NY: Talk of the town

TALK OF THE TOWN
By SAM WILLIAMS

New York Post, NY
June 20 2004

June 20, 2004 — New York is a city lost in translation. Almost half of
the Big Apple’s residents do not speak English as their first language,
according to surprising new research.

The research, conducted by the Modern Language Association, gives the
first neighborhood-by-neighborhood analysis of the languages spoken
across the five boroughs.

English, the official language in New York City since 1664, is spoken
as a first language by 3.9 million residents, while almost 3.6 million
people are more familiar with another tongue.

English is no longer the most widely spoken first language in more
than 30 New York neighborhoods, the research found.

Spanish has become the most widely spoken language in one-quarter of
the city’s neighborhoods.

The research, which uses data from the 2000 Census, allows linguists to
track everything from the number of Italian speakers in Tottenville,
S.I., (669) to the number of Gujarati speakers in Glen Oaks, Queens
(635).

“Our goal is to let people see what languages are spoken where,” says
Rosemary Feal, executive director of the Modern Language Association,
an organization dedicated to promoting the study and teaching of
languages.

David Goldberg, a Yiddish-language scholar who is MLA’s director
of foreign-language programs, said the research also breaks down
neighborhood language patterns into two major age groups — under 18
and over 18.

Such capabilities make it easy to spot the generation difference
between Manhattan’s Yiddish-speaking community, where less than 3
percent of speakers are under 18, and Brooklyn’s Yiddish-speaking
community, where the number of children speakers jumps to 35 percent.

Venture up to Rockland County, and the ratio of youthful speakers
rises to 47 percent.

“You can see a vibrant, relatively young Hasidic community moving in,”
says Goldberg.

A similar pattern appears to be emerging within the city’s
Chinese-speaking population.

Traditionally centered around Manhattan’s Lower East Side, the
community has formed two distinct offshoots in Brooklyn and Flushing,
Queens, over the last two decades.

Again, age data offer a hint at new immigration patterns: In Manhattan,
13 percent of Chinese speakers are under 18.

In Brooklyn and Queens, the numbers rise to 18 percent and 15 percent,
respectively.

When it comes to assessing the city’s two main language groups,
English and Spanish, The Bronx weighs in with the city’s largest
Spanish-speaking population (534,660), while Staten Island boasts
the largest percentage of English speakers — 74 percent.

Both boroughs have their surprises, however. The Bronx also happens
to be home to the city’s largest Tagalog community (3,981), while
Staten Island’s 10304 ZIP code hosts the largest concentration of
African-language speakers, 4.3 percent.

To really hear New York’s increasing linguistic diversity, one need
only visit Queens.

In addition to topping out in terms of native Chinese (126,904), Korean
(57,447), and Urdu (17,837) speakers, the city’s second-largest borough
boasts the most Armenian (3,531), Thai (2,794), and Navajo speakers
(11).

Perhaps the most significant evidence of linguistic diversity,
however, is the fact that English, while still predominant, registers
as a majority language in less than half — 28 out of 60 — Queens
ZIP codes.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Going in search of a family history

Going in search of a family history
By Georgia Rowe, TIMES CORRESPONDENT

Contra Costa Times, CA
June 20 2004

MICHELINE AHARONIAN MARCOM isn’t old enough to remember the horrors
of the Armenian genocide. But she remembers her grandparents, who
were survivors.

“They were melancholy,” recalls the Berkeley-based author of “The
Daydreaming Boy.” “There was tremendous sadness. There was anger at
the Turks, and a lot of that anger came from the fact that Turkey to
this day has never acknowledged the genocide. Not only have they not
acknowledged it, they spend a lot of time and resources denying it
ever happened. And that makes the Armenians crazy.”

Marcom says she inherited a legacy of depression and bitterness from
the Armenian side of her family, which was shattered in the campaign
waged against Armenians by the Ottoman Turkish government from 1915
to 1923.

It’s a legacy she explored in her first novel, “Three Apples Fell
>>From Heaven.” She intends to write three books on the subject, and
“The Daydreaming Boy” is the second novel of the trilogy.

Set in Beirut, the new book has a central character in Vahé Tcheubjian,
an adult survivor of the genocide. On the surface, Vahé is a successful
businessman. But his internal life is in constant turmoil. Paralyzed
by memories of a traumatic childhood in a Lebanese orphanage, he spends
his days in a haze of guilt, loneliness, despair and violent fantasy.

