The Pilot Project "TIGRAN" Of Orange Armenia Company Was Rewarded

THE PILOT PROJECT "TIGRAN" OF ORANGE ARMENIA COMPANY WAS REWARDED

Aysor
May 12 2010
Armenia

The project "T.I.GR.A.N" (Tower InterGRated Armenian Network) of
Orange Armenia has been rewarded by the France Telecom Group for
innovation during the award ceremony 2010 in Paris. In a little time,
Orange Armenia team built a project which will not only enrich France
Telecom/Orange experience, but also allow to build mobile networks
with much less costs and time.

Before this project all equipments were generally installed near
the tower, on the ground floor, on a dedicated concrete slab. The
innovation of TIGRAN consists in the structure of the site: the
equipments are installed directly on a platform inside the tower. This
new concept allows optimizing GSM Greenfield site design: space,
construction time and costs.

"I am happy to manage this team, which is motivated and full of new
ideas. The TIGRAN team consists of Armenian and French engineers,
and that’s the result of their joint research. We are a part of a
big Group, and this idea will be used in the future during other
network roll-out projects. Orange Armenia is really proud for this
contribution", said Bruno Duthoit, CEO of Orange Armenia.

The project was born last year, when Orange Armenia launched the first
stage of network roll-out and the first TIGRAN tower was installed
in June 2009. Since more than 100 towers were built with this new
principle, informs the public relations department of the Orange
Armenia Company.

ANCA Is Resolute To Struggle For Armenian Genocide Resolution Adopti

ANCA IS RESOLUTE TO STRUGGLE FOR ARMENIAN GENOCIDE RESOLUTION ADOPTION BY US CONGRESS

PanARMENIAN.Net
May 10, 2010 – 19:27 AMT 14:27 GMT

Chairman of the Armenian National Committee of America Ken Hachikian
said that ANCA will work actively to increase the number of supporters
of the Armenian Genocide Resolution – HR252.

"We believe we have strong bipartisan support both by Republics and
Democrats. Our job is to increase the number of supporters and to
convince Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi that we have sufficient
votes to pass the resolution" Hachikian told a PanARMENIAN.Net
reporter. He added that presently ANCA is in that process, contacting
all its supporters.

"Each session of US Congress lasts only two years. This session of
Congress ends in December 2010, so this resolution will die unless
it’s proved by Congress," he said.

Thus, Ken Hachikian stated that ANCA’s job of the next 6 months is
to generate enough support. Besides, he referred to pressure from
the US administration, which opposes to the resolution adoption.

As for President Barack Obama’s address to the Armenian-American
community on April 24, Ken Hachikian stated that it was very shameless
comment by him. "He broke his pledge once again under pressure of the
State Department, which is very pro-Turkish. Even though he recognized
the Armenian Genocide as a person, however, he has been unwilling to
do it officially as a US President," said Mr. Hachikian, adding that
despite the Armenian-American community’s disappointment, ANCA will
continue pressing Obama, demanding from him that he honor his pledge.

Armenia: 14 Murders In 3 Months

ARMENIA: 14 MURDERS IN 3 MONTHS

5 May, 2010 | 12:26

criminal

According to official statistics issued by the RoA Police Department,
there were fourteen murders registered in Armenia from January 1 to
March 4 of this year. The police say that eleven of the crimes have
been solved.

Four cases of attempted murder were also registered during the three
months and all, according to the police, have been solved. During
the same period last year, there were twenty-two murders and four of
attempted murder.

http://hetq.am/en/category/criminal/

Georgian Side Says Gas Supply To Armenia Resumed

GEORGIAN SIDE SAYS GAS SUPPLY TO ARMENIA RESUMED

news.am
May 10 2010
Armenia

The Georgian side announced the resumption of Russian gas supply
to Armenia. The Georgian gas-transport company completed the repair
works at several sections of the gas pipeline and supply has already
been resumed, Georgian Oil & Gas Corporation press service reports.

