Soccer-Macedonia squad for World Cup qualifier v Armenia

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Sports-Soccer

Soccer-Macedonia squad for World Cup qualifier v Armenia

Mon Aug 9,11:10 AM ET

SKOPJE, Aug 9 (Reuters) – Macedonia coach Dragan Kanatlarovski has named the
following 18-man squad for their opening World Cup qualifying match against
Armenia at home on August 18:

Goalkeepers: Petar Milosevski (A.Sebatspor), Jane Nikoloski (Sloga
Jugomagnat Skopje)

Defenders: Igor Mitreski (Spartak Moscow), Goce Sedloski (Vegalta Sendai,
Japan), Goran Stavrevski (Diyarbakirspor), Vasko Bozinovski (Kamen Ingrad),
Pance Kumber (Groclin Grodzisk), Alexander Vasovski (Vardar Skopje)

Midfielders: Goran Popov (Red Star Belgrade), Alexander Mitreski
(Grasshoppers), Mile Krstev (Groningen), Velice Sumolikoski (Zenit St
Petersburg), Artim Sakiri (West Bromwich Albion), Igor Jancevski (Varteks
Varazdin), Vanco Trajanov (Arminia Bielefeld)

Forwards: Goce Toleski (Rabotnicki Kometal Skopje), Goran Pandev (Lazhbio),
Draganco Dimitrovski (Pobeda Prilep).

Apart from Armenia, Macedonia are in a group with Netherlands, Romania, the
Czech Republic, Finland and Adorra.

Blessing of grapes set for Inland church

Press Enterprise (Riverside, CA)
August 3, 2004, Tuesday

Blessing of grapes set for Inland church;
TRADITION: The event at the Armenian Apostolic Church of Riverside
observes the Virgin Mary.

THE PRESS-ENTERPRISE

The Armenian Apostolic Church of Riverside will hold its annual
church picnic and traditional blessing of the grape service
beginning at 11:30 a.m. Aug. 15 at La Sierra Park, 5215 La Sierra,
Riverside.
The blessing of grapes is part of the Orthodox Christian Feast of
the Assumption of St. Mary, an observance of the death, burial,
resurrection and transfer to heaven of the Virgin Mary, the mother
of Jesus.
“Grapes are blessed during the Feast of the Assumption of St. Mary
to symbolize a number of values that are important to life and
living,” the Rev. Dr. Stepanos Dingilian, pastor of the church,
said in an e-mail.
Wine comes from grapes and symbolizes the blood shed by Christ, he
said.
“This ‘blood’ in turn signifies that no achievement that raises
the
standard of human civilization is possible without wholehearted
dedication, total commitment and unselfish perseverance,” he said.
Grapes grow in clusters, illustrating that people need family and
community to grow spiritually and mentally and to live a meaningful
life, he said.
The blessing of the grapes is observed on the Feast of St. Mary,
Dingilian said.
For information, call (951) 684-1722, (951) 522-5172 or (909)
883-1066.

Peace And Security Cannot Be Actualized Through Suspicion, Force

Tehran Times, Iran
Aug 7 2004

Peace And Security Cannot Be Actualized Through Suspicion, Force,
Threats: Khatami

BAKU (IRNA) — Visiting Iranian President Mohammad Khatami here on
Friday called peace, security, and justice the most basic needs of
humanity, saying that peace cannot be established by suspicion and
lack of confidence and security cannot be maintained by force and
threats.

Speaking at Azeri National Assembly, he added that in today’s world
peace and security are of great importance.

He added that new understandings and close cooperation are required
to promote peace and security.

“However, firm determination to promote peace, security and justice
as well as campaign against war, terrorism and discrimination on the
international, regional and national levels can open new horizons to
the human community,” he added.

Turning to the fact that today the fate of regional and world
countries are interdependent, he noted that dialogues, initiatives
and new measures are required for getting over the concerns inherent
in unilateral politics, economy and culture.

“Today, on the eve of entering the era of information and
communication technology, the world is facing new dilemmas and
limitations. Therefore, democratic methods and logic should be used
to tackle misleading approaches.

Prior to the president’s speech, Speaker of Azerbaijan’s National
Assembly Murtuz Aleskerov welcomed the Iranian chief executive and
hoped that his visit would give momentum to further expansion of
ties. —————- Focusing On Parliament Shows Respect For
Nation—————

Khatami also referred to parliament as the cornerstone of democracy
and symbol of sovereignty and said that placing focus on parliament
indicates respect for the nation.

