Former Queen’s Anatomy Professor Dr. John V. Basmajian Dead At 86

FORMER QUEEN’S ANATOMY PROFESSOR DR. JOHN V. BASMAJIAN DEAD AT 86
By Jordan Press

The Kingston Whig-Standard
y.aspx?e=955202
March 24 2008
Canada

The music flowed from the basement. Then it came from the living room.

The works of the old masters – Bach, Beethoven and Mendelssohn –
filled the home of the Basmajian family courtesy of the young musicians
practising away. The notes took over the house and no one escaped it
except Dr. John V. Basmajian.

He lay on the couch most days focused on writing his latest research
paper or medical textbook.

Basmajian, who died last week at the age of 86, wrote plenty: More
than two dozen books and almost 400 research papers, many of which
were done during his time as head of anatomy at Queen’s University
in the late 1950s and 1960s.

His research was seen as revolutionary, but he also left an impact
locally after serving on the local school board and on the board of
governors for St. Lawrence College.

"He never wasted a moment. He never wasted a bit of time," said his
wife, Dora, from the couple’s Burlington home.

"We’re going to miss him a great deal."

Basmajian was born to Armenian parents in 1921 in Istanbul. It was
three years after the end of the First World War and six years removed
from the Armenian genocide, which took the lives of 1.5 million people.

His parents, Myran and Miriam, had both been married once before.

Myran lost his wife and children to the genocide, Miriam her first
husband and children.

So when Basmajian entered the world, he was "very precious" to his
parents, Dora said. They decided to leave Turkey, fearing tragedy
would revisit them if they stayed.

They boarded a boat and left Turkey, bribing their way aboard, and
then tried to enter France. Their papers didn’t allow them to gain
entry, however, and they sailed to Canada.

The family suffered through the depression as Basmajian grew up in
Brantford. Despite the financial hardships of the time, "they always
thought they were lucky for being safe," Dora said.

When the family moved to Toronto, Basmajian enrolled at the University
of Toronto and started working toward a medical degree. He worked
his way through school and earned his degree with honours in 1945.

While he was an intern at Toronto General Hospital, he met Dora,
who was a nurse. It was his last name that she first picked up on
and she asked him about it. He became a little defensive, but she
had his attention and the two began talking.

"I’ve been getting his attention about it ever since," Dora said with
a laugh. The couple was married for 60 years.

In 1957, Basmajian moved to Queen’s and became head of the anatomy
department, where he served for 12 years.

It was during this time that he sat through countless musical recitals
and school board meetings. His booming voice filled a room and he
enjoyed the spotlight that came with making decisions, but he enjoyed
the decision-making even more.

"It was natural to him," Dora said.

"He considered his co-workers and students as very special, as family."

His time in Kingston included lots of family time, specifically music
recitals on a regular basis.

He returned to Kingston in 1999 to receive an honorary doctor of
law degree from Queen’s. The degree highlighted his work in anatomy
and rehabilitation medicine, work that has influenced a generation
of doctors.

The family is planning a gathering to remember the man later this
spring. The family asks anyone wishing to make a donation in his
memory to consider the Kidney Foundation of Canada or the Alzheimer’s
Society of Canada.

http://www.thewhig.com/ArticleDispla

Turkish Party Leader Charged Over Alleged Terror Plot

TURKISH PARTY LEADER CHARGED OVER ALLEGED TERROR PLOT

Gulf News
March 24 2008
United Arab Emirates

Ankara: The leader of one of Turkey’s political parties has been
charged with involvement in an alleged plot to stir up civil unrest
and prompt a military coup.

Dogu Perincek, the leader of a small leftist political party is part
of a shadowy network of extreme nationalists who allegedly want to
topple the Islamic-rooted government.

The court in Istanbul Monday charged Dogu Perincek with "being a senior
official of a terrorist organization and obtaining and possessing
classified documents."

Perincek is the leader of the Turkish Workers’ Party which won a tiny
fraction of the votes in general elections last summer.

In 2007, a Swiss court convicted Perincek of racism for denying,
during trips to Switzerland, that the mass killing of Armenians in
the early 20th century was genocide.

Perincek is among several alleged suspects detained by police for
interrogation.