ArmRusgasprom press secretary Shushan Sardaryan noted that gas has
not reached Armenia yet. "It will take several hours," she said.

The Georgian Oil & Gas Corporation informed NEWS.am today that
repair of the North Caucasus – Transcaucasia pipeline damaged due to
landslides was underway.

Gas supply to Armenia was interrupted on April 28, it was expected
to resume 2-3 days later, but the Georgian side reported additional
work on the North Caucasus – Transcaucasia pipeline.

BAKU: Turkish Authorities Will Be Committed To Policy They Have Purs

TURKISH AUTHORITIES WILL BE COMMITTED TO POLICY THEY HAVE PURSUED THUS FAR

Today
.html
May 10 2010
Azerbaijan

"Resolution to the Armenia-Azerbaijan Nagorno-Karabakh conflict will
certainly be discussed during Russian President Dmitry Medvedev’s
talks with the Turkish leadership in Turkey," Deputy Chairman of the
New Azerbaijan Party (NAP), member of the Azerbaijani Milli Majlis
(Parliament) Ali Ahmadov said.

The MP said he believes the Turkish authorities will be committed to
the policy they have pursued thus far and will not reopen border with
Armenia until Azerbaijan’s occupied lands are liberated.

"I think that Ankara will proceed precisely from this principle at
a meeting with the Russian President. In terms of economy and other
parameters, Turkey is developed nation which is able to get actively
involved in ongoing process in the South Caucasus and Middle East. I
do not think that some third country is able to exert pressure and
force Turkey to change its policy," NAP Deputy Chairman noted.

http://www.today.az/news/politics/67569

The word ‘mother’ is special in all languages

The word ‘mother’ is special in all languages

Sunday, May 09, 2010

By Mackenzie Carpenter, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Mutter (German). Mère (French). Majka (Serbian). Mat’ (Russian). Madre
(Spanish). Moder (Swedish). Máthair (Irish). Mataji (Hindi). Móðir
(Icelandic).

Oh, and Mama (Chinese). Mama (Swahili). Mama (English).

All around the world, the word for the person being honored today is almost
always the "M" word.

A remarkable coincidence? Evidence of some great mythic, spiritual
communion, a reminder that we are all our mother’s children under the skin?

Not a chance.

The reason for the similarities are far more prosaic, experts say. Many of
us, at around age 7 or 8 months, put our lips together, hum so that our
larynxes buzz, and then open our mouths to unleash a sound: Ma.

At first, it’s just baby talk, playing with sounds, but soon, "Ma" and its
derivatives take on a deeper urgency: a command or a plea to fulfill the
most primal desires within us, for food, warmth, love — or to play Candy
Land for the umpteenth time.

"The word evolved out of the sounds a baby could say early on" before taking
on an actual meaning, said Cheryl Messick, associate professor in
Communications Science and Disorders at the University of Pittsburgh.

Once the word "Ma" does start to mean something, it’s virtually the same
object in virtually all Indo-European languages, from Russian to German to
Hindi: breast. Some experts believe it is the most widespread root word in
the world, even in non-Indo-European languages, such as Chinese.

The English "mother" also includes the suffix "-ter" (or "-ther") — also in
"sister," "brother," "father" as well as the German "schwester," or
sister — and stems from the Latin "mater," the mother of so many English
words: madrigal, material, maternal, matriculate, matrimony, matrix, matron
and matter.
Nonetheless, the "M" word is not universal, warned Penn State University
etymologist Philip Baldi.

"That’s a dangerous assumption," Dr. Baldi said, adding that the Albanians
call their mothers "Nene," a relative of the Latin word "Nonnus," which is
defined by Latin-Dictionary.org as the word young monks use to address their
elders.

"The Hittites used the word ‘Annas,’ which has a different Indo-European
root, cognate with the Latin word ‘Annus,’ which means old woman," he added.

