Karo Parisyan Returns From Suspension At UFC 106

KARO PARISYAN RETURNS FROM SUSPENSION AT UFC 106
Tom Ngo

5thRound.com
3/karo-parisyan-returns-from-suspension-at-ufc-106 /
Aug 26 2009

It’s being reported that UFC veteran Karo Parisyan will be making
his Octagon return this November after serving a nine-month drug
suspension. Apparantly, the Armenian will be taking on Dustin Hazelett
at UFC 106 in Las Vegas, Nevada.

MMAWeekly.com reported that both welterweights had verbally agreed
to the scrap, and fight contracts should be signed shortly.

Following his UFC 94 "win" over Dong Hyun Kim, the Nevada State
Commission suspended Parisyan for nine months, fined him a total of
$32,000, and overturned his split decision W to a No Decision after
it was revealed that he had three banned pain killers in his system.

Speaking of sitting the sidelines, come game time it will have been
a year since Hazelett last saw action. He has been riding the pine
since tearing the ACL in his right knee prior to his proposed UFC 96
contest against Ben Saunders.

UFC 106 will be held inside the Mandalay Bay Event Center on November
21st. Here are the fighters rumored to be competing in the pay-per-view
broadcast:

Ricardo Almeida vs. Jon Fitch Dustin Hazelett vs. Karo Parisyan Tito
Ortiz vs. Mark Coleman Shane Carwin vs. Brock Lesnar (UFC Heavyweight
Champion)

http://www.5thround.com/news/927

Armenian PM Meets Representatives Of "Miasin" Youth Movement In Seva

ARMENIAN PM MEETS WITH REPRESENTATIVES OF "MIASIN" YOUTH MOVEMENT IN SEVAN

ARMENPRESS:
August 26, 2009
Yerevan

Armenian Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan met today with the
representatives of the "Miasin" ("Together") Youth Movement encamped
on the shore of Lake Sevan.

The prime minister spoke with them about different economic issues,
answered their questions. The young people were mainly interested
in the essence of the global financial-economic crisis, its causes,
further pace and consequences.

The prime minister said that the young people must seriously think
about their future and how they will live in 10-20 years. Each of
them must be able to program his/her future, disclose own skills,
understand main principle of world perception, main values.

The contemporary world is subjected to quick changes and a question
arises what the important basic thing is to be devoted to. In the
discussion of this theme, the prime minister suggested his own
formula: the basic process in post-industrial society is mental
activity, production of new knowledge which is necessary for ensuring
welfare. Knowledge becomes out of date very quickly and there is an
incessant need of acquiring new one.

"In the contemporary world, for which you must be ready, you are
condemned to learn, otherwise you will not be competitive. You must
work with new knowledge and form self thinking abilities. This is
number one issue in the society and education system," he said.

As to the crisis, Tigran Sargsyan said the economists explain it in
two ways – according to the first one the years of economic growth
must be followed by decline and it is of cyclic nature: in these
conditions governments start carrying out extending policy. According
to the second one, it is not a regular cyclic crisis but formation of
new world where the main basic processes give place to the new ones,
and the formation of new is naturally passing not very smooth.

The prime minister noted that among different definitions of the
crisis the Chinese one is the most interesting – it consists of two
hieroglyphs which mean danger and opportunity. Tigran Sargsyan noted
that even this dangerous situation brings with it new opportunities.

The prime minister also discussed with the young people economic
issues, initiatives of the movement and expressed readiness to support
them in their further activity.

Traveling Arshile Gorky Exhibit To Debut In October

TRAVELING ARSHILE GORKY EXHIBIT TO DEBUT IN OCTOBER

Asbarez
/traveling-arshile-gorky-exhibit-to-debut-in-octob er/
Aug 24, 2009

PHILADELPHIA-The Philadelphia Museum of Art will present a major
traveling retrospective celebrating the extraordinary life and work
of Armenian American artist Arshile Gorky, a seminal figure in the
movement toward gestural abstraction that would transform American
art in the years after World War II.

The exhibition, which will run from October 21 to January 10, 2010
in Philadelphia, will travel to Tate Modern, London (February 10 –
May 3, 2010) and The Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles (June 6 –
September 20, 2010) following its debut in Philadelphia.