A refugee’s view

While “Three Apples” told the stories of multiple Armenian characters,
“The Daydreaming Boy” focuses almost exclusively on Vahé. Marcom,
who teaches creative writing at Mills College in Oakland, says she
wanted this book to take a radically different approach.

In a recent interview in the Berkeley hills home she shares with her
husband, a software engineer, and their 3-year-old son, the author
explained that she was particularly interested in the effects of the
genocide on Armenian children.

“I wanted to write a book that was spoken through one person,” says
Marcom. “A war orphan, a refugee. Someone who is an extreme creation
of war.”

The book begins with one of Vahé’s earliest childhood memories: the
day he arrives in Lebanon, one of thousands of orphans shipped into
exile in cattle cars. The scene was based on a historical account
Marcom uncovered a few years back.

“It was written by an American missionary who was at the orphanage in
Lebanon,” she recalls. “He described the trains coming from Turkey,
how they stopped at the sea and how the boys who had been on the trains
for weeks — they were thirsty, tired, hungry — ran to the sea and
drank the water. They’d always lived in the interior of the country,
so they’d never known salt water.”

That scene marks the first of many memories for Vahé. As he relives
his days in the orphanage — scenes of hunger, confusion and brutality
at the hands of his fellow orphans — the character assumes tragic
proportions. For Marcom, Vahé represents a generation of survivors.

“He comes to consciousness in the orphanage,” she says, “so he’s
someone who can never really know who his family is. He is a man
without history, a man adrift.”

War stories

Marcom was born in Dhahran, Saudi Arabia, and spent her early childhood
in the Middle East. Her businessman father was American, her mother
was Armenian-Lebanese. When Marcom was 5, the family moved to Los
Angeles, but in the years before the Lebanese civil war, she spent
summers in Beirut with her mother’s family.

Growing up, she heard dozens of war stories — many of them concerning
members of her own family. Her grandmother, who saved her brothers
and sisters from the Turks, was a heroine, but her father — Marcom’s
great-grandfather — wasn’t so lucky. “They came and took him in the
middle of the night,” says the author. “No one ever saw him again.”

Her grandfather’s family survived intact, which was unusual. “But
my grandfather’s father could only save his wife and children,”
says Marcom. “He couldn’t save anyone in the extended family. My
great-grandmother never forgave him. She lived to be 96, and she had
that bitterness toward her husband to the end.”

For Marcom, growing up with these stories was a heavy burden. “It’s
a lot to live with,” she says.

Her maternal grandmother remains a particularly vivid presence in her
memory. “She talked about it all the time,” says Marcom. “There seem
to be a couple of responses to genocide — one is to talk about it all
the time, like my grandmother. The other is to be completely silent.”

Marcom notes that the family continued to sustain losses throughout her
own childhood. She mentions her “Uncle” Vahé — actually her mother’s
first cousin — who was killed in Beirut during a particularly fierce
period of ethnic cleansing in the mid-1980s. “The Daydreaming Boy”
is dedicated to his memory, although Marcom says the character of
Vahé is not based on him.

Similar stories

Marcom did extensive research to prepare for the new book, reading
about Armenian history, Lebanese culture, the genocide and the orphans
it produced. The scope of her reading expanded as she went, finally
including books on Rwanda, Bosnia and other sites of ethnic cleansing.

“The parallels are horribly similar,” she says. “Vahé could be a kid
now living in Iraq. In war, the details are all different, but some
things are always the same.

“I’m now reading about the genocide in Guatemala. It’s eerie and
horrifying. Even the language is the same, the way people everywhere
call their enemies ‘dogs.’ The debasement, the sexual humiliation;
the photos we’re seeing from Iraq are probably mild compared to a
lot of what goes on. It always happens in war.”

Even more upsetting to Marcom is the degree to which the history of
the Armenian genocide has been erased. Growing up in Los Angeles, she
studied World War I with no mention of the Armenian experience. Today,
she continues to be surprised by students, friends and acquaintances
who know little or nothing about the events of 1915-23, which resulted
in as many as a million Armenian deaths.

“We are so un-historied,” she says with a sigh. “This is why we’re
so easy to manipulate and so lonely.

“We don’t know our ancestors, we don’t know our history. It doesn’t
matter who you are here. You come here as an immigrant, and within
a generation you become the same way.”

For Marcom, writing “The Daydreaming Boy” was an educational as well
as an artistic experience. She says she learned a great deal about
her ancestors from writing the book. But it’s clear that the climate
of her own childhood memories contributed to the story’s emotional
charge. Those memories and the history that inspired them remain
inextricably linked to her heart.