Old woman? And Happy Mother’s Day to you, Dr. Baldi.

At any rate, the Hittites — an ancient race that lived near what today is
Turkey — are long gone, but "Moder" and "Mutter" are still with us, and
babies are still making what Dr. Baldi calls "an articulatory extension of
the sucking impulse, a nasal consonant, in which the air flows through the
nasal passage … and the lips come together."

But "Ma," is not, contrary to received wisdom, necessarily the first
utterance a baby makes when practicing sounds, Dr. Messick said.

"Actually, my kids said ‘Daddy,’ before they said ‘Mommy,’ " Dr. Messick
said, noting that babies initially babble sounds that are separate from
meaning — usually a subset of consonants beginning with the letter "m," "b"
or "d" and less commonly, "f."

Dr. Messick, who did her doctoral dissertation on the subject, said she
found that babies around 9 or 10 months would babble about three or four
consonants frequently.

"If you expose them to nonsense words that have the sounds the infants are
already using and those they don’t ever use, they will learn the words that
they’ve already practiced babbling."

Each child is different, though, and so are their parents.

"Some people might reinforce sounds over others and get excited when baby
makes a certain sound," which may determine which real word is uttered
first, she said.

"Because I’m a speech pathologist and my son was my oldest, I taught him
early on what the tick-tick sound the clock in our front hall makes, and at
9 months he’d look at the clock and make clicking sounds," Dr. Messick said,
adding that when he finally did utter the "M" word, "it was for cow."
"We lived in a rural area and he said ‘Moo,’ long before he said ‘Mom,’ "
she said, laughing.

Regardless of what comes before "Mama," it’s still a word that’s great at
multitasking and has given birth to a lot of other words, linguists noted.
A few years ago, a post in YourDictionary.com defined the noun "mother" as
"a female parent" — as the redoubtable Oxford English Dictionary does —
noting that "just as many mothers work two jobs, it also does the work of a
verb" in terms of mothering.

"When Saddam Hussein (remember him?) challenged the United States to the
‘mother of all battles,’ we all knew exactly what he meant because of the
primordial force of motherhood throughout our language: Mother Earth, Mother
Nature, Mother of God, Mother Goose, the mother lode, the motherland — even
the motherboard in your computer," wrote Audra Himes, then an English
professor at Indiana University of Pennsylvania, now retired.

In some languages, however, the word for mother sounds a lot nicer than in
others, depending on your nationality. For many Americans, for example, no
sound is sweeter than the greeting from your teenager who — before
complaining there’s no food in the house — utters it not as a question, but
as a statement of fact: "Mom."

Not all English-speakers find it so attractive, however.

"When it comes to motherhood, we should all give thanks that we are not
domiciled in America. There are few uglier assaults on the ear than someone
shrieking ‘Mom!’ " wrote Betty Kirkpatrick in Scotland’s The Glasgow Herald
a while back.

All right then: Mom, in some accents, can grate. But we should also probably
give thanks that we are not domiciled in the United Kingdom, where the most
common form for Mother is "Mummy," sometimes "Mumsy," and in certain areas
of Scotland, it’s — God forbid — "Mammy."

Happy Mother’s Day, MOM.

Mackenzie Carpenter: [email protected] or 412-263-1949.

http://www.post-gazette.com

Baku is trying to prove so-called Azerbaijani genocide

Baku is trying to prove so-called Azerbaijani genocide through shots
of wars in Chechnya and Afghanistan

May 8, 2010 – 16:52 AMT 11:52 GMT
PanARMENIAN.Net –

Armenian Deputy Minister of Emergency Situations, Major General
Astvatsatur Petrosyan said that the Armenian troops opened a
humanitarian corridor for civilian population during the Khojaly
operation. `The corridor remained open for a long time, so that the
Azerbaijani special sub-units managed to take advantages of it,
entering Khojaly,’ Mr. Petrosyan told a press conference in Yerevan.

