Armenian electoral body reduces number of constituencies

Armenian electoral body reduces number of constituencies

Arminfo
6 Jul 05

YEREVAN

The number of the electoral constituencies in the country has been
reduced from 65 to 41 in line with the amendments to the Armenian
Electoral Code. The Armenian Central Electoral Commission [CEC]
approved this decision today.

Under the decision, the number of the constituencies in Yerevan was
reduced from 18 to 13. The number of the constituencies decreased by
four in Ararat and Armavir Regions and by two in Aragatsotn
Region. The commission tried not to change the borders of the
constituencies while “expanding” them, the deputy chairman of the CEC,
Gamlet Abramyan, has said. [Passage omitted: geographical details of
the constituencies]

Today’s session of the CEC sparked off a fierce discussion provoked by
Feliks Khachatryan, a representative of the opposition Justice bloc in
the commission.

He said that for some reasons, the division into the constituencies
had been carried out by the chairman of the CEC, Garegin Azaryan, and
his deputy, Gamlet Abramyan, in secret from the other members of the
commission. The division was carried out unequally and illogically,
“for the purpose of securing unhampered election of a certain
candidate, and, as a result, not only territories of one region, but
also houses on the same side of a street in Yerevan were included into
various constituencies “, he added.

[Passage omitted: details of discussion]

Actor Thomajan, 87, dies

Tallahassee Democrat, FL
July 6 2005

Actor Thomajan, 87, dies

He had a long career with Hollywood titans, then spent his last years
in Monticello

By Mark Hinson

DEMOCRAT SENIOR WRITER

Feisty character actor Edd “Guy” Thomajan – who appeared in such
films as “Panic in the Streets,” “Miracle on 34th Street” and “The
Pink Panther” – died at his home in Monticello on June 28. He was 87.

Thomajan, who was also a veteran of World War II, retired to the
woods of North Florida to build his own house in the 1980s. A
lifelong bachelor, he left behind no family members or survivors.

The diminutive Thomajan had a scrappy personality and salty
vocabulary, but he could switch from crusty curmudgeon to charming
gentleman in a matter of seconds. Around his friends, he enjoyed
telling colorful tales of his days working on Broadway and in
Hollywood with such famous figures as James Dean, Marlon Brando,
Montgomery Clift, Shelley Winters, Audrey Hepburn, Paul Muni and
legendary director Elia Kazan.

“He was a walking encyclopedia of great stories,” Steve MacQueen,
former Tallahassee Democrat theater critic and Thomajan friend, said
Tuesday.

Born in Massachusetts, the son of Armenian immigrants, Thomajan began
developing his street-tough persona as a kid after his family
relocated to a rough-and-tumble neighborhood in Brooklyn.

As a teenager in New York City in the ’30s, he hung around the Group
Theatre, known for its socially relevant plays. It’s where he first
met Kazan.

After serving four years in India, Burma and Japan during World War
II – a tour of duty that included the liberation of hellish prison
camps in Japan – Thomajan returned to find that Kazan had become one
of the most prominent directors in New York. He worked as stage
manager for a trio of Kazan’s landmark Tennessee Williams productions
on Broadway – “Camino Real,” “Sweet Bird of Youth” and “A Streetcar
Named Desire.”

During “Streetcar,” Thomajan’s jobs also included keeping Williams
supplied with “the right amount of bourbon” and sparring with Brando
backstage between scenes. Thomajan and Brando never became friends
and “would tolerate each other,” he said.

“As an actor, Brando is one of the greatest,” Thomajan said in 1995.
“Very powerful, very influential actor who could do some really
amazing things. As a person, of course, he’s a jerk, very selfish and
egotistical.”

The theater was always Thomajan’s first love, and he often spoke
passionately about the need for contemporary plays dealing seriously
with social issues and the human condition.

“Where are the new plays?” he said. “That’s what we need. What the
hell do you get out of revivals unless the people involved can
interpret them in a different way than they’ve been done for 400
years?”

Although he never obtained a college degree, the self-educated
Thomajan could discuss classic plays and literature at length. When
it came to chess, his playing style was as aggressive and keen as the
man himself. In the ’90s, the ever-restless Thomajan wrote an updated
stage version of Moliere’s “The Miser” and many other works.