“I was very interested in trying to get inside the mind of someone
like Vahé, who has experienced extreme trauma,” she says. “I think
every day for someone like him is a struggle. Every day you survive
is an achievement. I’ve met people who have survived war and genocide,
and they have said that to me. It’s a lifelong inheritance. It never
goes away.

“I’m still trying to understand it,” she adds. “That’s why I’m writing
these books. I myself knew nothing about being Armenian, nothing about
the genocide, except that I’d inherited a hell of a lot of depression
and melancholy.”

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Big talent at Bachauer Junior Piano Competition

Big talent at Bachauer Junior Piano Competition
By Catherine Reese Newton, The Salt Lake Tribune

Salt Lake Tribune, UT
June 20 2004

Paul Pollei believes the ages between 11 and 13 are make-or-break
years for pianists. “That’s when they decide whether to keep going or
not,” said Pollei, artistic director of the Gina Bachauer
International Piano Foundation. The Bachauer is staging its
quadrennial Junior Piano Competition this week in the Assembly Hall
on Salt Lake City’s Temple Square.
Pollei hopes many young people who are on the fence about
continuing piano lessons will turn out and perhaps be inspired by
contestants who are “the age of kids who, in our society, give up.”
There are 37 pianists in this year’s competition; as this article
went to press, none of the competitors (invited from a field of more
than 70 applicants) have dropped out. “That’s a Bachauer first,”
Pollei noted.
All 37 pianists will perform 20 minutes of self-chosen repertoire
in the first round Tuesday and Wednesday, then will return to play
for 30 minutes Thursday and Friday. The seven-member jury then will
select six finalists to perform concerto movements, with pianist
Michael Sushel performing a piano reduction of the orchestral
accompaniment, Saturday night. Each of the six will receive a cash
prize ranging from $7,000 to $1,000. The always-popular peer jury —
young people the same ages as the competitors — also will award a
$500 prize to its favorite finalist.
The Junior Bachauer once included contestants as young as 8, but
Pollei found the prodigy track a little frightening. He believes it’s
healthier to wait until the youngsters have more seasoning.
This year’s competitors have impressive resumes already. Many of
them have won at least one piano competition; one, 13-year-old Sasha
Clynes of Suffern, N.Y., was a finalist in the ASCAP national
Composition Competition two years ago, and 13-year-old Kazakhstan
native Aleksei Fedorov is a past winner on TV’s “Star Search.” Chloe
Pang, a 12-year-old Californian, charmed host David Letterman on the
CBS “Late Show” a couple of months ago. The youngsters also have
hefty academic credentials: Karsten Gimre, 11, of Banks, Ore., began
college as a math major last year, and SiJing Ye, 12, of Beijing, won
a national chess competition in 1998.
The four-year Bachauer cycle also includes competitions for young
artists ages 14 to 18, who will compete here next June; artists 19 to
32, who vie for the $30,000 top prize in the Bachauer’s main event;
and adult amateurs. “What’s fun is to see when the juniors come back
as young artists,” Pollei said, adding he soon hopes to see some of
these young artists complete the Bachauer cycle.

He is also pleased to note the achievements of Bachauer alumni
such as Karen Hakobyan, a 19-year-old Armenian who competed in Salt
Lake City in 2001, returned here to study at the University of Utah
and has won numerous composition awards, most recently first prize in
the ASCAP Foundation Morton Gould Young Composer Awards; 1999 Young
Artists competition winner Yundi Li, who went on to win the Chopin
competition and now records with Deutsche Grammophon; and Kotaro
Fukuma, fourth-place Young Artists finisher in 1997 and winner of
last year’s Cleveland competition. “It’s thrilling to think we
helped,” Pollei said.
Thirteen nations are represented in this year’s Bachauer —
Australia, Brunei Darussalam, Canada, China, Hong Kong, Japan, Korea,
Russia, Serbia-Montenegro, Singapore, Turkey, Uzbekistan and the
United States. Fifteen of the competitors reside in the United
States, but Pollei pointed out that many of them were born elsewhere.
He sees the nation’s dwindling prominence on the international piano
stage as part of a sad trend resulting from the demise of arts
education in public schools. “Utahns should be the most ashamed and
the most proud,” he said. “It’s such a musical state by nature, but
music is so underencouraged by those who should help” — namely the
state Legislature.