The first comprehensive survey of the work of this artist in nearly
three decades, Arshile Gorky: A Retrospective will premier at the
Museum and present 180 paintings, sculptures and works on paper
reflecting the full scope of Gorky’s prolific career. Drawn from
public and private collections throughout the United States and Europe,
this retrospective will reveal the evolution of Gorky’s unique visual
vocabulary and mature style. It is organized by the Philadelphia Museum
of Art and will be accompanied by a major publication, published in
association with Yale University Press.

"Gorky built upon the achievements of the early modern artists he
greatly admired and broke new ground during a remarkable moment to
become an inspiration to a new generation of American painters,"
said Timothy Rub, the George D. Widener Director-elect and CEO of
the Museum. "The exhibition and catalogue will offer a deeply moving
reassessment of the artist’s entire career, including his struggles
and his triumphs-personal as well as artistic-and the powerful legacy
of his work."

Arshile Gorky: A Retrospective is the first major exhibition of its
type since 1981 and the first to benefit from the publication of
three biographies of the artist: Nouritza Matossian’s Black Angel:
The Life of Arshile Gorky (1998), Matthew Spender’s From a High Place:
A Life of Arshile Gorky (1999), and Hayden Herrera’s Arshile Gorky:
His Life and Work (2003), all of which shed new light on the artist’s
Armenian background and his central role in the American avant-garde.

This will be the first major museum exhibition to highlight the
artist’s Armenian heritage and examine the impact of Gorky’s experience
of the Armenian Genocide on his life and work.

The retrospective and its accompanying catalogue have also benefited
from in-depth interviews with the artist’s widow, Agnes "Mougouch"
Gorky Fielding, who has generously supported the project from the
start, through key loans and first-hand accounts of Gorky’s artistic
practice as well as his cultural milieu.

Among the works to be included are such renowned paintings as the
two versions of "The Artist and his Mother," 1926-36 (Whitney Museum
of American Art, New York) and about 1929-42 (National Gallery
of Art, Washington, D.C.); "The Liver is the Cock’s Comb," 1944
(Albright-Knox Art Gallery), the artist’s largest easel painting;
"Water of the Flowery Mill," 1944 (Metropolitan Museum of Art), which
demonstrates his deep absorption in nature-based abstraction; "The
Plow and the Song series," 1944-47, which reflects Gorky’s continuing
engagement with memories of his rural Armenian childhood; "Agony,"
1947 (Museum of Modern Art, New York), Gorky’s haunting late painting,
a product of his increasingly tormented imagination in the late 1940s;
and "The Black Monk" ("Last Painting") (Museo Thyssen-Bornemisza,
Madrid), which was left unfinished on Gorky’s easel at the time of his
death in 1948. Some of the works included in the exhibition have not
been on public view before, among them the wood sculptures, "Haikakan
Gutan I, II, and III" (Armenian Plow I, II and III), of 1944, 1945,
and 1947 (collection of the Diocese of the Armenian Church of America
(Eastern), on deposit at the Calouste Gulbenkiam Foundation, Lisbon),
as well as the Museum’s recently acquired "Woman with a Palette"
(1927).

Michael Taylor, the Museum’s Muriel and Philip Berman Curator of Modern
Art and curator of the retrospective, stated: "Gorky was a pivotal
figure in modern American Art who has since come to be known as the
quintessential artist’s artist. It is our sincere belief that this
landmark retrospective will secure Gorky’s place alongside Jackson
Pollock and Willem de Kooning as one of the most daring, innovative,
and influential American artists of the 20th century."

Arshile Gorky: A Retrospective will be presented in a generally
chronological sequence. Thematic groupings will represent each phase
of Gorky’s career, which underwent an astonishing metamorphosis as he
assimilated the lessons of earlier masters and movements and utilized
them in the service of his own artistic development. Beginning in
the mid-1920s with Gorky’s earliest experiments with Impressionism
and the structural rigor of the paintings of Paul Cezanne, and
continuing through his prolonged engagement with Cubism in the 1930s,
the exhibition ends with the Surrealist-inspired burst of creativity
that dominated the final decade of Gorky’s life and left us with so
many breathtakingly beautiful paintings and drawings.

