Kevork Arslanian, 100, Survived WWI Massacre

KEVORK ARSLANIAN, 100, SURVIVED WWI MASSACRE
Richard M. Peery
Plain Dealer Reporter

Cleveland Plain Dealer, OH
March 30 2006

Garfield Heights- Kevork “George” Arslanian, 100, a survivor of the
slaughter of Armenians in Turkey during World War I and a Cleveland
barber since 1928, died Monday at Marymount Hospital.

Arslanian was living in Malatia, Turkey, when he and two siblings
were rescued by an uncle who had converted to Islam and a Muslim woman.

Their parents and other family members died in the massacre that took
an estimated 1.5 million Christian Armenians’ lives.

Although 24 nations have labeled it an act of genocide, the Turkish
government denies responsibility for the deaths.

The children were placed in a Red Cross orphanage in Syria.

Another uncle in Cleveland tried to send for them but was blocked by
immigration quotas. The uncle provided passage to Cuba, where the
children shined shoes and did odd jobs for several years. In 1927,
prohibition-era rum runners smuggled them into the United States.

Arslanian never attended school beyond kindergarten, but he taught
himself to read using a dictionary and newspapers. He enrolled in
Miller Barber College and was awarded the 11th license issued in
Ohio. In 1932 he opened a barbershop with his brother.

Four years later, a friend wrote Arslanian to tell him about a young
woman in another city. She was Vergin “Virginia” Sarkisian, who had
also lived through the massacre and fled to Syria as a child.

He married her and brought her to Cleveland in 1936. They lived in
Garfield Heights for many years.

In 1955, Arslanian and his brother moved their shop to the former
Milo Theater at East 100th Street and Miles Avenue. His sons began a
rug-cleaning business in the back of the building in 1959 that grew
into one of the industry’s leaders under the Arslanian Brothers name.

Although two years ago Arslanian stopped driving to the barbershop
to cut hair each Friday, he continued to help repair rugs one or two
days a week.

Arslanian was a founding member of St. Gregory of Narek Armenian
Church. The congregation built the area’s first Armenian Orthodox
church in Richmond Heights in the 1960s. He remained one of its
leaders throughout his life.

He was often asked to speak at weddings, birthdays, anniversaries
and funerals. He was also active in the Armenian General Benevolent
Union and the Tekeyan Cultural Association.

To reach this Plain Dealer reporter:

[email protected], 216-999-4807

Kevork Arslanian

1905 – 2006

Survivors: Ted of Aurora, Henry of Solon and Armen of Independence;
nine grandchildren; and 22 great-grandchildren.

Services: 10:30 a.m. Friday at St. Gregory of Narek Armenian Church,
678 Richmond Road, Richmond Heights 44143.

Contributions: St. Gregory of Narek Armenian Church; Tekeyan Cultural
Association, Armenian Benevolent Union; all same address as the church.

Arrangements: Johnson-Romito of Bedford.