Thomajan was on hand when Kazan’s career expanded beyond the stage
and onto the screen. He appeared in front of the cameras and behind
the scenes with the director on such films as “Viva Zapata,” “East of
Eden,” “Wild River,” “Boomerang!” and “On the Waterfront.”

In the famed car scene in “On the Waterfront” – the one in which
Brando tells Rod Steiger, “I could have been a contender, instead of
a bum, which is what I am” – Kazan filmed the shots of the two of
them, then did Brando’s close-ups as Steiger fed him his lines. But
when it was time for Steiger’s close-ups, Brando left. Steiger fumed.

“So Kazan said, ‘Edd, get in there and give him lines,'” Thomajan
said in ’95. “So on the close-ups with Steiger, when he’s looking
off-camera at Brando, he’s looking at me.”

In 1950, Thomajan co-starred with Jack Palance and Zero Mostel as one
of three disease-ridden lowlifes spreading a plague in Kazan’s gritty
classic “Panic in the Streets.” In one memorable scene, Thomajan was
tossed from a seedy second-story tenement into an alley in New
Orleans.

“We didn’t use any stunt guys on that picture,” he said in 1999 when
Kazan was being given an honorary Oscar. “It hurt my neck, but I
walked away. I would’ve done anything for Gadge (Kazan’s nickname).”

In the ’60s, Thomajan kept working, directing numerous summer shows
in Miami Beach and even made a film called “The Ex-Americans,” which
he directed in Rome (he later dismissed the movie as “just plain
bad”). He also worked as an executive production supervisor and scout
for a Canadian firm that financed lesser-known pictures all over
Europe. Other credits include directing a Broadway play (“Harbor
Lights,” starring Robert Alda) and even a few operas for New York’s
Civic Theatre.

When asked why he settled down in a remote A-frame cabin, which
intentionally had no phone or TV, in the woods near Monticello,
Thomajan liked to joke: “Because it’s halfway between New York and
Miami.”

Thomajan requested that no memorial service be held after his death.

THOMAJAN PLAYED …

A postal worker in the Christmas classic “Miracle on 34th Street”
(1947)

A court witness named Cartucci in Elia Kazan’s “Boomerang!” (1947)

A plague-infected thief who is eventually tossed from a balcony (by
Jack Palance) in Kazan’s “Panic in the Streets” (1950)

A gangster in “The Breaking Point” (1950), directed by Michael Curtiz
(“Casablanca”).

A dog-stealing henchman for David Niven in “The Pink Panther” (1964)

He was also stage manager for Kazan’s Broadway productions of “A
Streetcar Named Desire,” “Camino Real” and “Sweet Bird of Youth,” all
by Tennessee Williams.

Armenian Apostolic Church leader congratulates nation on Constitutio

ARKA News Agency, Armenia
July 5 2005

ARMENIAN APOSTOLIC CHURCH LEADER CONGRATULATES NATION ON CONSTITUTION
DAY

YEREVAN, July 5. /ARKA/. Armenian Apostolic Church leader Catholicos
Garegin II congratulated the nation Tuesday on the Day of the
Constitution. According to the Press Service of St. Echmiadzin,
Armenian Apostolic Church’s seat, Garegin II stressed that the
Constitution is the base of the state.
“The essence of the Day of the Constitution is to restore the values
and principles needed to ensure our country flourishing and our state
system strengthening”, Garegin II said in his national address. He
expressed his confidence that these humanistic values would
strengthen and produce results. In his words, for centuries, Armenian
people wished to live righteously and freely. “We are praying God to
protect entire world, our Homeland and people and to grant us
faithful soul, love and devotion on the way to the Motherland
prosperity”, the address said. M.V. -0–

Economic growth in Armenia Jan-May 2005 exceeds CIS countries’ avg.

ARKA News Agency, Armenia
July 5 2005

ECONOMIC GROWTH IN ARMENIA IN JAN-MAY 2005 EXCEEDS CIS COUNTRIES’
AVERAGE INDEX BY 3.5%

YEREVAN, July 5. /ARKA/. Economic growth in Armenia made 8.5% in
Jan-May 2005, compared with the same period a year earlier, exceeding
the CIS countries’ average index by 3.5%, the CIS Statistical
Committee says. The average economic growth in the CIS member
countries made 5%. Armenia ranked third following Azerbaijan with its
16% GDP and Belarus with 8.9%. Economic growth in Tajikistan is 7.5-%
economic growth, in Russia 4.8% (production in economy’s basic
sectors), Ukraine 4.7% and Kyrgyzstan 3.3%. There are no data on
Georgia, Kazakhstan and Moldova for that period. GDP in mentioned
countries rose for the 1st quarter by 7.34%, 9.14% and 8.24%
accordingly. M.V. -0–