In the 1940s, Gorky’s contact with Surrealism informed his breakthrough
landscapes in Virginia and the visionary works made in his spacious,
light-filled studio on Union Square, which he called his "Creation
Chamber." Several galleries in the exhibition will serve as "creation
chambers" in their own right, highlighting the artist’s working
process by presenting Gorky’s most significant paintings alongside
the numerous painstaking studies that informed their making.

Born Vosdanig Adoian around 1904 near Lake Van in an Armenian province
of Ottoman Turkey, Gorky witnessed as a young boy the ethnic cleansing
of his people, the minority Armenians. Turkish troops in 1915 drove
Gorky’s family and thousands of others out of Van on a death march to
the frontier of Caucasian Armenia. Suffering from starvation in 1919,
during a time of severe deprivation for the Armenian refugees, Gorky’s
mother died in his arms. With his sister, Vartoosh, he eventually
arrived in the United States where, claiming to be a cousin of the
Russian writer Maxim Gorky, he changed his name to Arshile Gorky.

Gorky stayed briefly with relatives in Watertown and Boston,
Massachusetts, before settling permanently in New York in 1924,
where he studied at the Grand Central School of Art, later becoming
an art instructor there. Gorky met and became fast friends with many
of the city’s emerging avant-garde artists, including Stuart Davis,
Willem de Kooning, John Graham, Isamu Noguchi, and David Smith. Among
his students was Mark Rothko.

The noted art critic Harold Rosenberg observed that Gorky, "a lifelong
student, was an intellectual to the roots, he lived in an aura of
words and concepts, almost as much at home in the library as in the
museum or gallery." He was largely self-taught, visiting museums and
galleries and reading voraciously. Gorky became familiar with modern
European art and embarked on a systematic study of its masters and
their methods, from Paul Cezanne and Henri Matisse, whose landscapes
and still-lifes he emulated masterfully, to Pablo Picasso’s Cubist and
neoclassical works, and the biomorphic abstractions of Joan Miro. Works
by Giorgio de Chirico and Fernand Leger informed, respectively,
Gorky’s vast Nighttime, Enigma, and Nostalgia series of the early
1930s and the sequence of murals on the theme of aviation that Gorky
created in 1936 for the Administration Building of Newark Airport,
under the aegis of the Public Works of Art Project (later the Works
Progress Administration), through which Gorky and many other American
modernists found employment during the Great Depression.

One of the key themes of Arshile Gorky: A Retrospective will be the
artist’s profound engagement with the Surrealist movement throughout
the 1940s. Gorky’s relationships with members of the Surrealist group
in exile in the United States, including its leader, Andre Breton,
as well as painters Yves Tanguy, Wifredo Lam, and Max Ernst, and
his close friendship with the Chilean-born artist Roberto Matta all
contributed to the development of his singular visual vocabulary,
a highly original form of Surrealist automatism characterized by
biomorphic forms rendered with thinned-out washes of paint. After
his marriage in 1941 to Agnes Magruder, whose parents had a farm in
Virginia, Gorky’s experience of the American landscape would enrich his
artistic vision, and, beginning in 1943, emerges as a central theme
in the lush, evocative paintings for which Gorky is best known. The
rich farmland and bucolic atmosphere of rural Virginia (and later
Sherman, Connecticut) reminded Gorky of his father’s farm near Lake
Van, and inspired him to create freely improvised abstract works that
combined memories of his Armenian childhood with direct observations
from nature. The resulting paintings, such as "Scent of Apricots on
the Fields" (1944) and "The Plow and the Song" series (1944-1947),
are remarkable for their evocative strength, lyrical beauty, and
fecundity of organic forms.

Gorky’s last years were tragic. In January 1946, a fire in his
Connecticut studio destroyed 27 recent paintings. Shortly thereafter,
he underwent a painful operation for rectal cancer, and while
recovering created some of the most powerful, though agonized,
works of his final years, including the haunting "Charred Beloved"
series (1946), which alludes to his lost paintings. In June 1948,
Gorky was involved in a serious car accident that left him with a
broken neck and temporarily paralyzed his painting arm. His young
wife left him shortly afterward to pursue a brief affair with Matta,
Gorky’s friend and mentor. Gorky took his own life on July 21, 1948,
leaving behind an impressive body of work that secured his reputation
as the last of the great Surrealist painters and an important precursor
to Abstract Expressionism.

http://www.asbarez.com/2009/08/24

Aram Manukyan Trembled With Excitement

ARAM MANUKYAN TREMBLED WITH EXCITEMENT

a1+
08/24/aram-manukyan
03:36 pm | August 24, 2009

Politics

On August 23 Armenia marked the 19th anniversary of the Declaration
of Independence. But none of the declarers was present at the official
ceremony.