Vartan Oskanian: Diaspora Wants The Best For Armenia,And The Best Fo

VARTAN OSKANIAN: DIASPORA WANTS THE BEST FOR ARMENIA, AND THE BEST FOR ARMENIA IS GOOD RELATIONS WITH NEIGHBOURS

Noyan Tapan
Armenians Today
Mar 28 2006

ISTANBUL, MARCH 28, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. The Turkish
“Huriet” daily published its correspondent Sefa Kaplan’s interview
with RA Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian. The interview that the
Istanbul “Marmara” daily reprinted in translation on March 27,
is completely presented below. H.- The new Constitution of Armenia
liquidates the prohibition of dual citizenship. What may happen if
making use of this right, Diaspora has a more influencial role in
the political life of Armenia? V.O.- The issue of dual citizenship
is still disputable in Armenia. No clear decision has been yet made
on this occasion. As in any independent country, in Armenia as well,
the political life is decided by the population of Armenia. There are
numerous gossips, wrong interpretations and wrong conceptions about
Armenia in Turkey. And of its reasons is that the Government of Turkey
refuses to establish diplomatic relations with Armenia. If relations
are established between our countries, the two countries’ peoples
as well will bear the influence of mutual contact, and the Turkish
people will see that it has nothing to be worry from Armenia. H.-
One important part of the Turkish society thinks that if Diaspora
doesn’t exist, the Turkey-Armenia relations will be at much more
well-provided state. V.O.- If the events of 1915 didn’t happen, the
“Diaspora” conception wouldn’t exist. Armenia and Diaspora demand
that events of 1915 are accepted and condemned. On the other hand,
the fact of the borders’ being close and the reality of absence
of relations between the two countries indignate people and deepen
the gulf existing between the two countries. For this puprose our
peoples are not given possibility to share their new experience with
one another and to change their old memories by new ones. Diaspora,
of course, wants the best for Armenia. And the best for Armenia is
establishing good relations with its neighbors. We hope that the
Turkish people as well wants to establish good relations with its
neighboring country, and we expect just it. H.- Will the Diasporan
Armenians be given the right to vote during elections? V.O.- No,
they will not be given that right. H.- What do you want to say to the
Turkish people about the peace and safety of the territories? V.O.-
Peace and calmness will be established only in the case when natural
relations will be established and the dialogue will be completed. To
Erdogan’s proposal addressed to the President of Armenia on calling to
life the “history commission,” Robert Kocharian responded that such
a commission can be created only at the time when close diplomatic
relations and a dialogue are established between the two countries
and governments, and the borders are open. Turkey didn’t respon this
proposal. And the European Union affirmed that even in the case of
having misunderstandings, Turkey must establish good relations with its
neighbors. Turkey is a country that has serious issues with some of
its neighbors and other ones with some others. But it has diplomatic
relations with all the countries, except Armenia. The issue that
Turkey and Armenia, in the international law and order, with their
today’s borders, have their place, is a political reality. Another
political reality is also the issue that Armenia, as a neighboring
country, is not a threat for Turkey. It’s enough for a step is taken
for the beginning.

U.S. Doesn’t Press On Yerevan And Baku In Karabakh Issue

U.S. DOESN’T PRESS ON YEREVAN AND BAKU IN KARABAKH ISSUE

PanARMENIAN.Net
29.03.2006 20:13 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ “The U.S. doesn’t press on either of the parties
to the Nagorno Karabakh conflict,” U.S.

Assistant Secretary for the Bureau of European and Eurasian Affairs
Daniel Fried stated yesterday in an interview with Armenia TV
Channel. “The U.S. will admit any variant which will satisfy all the
parties,” he said. Besides, he noted that proceeding from security
the U.S. render assistance to Azerbaijan.

“However these funds cannot be used to the detriment of Armenia,
they will be spent on the war on terror,” he added.

Mr. Fried also noted that Washington is interested in Armenia’s
security and in this context the maintenance of parity in military
aid to Armenia and Azerbaijan is essential.

Armenian MP Says No Parallels Possible Between Azeri Exclave AndKara

ARMENIAN MP SAYS NO PARALLELS POSSIBLE BETWEEN AZERI EXCLAVE AND KARABAKH

Arminfo
27 Mar 06

Yerevan, 27 March: Parallels cannot be drawn between Nagornyy
Karabakh and [Azerbaijan’s exclave of] Naxcivan as Council of Europe
Secretary-General Terry Davis has done, Tigran Torosyan, head of the
Armenian delegation to the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of
Europe and deputy speaker of the Armenian parliament, said at today’s
press conference. Davis has said that the Council of Europe will send
a delegation to Nagornyy Karabakh and Naxcivan to find out about the
situation with the preservation of cultural monuments.

Nagornyy Karabakh and Naxcivan are completely different entities
in terms of their status, Torosyan said. “Finally, one should not
forget that a war finished in Nagornyy Karabakh only 12 years ago,
whereas there have never been military operations in Naxcivan. And
I intend to draw the attention of Terry Davis to this fact,” he said.