Speaking in a meeting with the Speaker of Azerbaijan’s National
Assembly, he pointed to the decisive role of the parliaments of both
countries in expansion of mutual ties and urged to implement the
mutually signed agreements, despite bureaucratic problems.

The president noted that security, stability and progress in
Azerbaijan is linked to security in the Islamic Republic of Iran and
hoped that Karabakh clashes will lead to sustainable peace.

Appreciating the steps taken to establish a legal Caspian regime, he
said that Majlis is quite serious on the issue.

The chief executive hoped that a comprehensive plan securing the
interests of the Caspian littoral states will soon be drawn up.

“The convention on the Caspian Sea environment inked by the littoral
states will soon be examined by Majlis. We expect Azerbaijan’s
National Assembly will take a similar step,” he added.

Aleskerov also appreciated Iran’s approach towards Karabakh issue on
the international scene and said, “We believe that Iran will take
measures towards seeking a peaceful solution to the problem.

Solvay man writes hit songs for Armenia

Syracuse Post Standard, NY
Aug 3 2004

Solvay man writes hit songs for Armenia
Decker has written lyrics for works by a prominent Armenian composer.

By Mark Bialczak
Staff writer

You could argue that Daniel Decker gets more attention in Armenia
than he does in his hometown of Solvay.

After all, an American TV crew has yet to surreptitiously follow
Decker around for a couple of days for a network series.

That’s exactly what happened to Decker when he visited his wife
Armine Khurshudian’s homeland in May.

Unbeknownst to Decker, cameras followed him from the moment he walked
in the airport gate. Three days later, the host of the show, the
title of which translates into “By Their Steps,” caught Decker in the
lobby of his hotel for a face-to-face interview.

The host’s questions and Decker’s answers were translated by
Khurshudian and Armenian composer Ara Gevorgian. Decker was in
Armenia to work with Gevorgian, who’s one of the country’s most
prominent composers. For several years now, Decker has written lyrics
to pair with Gevorgian’s grand musical landscapes.

Decker pops a DVD of the 30-minute TV show into his portable computer
and relives the moment, from the stalker-like opening to the “big
reveal” in the hotel lobby.

American Armenians there for a visit applaud in the background when
Decker moves to the lobby piano and performs his piece “Redemption’s
Song.”

That piece appears on this year’s independently made, 11-song disc
“My Offering.”

The Christian-based recording also includes “Noah’s Prayer,” the
collaboration between Decker and Gevorgian that made him famous for
his 2002 performance of the song on Armenian Independence Day, May
28, 2002, with the Armenian Opera Orchestra. A video of that
performance, which has Mount Aratat

jutting in the background, was part of the Armenian show chronicling
that year’s significant events. The video still is played often on
Armenia TV, as well as on the big screen in the capital city of
Yerevan’s version of Times Square.

Decker writes and sings in English. The Armenians get his message.

His next video release in Armenia will be “Adana,” named for the city
that was one of the primary locations of the Armenian genocide during
World War I. In the lyrics, Decker describes how more than a million
Armenians were “slaughtered because they would not renounce their
faith in Christ.”

Decker says he loves writing for the Armenian people because of their
huge spirit.

He’s working on programs to provide financial aid to the poor in his
wife’s home country. Khurshudian moved to Syracuse after marrying
Decker in 2001, but they visit there as frequently as possible.

“On my fourth trip to Armenia, we went to the place where I had heard
the melody to ‘Noah’s Prayer’ (composed by Gevorgian) for the first
time,” Decker says. “I saw an old man being helped by a young girl.
They were begging for coins. People were giving them 10 drams. There
are 550 drams to a dollar. This had a huge impact on me.”

So Decker is working with Armenian programs that provide soup
kitchens, school supplies and clothing for the poor.

“They’re caring. They’re warm. There’s something about the Armenian
people that’s really touching,” Decker says. “It absolutely changed
my life. I decided I’d dedicate my career, my life, to helping these
Armenian people who have so little. This is just the beginning now.”

Damascus: Minister of Economy and Trade arrives in Yerevan

Syrian Arab News Agency
Aug 3 2004

Minister of Economy and Trade arrives in Yerevan

YEREVAN, Aug 3 (SANA)

Minister of Economy and Trade Dr. Ghassan al-Refai Tuesday arrived in
Yerevan heading the Syrian delegation to the 3rd meetings of the
Syrian-Armenian Joint Committee.

The Syrian delegation includes representatives of the Ministries of
Communications, Technology, Housing and Construction, Oil & Mineral
Resources, Tourism and State Planning Committee.

The Armenian side is headed by Armenian Minister of Agriculture David
Lokian.