Armenian Opposition: Authorities Will Decline In Near Future

ARMENIAN OPPOSITION: AUTHORITIES WILL DECLINE IN NEAR FUTURE

PanARMENIAN.Net
21.03.2008 17:46 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Formally lifting the emergency rule, the authorities
apply the strategy of its perpetuation, Levon Ter-Petrosyan’s team-mate
Levon Zurabyan told a news conference on March 21.

"The authorities hastily took measures to deprive the population of
any possibility to protest. They used the state of emergency as a
tool of pressure on the Constitutional Court. That is why members of
our movement do not accept the CC decision," he said.

"Representatives of the ex-President’s movement are ready for
dialogue. But is dialogue possible when one of the sides reaches out
one hand and tries to beat with the other. Many of our team-mates
have been arrested; prisons have been filled with people persecuted
for their political views. Holding talks when our compatriots are
kept in custody would be treason," he said.

When commenting on further plans, Zurabyan said that opposition will
try to avoid tensions and bloodshed.

"We will not hold unauthorized protest actions," he said.

"Armenia is awakening. The nation will never accept the despotic
regime of the incumbent authorities which are doomed to decline soon,"
he said, IA Regnum reports.

Armenian President Announced That Tomorrow The State Of Emergency Or

ARMENIAN PRESIDENT ANNOUNCED THAT TOMORROW THE STATE OF EMERGENCY ORDER IN YEREVAN WILL BE LIFTED

Mediamax
March 20, 2008

Yerevan /Mediamax/. Armenian President Robert Kocharian stated today
that on March 21 the state of emergency order will be lifted.

Mediamax reports that, speaking at a news conference in Yerevan today,
the Armenian President stated that he does not see any reasons to
prolong the state of emergency.

"The implementation of a state of emergency on March 1 allowed avoiding
new human losses and more serious consequences for the country", Robert
Kocharian stated, noting that in the course of 20 days of the state
of emergency effect, cases of its violation were not registered. The
President reminded that in the course of the recent 20 days, he twice
signed decrees on mitigating the order of the state of emergency.

"Today, my main task is the complete stabilization of the situation
from the point of view of control and return to the situation,
which we had in Armenia before the elections. To overcome the
psychological consequences, of course, more time will be necessary",
Robert Kocharian stated.

The Armenian President stated that the initial results of the
investigation evidence that the mass unrest in Yerevan on March 1-2
were organized, "there are no doubts about it".

Robert Kocharian stated that in the nearest future, the cases of 40-50
arrested people will be sent to court and will undergo hearings in
accordance with accelerated legal procedure.

Azerbaijani Political Parties Denounce The Minsk Group Co-Chair Coun

AZERBAIJANI POLITICAL PARTIES DENOUNCE THE MINSK GROUP CO-CHAIR COUNTRIES’ VOTE AT THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY

armradio.am
19.03.2008 16:57

The political parties of Azerbaijan call on the OSCE Minsk Group
Co-Chairmen to put an end to double standards, serve peaceful
settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict and not take any reckless
steps.

"Political parties of Azerbaijan sharply condemn the OSCE Minsk Group’s
position on the Resolution on ‘Situation in Occupied Territories of
Azerbaijan’- which was adopted by the UN General Assembly," states
the declaration adopted by the political parties of Azerbaijan during
the conference organized by the ruling New Azerbaijan Party (NAP)
on 19 March.

On 14 March, the UN General Assembly supported the Resolution
on ‘Situation in Occupied Territories of Azerbaijan,’ which was
presented by the Azerbaijani side. The representatives of three
co-chair countries (USA, Russia and France) of the OSCE Minsk Group
– established for the peaceful settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh
conflict, voted against the Resolution, i.e. against the territorial
integrity of Azerbaijan.

The declaration says that according to the mandate of OSCE Minsk Group,
the key obligations of the mediators include achieving a peaceful
settlement of the conflict on the basis of norms and principles of
the international law.

"Unfortunately, in several cases, the Minsk Group Co-Chairmen do not
demonstrate succession in this regard. The statement of Co-Chairmen
distorting the essence of conflict adversely affected the process
of peaceful negotiations, nonetheless encouraged occupant country,"
the declaration says.