It is all a different matter if the Council of Europe delegation wants
to visit Nagornyy Karabakh to clarify some issues. In that case,
the visit should be agreed with the Nagornyy Karabakh authorities,
Torosyan said.

Following the latest act of vandalism in Naxcivan in December 2005,
Armenia appealed to various international bodies for condemnation of
the destruction of the Armenian cultural memorials in Azerbaijan. In
response to a letter by Armenian Speaker Artur Bagdasaryan, Terry Davis
said that a special delegation of the Council of Europe will visit
Nagornyy Karabakh in the summer 2006 to learn about the situation on
the ground.

Service Is Appreciated

SERVICE IS APPRECIATED

A1+
03:37 pm 27 March, 2006

Actor of the Yerevan Chamber Theater Hrant Tokhatyan has been awarded
the title of Honored artist. The title was of course won four years
ago when he actively participated in the process of depriving “A1+”
of air together with the company “Sharm”.

By the decree of Robert Kocharyan a number of theatrical figures have
been awarded titles. Among them are opera singer Barsegh Toumanyan,
actor of the Yerevan Drama Theater Hovhannes Babakhanyan, actor of
the Puppet Theater Derenik Martirosyan, actor of the Artist Theater
Lala Mnatsakanyan and chief conductor of the Opera and Ballet national
Theater Karen Sargsyan.

By another decree Head of the State Drama Theater of the city of
Kapan Kamo Arzoumanyan has been awarded the Movses Khorenatsy medal.

Council Of Europe To Assist Improvement Of Armenian Judicial System

COUNCIL OF EUROPE TO ASSIST IMPROVEMENT OF ARMENIAN JUDICIAL SYSTEM

Noyan Tapan
Mar 27 2006

YEREVAN, MARCH 27, NOYAN TAPAN. The possibilities of cooperation in
different directions between the Council of Europe and the Armenian
judicial system were discussed at the March 27 meeting of RA Cassation
Court Chairman Hovhannes Manukian and Council of Europe Secretary
General’s Special Representative Boyana Urumova. As Noyan Tapan was
informed by the Cassation Court’s Spokesperson, the interlocutors
touched upon the current legislative developments in the Armenian
judicial system, especiallyn the revision of the draft Judicial
Code. Presenting separate provisions of the draft Judicial Code,
H.Manukian attached importance to the fact that it concerns almost
all spheres of the judicial system’s activity and in the future
will be a basis for working out trial codes. It was mentioned that
at the current stage of reforms there is a necessity to change the
current institutions and to form new ones (in particular, judicial
self-government bodies, meeting of judges, council of judges,
judicial department, judicial service). H.Manukian also touched
upon the application of the powers reserved for the Cassation Court
by the Constitution. The Special Representative of CE Secretary
General informed that the CE respective specialists will also
consider the draft Judicial Code and will present the corresponding
opinion. B.Urumova also attached importance to issues of professional
retraining, as well as translation of the European Court’s precedent
decisions.

‘Terrible Fate’; The Legacy Of Ethnic Cleansing

‘TERRIBLE FATE’; THE LEGACY OF ETHNIC CLEANSING
By Pamela H. Sacks, Telegram & Gazette Staff

Telegram & Gazette (Massachusetts)
March 21, 2006 Tuesday
All Editions

Historian Ben Lieberman was reflecting on Slobodan Milosevic shortly
after the Serbian strongman’s death last week in a jail cell in
The Hague.

Milosevic led Serbia, the dominant Yugoslav republic, into four Balkan
wars. At the time of his death from a heart attack, he was on trial
before an international tribunal, charged with 66 counts of war crimes,
including genocide, in Croatia, Bosnia and Kosovo.

“Milosevic was at one time a socialist, or communist, and didn’t
care about national purity,” Mr. Lieberman said. “In the 1980s,
he realized he could draw power by manipulating opinions.”

Mr. Lieberman went on to explain that Milosevic’s actions fit a
historical pattern of ethnic cleansing, in which one group starts the
process by creating fear of another through the telling and retelling
of hate-filled stories. “In periods of crisis, those stories about
people who aren’t and haven’t been their enemies take over, even
among people who know better,” he said.