According to him, the shots that Azerbaijan provides to prove the
so-called genocide were done during the wars in Chechnya and
Afghanistan. Petrosyan added that Azerbaijan is exploiting the Khojaly
operation, as there was civilian population in this village, for which
a humanitarian corridor was opened.

A Call Voiced From Stepanakert To Mass Media Of Azerbaijan, Armenia

A CALL VOICED FROM STEPANAKERT TO MASS MEDIA OF AZERBAIJAN, ARMENIA AND NAGORNO KARABAKH TO REFUSE PUBLISHING MATERIALS WHICH SPREADS RACIAL HATRED AND PROPAGANDA WAR

ArmInfo
2010-05-07 14:33:00

ArmInfo. "I suggest the leaders of mass media and journalist
organizations of Azerbaijan, Armenia and Nagorno Karabakh to stop
hostile actions in the information field beginning from 12:01 AM on
May 12, 2010. It means, first of all, to refuse publications which
dishonor the whole people and its individual representatives, as well
as the materials which spread racial hatred Stepanakert press-club
Gegham Baghdasaryan to heads of the Armenian, Azerbaijani and Nagorno
Karabakh mass media and journalist organizations says.

"Establishment of ceasefire regime in 1994 on the Karabakh front
played an important part in termination of the armed conflict
and activation of the negotiating process among the parties to
the conflict. However, it turned out to be insufficient for final
settlement of the conflict. Moreover, a state of "neither peace nor
war" and absence of any official interstate relations over the last
years not only aggravated the tension in the conflict region but more
burden the pan of "neither peace" on the military-political scales of
"neither war nor peace". Unfortunately, mass media play an unseemly
part here", the message says.

In this complicated situation, on the threshold of the 16th anniversary
of signing a ceasefire agreement of May 12, 1994, Baghdasaryan thinks
it is necessary to come forward with an initiative of "ceasefire"
in the information field of all the parties to the conflict. "I am
sure that cessation of the information war will create favourable
conditions for continuation of the peaceful dialogue. It will promote
achievement of real compromises and mutually acceptable solutions on
the Karabakh conflict settlement, as well as to rapprochement of the
parties’ media stances in this issue", Baghdasaryan said.

BAKU: Shocking Incident In Armenian Army: Lieutenant-Colonel Savagel

SHOCKING INCIDENT IN ARMENIAN ARMY: LIEUTENANT-COLONEL SAVAGELY PUNISHED
H. Hamidov

Today
67331.html
May 6 2010
Azerbaijan

"The Armenian army is like Wonderland. You disappear once you get
there."

The author of this quatrain about the Armenian army, which can easily
be found on the Internet, was likely a young man who once served
there. Like anyone else, he knows the plight of the local army, which
is constantly praised by Armenian Defense Minister Seyran Ohanian.

Armenian media regularly reports on the disastrous situation in the
Armenian army, all sorts of abuses, bullying, crimes against soldiers
and frequent escapes. However, the news released later, certainly
surprised even seasoned military officers and soldiers.

Armenian press reported that a lieutenant colonel of the Armenian
armed forces, commander of a battalion of the Armavir military unit,
was hospitalized in a military hospital in Yerevan with four stab
wounds. The Military Prosecutor’s Office confirmed this fact. A
criminal case on the grounds of an attempted suicide was launched
right after the incident.

It later turned out that on the day of the incident, the military
unit’s management instructed to "punish the battalion commander for
his offensive remarks about Defense Minister Seyran Ohanian." They
could have punished him, for example, by reducing his already meager
salary, demoting him, dismissing him or even putting him on tribunal.

But the wise men of the army decided to act differently, in their
usual perverted manner.

The commander was tied to a chair and soldiers were told to shout
insulting things at him while passing by. Not wishing to suffer
humiliation, the colonel somehow freed his hands and stabbed himself
with a knife four times.