New Iranian president favors Azerbaijan: Afshar Suleymani

ARKA News Agency, Armenia
July 5 2005

NEW IRANIAN PRESIDENT FAVORS AZERBAIJAN: AFSHAR SULEYMANI

YEREVAN, June 5. /ARKA/. The newly elected Iranian President Mahmud
Akhmadinejad has a positive attitude to Azerbaijan, and the bilateral
relations will be improved during his presidency, Iranian Ambassador
to Azerbaijan Afshar Suleimani told reporters in Baku. Mahmud
Akhmadinejad has a very favorable attitude to Azerbaijan. When he was
Deputy of Ardebil he paid a visit to Azerbaijan and contributed to
the Azerbaijani-Iranian cooperation in every way, the Ambassador
said. According to him, the new Iranian President played a unique
role in supplying fuel to Nakhichevan. Speaking of the new
president’s attitude to the Nagorno-Karabakh problem, Suleimani
pointed out that Iran has always supported Azerbaijan’s territorial
integrity and helped refugees and forcibly displaced persons.
Commenting on Armenian-Iranian relations, the Ambassador said that
his country’s foreign policy is based on the Constitution. He
stressed that special importance is attached to good neighborly
relations. Pointing out that any change in Iran’s position depends on
negotiations, Suleimani added that bilateral and pentalateral
meetings will be continued. Friendly neighboring countries must not
have any problems, he said.
At the same time, Ambassador Suleimani accused those raining the
issue of Southern Azerbaijan of causing serious damage to
Azerbaijan.He said that raising this issue does not meet Azerbaijan’s
interests. He asked what those raising this issue have done for
Azerbaijan’s independence and territorial integrity. P.T. -0–

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Leg Two Of System Of A Down’s American Tour

Ultimate-Guitar.Com
July 6 2005

Leg Two Of System Of A Down’s American Tour

Date: 2005-07-06 Artist: System Of A Down Category: Upcoming Tours

“…the most wonderfully bombastic band in modern rock…” – Boston
Globe.

With many of the dates on Leg One already sold out, a Top 5 track at
radio with “B.Y.O.B.,” and a Platinum album for “Mezmerize” under
their collective belt, SOAD announces dates for the second leg of
their Summer North American headline tour. In addition, the band
confirms a Boston-area date for Leg One to be played at The Centrum
in Worcester on August 27.

System Of A Down will wrap up Leg One in Toronto on September 1, take
a couple of weeks off, then kick off Leg Two headlining the Pacific
Coliseum in Vancouver on September 17. Leg Two will extend into
mid-October (see below for confirmed dates). As with Leg One, System
Of A Down has invited The Mars Volta to be Special Guest on the
second half of the tour; a third band, to be announced, will open the
shows.

Tickets for the tour dates will be priced from $32.50 to $45.00, and
many of the dates on Leg Two will go on sale this weekend (July 8 and
9). System Of A Down’s site will host ticket presales for all of the
dates. Log onto the site for the special password and complete
details.

The tour is in support of System Of A Down’s the brand-new album,
“Mezmerize” (American Recordings/Columbia Records), which was
released May 17 and debuted in the Number One slot on the
Billboard/SoundScan charts. “Mezmerize” also experienced worldwide
first-week success having soared to the top of album charts in more
than a dozen countries – worldwide sales for “Mezmerize” in its first
week topped 800,000 copies, and is already Platinum. “Mezmerize” is
the first disc in a two-disc set, with disc two, “Hypnotize,” set for
a late fall release. “Mezmerize/Hypnotize” was produced by Rick Rubin
and System’s main songwriter/guitarist Daron Malakian.