Ethnic-cleansing campaigns range from intimidation to terror to
violence that sometimes includes rape, Mr. Lieberman said. “Then
there’s extermination.”

Mr. Lieberman, who will speak Thursday at Clark University, has
traced ethnic cleansing over the past two centuries in eastern and
central Europe and Asia. His findings are presented in his new book,
“Terrible Fate: Ethnic Cleansing in the Making of Modern Europe.”

As the Ottoman, Russian, Austro-Hungarian and German empires collapsed
in the 19th century, waves of ethnic cleansing and related violence
changed the populations of towns and cities and transformed those vast
multi-ethnic empires into the nearly homogenous nation-states of today.

The decimation continued through the 20th century, with the Armenian
genocide, the two world wars, the Holocaust, the rise and fall of the
Soviet Union and, in the 1990s, the breakup of Yugoslavia. Monarchs
and dictators were fomenters, but so were democratically elected
leaders. Ordinary people often required little encouragement to rob
and brutalize their neighbors, Mr. Lieberman said. The Holocaust and
the Armenian genocide were not discrete atrocities but part of a much
broader process.

“Ethnic cleansing remade almost the entire map from Germany through
Turkey,” Mr. Lieberman, a professor at Fitchburg State College, said
by telephone from his campus office. “You could look at any town or
village and find the population was different 150 years ago.

Different minority populations were forced out – usually violently.”

The denial of the Armenian genocide by the Turkish government is,
he said, “part of the mythology of politics.” On the other hand,
there are many Turkish historians and scholars who do acknowledge
what happened, particularly if they are speaking privately or are
outside of their country.

“The Turks have a lot in common with other nations,” Mr. Lieberman
said. “Many nations have powerful national stories, and they are the
heroes, and they were victimized. They have a hard time understanding
and recognizing the suffering of others. You can look at the Turkish,
Armenian or Greek understanding of history – there are similar stories
of victimization. The Turks aren’t that different from other people.”

Today, there is reason to worry that ethnic cleansing is taking place
in Iraq, he said. Some argue that members of the two major Islamic
sects, the Shiite and the Sunni, are not different enough to touch off
widespread ethnic violence. Mr. Lieberman is not so sure. “The close
ties do not tell me there is not going to be more ethnic cleansing,”
he said.

Attitudes about ethnic cleansing have changed only in the last
15 years, Mr. Lieberman asserts. The idea was acceptable in the
mid-20th century. Even after World War II, he said, there was a
strong international consensus that sometimes people needed to live
in separate spheres to create long-term peace.

In the 1990s, attitudes changed in the face of the extreme brutality
occurring in the Balkans, where Mr. Milosevic played an important
and brutal role, and steps were taken to stop it.

“People used to say, `What could we do?’ Now, they say, `It is bad,'”
Mr. Lieberman said.

Nonetheless, little to no effort was made to stop the killing of
hundreds of thousands of Tutsi by the Hutu in the early 1990s in
Rwanda, and it is widely acknowledged that genocide is occurring in
the Darfur region of Sudan right now.

“Nicholas Kristof is writing about it,” Mr. Lieberman said, referring
to a columnist at The New York Times. “But I don’t think there’s been
an adequate response thus far.”

What: “Driven Off the Map” – a lecture by Professor Ben Lieberman,
presented by the Strassler Family Center for Holocaust and Genocide
Studies, Clark University

When: 7:30 p.m. Thursday

Where: Tilton Hall, Higgins University Center, Clark University,
950 Main St., Worcester

How much: Free and open to the public, to be followed by a reception.