The news is certainly shocking and once again testifies to the lack
of rule of law and disorder in the Armenian army. It is high time
Ohanian dealt with them instead of using his regular harangue on the
combat capability of the Armenian army.

The army of any other country will hardly treat its officer this
way for criticizing the minister. The officer was subject to inhuman
punishment by his senior officers who wear the same uniform and the
same insignia.

Certainly, only a handful of people in the Armenian army have any
idea about honor and dignity. If you take into account that top
officials largely consist of Karabakh bandits who once fired at
peaceful inhabitants from behind the bushes, it becomes clear that
the story leaked to the Armenia media was hardly true. After all,
this story has quite a lot of contradictions.

For instance, why did the officer who set himself free by some miracle
decide to inflict four stab wounds on his body? It would be more
reasonable if he attacked on his attackers with a knife. How could
the colonel, whose hands were tied up, have a knife?

Maybe the story is quite different and the "suicide attempt" is a
version intended for the public. True, if they actually planned to
insult the colonel in a chair or decided to simply kill him, this
shows the lawlessness and anarchy prevailing in the Armenian army.

So, next time when Ohanian decides to rattle the sabre and praise his
army, he should at least in advance ask whether embarrassing cases
took place in the army…

Nevertheless, the minister’s reluctance to inquire about such facts
in advance is understandable as they have become an integral part of
routine for the Armenian army.

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

A Conversation Between Architects Silva Ajemian And Aslihan Demirtas

A CONVERSATION BETWEEN ARCHITECTS SILVA AJEMIAN AND ASLIHAN DEMIRTAS,

Absolutearts.com
http://www.absoluteart s.com/artsnews/2010/05/05/publish/2348910118.html
May 5 2010

"Remains Connected"

moderated by experimental architect and theorist Lebbeus Woods.

Tuesday, May 11, 6:30 PM

Pratt Manhattan, room 213 adjacent to the gallery

144 West 14th St.

New York, NY 10011

212 647-7778

Free and open to the public

This event is the second in a series of public discussions organized
in conjunction with the "Blind Dates" curatorial project which opens
at Pratt Manhattan Gallery in November 2010.

About the Participants:

Lebbeus Woods (b. 1940 in Lansing, Michigan) has concentrated
on theory and experimental work since 1976. He is the co-Founder
and Scientific Director of RIEA.ch, an institute devoted to the
advancement of experimental architectural thought and practice. His
most recent books are Radical Reconstruction (Princeton Architectural
Press, 1997), The Storm and The Fall (Princeton Architectural Press,
2003), and System Wien (Hatje Cantz/MAK, 2005). He is a recipient
of the Chrysler Award for Innovation in Design and his works are in
public collections, including the Museum of Modern Art, New York;
the Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum; the San Francisco Museum of
Modern Art; the Cartier Foundation for Contemporary Art, Paris; the
Austrian Museum of Applied Art, Vienna; the Carnegie Museum of Art,
and the Getty Research Institute for the Arts and Humanities. Lebbeus
Woods holds the position that architecture and war are in a certain
sense identical, and that architecture is inherently political. An
explicitly political goal of his highly conceptual work is the
instantiation of the conflict between past and future in shared
spaces. One of the most striking examples of his work is his project
on a possible future for the Korean De-militarized Zone. Conflict
and crisis are the forces within which the architectural forms of
Lebbeus Woods take shape. Lines and directions are traced out of a
sheer will to create a new space from the broken forms that are left,
for instance in the wake of the war in Bosnia.

Silva Ajemian grew up in Lebanon and moved to New York City in 1996.

