church backgrounds, and mix. The result is the Sand Lake
Chorale, a group of singers and musicians who will perform parts two
and three of Handel’s “Messiah” next weekend.
The musical group’s conductor, Janine Budesheim, likens the chorale
to a recipe with mixed ingredients.
“In the beginning, it’s chaos, learning the notes and rhythms,” she
said. “But once they start listening to each other, the harmonies are
formed and they are feeling the blend.”
Budesheim founded the choir in 2001; it was known then as The
Ecumenical Messiah Choir. The year before, Sylvia Kutchukian,
director of the arts school David’s Tabernacle, had asked Budesheim
to put together an orchestra to accompany her choir for a rendition
of Handel’s “Messiah,” part one.
Afterward, people from Budesheim’s community approached her,
Budesheim said, and asked, “Can we do that?” So they did. 64 singers
and 32 instrumentalists sang and played the Hallelujah chorus.
Last November, they got together again to perform the same chorus as
the grand finale of a benefit for the opening of the Sand Lake Center
for the Arts. A month later, they started practicing the Handel
pieces for next week’s concert. There are now 38 chorale musicians
and 24 orchestral musicians.
Among them is 35-year-old Raffi Topalian, who runs Top Custom
Jewelers in Latham’s Hilltop Plaza. Topalian worships at St. Peter
Armenian Apostolic Church and is more accustomed to singing in
Armenian than English. He sings tenor with the Sand Lake Chorale and
said it has been a pleasure — a “great fellowship” — to sing with
people from different denominations.
Even after singing the “Messiah” over and over again for the past
four months, Topalian said he discovers something new every time it
is sung.
“You could sing it for 30 years but learn something new each time you
sing it because you have a new life perspective,” he said. “It’s
something different every time.”
Mary Margaret McGuire, retired director of education for the New York
State Theater Institute, sings alto — three octaves of alto — with
the Sand Lake Chorale. She said she likes singing with the group
because, for the first time in her life, she is singing with people
who really love to sing.
She said Handel wrote the three-part piece in a matter of days and
put it together in a marvelous way.
“If you forget what your part is — and if you stop and listen —
you’ll hear your part but it might be an oboe, viola or cello playing
it,” she said.
What makes this upcoming performance unique is the difficulty of the
composition, said Peter Skinner, administrative director of the
chorale. He said parts two and three are much more difficult than the
first.
“We’re doing a performance only a few recordings have on it, while
most choirs can exclude up to a third of it,” he said.
He credits the group’s success to the community support.
“So often, we have become more fractured and divided. Here, people
are communicating, achieving together and getting to know each other,
creating a sense of purpose and caring for community,” Skinner said.
“It’s about community.”

Oskanian to travel b/w Tehran, Prague and London

ArmenPress
April 9 2004
FOREIGN MINISTER TO TRAVEL BETWEEN TEHRAN, PRAGUE AND LONDON
YEREVAN, APRIL 9, ARMENPRESS: Armenian foreign affairs minister
Vartan Oskanian is leaving for Tehran, on April 12 for a two-day
visit, where he is scheduled to meet with Iran’s president Mohammad
Khatami , secretary of security council Hasan Rowhani and his
counterpart Kamal Kharazi.
On April 16 minister Oskanian will depart for Prague to attend a
conference on Nagorno Karabagh, to be held under the aegis of the
OSCE Minsk group. In Prague he is expected to meet with his newly
appointed Azeri counterpart Elmar Mamadyarov.
On April 22-23 Oskanian will fly to London for a working visit.

Opposition activist arrested for distribution of anti-govr leaflets

ArmenPress
April 9 2004
OPPOSITION ACTIVIST ARRESTED FOR DISTRIBUTION OF ANTI-GOVERNMENT
LEAFLETS
YEREVAN, APRIL 9, ARMENPRESS: The Armenian Prosecutor’s Office
said today it continues investigation into public calls for violent
overthrow of the constitutional order and offensive languages
directed at authorities.
Prosecutors said they have detained today a citizen of Yerevan,
Artak Gabrielian on the same charges. Gabrielian was arrested when he
was distributing leaflets of the opposition National Unity of
Artashes Geghamian urging people to participate in the unsanctioned
rally with concurrent calls for illegal seizure of power. These
actions were classified as violation of article 301 of the Armenian
Criminal Code.
In a reference to the April 8 detention of an opposition
parliament member Viktor Dalakian, prosecutors said he had been
summoned as a witness for a case under investigation, but refused to
come and therefore was brought by force, an action stipulated by
article 153 of the Armenian Criminal Code.