Armenia-Turchia: Inedito Faccia A Faccia Ambasciatori Su RAI

ARMENIA-TURCHIA: INEDITO FACCIA A FACCIA AMBASCIATORI SU RAI

ANSA Notiziario Generale in Italiano
March 20, 2006

Interventi A Cronometro Su Questione Genocidio Su Uno Mattina

(ANSA) – ROMA, 20 MAR – La spinosa questione del presunto genocidio
degli armeni da parte dei turchi nel 1915, che Ankara non ha mai
ufficialmente riconosciuto, e’ stato al centro di un incontro fra
gli ambasciatori in Italia di Turchia, Ugul Ziyal, e Armenia, Rouben
Shugarian, stamani sulla rubrica di storia di Uno Mattina. Un incontro
definito “storico” dal conduttore della trasmissione, Roberto Olla,
fra i rappresentanti diplomatici di due Paesi, che fra loro non hanno
relazioni diplomatiche.

I due ambasciatori, che hanno avuto tempi ‘contingentati’ per parlare
e senza domande, si sono detti d’accordo di dover guardare al futuro
per superare la storica inimicizia fra i due Paesi, che lentamente
sembrano erodere la pesante barriera rappresentata dal genocidio, senza
essere tuttavia ancora riusciti ad abbatterla: la Turchia e’ pronta
ad esaminare la spinosa questione con una “ricerca congiunta sugli
archivi storici” insieme all’Armenia; l’Armenia ribadisce di essere
pronta a riaprire relazioni con Ankara, ma chiede che la questione
del genocidio non sia appannaggio degli storici, ma dei due governi.

“Non concordiamo sulla natura di questa tragedia”, ha detto
l’ambasciatore turco Ziyal: “Non si tratta di negazionismo,
ma di ricercare congiuntamente negli archivi verita’ che siano
incontrovertibili”, ha detto, aggiungendo che “il governo e il
parlamento turchi sono pronti ad esaminare la questione da un punto di
vista storico”, visto che la disputa riguarda fatti compiuti ai tempi
dell’Impero Ottomano, prima che nascesse la repubblica turca. Sulla
sua proposta, ha detto l’ambasciatore, Ankara sta ora aspettando una
risposta dal governo di Erevan.

Per Ziyal, il fatto che “attivisti armeni abbiano chiesto a diversi
parlamenti di approvare differenti risoluzioni che riconoscono il
genocidio degli armeni. Questo significa che le realta’ storiche non
sono state in grado di sostanziare queste accuse”.

“La storia – ha detto da parte sua l’ambasciatore armeno Shugarian –
non e’ stata scritta, non e’ un documento che puo essere censurato,
il genocidio e’ un fatto accaduto e la diaspora armena, sparsa
per il mondo, ne costituisce una prova”. Secondo Shugarian,
“l’interpretazione turca e’ in completo disaccordo con il resto
della comunita internazionale”, ed il fatto che “la maggior parte
della comunita’ internazionale riconosce il genocidio come un fatto
storico. Il Parlamento italiano lo ha riconosciuto nel 2001”.

Il negazionismo, secondo il diplomatico armeno, costituisce un
ostacolo alla prevenzione dei crimini: “Potete immaginare voi una
commissione di storici incaricata di decidere se Auschwitz sia esistita
o meno?”. La questione, ha detto Shugarian, non deve essere affrontata
dagli storici, ma dai politici e attraverso “comitati” e “commissioni”
intergovernative. Shugarian ha ricordato come l’Armenia abbia “steso la
mano a voi (turchi) per aprire i confini e per stabilire un dialogo”.

L’ambasciatore turco ha poi detto che il suo Paese “e ansioso di
avere ottimi rapporti con l’Armenia”, che deve pero riconoscere il
confini fra i due Paesi determinati dall’accordo del 1923 siano
considerati da Erevan come “inviolabili e permanenti”. Se non vi
sono rivendicazioni sui confini turchi, “da questo punto di partenza
possiamo andare avanti”.

Shugarian ha ricordato come il confine sia stato “chiuso
unilateralmente”, in violazione dell’accordo del ’23, che stabilisce
collegamenti nei trasporti fra i due Paesi. Secondo l’ambasciatore
turco, “solo il confine terrestre e’ chiuso”, mentre lo spazio aereo e’
aperto.