"August 23 of 1991 was a holy day," says member of the Pan-Armenian
Movement (HHSh) Aram Manukyan, who was entrusted with the proclamation
of the declaration.

"The day was remarkable for the whole republic. There were neither
authorities nor opposition in the country. I doubt whether our people
will ever enjoy such glorious moments," said Mr. Manukyan.

The Supreme Council was set up in 1990. The two main issues put on
the agenda were elections to the Supreme Council of Armenia and the
proclamation of Independence. Levon Ter-Petrosyan was elected SC
President on August 4, 1990 and on August 23 the Supreme Council
adopted the Declaration of Independence.

"I was entrusted with the proclamation because of my name and
surname. As you know the founder of the first independent republic
was Aram Manukyan and I was his namesake. Actually, we continued the
activity of the first republic (1918 -1920)," says Aram Manukyan.

In 1990 Aram Manukyan was 33 years old. "I was very excited and
trembled all over. But the excitement dashed away after I had read
the first four lines."

Two years ago the text of Declaration read out on August 23, 1990
was stolen from Manukyan’s car. So far, the police have been unable
to return the extract.

http://a1plus.am/en/politics/2009/

BAKU: Azerbaijan, Armenia Must Solve Nagorno-Karabakh Conflict Thems

AZERBAIJAN, ARMENIA MUST SOLVE NAGORNO-KARABAKH CONFLICT THEMSELVES: EX-ADVISOR TO U.S. SECRETARY OF STATE

Today.Az
54918.html
Aug 24 2009
Azerbaijan

Azerbaijan and Armenia are responsible for the Nagorno-Karabakh
conflict resolution, Ex-Advisor to the U.S. Secretary of State on
Political Affairs Marc Grossman told journalists at the Centre for
Strategic Studies under the Azerbaijani President.

"A work of the OSCE Minsk Group has been built correctly and its
result is the meetings between the two presidents," Grossman said.

He said Azerbaijani and Armenian communities should independently
approach resolution of the problem, but not wait for the resolution
by other countries.

"The United States supports Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity and
we consider a diplomatic way the only solution of the conflict ,"
Grossman said.

As to the Trans-Atlantic cooperation, Grossman said the U.S. supports
efforts for its expansion.

"NATO is the only organization successfully operating on security in
the world and we must work to improve it," he said.

Grossman expressed his confidence that the cooperation will develop,
because the U.S. and Europe are interested in it. "The countries,
such as Azerbaijan play an important role in development of the
Trans-Atlantic cooperation," he said.

http://www.today.az/news/politics/

Aronian to face Leko in FIDE Grand Prix

News.am

Aronian to face Leko in FIDE Grand Prix
15:08 / 08/22/2009

Armenian Grandmaster Levon Aronian to face one of the FIDE Grand Prix
leaders – Peter Leko in tournament in Jermuk.
Aronian will play black, which is risky, as he has not gained any
victory playing black in this tournament.
Tomorrow the last 13th round will commence. Rustam Kasimjanov, Peter
Leko and Vassily Ivanchuk are at the top of the standings. Aronian has
6.5 points and shares 4-5 places with Yevgeny Alekseev.

Our Problem is Indifference

Hellenic News of America

Our Problem is Indifference

(08/21/09)