RA Ambassador to Baltic Countries Hails Current Coop Level

RA AMBASSADOR TO BALTIC COUNTRIES HAILS CURRENT COOPERATION LEVEL OF
ARMENIA WITH THOSE COUNTRIES

YEREVAN, July 27, (Noyan Tapan). “Three Baltic countries are
interested in the integration of the South Caucasus in the European
and Euro-Atlantic structures too. Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia are
ready to support the three countries of the South Caucasus in these
problems”, Ashot Hovakimian, Armenian Ambassador to Poland and Baltic
countries, told NT. According to him, the Baltic countries try to find
their place in the European Union and NATO by conducting active policy
in the Caucasian countries to let the latter make use of their
experience of cooperating with the European structures. Ashot
Hovakimian reminded that the Baltic countries put forward the 3+3
cooperation formula in 2003 i.e. three Baltic and three Caucasian
countries. “Though our regions are different, there are some
similarities. They share the same Soviet heritage and are regarded to
be the experts of our region. It must not be percieved in a wrong way
i.e. to say that they are willing to take patronage. No, they are
ready to give us what they have already passed”, the Ambassador
emphasized. Ambassador Hovakimian gave a positive assessment to the
current level of the cooperation between Armenia and the Baltic
countries. According to him, the visits of the President of Armenia
paid to all Baltic countries in 2003, as well as the mutual visits of
the foreign ministers of Armenia and of those countries witness about
the active political ties. Ashot Hovakimian gave special importance to
the visit of the former president of Lithuania to Armenia and said
that the visits of the presidents of Latvia and Estonia to Armenia are
also expected.

ANKARA: Erdogan Answers Calls of Turkish Immigrants in France

Zaman, Turkey
July 21 2004

Erdogan Answers Calls of Turkish Immigrants in France

France is the sharpest turn on Turkey’s way to the European Union
(EU). Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s Paris visit is
important to ensure that Turkey rounds this difficult turn safe and
sound.

Erdogan first held meetings with French Prime Minister Jean Pierre
Raffarin yesterday and then in the evening met with Turkish citizens
living in France. Thousand of citizens living in and around Paris
turned out for the meeting held in a sports arena. Speakers were
limited to four minutes. Association representatives expressed their
complaints and their wishes. Afterwards, Erdogan approached the
podium and addressed the emigrants.

“Do not worry,” Erdogan said in response to difficulties the
emigrants were experiencing trying to get back into Turkey. “Use the
double citizenship passport, do not stay away from the administration
and become involved in politics.”

Erdogan gave the mobile phone number of Binali Yildirim, the Minister
of Transport, and said that the Minister would deal with the problems
in person. Then Erdogan gave another number for the citizens to call
if Yildirm could not help them: The Prime Minister’s personal number.
Citizens reportedly busied the mobiles of Erdogan and Yildirm all
night. Erdogan personally responded to several calls.

The next morning Erdogan met with members of the business circles and
requested the support of MEFED, the French Association of Businessman
and Industrialists. At noon Erdogan visited French President Jacques
Chirac in the Elysee Palace. Minister of Transport Yildirim, Minister
of Finance Kemal Unakitan and Minister of State Mehmet Aydin also
attended the meeting. The meeting had two critical issues: The
European Union and Turkish Airlines (THY).

Erdogan explained the reforms of Turkey to Chirac and reminded the
French President that Turkey deserved a negotiation date. Chirac said
that the EU’s progress report would be a determining factor in their
decision.

THY also put the final touches on a deal for 36 planes from the
French-German Airbus partnership. THY had been negotiating with
Airbus for quite some time. The tender, in excess of US$1.5 billion,
had a small problem left to take care of. Erdogan evaluated the
meeting as positive.

After Chirac, Erdogan met with the leader of the Turkey France
Friendship Group and Foreign Affairs Commission in the parliament.
When asked about the so-called Armenian Genocide, Erdogan responded,
“This is primarily an issue for historians. The Armenian Diaspora
should give up using these so-called alleged claims.” Meanwhile a
group of Armenians marched along Erdogan’s route.

Erdogan is making special efforts to influence French public opinion
since the publicity will help influence Chirac’s decision. The Prime
Minister gave an exclusive interview to France2 Channel and Le Figaro
newspaper.

07.21.2004
MUSTAFA UNAL

BArT principal hopes to `change lives’

iBerkshires.com, MA
July 15 2004

BArT principal hopes to `change lives’
By Linda Carman –

Michelle Close, the principal of the Berkshire Arts and Technology
Charter School. (Photo By Linda Carman)
NORTH ADAMS – The principal of the Berkshire Arts and Technology
Charter School had a teacher and mentor who opened a new world for
her, and now she wants to do the same for this generation of
students.