The Splice That Binds Two Giants

Spartanburg Herald Journal , SC
March 25 2006

The Splice That Binds Two Giants

By KEN BELSON
New York Times
Published March 25, 2006

This article was reported by Ken Belson, James Kanter and Andrew Ross
Sorkin and was written by Mr. Belson.

For Patricia F. Russo, pulling Lucent Technologies back from the
brink of bankruptcy has not been enough.

As chairman and chief executive of the company, the nation’s biggest
telecommunications equipment maker, she has been under pressure for
the last two years to find a long-term solution for its troubles. On
Thursday, it became clear that a $13.6 billion deal with Alcatel of
France itself a survivor that has made a comeback in the turbulent
global telecommunications industry was perhaps the only viable option
left.

Ms. Russo, who took the helm at Lucent in 2002, defied skeptics by
returning the company to profitability by cutting thousands of jobs,
eliminating billions of dollars in debt and promoting wireless
technology. But righting a ship and driving it full steam ahead are
two very different things.

For all her efforts, Ms. Russo has been outflanked by her competitors
who moved faster into new fiber optic technologies and by rapid
consolidation among her customers in the phone industry. Under these
circumstances, many analysts have predicted that it was only a matter
of when, not whether, Ms. Russo would seek a merger. The transaction,
which the companies characterized as a merger of equals, could be
announced as soon as Monday.

But no matter how the deal is labeled on Wall Street or in
Washington, the new entity will face many hurdles. The
telecommunications landscape has been swept by ever larger mergers
including AT&T’s plan to buy BellSouth, announced this month creating
fewer clients with more leverage to demand cheaper equipment prices.

At the same time, up-and-comers from Asia like Huawei have been
cutting prices steeply to break into new markets. These newcomers
have been able to compete with old-line manufacturers because of the
broad shift toward equipment that runs on open standards, not the
proprietary technology sold by Lucent, Nortel and others.

This shift has allowed AT&T and other big carriers to sidestep Lucent
and buy equipment directly from low-cost makers in places like Taiwan
or China.

Still, analysts and investors were upbeat about the merger because by
teaming up, the companies could reduce their costs by consolidating
some of their operations. For Alcatel, a merger would bring Lucent’s
very profitable C.D.M.A. wireless technology used by Verizon
Wireless, Sprint Nextel and others. Alcatel could take advantage of
Lucent’s long relationships with the Bell companies. The companies
could also combine their fiber optic units and perhaps gain enough
power in the market to reverse the long decline in prices. Lucent
shares rose 24 cents, to close at $3.06 yesterday. The deal is not
expected to include a premium on Lucent’s market value. Alcatel’s
American depository receipts rose 25 cents, to close at $15.70.

The details of the possible deal continued to trickle out early
yesterday.

Ms. Russo, 53, would be chief executive of the combined company,
people close to the discussions said. The enlarged entity would have
its “executive office” in Paris, though it would continue to have
major operations in both the United States and France. Its board
would be split evenly between the merger partners.

Alcatel is not a new player in the North American market. In fact,
since the mid-1980’s it has considered itself more of a global
company than a French one, even adopting English as the official
language for its multinational staff.

Most notably, Alcatel, like Lucent, has had to recover from a dire
business downturn just a few years ago. The company, led by Serge
Tchuruk, 68, an English-speaking French citizen of Armenian heritage
who became chairman and chief executive of Alcatel in 1995, has also
cut thousands of jobs in recent years.

In 1998, Mr. Tchuruk got a harsh lesson when the stock plunged 38
percent in a day after he said earnings would miss analysts’
estimates. He began cutting costs and focusing on the core
businesses. The global work force, once 115,700, is now 58,000, with
most of the layoffs outside France.

Mr. Tchuruk, who is expected to retire as chief executive in May and
remain as nonexecutive chairman, also shed unprofitable divisions
like mobile phones to focus on network sales to developing markets
and sales of high-speed Internet equipment and digital subscriber
lines.

Those efforts, many analysts say, allowed Alcatel to survive when the
telecommunications sector crashed in 2000. In 2005, Alcatel recorded
net profit of about $1.12 billion.