37 young pianists

The Gina Bachauer International Junior Piano Competition takes
place Tuesday and Wednesday from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. and 5 to 9 p.m.,
Thursday and Friday from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. and 4 to 9 p.m., with a
final round and awards ceremony Saturday from 5 to 9 p.m., in the
Assembly Hall on Temple Square, Salt Lake City.

Admission is free.

COAF Press Release

PRESS RELEASE

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Children Of Armenia Fund
Contact: Mary Ann Kibarian
212-994-8250
[email protected]

Christopher Hitchens of Vanity Fair to be Keynote Speaker at COAF
Gala at the St Regis Hotel, New York

New York- June 16th, 2004- Christopher Hitchens, columnist and
contributing editor at Vanity Fair, has been chosen as the keynote
speaker for the Children Of Armenia Fund (COAF) Gala to be held on
Thursday, June 24th, 6:30 pm, at the St. Regis Hotel in New York City.

“I am delighted that Mr. Hitchens will be delivering the
keynote address,” stated Dr. Garo Armen, President and Founder
of COAF. “Mr. Hitchens’ unique knowledge of disadvantaged people,
including Armenians, makes the delivery of his keynote address very
meaningful for this occasion.”

Christopher Hitchens began his journalism career in London in 1971.
After emigrating to the United States in 1981, he has established
himself as a columnist and contributing editor, book reviewer and
essayist for a wide array of publications from The Nation to Vanity
Fair. Mr. Hitchens has also authored numerous books including Cyprus:
Hostage to History; The Elgin Marbles; The Monarchy: A Critique of
Britain’s Favorite Fetish; and many others. Mr. Hitchens is the
recipient of the 1992 Lannan Foundation Literary Award for Non-Fiction
and the 1996 Professional Integrity Award from the Society of Print
and Broadcast Media.

The COAF gala will honor Cynthia and Larry Feinberg for their
exceptional contribution towards the betterment of children living
in impoverish conditions in Armenia. Other featured speakers at
this event are acclaimed author Peter Balakian and Dennis Walto of
Save the Children. Mark Gavoor, Director of Customer Service and
Logistics for Colgate-Palmolive, will be the Master of Ceremonies.

About COAF

COAF’s mission is to find sustainable solutions to the current plight
of many Armenian children, culminating from a most tumultuous past
15 years. Its objective is to address all areas of essential child
development by creating sustainable and effective programs designed to
reverse the current impoverished conditions that affect the majority
of the population and beneficially impact the greatest number of young
Armenians. Key programs include improving healthcare and nutrition,
developing improved sanitation to provide clean and safe drinking
water, and expanding irrigation and food processing capabilities.
This recovery process will provide Armenians with the means necessary
to foster economic growth and re-build the community

In 2003, Dr. Armen , with Executive Director, Mary Ann Kibarian and
the COAF Board of Directors, launched an aggressive campaign to bring
hope and recovery to children of rural Armenia with the COAF Rural
Development Initiative. This past May, Dr. Armen presided over the
opening of the COAF offices in Yerevan, established to oversee ground
operations and manage COAF partnerships with such international
organizations as the United Nations Development Program (UNDP).
COAF has successfully completed a program in partnership with the US
Department of State to bring demining team of dogs and handlers to
rid Armenia of the landmines left from the war with Azerbaijan. This
was a $400,000 project.

In addition to Dr. Armen’s position as President of COAF, he is the
Chairman and CEO of Antigenics, a publicly held biotechnology company
that develops breakthrough therapeutics for cancer. In July of 2002,
Dr. Armen served as Chairman of Élan Corporation, a biopharmaceutical
company. At Élan, Dr. Armen initiated a recovery plan that ultimately
saved this company from certain collapse. In May, Dr. Armen was named
one of the recipients awarded the 2004 Ellis Island Medal of Honor.

COAF Gala Contact Info
Arienne Orozco
Susan Ulin & Associates
212-675-9474
[email protected]

Armenia wins vs Rest of World

philstar.com

Armenia wins vs Rest of World

Let’s play C H E S S By Nm Edgar De Castro

The Philippine Star 06/20/2004

The most celebrated team match between Armenia and Rest of the World took
place June 10-16 in Moscow. The match was organized to honor the 75th birth
anniversary of the late Armenian world chess champion Tigran Petrosian.