Michelle Close, who worked from Providence, R.I., until Friday, said
her 7th and 8th grade teacher in Brookline, Margo Strom, developed a
curriculum titled `Facing History and Ourselves,’ a study of the
Holocaust which Close found galvanizing.

`It changed my world. It asked critical questions, such as who’s
responsible, and are there such things as innocent bystanders,’ she
said. The curriculum began with Holocaust studies, and has expanded
to cover the Armenian genocide, the Sudan and other venues for its
exploration of peace and personal moral responsibility.

Close worked for Strom after college, motivated by enthusiasm for the
curriculum, and the non-profit organization Strom founded.

`It made me wide awake in the world, and once I was wide awake in the
world there was no going back,’ she said at the BArT offices on Main
Street in North Adams Tuesday.

Close said she is confident that the charter school, to be located at
One Commercial Place in Adams, will open in September as scheduled,
and is pleased with Gov. Mitt Romney’s recent veto of a moratorium on
new charter schools in the state. An override vote by the legislature
on the moratorium is possible.

`I’m thinking positively,’ Close said. `We’ve been having talks with
[legislators]. We’re moving ahead as if the school is going to open.
All the plans are in place. I’m believing in the school and hoping
the state is too.’

Close grew up with a teacher near at hand; her mother was an early
childhood educator. She identifies her epiphany – her realization
that she wanted to pursue education as a career – to a bus trip in
Israel, where she lived on a kibbutz after traveling widely in
Europe.

`I really, truly believe my education changed my life, and I hope to
do the same for others,’ she said.

Close joined BArt June 1. She and her husband, who will teach in
Pittsfield, and their two children, ages 2 1/2 and 5, have moved to
Williamstown, where the children will attend Williamstown Elementary
School.

During her 15 years of teaching, Close has taught at a broad spectrum
of schools – alternative, standards-based and project-based. In
Providence, she taught humanities, mentored student teachers from
Brown University, trained teachers in arts literacy, among other
topics, and developed curricula for several organizations.

Most recently, she said, `I did a unit on witch hunts throughout
history – the Salem witch trials, the Japanese internments during
World War II, and the anti-immigrant measures post 9/11.’

The students’ final project includes an exploration of `whose
responsibility is it to end witch hunts? Who instigates them?’ she
said. `Everyday activities become a scaffold for students to show
they understand. Everyday learning is connected to the final
outcome.’

The educational name for this approach is understanding by design or
backwards learning, starting with the idea of what the student should
be learning.

This approach can be taken in practically any educational setting,
but Close said the exciting part of this charter school is `teaming,’
a sort of educational huddle of teachers planning for each individual
student.

This, she said, results in `project-based learning that is rigorous,
challenging and cross-curricular.’

Here, she said, this approach will focus on community, tying together
statistical analyses, biographies, and environmental effects in an
endeavor that `still covers all the standards in Massachusetts.
Skills and content connect.’

Close said she was drawn to this BArT charter school because students
are teamed with teachers who know them more intimately.

`It’s difficult for students to fall through the cracks,’ she said.

To graduate from BArT, students will take a senior seminar, pass a
college course, complete an internship, all in addition to state
graduation requirements, she said, adding that the Commonwealth
Corporation, a quasi-public organization, is helping guide BArT.

Close was drawn to BArT by the prospect of synergy between arts and
technology.

`That was a big pull,’ she said. She most recently worked in a
technology-based school.

Close received her bachelor’s degree from the University of
Massachusetts and her master’s degree in education from Tufts
University, with additional course work at the University of
California at Berkeley and Brown University.

`I’m excited about the challenge here,’ she said. `So many people
have done so much work before me. I feel blessed.’

The =?UNKNOWN?Q?UN=B4s?= genocide watchdog

Radio Netherlands Wereldomroep
July 13 2004

The UN´s genocide watchdog
By our Internet Desk, 13 July 2004

Juan Mendez – the new advisor on genocide to UN Secretary-General
Kofi Annan

The Secretary-General of the United Nations, Kofi Annan, has
announced the appointment of the first special UN advisor on the
prevention of genocide. The man chosen for the job is Juan Mendez
(59), an Argentinian human rights lawyer and one-time political
prisoner under the military regime that ruled his native country in
the 1970s.

With the failure in mind of the United Nations and the international
community as a whole to tackle the genocide in Rwanda in the 1990s,
the creation of this special position at the world body appears to be
a positive move towards preventing such humanitarian disasters from
occurring on the same scale in the future. But how much influence
will the new advisor have at the United Nations, and will he really
be able to get things moving before the threat of genocide becomes a
reality?