The company generates 15 percent of its sales in North America and 15
percent in Asia, compared with 12 percent in France. Only one French
company France Télécom is among its 10 biggest customers.

Analysts said the two companies, which had merger talks in 2001, were
a good fit, combining the growing reach of Alcatel in
developing-world markets and its leadership in broadband equipment,
fiber optic networks and Internet television with Lucent’s strength
in the wireless equipment market in the United States, where Alcatel
is seeking growth.

Lucent, under Ms. Russo’s direction, has also pushed forward with
next-generation technology like IP Multimedia Subsystem, or I.M.S.,
which is intended to integrate wireless and fixed-line networks. AT&T
and Cingular, for instance, have signed contracts to work with
Lucent.

“I look at the deal with Alcatel and I think it’s chocolate and
peanut butter, they fit so perfectly,” said Paul Sagawa, who covers
Lucent for Sanford C. Bernstein, an investment research company, in
New York.

A merger with Alcatel would be the final unraveling of Lucent, a
highflier whose stock once traded over $63 a share, in 1999. It has
been through so much already, including losing more than two-thirds
of its revenue since 1999.

With its customers the Bell companies and the big wireless carriers
consolidating, “the only way to respond is not to compete but to
merge,” said Richard Nespola, the chairman and president of the
Management Network Group, a telecommunications consultant.

The merger would not necessarily mean significant job cuts at Lucent,
analysts said, because deep cuts could potentially harm Lucent’s
leadership in the wireless equipment market and its long
relationships with the Bell companies. Any future layoffs, they said,
would probably be at headquarters rather than in operational jobs.

On Lucent’s sprawling corporate campus in Murray Hill, N.J., Lucent
employees were adopting a wait-and-see attitude about the merger.

Sophia Tsai, who works in the new- product introduction department,
said she had received an e-mail message from Ms. Russo, discussing
the possible merger without going into detail.

Ms. Tsai, like others interviewed, recognized that the merger could
mean layoffs and department mergers.

“It is possible that this is a merger of equals, and Lucent will
remain in control,” she said. “We have a strong leadership here.
There might be some changes. It depends on who takes the lead.”

George M. Calhoun, a professor at the Stevens Institute of
Technology, said that “looking at the size of both companies, there’s
no doubt Alcatel will be the Daimler and Lucent will be the
Chrysler.”

But, he added, “keeping Pat in her position will reassure” Lucent’s
customers who are “scratching their heads whether they are going to
have to deal with new people. ”

Mr. Calhoun also said that naming Ms. Russo as chief executive of the
proposed merged company might give Alcatel access to government
contracts that foreign companies were typically prohibited from
bidding on.

But Steve Kamman, an analyst at CIBC World Markets, said regulators
and lawmakers could have “serious concerns” about an Alcatel-Lucent
deal because Bell Labs, Lucent’s research arm, has worked closely
with various security agencies. This could lead to a long and
potentially contentious approval process, he said.

A Lucent spokesman, William Price, said company executives were not
available for comment yesterday.

Over all, nearly half of Lucent’s revenue now comes from wireless
equipment, up from 37 percent two years ago. At the same time, sales
from wireline equipment have been shrinking and now make up a quarter
of revenue, down from 37 percent in 2003. As for new products like
I.M.S. technology, which Lucent hopes to rely on, the markets are not
large and may take years to grow.

In the meantime, Mr. Kamman said, “the whole industry is a
fixer-upper.” Ten years ago, he said, “this would have been
earth-shattering, but the forces in play are so enormous that this
merger is underwhelming.”

Ara Barmakian: Leading jeweler helped many immigrants

The Boston Globe
March 24, 2006 Friday
THIRD EDITION

ARA BARMAKIAN; LEADING JEWELER HELPED MANY IMMIGRANTS; AT 77

BY GLORIA NEGRI, GLOBE STAFF

Ara Barmakian, who took his father’s small business and turned it
into one of the largest family-owned jewelry companies in the
country, died Sunday at his Belmont home after a brief illness. He
was 77.