The declaration says that "the Co-Chair countries’ vote against the
document, submitted by the Azerbaijani side to the UN General Assembly,
brought to serious dissatisfaction in Azerbaijan. Thus, the Co-Chairman
subjected their objective activities to serious doubts and demonstrated
solidarity with Armenia, which openly breaks the rights of peaceful
neighborhood existence and principles of territorial integrity."

Armenian Parliament Amends Law On Rallies

ARMENIAN PARLIAMENT AMENDS LAW ON RALLIES

ARKA
March 14, 2008

YEREVAN, March 18. /ARKA/. The RA Parliament amended the law on
holding rallies, strikes and demonstrations on March 17.

Amendments to the law were necessary, as it had many drawbacks which
needed to be addressed in order to avoid additional difficulties,
said MP Rafik Petrosian.

He pointed out that the draft is guided by regulations of the European
Convention on Human Rights.

According to the amended law, rallies can be banned if the security
service and police make trustworthy reports that they may threaten
national security, public order or violate citizens’ constitutional
rights. At the same time, reports are considered trustworthy if the
Police and National Security Services make their official statement
on the issue.

After the recent violent clashes in Yerevan, authorized bodies
can temporarily ban rallies till they catch all the organizers of
the crime.

According to the law, rallies and demonstrations can be held only if
authorized bodies give their written permission. They inform organizers
their decision in 72 hours after receiving a written note on their
intention to hold rallies.

Baku To Revise Relations With Russia, US, France Over UN Resolution

BAKU TO REVISE RELATIONS WITH RUSSIA, US, FRANCE OVER UN RESOLUTION

Interfax News Agency
March 17 2008
Russia

Azerbaijan will revise its relations with the OSCE Minsk Group
co-chairmen over their vote against a UN General Assembly resolution
on the situation in the occupied Azerbaijani territory that called for
the withdrawal of all Armenian troops, Azeri Deputy Foreign Minister
Araz Azimov said.

"Azerbaijan will revise and adjust its relations with the co- chairing
countries within the framework of the Minsk process," Azimov told
journalists on Saturday.

Azimov said that Azerbaijan was stunned that all the three countries
co-chairing the OSCE Minsk Group voted against the resolution.

The resolution, which the UN General Assembly passed on Friday, was
supported by 39 countries, seven voted against it and 100 abstained.

The opponents of the resolution were Russia, the U.S., France, Armenia,
Angola, India, and Vanuatu.

"We are satisfied with the adoption of this resolution. This helped
clarify the situation. Azerbaijan is no longer going to move in
darkness. Everybody should realize that a conflict settlement
acceptable to Azerbaijan is possible only based on the territorial
integrity principle," Azimov said.

The passage of the resolution does not mean Azerbaijan intends to
change the format of the negotiations, and Baku will remain committed
to the OSCE Minsk Group’s mediation, Azimov said.

The resolution supports Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity, demands the
withdrawal of all Armenian forces "from all the occupied territories
of the Republic of Azerbaijan," reaffirms "the inalienable right of
the population expelled from the occupied territories" to return to
their homes, and calls for establishing "normal, secure and equal
conditions of life for Armenian and Azerbaijani communities in the
Nagorno-Karabakh region."

The resolution also supports international mediation efforts to settle
the conflict, particularly those made by the OSCE Minsk Group, and
calls on other organizations and countries to facilitate a peaceful
settlement of the conflict.

East Bay Symphony Celebrates Persian New Year

EAST BAY SYMPHONY CELEBRATES PERSIAN NEW YEAR
Joshua Kosman

San Francisco Chronicle
March 17 2008
CA

Michael Morgan and the Oakland East Bay Symphony threw an early New
Year’s party at the Paramount Theatre Friday night. It featured
plenty of music and was blessedly free of the maudlin strains of
"Auld Lang Syne."

That’s because the occasion was Persian New Year, which is actually
due on Wednesday. But Morgan and a fine pair of soloists decided
there was no pressing reason to delay the festivities.

Friday’s longish program, titled "Notes From Persia," was evenly
divided between traditional European repertoire – works by Rachmaninoff
and Richard Strauss occupied the first half – and music drawing either
directly or indirectly on Iranian themes. If the latter works generally
sounded less polished or rewarding than those of the established
masters, they still had the benefit of novelty.