In the following interview, Radio Netherlands speaks to Roberta
Cohen, an analyst with the Brookings Institute in the United States,
and asks her about the significance of the newly created post, and Mr
Mendez’s ability to act to thwart potential genocide.

“In think it’s very important that there was such an appointment. The
UN failed very, very dramatically – and everybody recognises that –
in responding to the genocide that took place in Rwanda. And everyone
has said “never again”, that the international community has to have
some sort of response when situations like that occur. And you see
that, right now, happening in Darfur in the Sudan, where acts of
genocide are taking place, and again the Security Council has been
very weak in its response.”

Juan Mendez is president of the International Centre for Transitional
Justice; a body which furnishes legal assistance to nations emerging
from conflict.

In the 1970s he spent two periods in jail as a political prisoner of
Argentina’s then military regime, and was subjected to torture.
During this period, Amnesty International made him one of its
“Prisoners of Conscience”; putting pressure on the authorities in
Buenos Aires to set him free.

Finally released in 1977, he went into exile, where he continued his
human rights activities. He later headed the Latin America division
of the Human Rights Watch organisation, going on later to become its
general counsel. He has also worked for other NGOs as well as
teaching law, concentrating on the human rights aspect of this field.

RN: “Is this just a spokesperson or is this somebody who could say to
the Security Council that intervention is now needed to prevent
genocide?”

“I don’t think the person could […] require the Security Council to
act, but certainly the person – through the Secretary-General – could
propose that the Security Council act in a certain way, or if actual
troops or military action were needed, could then call for troops and
funds in order to do this. But hopefully a strong Security Council
resolution, sanctions, international political pressure, would be
sufficient, and this person could certainly put pressure – via the
Secretary-General – on the Security Council to act.”

RN: “This is something which, after the Rwanda genocide, Kofi Annan,
the Secretary-General of the United Nations, was very, very serious
about it not happening again. But, as you say, as we see in Darfur,
it is happening again.”

Genocide in history: the bodies of murdered Armenians, killed in the
period 1915-1918. The systematic slaughter of Armenians under
Turkey´s then Ottoman rulers is still not recognised by all sides as
an event of genocide.

“It is happening again, and you again see the international community
now desires to do something. The humanitarian part of the UN is very
much in gear, there is pressure on the Sudan, but you find that the
Sudanese have been able to resist and that governments in the
Security Council have not wanted to take strong measures. So, I would
like to see what will happen with the appointment of Juan Mendez, and
whether there will be more pressure on the Security Council to enact
sanctions, not only against the militias in the Sudan – the Janjaweed
– but against the Sudanese government.”

RN: “We’ve heard from Mr Annan that he plans to draw up a plan of
action to prevent genocide in the future. Is this something that can
be written down on paper given that there is so much political
manoeuvring involved in this?”

“You are right, I don’t think that you can just put this down on
paper. But I think there are quite a number of societies where one
can find indicators […] of potential killings and genocide in such a
society because there isn’t sufficient protection for a particular
racial or minority group because the political situation is
developing in such a way that one can almost sense that a group is in
particular danger. Usually situations unravel, and once they unravel
and there are suddenly tens of thousands of killings then everyone
looks.”

http://www.rnw.nl/hotspots/html/un040713.html

Opposition lawmakers defend their boycott of parliamentary sessions

Associated Press Worldstream
July 13, 2004 Tuesday 11:43 AM Eastern Time

Armenian opposition lawmakers defend their boycott of parliamentary
sessions

YEREVAN, Armenia

Opposition lawmakers in Armenia on Tuesday defended their nearly
yearlong refusal to attend parliamentary sessions as a political
boycott against this ex-Soviet republic’s leadership.

“The absence of opposition deputies from sessions of the Armenian
National Assembly should be considered the ultimate political action
to boycott the parliament’s work,” said the opposition factions,
Justice and National Unity.

The opposition statement came in response to a letter sent by the
parliament’s committee on state and legal questions to all 24
opposition deputies asking them to explain their absence.

Some of the opposition lawmakers have refused to attend parliamentary
sessions since last July to protest against Armenian President Robert
Kocharian, whose resignation they have demanded. Kocharian won a
second term in presidential elections a year ago that sparked mass
protests and which the opposition claims was marred by widespread
violations.

Parliamentary officials have said they are considering whether to
punish the opposition lawmakers for violating discipline by not
attending sessions of the 131-seat parliament, including stripping
them of their parliamentary mandate. The opposition, meanwhile, has
said it is currently deciding whether to continue the boycott.