Mr. Barmakian, who trained as an engineer at the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology but entered the jewelry business in his 20s
when his father died, was considered one of the biggest diamond
dealers on the East Coast and a giant in the jewelry industry.

“This man built an empire in Massachusetts, and he helped everyone
who needed help along the way,” said Souren Maserejian, a Boston
jeweler, who was one of many new Americans Mr. Barmakian sponsored
and mentored in the jewelry business.

The son of Armenian immigrants himself, Mr. Barmakian not only
sponsored his arrival in this country from Armenia in 1972,
Maserejian said, but gave him a job in his office at Barmakian
Jewelers for two years.

“He was like an older brother to me,” he said. “My dream was to have
my own place, and I got it in 1975.”

Though Mr. Barmakian was an MIT graduate, Maserejian said, “he could
sit down and talk to the plainest person with plain language and be
their friend. For any person, he gave the opportunity to encourage
him.”

Mr. Barmakian helped many young immigrants realize their dreams, said
his daughter Gail, of Oak Bluffs.

“Dad had the biggest heart in the world,” she said. “He bonded with
people quickly. He was also a workaholic.”

Mr. Barmakian was renowned for his knowledge of the jewelry business.

“He was a maven,” said Deepak Sheth, a New York jewelry and diamond
wholesaler. “He was one of my first customers when I came here from
India, a noble and generous man who treated others with tremendous
dignity. He took care of people and gave them respect. He was honored
and recognized in the jewelry industry for his knowledge and plans
for its growth.”

Last year, in Basel, Switzerland, the Armenian Jewelers Association
made Mr. Barmakian its international president. Three years earlier,
also in Basel, the AJA elected him chairman of its East Coast area
and gave him its lifetime achievement award.

“Ara was a born leader,” said Hagop Baghdadlian, owner of Cora
Diamonds in New York City. “He was shrewd, smart, and an inspiration
to all of us.”

Ara Levon Barmakian was born in Cambridge to Levon and Hripsime
Barmakian, who had fled the Armenian genocide from their home in
Malatia in Turkey.

Mr. Barmakian spoke no English until he was 5 and started attending
the Watertown public schools, his family said. He quickly
demonstrated an aptitude for all things mechanical, “as well as hard
work.”

His mother died while he was in college studying engineering, and his
father soon after.

Levon Barmakian left behind his interest in a small shop he had
opened with his brothers in the Jewelers Building downtown “with a
shoebox of inventory,” the family said.

“Dad was always the dutiful Armenian son,” Gail Barmakian said, “and
knew what he had to do. He became the patriarch of the family to his
younger twin brothers and director of the company.”

With his brothers as partners, the three built the business. Today it
consists of stores in Boston, Framingham, and Nashua.

Mr. Barmakian had learned “by necessity and by his growing interest”
all aspects of the business, from gemology to metallurgy, design and
manufacture, marketing and sales. He traveled the world on business
trips.

In 1952, Mr. Barmakian married Natalie (Gazoorian) of Worcester.

Marcia Gazoorian of Worcester said her brother-in-law was “definitely
a self-made man.”

“He was a no-nonsense person,” she said. “If something had to be
done, he learned how to do it and did it.”

“He was compassionate and inquisitive. . . . He learned a lot by
talking with people. If you wanted to talk something through, he
would ask the right questions,” she said.

Mr. Barmakian’s favorite place away from work, his wife said, was at
Oak Bluffs on Martha’s Vineyard, where the family had a home.

“That’s where he would relax. He loved the water and the ocean,” she
said.

Besides his wife and his daughter, Mr. Barmakian leaves two other
daughters, Karen Herosian of Belmont and Janice McCullough of
Sudbury; his son, Ara Jr. of Belmont; two brothers, Diran and Vahan,
both of Winchester; and 11 grandchildren.

A service will be held at 11 a.m. today at St. James Armenian
Apostolic Church in Watertown. Burial will be in Mount Auburn
Cemetery, Cambridge.