Former world champion Garry Kasparov, whose mother is Armenian, led the
Armenian contingent. The All-Star cast included world title challenger Peter
Leko, whose wife is Armenian, many-time world contender Boris Gelfand, who
is Petrosian’s favorite pupil, and super GMs Vladimir Akopian, Smbat Lputian
and Rafael Vaganian. The Rest of the World had former world champion
Viswanathan Anand (India), World’s No. 8 Michael Adams (England), and World
No. 6 Peter Svidler, the current Russian champion. Super GMs Loek van Wely
(Holland), Etienne Bacrot (France) and Francisco Vallejo Pons (Spain)
completed the cast.

The match was played over six rounds, and conducted on the Scheveningen
format, i.e., each player on one side plays against every player on the
other team. The overall result, with Team Rest of the World prevailing, was
18.5 : 17.5. At a certain stage of the final round match, it was thought
Armenia might level the score, as Gelfand held the advantage against Bacrot
in a Rook and Bishop vs. Rook ending. But the French champion gamely hang
on, finally obtaining a draw in a marathon endgame. * * *
At 73, Victor Korchnoi must be on the decline. The two-time world title
challenger is feeling, by his own admission, the ravages of time. His Elo
rating has tremendously dropped, and in the latest World Rankings, he was
out of the top 100, the first time since almost half a century ago. But in
the 2004 Gyorgy Marx Chess Memorial held June 5-15 in Hungary, he paced
himself beautifully, topping the Category 14 all-GM event. He had 7.5 out of
possible 10, and an impressive 2780 performance rating.

Second was Hungary’s young star Ferenc Berke (6.5), followed by Alexander
Beliavsky of Slovenia (6.0), Nevednichy of Romania (4.0) and Magyar
stalwarts Lajos Portisch and Peter Acs (3.0). * * *
The 2004 Russian Super Chess League, held recently in the seaport of Sochi,
was the strongest in years. There were 10 teams in all, composed mostly of
super GMs and aspiring young stars. The big names this year included GMs
Alexander Morozevich, Alexander Grischuk, Evgeny Bareev, Victor Bologan,
Boris Gelfand, Vladimir Akopian and Vladimir Malachov.

The unpredictable performance of the young crop of Russian players, made a
forecast, a not too easy task, but the final result was, as a whole, a
vindication of youth. The Morozevich led Toms 400 Yukos, emerged champion,
garnering 15.0 total match points, and 35.0 total game points, and beating
chief rival Norilsky Nikel in the deciding match. Morozevich, who is ranked
seventh in the current world ratings, provided the scoring sock for the
champion team, with an impressive 6.5/8, for a very high 2900 performance
rating on board 1. Joining Morozevich in the winning team were Akopian
(5/7), Khalifman (4.5/7), Jakowenko (4/7), Inarkiev (4/7), Smirnov (4.5/7).
Bocharov (3/4) and Belosarov (1/1. The last four were all young GMs in their
early twenties.

Now for the best attacking game of the 2004 Russian Super Chess League.

Russian Super League 2004

W) GM A. Morozevich

B) GM V. Bologan

Caro-Kann Defense

1. e4 c6

2. d4 d5

3. f3 …

Rather unexpected. Morozevich refrains from well-known lines such as 3. Nc3
and 3. e5 in favor of something “unorthodox.”

3… e6

The Pawn sacrifice after 3…dxe4 4. fxe4 e5 5. Nf3 (Black’s threat is
5…Qh4ch) 5…exd4 6. Bc4, is assessed by theory as unfavorable for Black.

4. Nc3 Bb4

5. Bf4!? …

This system of development was seen in the game Nataf-Motylev, Istanbul
2000, in which White achieves a sound position and can quickly get an
advantage should Black play inaccurately.

5… Ne7

Black anticipates the Pawn avalanche g4-g5 and h4-h5, so correctly develops
the Knight to e7 instead of f6.

6. Qd3 b6

7. Nge2 Ba6

8. Qe3 0-0

9. 0-0-0 c5

10. a3 Bxc3

11. Qxc3 Bxe2

12. Bxe2 c4

After 12…cxd4 13. Qxd4 Nbc6 14. Qf2 enhances the scope of White’s Bishops,
so Black decides to lock the center.

13. h4 b5

14. Qe1 Nbc6

15. h5 Qd7

15…dxe4 16. fxe4 Nxe4 17. Kb1 leads to a difficult game for Black owing to
the unpleasant pin on the d-file.

16. g4 f6

Preventing White’s 17. h6, and if 17…g6, then 18. e5! with the idea of
Qh4-Qf6-Qg7 mate.

17. Bf1!? …

A cunning move, intending to exploit Black’s weakness on the e6 square, via
the maneuver Bh3-g5-exd5.