She holds a Master of Architecture degree and a Bachelor of
Environmental Design Studies from Dalhousie University, Canada. She has
been practicing Architecture since 1996 and has worked with Michael
Sorkin and Vito Acconci. Recipient of the Rosetti Scholarship she
documented the architecture of public markets in London, and with
a CIDA travel grant she worked on low cost and sustainable housing
projects for local communities in Tumaco, Colombia, published by
Tuns Press. With her partner, Jorge Prado, she founded todo design in
2003, a multi disciplinary practice encompassing urban, architecture,
furniture and graphic design Their approach is
simple: treat each project as a provocation. The resulting expression
in material, spatial and philosophical terms aims always for the same
result, to raise awareness of our surroundings, our interactions with
it and its impact on us. Silva has taught architectural design at Kamla
Raheja Vidyanidhi Institute in Mumbai, and at Dalhousie Univerisity
in Halifax.Currently she is an adjunct professor at the New Jersey
Institute of Technology, School of Architecture and a visiting critic
at Pratt Institute, NYIT and Cornell University.

Aslihan Demirtas holds a Master of Science in Architectural
Studies from Massachusetts Institute of Technology and a Bachelor of
Architecture from the Middle East Technical University, Turkey. She is
a practicing architect since 1991 and has worked with I.M. Pei, as his
lead designer for international projects such as the Museum of Islamic
Art, Doha,Qatar. In 2007, she established her own practice in New
York where she is working on local and international projects and has
collaborated with IM Pei on a chapel project in Kyoto, Japan. As part
of her research, Aslihan Demirtas has been studying architecture as a
wider interdisciplinary understanding of building activity inclusive
of landscape and infrastructure and ecology. Her research has been
generously supported by the Aga Khan Program for Islamic Architecture.

She has published articles in journals and chapters in books by
MIT Press, Bauhaus and Harvard Press. Aslihan Demirtas is currently
teaching design studio at Parsons School of Constructed Environments
where she runs collaborative design projects with non-profit community
groups. She has taught at Fordham University and MIT and has lectured
at GSD at Harvard University and Bauhaus University in Weimar, Germany.

Abstract

At Ani, a bridge once connected the two banks of the Akhurian/Arpacay
River. Today, of the now collapsed bridge, only the abutments on the
two sides of the river remain, one in Turkey and the other in Armenia.

As the remains of the bridge exist in two territories, Ani exists in
two worlds, at once an important historic Armenian capital and an
archeological ruin in a military zone in Turkey at the border with
Armenia. Two architects are seduced by the collapsed bridge. Their
project consists of a series of visual, graphic and tectonic
‘conversations’ set up to investigate and interpret the multiple
existences of Ani, the river and its disconnected bridge. They start
by revealing the lenticular existence of the place and develop by
interweaving the resulting existences, references and projections. New
York based architects/designers Silva Ajemian and Aslihan Demirtas
work to reveal two stories, two forecasts. As they bridge from their
respective approaches, they seek to interleave insights and articulate
nested architectural and geographic narratives to create illusions
of simultaneity and unfold possible realities.

About Blind Dates:

As an interdisciplinary and cross cultural curatorial undertaking
Blind Dates tackles with the traces or ‘what remains’ of the peoples,
places and cultures that once constituted the diverse geography of
the Ottoman Empire (1299-1922). Taking the breakup of the latter’s
complex history as a point of departure, and considering the subsequent
formation of nation states throughout the region, the exhibition is
an attempt to explore the effects of various forms of ruptures, gaps,
erasures as well as (re)constructions, including continuities within
discontinuities, through the prism of contemporary lived-experiences.

Blind Dates has been working with artists, intellectuals and cultural
producers interested in deconstructing master narratives to give agency
a chance, or to extend new ‘ways of seeing’ contentious historical
accounts/events and their lingering effects on life today.

By pairing artists and non artists for a series of private/informal
discussions project co-curators, Defne Ayas and Neery Melkonian,
have been ‘matchmaking’ to mediate encounters between distanced
neighbors and their estranged cultures. The exhibition will be based
on collaborations stemming from these critical encounters.

www.pratt.edu/exhibitions
www.lebbeuswoods.net
www.tododesign.com.