Armenian FM, IAEA Dir.Gen. discuss problems of energy sector

ARKA News Agency
July 27 2005

ARMENIAN FM, IAEA DIRECTOR GENERAL DISCUSS PROBLEMS OF ENERGY SECTOR
OF ARMENIA

YEREVAN, July 28. /ARKA/. RA Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanyan and
Director General of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)
Muhammad Al Baradey discussed the problems of Armenia in energy
sector and prospects of the sector’s future development,
press-service of the RA Foreign Ministry reports. During the meeting
they also discuss implementation of more effective work to provide
security of the Armenian Nuclear Power Plant, as well as use of other
sources of energy. Oskanyan and Baradey underlined importance of
Armenia’s cooperation with IAEA. A.A. -0–

Aliyev: More points fitting Baku appeared in talks

PanArmenian News Network
July 26 2005

ALIYEV: MORE POINTS FITTING BAKU APPEARED IN TALKS

26.07.2005 03:15

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ «The mediators became more active lately, various
ideas appeared. More points fitting Azerbaijan appeared in the talks,
first of all the stepwise settlement. This is an approach accepted by
the international community,» Azeri President Ilham Aliyev stated
Monday. Addressing residents of a settlement, Aliyev noted the
unsettled state of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict is of most concern
to the authorities. «For many years the Karabakh conflict has been
unresolved, the mediation mission, unfortunately, did not produce an
effect,» he said. Having mentioned the importance of diplomatic
efforts the President emphasized the opponent should know Azerbaijan
has strength and army. I. Aliyev said that to solve the NK problem
official Baku has mobilized all its economic and diplomatic potential
and simultaneous to it strengthening the army is highlighted. «To
enhance the military power of Azerbaijan the budgetary spending is
increased 70%. Azerbaijan will liberate its lands by all means,» the
Azeri President is sure, Azeri media reported.

Ice ages linked to galactic position

San Francisco Chronicle, United States
July 25 2005

Ice ages linked to galactic position

Study finds Earth may be cooled by movement through Milky Way’s
stellar clouds

Keay Davidson, Chronicle Science Writer

It might sound preposterous, like astrology, to suggest that galactic
events help determine when North America is or isn’t buried under
immense sheets of ice taller than skyscrapers. But new research
suggests the coming and going of major ice ages might result partly
from our solar system’s passage through immense, snakelike clouds of
exploding stars in the Milky Way galaxy.

Resembling the curved contrails of a whirling Fourth of July
pinwheel, the Milky Way’s spiral arms are clouds of stars rich in
supernovas, or exploding stars. Supernovas emit showers of charged
particles called cosmic rays.

Theorists have proposed that when our solar system passes through a
spiral arm, the cosmic rays fall to Earth and knock electrons off
atoms in the atmosphere, making them electrically charged, or
ionized. Since opposite electrical charges attract each other, the
positively charged ionized particles attract the negatively charged
portion of water vapor, thus forming large droplets in the form of
low-lying clouds.

In turn, the clouds cool the climate and trigger an ice age — or so
theorists suggest.

In that regard, researchers are finding correlations between the
timing of Earth’s ice ages and epochs when our solar system passed
through galactic spiral arms.

The latest evidence appears in the June 20 issue of Astrophysical
Journal. The article is the result of an unusual collaboration
between an astronomer, Professor Douglas Gies of Georgia State
University’s Center for High Angular Resolution Astronomy, and a
16-year-old student at Grady High School in Atlanta, John Helsel.
They report the results of their effort to determine how the sun has
moved through the galaxy over the last half-billion years.

Difficult to map

By making a variety of assumptions about the rate of solar motion and
the distribution of spiral arms in the galaxy — which are difficult
to map because galactic dust and foreground stars get in the way —
Gies and Helsel conclude that “the sun has traversed four spiral arms
at times that appear to correspond well with long-duration cold
periods on Earth.”

“This,” they continue, “supports the idea that extended exposure to
the higher cosmic-ray flux associated with spiral arms can lead to
increased cloud cover and long ice age epochs on Earth.”

Gies and Helsel’s article is the long-term result of a project that
Helsel began working on “as a science fair project,” Gies says. Gies,
50, is a neighbor of Helsel’s. Gies had previously “developed a
scheme to model the motion of some massive stars in the galaxy,” and
when Helsel approached him for guidance on the science fair project,
their “conversation quickly focused on studying the sun’s motion and
encounters with spiral arms in the galaxy.”

A veteran investigator of the galaxy-ice age hypothesis is
astrophysicist and assistant professor Nir Shaviv, 33, of Racah
Institute of Physics at Hebrew University in Jerusalem, who was
previously a postdoctoral researcher at the California Institute of
Technology. He has reanalyzed other scientists’ previously published
data on meteorites, which contain mildly radioactive isotopes —
fragments of atoms that were altered by cosmic-ray bombardments over
millions of years while the meteorite was still hurtling through
space. Based on the ages of different isotopes, he concludes the
cosmic-ray bombardments were most intense during past epochs when
Earth is believed to have passed through known spiral arms.