Since its self-titled debut in 1998, System of a Down – Daron
Malakian (guitars, vocals), Serj Tankian (vocals), Shavo Odadjian
(bass), John Dolmayan (drums) – has sold more than 10-million records
world wide, and risen to the level of an arena headliner while
maintaining its musical integrity, its core fan base, and its
position as one of the most unique bands in rock. With the unexpected
commercial radio success of “Chop Suey!,” “Toxicity,” and the Number
One “Aerials,” the three Top 10 radio tracks from 2001’s
multi-platinum album “Toxicity,” System blew the definition of
mainstream rock wide open. System Of A Down’s music is impossible to
pigeonhole, as it runs the gamut from Metallica to Frank Zappa to
Gilbert and Sullivan to Armenian folk tunes. Lyrically, System is
highly opinionated about numerous topics including war, religion,
politics, Hollywood, love, genocide, drugs, sex, injustice, and just
having a good time.

With more dates to be announced on Leg Two, confirmed dates for both
leg one and leg two of System Of A Down’s headline tour are as
follows:

Leg One:

04-05/08 – Long Beach Arena, Long Beach, CA
06/08 – Sports Arena, San Diego, CA
08/08 – America West Arena, Phoenix, Arizona
11/08 – American Airlines Center, Dallas, TX
12/08 – SBC Arena, San Antonio, TX
13/08 – Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion, Houston, TX
15/08 – Civic Center, Pensacola, FL
16/08 – TD Waterhouse Arena, Orlando, FL
17/08 – Office Depot Center, Miami, FL
19/08 – Gwinnett Arena, Atlanta, GA
21/08 – Hampton Coliseum, Hampton, VA
22/08 – Baltimore Arena, Baltimore, MD
23/08 – Continental Airlines Arena, East Rutherford, NJ
26/08 – Wachovia Spectrum Center, Philadelphia, PA
27/08 – The Centrum, Worcester, MA
29/08 – Belle Centre, Montreal, QC
30/08 – Colisee Pepsi, Quebec City, QC
01/09 – Air Canada Center, Toronto, ONT

Leg Two:

17/09 – Pacific Coliseum, Vancouver, BC
19/09 – Pengrowth Arena, Calgary, AB
20/09 – Rexall Arena, Edmonton, AB
22/09 – MTS Centre, Winnipeg, MB
23/09 – Xcel Center, Minneapolis, MN
29/09 – Joe Louis Arena, Detroit, MI
30/09 – Allstate Arena, Chicago, IL
02/10 – Pepsi Center, Denver, CO
05/10 – Key Arena, Seattle, WA
06/10 – Rose Garden, Portland, OR

ANKARA: The EU Trying to Make Us Foot the Bill

Turkish Press, Turkey
July 6 2005

The EU Trying to Make Us Foot the Bill
Gazi Erçel

source: Sabah

Columnist Gazi Ercel writes about Turkish-European Union relations. A
summary of his column is as follows:

`Following their defeat in the French and Dutch referendums on the
EU’s constitutional treaty, the leaders of the bloc have been trying
lately to find a scapegoat to foist off their own responsibilities.
At length, they decided to make Turkey pay the bill for their defeat.

But, what’s the real reason for their failure? Because they made
grave mistakes with regard to the enlargement process. Let’s take a
look at some of them:

They prepared a 350-page constitution and failed to explain the
motives and details of the text to their own people. 2. They held
referendums although there was no alternative to the constitution. 3.
They failed to make structural reforms to their own economies. 4.
They failed to address the unemployment problem. 5. They failed to
establish a competitive economic structure. They failed to display
sound leadership.

Consequently, the constitution prepared by these EU decision-makers
was tossed onto to the garbage heap. In addition, thorny problems
have emerged regarding the political integration process. Now most
European leaders seem to prefer giving up their enlargement
aspirations over trying to sell their voters on the process. `Let’s
stop the enlargement, don’t accept new members to the bloc and don’t
spend our taxes on them,’ they say. EU leaders are trying to make the
candidate countries foot the bill for their own failures.

But what will happen now? EU officials might have stumbled badly, but
they are no fools. I don’t think that they will change or postpone
the starting date of Turkey’s membership negotiations. They can’t
risk it because such a decision would damage their credibility in the
eyes of the international community. Instead, they will probably
increase pressure on Ankara, particularly on sensitive issues such as
Cyprus and Armenia. Their ultimate goal will probably be to deter us
by trying our patience.

Under these circumstances, we must act with common sense so as not to
be tricked by their ploy. We should keep patient and improve our
political structure without making concessions from our national
honor. We should not be incited by their provocations. These are the
best things that we can do for now.’