Title: Our Problem is Indifference

By: Aleco Haralambides, President American Hellenic Institute
Some Greek-American news organizations have recently taken up a
critical review of the so-called `Greek American Lobby’ and the
players that are involved, including organizations like ours’the
American Hellenic Institute. The articles make some valid points;
however, they fail to mention perhaps the most pressing problem facing
these Greek American organizations and perhaps the greatest threat to
Hellenism itself’Indifference. It�s not that Greek
Americans simply don�t care if Greece or Cyprus exists, but
for one reason or another, these foreign policy issues do not seem to
be a priority for the average Greek American. The following are a
couple of common themes.
Is there Disunity on Foreign Policy?
Some say that there is a lack of organization or that the Greek
American community lacks a unified message. In fact, on an annual
basis AHI releases a policy statement that is endorsed by 8 other
leading Greek American organizations. This policy statement clearly
sets forth our collective position relating to the foreign policy
issues affecting all Hellenes’whether they are the Greek minority in
Albania and Turkey, or a Thracian living on the border with
Bulgaria. The fact that at least 9 Greek American/Canadian
organizations agree on foreign policy is perhaps an unprecedented
demonstration of unity in the Greek community. Moreover, it clearly
demonstrates that disunity is not our biggest obstacle when it comes
to foreign policy.
Are we out of touch with Athens and/or Lefkosia?
Another theme is an ostensible lack of communication or perhaps
disharmony with the homeland’Greece or Cyprus. Generally speaking, I
think that it�s important to narrow the gap between
Greece/Cyprus and America and the best way to avoid this problem is to
visit the homeland. Our organization makes a formal trip annually to
meet with different government officials in Greece and in Cyprus,
which helps avoid a disjointed message on foreign policy. We also make
sure to meet regularly with the Greek Embassy and Cypriot Embassy in
Washington and I would say that we have developed some particularly
good relationships with the Greek military. In fact, in March we
attended the unrolling of twenty five F-16 fighter planes that the
Greek government purchased from Lockheed Martin in Fort Worth. So,
disharmony with Athens and Nicosia are really not the culprit.
Who is the culprit?
The culprit is indifference. So I recently asked a prominent Greek
American friend about this indifference that I perceived and he said
`Greece and Cyprus just aren�t being threatened right now;
things are pretty good over there¦.’ My friend may have described
the crux of the problem; I only wish his statement was true.
The following are a few examples of international issues affecting
Greece and Cyprus vis-Ã-vis United States foreign policy:
1)Cyprus: Turkey still has about 43,000 troops in occupied Cyprus and,
although they seek entry into the European Union, they have given no
indication whatsoever that they intend to demilitarize. As recently as
June 17th of this year, Turkey sent military ships to thwart
U.S.-based Noble Energy from performing oil and gas explorations that
Noble had contracted to perform with the government of Cyprus.
2)Turkey: The Obama administration seems intent on creating a `special
relationship’ with Turkey, which is why one of the
President�s first official visits was to Turkey. While he
was there, it was laudable that the President made reference to the
re-opening of the Halki Theological Seminary and Erdogan�s
visit on August 15th to the island of Prinkipo with His All Holiness
Patriarch Batholomew gives us reason for hope. However, Turkey
continues to refuse to remove its illegal troops and settlers from
Cyprus and it refuses to provide full religious freedom for the
Patriarchate.
So, what would happen to someone in Turkey if they were to point out
the hypocrisy in Erdogan�s recent public statement that the
Chinese killing of 150 Uighurs (ethnic Turkic people) in
China�s Western Xinjiang province was `genocide’? In 2005,
Orham Panuk, the Nobel Prize winning ethnic Turkish author, was
indicted under Turkish Article 301 for mentioning that one million
Armenians were killed in Turkey. For similar reasons, Hrant Dink, the
Armenian journalist, was prosecuted and later killed by extremists in
Turkey.
As Americans of Greek descent, we can not sit back and accept the
current trajectory of U.S. foreign policy towards Turkey, which is not
in the best interests of the U.S.
The good news is that it is easier than ever to take action. In
seconds, we can research objective news sources on the internet; we
can fire off emails capable of reaching people all over the world; and
we can reach all of our friends and acquaintances simultaneously on
Twitter or Facebook (I confess that I still don�t know how
Twitter works). One of my favorites is Wikipedia’if you find an
inaccuracy on any subject, you can log on and correct it yourself! We
could never do this with our college history books or an
encyclopedia. It is time to make it known that 2 million Greek
Americans refuse accept the status quo.

BAKU: Obama shares opinion that Armenia should return occupied lands

Trend, Azerbaijan
Aug 12 2009

President Obama shares my opinion that Armenia should return occupied lands to Azerbaijan: Matthew Bryza

Azerbaijan, Baku, August 12/ Trend News, E.Tariverdiyeva /

U.S. Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Matthew Bryza arrived in Baku
on August 11. This is a farewell visit of Bryza to the region as a
co-chair of the OSCE Minsk Group.