17… Rad8

The continuation 17…Nxd4 18. Rxd4 e5 19. Rd2 exf4 seems risky on account
of 20. h6! g6 (or 20…g5? 21. exd5 Nxd5 22. Qe4 Rad8 23. Bxc4 bxc4 24. Rhd1
f5 25. Qxc4 Qf7 26. Rxd5 fxg4 27. Rxg5ch wins) 21. exd5 Nxd5 22. Qe4 Rad8
23. Bxc4 bxc4 24. Rhd1 f5 25. Qxc4 fxg4 26. Rxd5 Qf7 27. Qc3 Rxd3 28. Rxd5
g3 29. Qd4, white has the upperhand.

18. Bh3 dxe4

19. fxe4 Nxd4

20. g5 …

Threatening 21. h6 and also activating the h3 Bishop.

20… f5

21. Kb1 …

Intending 22. c3, without allowing …Nb3ch.

21… Qc6

22. h6 fxe4?

Here’s the losing move. White gains a decisive tempo in his Kingside attack.
Necessary for Black is 22…g6 (not 22…Qxe4? 23. Qxe4 fxe4 24. Rxd4! Rxd4
25. Bxe6ch Rf7 (or 25…Kh8 26. Be5) 26. Rf1 and White gets a winning game)
23. Bg2, Black can still hang on.

23. Qc3! e3

After 23…Qb6 24. Rxd4! Qxd4 25. Bxe6ch, White also wins easily. For
instance 25…Rf7 (25…Kh8? 26. Be5!! and mate) 26. Qxd4 Rxd4 27. Rf1 Nf5
28. Be5 Rdd7 29. Rxf5 e3 30 Rxf7 Rxf7 31. g6! hxg6 32. Bxf7ch Kxf7 33. h7 e2
34. Bc3. White likewise wins after 23…Qb6 24. Rxd4 Rxd4 25. Bc7! Nd5 26.
Bxb6 Nxc3 27. bxc3, etc.

24. Rxd4! …

Away with all obstacles. Everything is forced from hereon.

24… Qxh1ch

25. Ka2 Qxh3

26. Rxd8 gxh6

If 26…Nf5 27. Qe5 Qh5 (or 27…Rxd8 28. Qxe6ch Kf8 29. hxg7ch Kxg7 30.
Qf6ch Kg8 31. Qxd8ch) 28. Qxe6ch Qf7 29. Qxf7ch Kxf7 30. g6ch!! Kxg6
(30…hxg6 31. Rxf8ch Kxf8 32. h7 wins) 31. Rxf8, White wins.

27. gxh6 Qg4

28. Qh8ch!! 1:0

It is mate in two after 28…Kxh8 29. Rxf8ch, followed by 30. Be5.

1. Ne3! …

If 1…b1=Q/b1=N, 2. Qxd2/Rc2 mate, or 1…d1=Q/d1=N, 2. Qxb2/Qc2 mate. Or
1…f1=Q/f1=N, 2. Qxd2/Nd1 mate, while 1…Nxd3/N=any , 2. Qxd3/Nd5 mate,
and finally 1…Rxh7/Re1, 2. Nd1/h8=Q mates

Prince likes us

Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Summerfest kicks up its cool quotient with younger lineup

By GEMMA TARLACH

Journal Sentinel pop music critic
Posted: June 19, 2004

Prince likes us

Babisch, who books all the Marcus Amphitheater acts for Summerfest,
labors each year to keep ticket prices affordable. In 2003, for
example, bargaining with Fleetwood Mac’s management led to Summerfest
having the lowest ticket prices of the band’s tour. Keeping cost in
check is increasingly difficult, however, as the industrywide average
continues to rise, particularly for older performers.

“The older, more seasoned acts like Madonna are generating the
highest grosses, but that goes in line with them having the higher
ticket prices,” said Ray Waddell, who covers the touring industry as
a senior writer for Billboard.

MTV’s Armenia wasn’t surprised to hear Madonna, Van Halen and most
other older-skewing acts were skipping Summerfest, with the exception
of Crosby, Stills & Nash, who will headline the amphitheater July 3.

More established acts also tend to have more elaborate production
requirements for their performances and might not be able to set up
in an amphitheater setting.

Prince, who kicks off Summerfest on Thursday, is an exception to the
demanding, high-priced veterans hitting the road this season.