Armenian epic poem “David of Sassoun” translated into Ukrainian

ArmenPress
April 9 2004
ARMENIAN EPIC POEM “DAVID OF SASOUN” TRANSLATED INTO UKRAINIAN
YEREVAN, APRIL 9, ARMENPRESS: The Ukrainian “Dnepro” publishing
house has released the Ukrainian translation of the Armenian epic
poem “David of Sasoun.” It was translated by a well known poet and
translator Pavlo Tichina in collaboration with Victor Kochevski. The
introductory word is written by a well known expert in Armenian
literature Vasil Shkliar.
Armenian foreign ministry said Armenian Ambassador to Ukraine
Armen Khachatrian visited Viktor Kochevski to congratulate him on his
80-th anniversary and to praise his work. The translation took him
and his co-translator about 10 years.

Armenian Genocide and historical memory published in English

ArmenPress
April 9 2004
ARMENIAN GENOCIDE AND HISTORICAL MEMORY PUBLISHED IN ENGLISH
YEREVAN, APRIL 9, ARMENPRESS: The Armenian Genocide and Historical
Memory, this the name of a book by Verjine Svazlian, consisting of
650 survivors stories of eye-witnesses of the Armenian genocide,
methodically carried out by the government of Turkey between
1915-1922, published in English earlier this month.
Verjine Svazlian collected most of these testimonies herself
through many years, across Armenia as well as some interviews abroad.
The book also contains folk songs, many of which in Turkish,
depicting the events of the Genocide, “the screams of the unheard
suffering, protest, as well as the heroic resentment of the people
subjected to genocide, undeniable testimonies addressed to the Turk
historians and politicians of today who are denying the Genocide.
This book is a heavy contribution to the history of the Armenian
Genocide. Published in 500 copies it will be distributed to foreign
embassies in Armenia, international organizations, researching in
Armenian history. Its Turkish-language edition will appear soon.
Ethnographer and folklorist, Verjine Svazlian was born in 1934 in
Alexandria (Egypt) in the family of a writer and public man Garnik
Svazlian, himself an eye-witness survivor of Turkish tyranny. In
1947, she was repatriated with her parents to Armenia. In 1956, she
graduated with honors from the Department of the Armenian Language
and Literature of Abovian Pedagogical Institute.
Beginning from 1950-s she started on her own initiative writing
down and thereby saving from a total loss various folklore creations
communicated by the repatriates forcibly deported from Western
Armenia, Cilicia and the Armenian-inhabited provinces of Anatolia, as
well as the narrated memoirs of the eye-witness survivors of the
Genocide.

Boxing: Harrison will defend his title

The Independent (London)
April 9, 2004, Friday
SPORTING DIGEST: BOXING
Scott Harrison will defend his World Boxing Organisation
featherweight title against William Abelyan on 29 May at the Braehead
Arena, Glasgow. The Cambuslang fighter has been due to face the
Armenian for his last defence of the title last month before Abelyan
withdrew through injury. However, after defeating the stand-in
opponent Walter Estrada, Harrison will finally face Abelyan who has
recovered from a shoulder problem.

We’ll make a bang

Agency WPS
DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
April 9, 2004, Friday
WE’LL MAKE A BANG!
SOURCE: Moskovsky Komsomolets, April 7, 2004, p. 2
by Olga Bozhieva
Russian and Belarusian Antiaircraft Forces were put an alert this
morning. A command exercise of the CIS United Antiaircraft System is
under way, run right near the western borders of the Commonwealth.
No general of the Russian or Belarusian Antiaircraft Forces could be
found at their desks on day two of the exercise. All of them
descended into underground command posts to practice “joint command
of antiaircraft forces and means in a deteriorating
military-political situation.”
Needless to say, “deterioration” means unpredictable or hostile
actions on the part of the Alliance. The official legend of the
exercise is approximately like that: actions of the CIS United
Antiaircraft System when terrorists hijack foreign planes or cross
the borders of the Commonwealth.
Planes imitating the potential enemy will make runs between Russian
and Belarusian airfields allegedly trespassing and land in nearby
countries. S-300 crews and fighters of the Antiaircraft Forces will
“destroy” them on LCDs.
Actual targets will be handled next week on Ashuluk near Astrakhan.
The Belarusians set out for Ashuluk on April 12 to “open the season”.
Lieutenant General Oleg Paferov, Belarusian Air Force and
Antiaircraft Forces Commander: Up to a dozen Belarusian batteries are
involved in shooting practice every year. Russia provides the
equipment, the testing site, and targets. Belarus spends much less on
Russian military objects on its territory than what Russia spends to
allow us to make use of its testing sites and shooting grounds free
of charge.
It means that “gas” and financial problems worry Russian and
Belarusian politicians only. The military is concerned with common
military threats.
The command exercise involves:
– over 100 units and formations of the Air Force and Antiaircraft
Forces;
– over 80 aircraft from Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan,
Tajikistan, Ukraine, Uzbekistan, and Russia.
Russia is represented by the Special Task Command (Moscow, and
Leningrad, Rostov, and Yekaterinburg armies of the Air Force and
Antiaircraft Forces.