And at least one selection from the second half, a collection of
Persian folk songs orchestrated by Bay Area composer David Garner,
turned out to be a heady and touching revelation. The songs were
assembled by Raeeka Shehabi-Yaghmai, a local mezzo-soprano whom Morgan
heard singing them at an orchestra Christmas party. She delivered
them with a fetching combination of tenderness and vigor.

They ranged from the alluring simplicity of "Sarzamineh man"
("My Homeland"), a limpid melody with harp accompaniment, to the
vivacious rhythmic lilt of "Shekare Ahoo" ("Deer Hunt"). For "She
Godar" ("Three Mountain Passes"), Shehabi-Yaghmai’s singing twined in
lively counterpoint with the violin lines of concertmaster Dawn Harms,
while a percussion section featuring Iranian instruments kept time.

These songs are part of an ongoing project by Shehabi-Yaghmai and
Garner to translate many Iranian folk melodies into concert form,
the same kind of ethnomusicological project that composers have been
undertaking for a century or more. It will be interesting to hear
what other jewels emerge from their efforts.

For more traditional concert fare, pianist Tara Kamangar was the
soloist in the Piano Concerto No. 2 by the Iranian-born French composer
Aminollah (or Andre) Hossein. Written in 1946, this turned out to be
a buoyant but rather lightweight affair, pursuing one simple musical
idea in each of its three movements and then taking itself modestly
off the stage.

The first movement was most interesting, a brittle jaunt deeply
indebted to Prokofiev but without his gift for thematic development.

Kamangar was a skilled advocate, playing with the same nimble
technique and lustrous phrasing that she had brought in the first
half to Rachmaninoff’s "Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini."

There was big orchestral bombast to begin and end the evening,
delivered under Morgan’s firm-handed guidance. Strauss’ "Don Juan"
got things off to a nicely muscular start, and the program concluded
with a suite from Loris Tjeknavorian’s 1965 opera "Rostam and Sohrab."

Tjeknavorian, an ethnic Armenian born and raised in Iran, was here in
2001 to conduct Tigran Chukhadjian’s 1868 opera "Arshak II" at the San
Francisco Opera. His orchestral writing proved somewhat overbearing
except for a beautifully translucent section for solo violin, cello,
horn and harp.

Armenian President Does Not See Perquisites For Prolonging The Term

ARMENIAN PRESIDENT DOES NOT SEE PERQUISITES FOR PROLONGING THE TERM OF EFFECT OF THE STATE OF EMERGENCY

Mediamax
March 17, 2008

Yerevan /Mediamax/. Spokesman of the Armenian President Viktor
Soghomonian stated today that up till now no cases of violation of
the state of emergency order, imposed on March 1 by the decree of
the President, were registered.

Mediamax reports that, speaking at a briefing in Yerevan today, Viktor
Soghomonian stated that the President does not see perquisites for
prolonging the term of effect of the state of emergency.

"The limitations of the media are of temporary nature. Besides, these
limitations were considerably mitigated, and we gave clear directions
as to what actions are banned", the Spokesman of the President stated.

There Are No Prerequisites For Prolonging The State Of Emergency

THERE ARE NO PREREQUISITES FOR PROLONGING THE STATE OF EMERGENCY

armradio.am
17.03.2008 17:06

The President’s Spokesman Viktor Soghomonyan declared today that
no case of violation of the state of emergency declared with the
presidential decree of March 1 has been registered. Viktor Soghomonyan
added that the there are no prerequisites for prolonging the state
of emergency.

"The restrictions of mass media activity are of temporary character.

Besides, these restrictions have been considerably mitigated, and
we have exactly noted what is prohibited," the President’s Spokesman
declared.

Viktor Soghomonyan declared that he was surprised when he got familiar
with the statements of the US Deputy Assistant Secretary of State
Matthew Bryza made early last week after the latter departed from
Yerevan.

Speaking at a news conference in Yerevan today, Viktor Soghomonyan
stated that he is familiar with the content of the talk of the US
diplomat with the Armenian President Robert Kocharyan "and could not
compare it with the statements Matthew Bryza made later on."

"We defend democracy from "power of the crowd" and we do not endanger
the democratic values," Viktor Soghomonian stressed.