“Prince reworked his entire schedule to play here because he likes
playing here. We’re his only outdoor date,” said Babisch, adding that
the funk-rock icon also was willing to change his stage configuration
to fit into the amphitheater.

-mail Gemma Tarlach at [email protected].

Soccer: Henry strikes for gold

UEFA.com, Europe
June 20 2004

Henry strikes for gold

Arsenal FC striker Thierry Henry has become the first Frenchman to
win the ESM Golden Shoe award after scoring 30 goals in the 2003/04
English Premiership, a figure which gives him a total of 60 points in
the final standings.

Henry confirmed
Henry had been the favourite to pick up the award after leading the
table when most of the leagues around Europe finished at the end of
May – and his position at the top of the table was confirmed this
weekend when the Ukrainian league became the last championship of the
2003/04 European season to reach its conclusion.

Ailton in second
SV Werder Bremen striker Ailton finished second to Henry after
scoring 28 goals in the Bundesliga while Djibril Cissé grabbed third
place with 26 Ligue 1 goals for of AJ Auxerre. Both players are
changing clubs this summer, Ailton joining FC Schalke 04 and Cissé
going to Liverpool FC.

Makaay drop
Last season’s winner Roy Makaay finished seventh this time around
after moving from RC Deportivo La Coruña to FC Bayern München at the
start of the 2003/04 season while AC Milan’s Andriy Shevchenko came
highest of the Serie A contingent in fourth. Long-time leader Ara
Hakobyan, of Armenian club FC Banants who play a calendar-year
season, held on for joint ninth.

Final standings

Pos Name Club (Country) Gls Val Pts
1 Thierry Henry Arsenal FC (ENG) 30 2 60
2 Ailton SV Werder Bremen (GER) 28 2 56
3 Djibril Cissé AJ Auxerre (FRA) 26 2 52
4 Andriy Shevchenko AC Milan (ITA) 24 2 48
4 Ronaldo Real Madrid CF (ESP) 24 2 48
6 Mateja Kezman PSV Eindhoven (HOL) 31 1.5 46.5
7 Roy Makaay FC Bayern München (GER)23 2 46
7 Alberto Gilardino Parma AC (ITA) 23 2 46
9 Ara Hakobyan FC Banants (ARM) 45 1 45
9 Henrik Larsson Celtic FC (SCO) 30 1.5 45
11 Alan Shearer Newcastle Unt FC (ENG) 22 2 44
12 Luigi Pieroni Excelsior Mouscron(BEL)28 1.5 42
13 Roland Kollmann Grazer AK (AUT) 27 1.5 40.5
14 Julio Baptista Sevilla FC (ESP) 20 2 40
14 Ruud v. Nistelrooij Manchester Unt(ENG) 20 2 40
14 Martin Max FC Hansa Rostock (GER) 20 2 40
14 Francesco Totti AS Roma (ITA) 20 2 40
14 Louis Saha Fulham FC/Manchester Unt(ENG)20 2 40
19 Tor Henning Hamre FC Flora (EST) 39 1 39
20 Raúl Tamudo RCD Espanyol (ESP) 19 2 38
20 Fernando Torres Atlético de Madrid(ESP)19 2 38
20 Alexander Frei Stade Rennais FC (FRA) 19 2 38
20 Salva Málaga CF (ESP) 19 2 38
20 Javier Chevanton US Lecce (ITA) 18 2 38
20 Mista Valencia CF (ESP) 19 2 38

Last updated: 20 June 2004
Only the leading five countries (Spain, Italy, Germany, France and
England) on the UEFA Ranking have two as their multiplier. This is to
emphasise the difference in international performance level between
clubs from those countries and those from the other countries.

A player cannot first play in a summer league (eg Norway) and then in
a winter league (eg Spain) and combine the points total for each
season.

Boxing: Harrison ‘now best Briton’

Harrison ‘now best Briton’

BBC News
June 20 2004

Scott Harrison could now face WBC champion Injin Chi

Frank Maloney says Scott Harrison is now the UK’s top boxer after
the Scot destroyed William Abelyan in defence of his WBO world
featherweight title.

The American-based Armenian was floored three times in the third round.

Manager Maloney said: “Scott made a statement to British boxing that
he is the number one fighter in Britain.”

Harrison is now looking for a unification fight and Maloney admits
the most likely match will be against WBC champion Injin Chi.

“People talk about Joe Calzaghe and Ricky Hatton, but Scott has
jumped above them,” said Maloney after Harrison stopped the number
one contender.