Asian states move step closer to building trans-national highway

Agence France Presse
April 9, 2004 Friday 7:35 AM Eastern Time
Asian states move step closer to building trans-national highway
BANGKOK
A decades-old dream of building Asia’s first trans-national highway
will move a step closer this month as 24 of 32 countries committed to
it will sign an agreement for a road from Japan to western Russia,
the United Nations said Friday.
The proposed Asian Highway would extend across 32 countries along
several routes, stretching through China south to Indonesia, and as
far west as Russia’s border with Finland, according to the UN
Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (UNESCAP).
“This 140,000 kilometre (87,000 mile) highway will contribute
tremendously to regional economic integration,” UNESCAP executive
secretary Kim Hak-Su told reporters ahead of the official signing in
Shanghai on April 26.
“All 32 countries have agreed in principle to signing, but it will
depend on passing this agreement internally through each country, so
not everyone will be ready to sign in Shanghai,” said Kim.
The UN first conceived of an Asian trans-national route in 1959, but
was unable to implement the project because of geo-political hurdles
at the time.
“Under the Cold War period we could not think of any highway running
through China or even Russia or the Korean peninsula,” said Kim,
adding that all Cold War states, including North Korea, had now
agreed to develop the route.
The agreement in Shanghai will outline roads to be built and upgraded
and establish minimum standards for the highway routes, while an
overall budget and time-frame for completion are expected to be
announced in 2006.
“Trade is increasing quite rapidly, about 40 percent last year, and
Asian countries realise they need this infrastructure to service that
growth,” said UNESCAP poverty and development division chief Raj
Kumar.
The UN would encourage governments and the private sector to jointly
fund the project.
“Funding arrangements are taking place now in many different forms.
Thailand is assisting Laos and Cambodia with soft loans, India is
assisting Nepal and Bhutan and the Asian Development Bank is looking
at funding other portions of the scheme,” said Kumar.
The main route — Asian Highway 1 — is expected to start in Tokyo
and terminate in Istanbul, passing though North and South Korea,
China, Vietnam, Cambodia, Thailand, Myanmar, India, Pakistan,
Afghanistan, Iran and Armenia along the way.
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

OSCE condemns attack on journalists during Yerevan protest

Agence France Presse
April 9, 2004 Friday
OSCE condemns attack on journalists during Yerevan protest
YEREVAN
The pan-European security and rights body OSCE condemned the attacks
on journalists that occurred during an opposition rally in Yerevan
this week, the OSCE envoy in Armenia said.
“Any violence against journalists should be condemned, the
instigators identified and criminal proceedings against them
initiated,” Ambassador Vladimir Pryakhin said late Thursday.
“I hope the Armenian authorities will keep their promises to take the
necessary measures in this respect,” he added.
Unknown assailants grabbed two television cameras and two cameras
from journalists covering the Monday demonstration, smashing them to
pieces in front of police, who did not intervene.
More than 3,000 Armenians took to the streets of Yerevan Monday to
protest against President Robert Kocharyan and demand a referendum on
his contested rule in the impoverished, landlocked Caucasus nation.
Last Friday, Armenian journalists held a rally to protest against the
threat to freedom of expression in this former Soviet republic, which
has been criticized by the Council of Europe for cracking down on
independent media.

Youth Aid

City News Service
April 8, 2004 Thursday
Youth Aid
LOS ANGELES
Mayor Jim Hahn today approved the transfer of $50,000 in grant money
to the Armenian Relief Society, to provide support services for
at-risk youth and senior citizens. The motion to transfer the funds
from the Mayor’s Urban Development Action Grant was sponsored by
Councilman Eric Garcetti. “I’m thrilled that we can can provide
support for the Armenian Relief Society’s mission of working
‘jhoghovoordes hamar jhorvordees head,’ or ‘with the people, for the
people,”‘ he said. “The people of Hollywood and surrounding areas are
very well-served by ARS’ dedication.” The funds, originally allocated
to develop a Bellevue Park master plan, became available after the
refurbishment project progressed faster than expected. “In this time
of budget constraints, I am pleased to be able to redirect funds to
where they can do the most good,” Hahn said. “This money will help to
improve the quality of life for many people, especially those in
danger of being touched by gang violence.”