President Obama shares my opinion that Armenia should return the
occupied lands to Azerbaijan, as Sarkozy and Medvedev reflected in the
general statement in July, said Bryza.

"The United States fully supports the peaceful settlement of the
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict on the basis of the Madrid principles, Bryza
told journalists. – We have finalized some of the Madrid principles
and discussed them at a meeting in Cracow."

He said that the Russian side also fruitfully and constructively
worked with them to resolve the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

"Our work in the Minsk Group has always been fair and constructive, he
said. – The Minsk Group has helped the two Presidents bring closer the
positions on the issues that will help resolve this conflict."

In his opinion, the Presidents are close to sign a framework
agreement.

Advisor of U.S. Secretary of State for European and Eurasian Affairs,
Bryza, was appointed the U.S. co-chair of the OSCE Minsk Group on the
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict settlement in June 2006, replacing Steven
Mann in this post.

The conflict between the two South Caucasus countries began in 1988
when Armenia made territorial claims against Azerbaijan. Azerbaijan
lost all of Nagorno-Karabakh except for Shusha and Khojali in December
1991. In 1992-93, Armenian armed forces occupied Shusha, Khojali and 7
districts surrounding Nagorno-Karabakh. Azerbaijan and Armenia signed
a ceasefire in 1994. The co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group – Russia,
France, and the U.S. – are currently holding the peace negotiations.

Moscow Hosts Exhibition Titled "National Gene Test. Quotations"

MOSCOW HOSTS EXHIBITION TITLED "NATIONAL GENE TEST. QUOTATIONS"

PanARMENIAN.Net
20.08.2009 18:15 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ An exhibition titled "National Gene Test. Quotations"
opened yesterday in Moscow. That’s the third project within the
frameworks of "One Sixth Plus" program, Alexander Kalugin, Head
of Interstate Fund for Humanitarian Cooperation, reported to
PanARMENIAN.Net.

Exhibition displays photographs and films by artists from Azerbaijan,
Armenia, Belarus, Georgia, Moldova, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia,
Tajikistan, Uzbekistan and Ukraine. Armenia is represented by director
Mariam Ohanyan and a photograph from Delusional Insanity.

The event aims at introducing the distinguishing features and formal
peculiarities of national schools, based on separate examples embodied
by spatial and temporal images.

"A man born in the north will differ from an inhabitant of south. From
early childhood, they see a different kind of landscape and sunshine
and hear conversation in different languages. They don’t even have
identical blood temperature. All that contributes to the formation
of views which a person sticks to all his life regardless the place
of his residence," exhibition manager Oleg Arnautov said.

The project is a curatorial research into the problems of human
perception on post-Soviet area and the tendencies of territorial
demarcation based on ethnic background.

Alaverdi Mayor Derives Benefit From Street Congestion

ALAVERDI MAYOR DERIVES BENEFIT FROM STREET CONGESTION
Larisa Paremuzyan

2009/08/20 | 16:56

Marzes

No parking signs have appeared on Tumanyan Street, a major thoroughfare
in the town of Alaverdi next to a building that belongs to the "Kata"
store chain. It would appear that Alaverdi drivers see the signs as
more of a joke than a concerted effort by municipal authorities to
ease congestion on that particular stretch of road.

Alaverdi drivers see the recent move by the municipality as just
another way for local police to "ticket" drivers and then split the
ill-gotten gains with town officials. This is the story we were told
by many local drivers who understandably wished to remain anonymous.

In reality this stretch of road is the most congested in Alaverdi
and is used by buses and vans as a transport route from Yerevan to
Tbilisi. The site in question is used as a paid parking lot for
buses and minivans plying the route and the morning and evening
congestion becomes a real safety hazard since it is so close to the
road itself. Many community residents have complained in the past
regarding the unsafe conditions.

However, the move by the Alaverdi Municipality to place no-parking
signs in the area is a sham response to residents’ concerns. A real
solution to the congestion is for the municipality to move the paid
inter-city bus and minivan stations to another location.

This however would not be to the liking of Alaverdi Mayor Artur
Nalbandyan, the majority owner of the "Kata" store chain since
passengers from outlying communities make purchases at his store
while waiting for transport to take them back home.

http://hetq.am/en/marzes/alaverdi-26/