“I don’t think you can take anything away from him. Scott showed how
he can fight, he’s a real fighting machine and I think he proved to
all the doubters and all the critics that he can go a long, long way
and be the best fighter we’ve ever produced in Britain.

I’d like Scott to fight again in Glasgow – Frank Maloney

“I was concerned before the fight because of the different styles
and I thought Abelyan would run. But, for some unknown reason, he
came to fight which suited Scott.

“If he had run, it would have been a different fight, but if you want
to fight Scott’s type of fight you have to be extra strong.

“I’d love to see him fight Injin Chi – that would be a great fight –
and I think he will be the easiest one to do a deal with because he’s
already been over to Britain.

Harrison retains title

“I don’t want to make silly statements and say that we’re certain
to make the match, but Chi is fighting in July and, if there’s a
possibility that we can do it, I would like to go and watch him and
make a challenge to him at ringside.

“I’d like Scott to fight again in Glasgow because the crowd were
magnificent and I think he deserves a super fight.”

Chess: Iranian Grand Masters Win World Chess Challenges

Iranian Grand Masters Win World Chess Challenges

Tehran Times
June 21 2004

TEHRAN (IRNA) — Grand masters Ehsan Qaem-Maqami and Morteza Mahjub
from Iran celebrated their wins in the World Chess Federation (FIDE)
Championships in Tripoli, Libya, said the Iranian federation Sunday.

Qaem-Maqami stunned once world No. 3, Rafael Vaganian from Armenia,
who stood top in Russia’s Aeroflot event in 2004.

He displayed unexpected prowess against Vaganian in a queen’s Indian
defense after offering his opponent a draw, which was declined.

“The game was normal for first 18 moves. I offered my opponent draw
but he tried to win and did some bad moves,” said Maqami, who ranked
92 out of tournament’s 124 players.

Vaganian ranks 37 in the tournament.

Mahjub also starred in his first fight, beating Georgian grand master
Zurab Azmaiparashvili, the European holder in 2004, even though he
was playing his favorite line, the Pirc defense.

“Today I am so happy,” Mahjub told reporters after his match. “My
game was hard. I won in a hard position. He made some not so good
moves.”

The Iranian duo are one stalemate far from the next round.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Visa-change run to Kish gets cheaper for 16 nationalities

Caspian Sea
Sun, 20 Jun 2004

gulf-news.com

News

Visa-change run to Kish gets cheaper for 16 nationalities

By Mahmood Saberi

Bureau Chief

Dubai: Sixteen nationalities will no longer need to pay a security deposit
when flying from the UAE to the Iranian island of Kish on a visa-change
trip, according to a Kish Airline source.

“It was a burden on the passenger, though it was only a deposit,” said a
source at the airline.

Those excluded from paying the deposit are expatriates from India, Pakistan,
the Philippines, China and the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS).

The CIS includes Azerbaijan, Armenia, Belarus, Georgia, Kazakhstan,
Kyrgyzstan, Moldova, Russia, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan and
Ukraine.

Kish Airline, which runs six daily flights to the Island from Dubai, earlier
took up to Dh1,500 from each passenger from these countries.

This was to pay for the passenger’s ticket home in case the sponsor did not
send a new visit visa for some reason.

Many passengers on visa-change run to the island have been stuck there for
days and sometimes months, due to glitches at the sponsor’s end.

The security deposit varied depending on the nationality of the person.

For an Indian or a Filipino, it was Dh1,500. For Pakistanis it was Dh1,000.

The number of passengers from the excluded countries who had to be brought
back to Dubai and sent to their home countries was very small, said the
source, explaining the reason for waiving the deposit.

For Chadians and Ugandans the deposit is around Dh3,000 because of the high
air fare back to some of the African nations, said the source.

However, expatriates from Sudan, Chad, Tunisia, Uganda, Senegal and Nigeria,
still have to pay the security deposit.

Passengers from the excluded countries now only have to pay a surcharge of
Dh25.

“The airline has not increased the fare since a long time,” said the source.

However, Qeshm Airline, which does the visa-change run from Dubai to a
smaller island off Iran, is still taking the security deposit from
passengers.

EXCLUDED

Surety amounted to Dh1,500

• Expatriates from countries India, Pakistan, the Philippines, China and the
CIS are excluded from paying a security deposit when flying to Kish island
on visa-change procedures.

• Earlier Kish Airline used to charge up to Dh1,500 from each passenger to
meet any contingency.

• However, Qeshm Airline which flies to a smaller island off Iran still
charges the deposit amount.