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

ANKARA: Aliyev’s Historic Gesture to TRNC

Zaman, Turkey
July 6 2005

Aliyev’s Historic Gesture to TRNC: Baku Begins Flights and Trade
Azerbaijan will take more concrete measures to end the isolation
imposed on Northern Cyprus, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev said
yesterday, June 30.

Saying, “I have given the order for charter flights to TRNC” Aliyev
announced the Azerbaijani companies would open offices in the
northern part of the island. In Baku for a two-day official visit,
Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan met with Aliyev
yesterday. In a joint news meeting, Aliyev said the Cypriot Turks
should be saved from isolation and the embargoes imposed on them,
adding that his country is ready to do its best on the subject.

Indicating that he gave the order for the start of flights to TRNC,
Aliyev said Azerbaijani companies would also go to the island, see
the investment opportunities, and open branches there. The policies
of the two countries overlapped about Cyprus said Erdogan and Aliyev
had given him “good news” during the conversation, the Prime Minister
added.

Both leaders talked about regional and international issues as well
as bilateral relations. Aliyev mentioned, the two friendly countries
would be in close cooperation in the future just as it was in the
past. The Azerbaijani President thanked the Turkish Prime Minister
for the support Turkey had given on the “Upper Karabag (Karabagh)
issue” between Azerbaijan and Armenia. Turkey and Azerbaijan would
make efforts to take their relations to a further point with the ‘two
states one nation’ understanding said Erdogan, indicating, Turkey
shared the same opinions with Azerbaijan about the Upper Karabagh
issue: “We are in favor of a solution. Armenia’s attitude will
determine the solution.” When reminded that the European Union (EU)
sets a condition for Turkey to open an Armenian border, Erdogan
responded: ” There is no such thing in the EU Copenhagen political
criteria. No such thing can be imposed on Turkey. This is Turkey’s
own decision. Turkey knows how it will decide about this.”

Iran, Armenia discuss ways of promoting bilateral ties

Islamic Republic News Agency, Iran
July 6 2005

Iran, Armenia discuss ways of promoting bilateral ties

Moscow, July 7, IRNA

Iran and Armenia in Yerevan on Wednesday discussed ways of expanding
bilateral relations and cooperation in various fields.

Armenian Prime Minister Andranik Margaryan, in a meeting with
visiting Governor General of the Iranian southern province of
Hormuzgan Ebrahim Derazgisou, said his country attaches importance to
promotion of ties with Iran.

He added strategic projects now being jointly implemented by Iran and
Armenia would consolidate mutual cooperation.

The premier expressed his felicitation to Iranian President-elect
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad on his landslide victory in the 9th presidential
election and hoped bilateral ties would receive further boost with
the coming to power of the new government in Iran.

Derazgisou, for his part, said Hormuzgan province which is located at
the beginning of North-South corridor plays a crucial role in transit
of goods in the region.

Meanwhile, the governor-general of Hormuzgan province, in a meeting
with Head of the Armenian presidential administration, Artashes
Tumanian, voiced Iran’s readiness to expand economic cooperation with
Armenia.

Tumanian, who is the co-chairman of the Armenian-Iranian
Intergovernmental Economic Commission, stressed the need to make use
of bilateral potentials by tradesmen and economic and industrial
officials considering the important role Hormuzgan province plays in
trade exchanges.

He called for activities of Armenian businessmen in Iran’s free trade
zones.

Derazgisou arrived in the Armenian capital on Monday at the head of a
trade delegation to discuss with Armenian officials ways to promote
Tehran-Yerevan cooperation.

The Iranian delegation will wrap up its visit to Armenia on Thursday.

There is a demand of directors

A1plus

| 14:45:43 | 06-07-2005 | Social |

THERE IS A DEMAND OF DIRECTORS

In the Yerevan State Theater and Cinematography Institute a new profession
has been opened – sound directing. There are professions which are opened
once in 4-5 years as, according to the dean of the faculty Narineh Sargsyan,
there is no demand, like – choreography directing, cinematology, etc.

At present there are 27 applicants in the Institute. The majority has
applied to the directing faculty, for which they must take 3 exams – acting,
directing and Armenian.

We tried to find out from the applicants themselves why they have chosen the
profession. Elen Brutyan said she loves it. And Gohar Poqrikyan wanted to
become a theater director.

The entrance applications are accepted till July 15, and the exams will
start on July 28.

By the way, Narineh Sargsyan assured that the exam committee will not
announce its staff till the exam day.