Another hypothesis

An alternate but related hypothesis of ice ages suggests that Earth
occasionally passes through huge interstellar clouds of hydrogen gas.
Such clouds are common in the spiral arms. According to this
hypothesis, the interstellar clouds chemically soak up oxygen
molecules in Earth’s atmosphere, dramatically lowering the levels of
the gas ozone.

Because ozone normally heats the atmosphere by trapping infrared
radiation, a decline in ozone could cool Earth and “may trigger an
ice age of relatively long duration,” the astrophysicists Ararat
Yeghikyan of Armenia and Hans Fahr of Germany proposed last year in
the journal Astronomy & Astrophysics.

Many other factors involved

Galaxy-ice age theorists caution that their findings are only
tentative and that many other factors also affect the timing of ice
ages.

Still, their research probably has long-term practical value. That’s
because it could eventually help scientists to better distinguish
between “normal” global climate change caused by Mother Nature’s
whims, such as the passage through a spiral arm, and climate change
caused by humans — such as drivers whose fossil-fuel-burning cars
contribute to global warming.

Various versions of the galaxy-ice age hypothesis have kicked around
the peripheries of the climatological and astronomical communities
since at least the 1970s. Until recently, though, such hypotheses
have received relatively scant scientific attention.

One reason for the neglect is that climate change is a dauntingly
complex topic, one in which causes of any event — even a simple rain
shower in downtown San Francisco — have innumerable short-term and
long-term causes.

Another likely reason is that climatologists and astronomers are two
scientific communities that rarely interact because their interests,
background, training and funding sources are so different. Like most
scientists, they hesitate to tread on unfamiliar intellectual turf
for fear of making naive mistakes.

But climatologists and galactic astronomers have at least one thing
in common: a grand sense of time. Both deal with events — such as
the comings and goings of ice ages and the slow spinning of the Milky
Way — that require them to use clocks timed in hundreds of thousands
or millions of years. This gives them a common language of discourse,
like a tourist to France who doesn’t speak French but can crudely
communicate with a chef via their common knowledge of French cuisine.

Relevant to ozone thesis

Although Yeghikyan and Fahr’s proposed ozone explanation for certain
ice ages differs from the cosmic-ray thesis, “I take the idea
presented by Gies and Helsel as absolutely serious” and relevant to
the ozone thesis, Fahr said in an e-mail. That’s because passage
through a spiral arm would increase Earth’s exposure to the dense
interstellar clouds, which are common within the arms, Fahr noted.

Other scientists view the galaxy-ice age hypothesis with cautious
interest.

On the one hand, astrophysicist Erik Leitch of Caltech says the Gies
and Helsel paper is “a suggestive result.” It “is not unreasonable”
to infer that the solar system, while passing through a spiral arm,
would experience more intense cosmic ray bombardment because “the
spiral arms seem to be the main sites of star formation in the
galaxy, and the massive stars which become supernovae don’t live long
enough to travel very far out of the arms before they explode.”

Therefore, Leitch said, “if you’re in a spiral arm, you’re much more
likely to be near a massive star about to explode than if you’re not”
— and hence, in turn, likelier to be exposed to intense bursts of
cosmic rays.

On the other hand, Leitch warns, just because Earth occasionally
passes through unusually intense showers of cosmic rays doesn’t mean
those showers will trigger ice ages. Regarding the Gies and Helsel
paper, the proposed connection between cosmic-ray surges and cooling
periods “seems more tenuous to me. … Cosmic rays may ‘seed’ more
cloud cover, but it’s not clear to me that increased cloud cover will
always lead to cooling.”

According to some computer models, he explained, clouds can act not
only like a sunshade but also like a blanket — that is, clouds not
only shield Earth from solar rays but also trap infrared heat
radiated by the ground. It’s anyone’s guess whether the net effect of
increased cloud cover would cool or warm the climate.

Shaviv disagrees: He is confident that low-altitude clouds “have a
clear cooling effect.”

Karen Aplin of the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory in Oxford, England,
who has studied links between atmospheric ionization and cloud
formation, observed: “The climate system is extremely complex, with
many feedbacks, and it is not at all straightforward to establish
that these (links between cosmic rays and clouds) exist.”

In a 2001 article co-written with R.G. Harrison, Aplin “showed that
ions formed by cosmic rays can make small particles, condensation
nuclei, in the atmosphere,” she said. There’s a catch, though: “These
particles are too small to act as cloud condensation nuclei. … To
trigger cloud formation, they would have to live for quite a while
and grow many times bigger.”

Whether they do so — and if so, how — remains an open question.

“The assumption that an increase in cosmic rays causes an atmospheric
response, which, in turn, causes ice ages is a large one, although
it’s not impossible,” her colleague Harrison told The Chronicle.

Blueprint of the Milky Way galaxy
A sketch of our disc-shaped galaxy as seen from above. The “spiral
arms” are vast, arc-shaped clouds of stars. As our sun orbits the
galaxy, it occasionally passes through a spiral arm. Inside a spiral
arm, some theorists believe, our solar system is exposed to unusually
intense showers of cosmic rays that trigger cloud formation and,
perhaps, ice ages on Earth. Our solar system is presently located in
a small “spur” of clouds called the Orion Arm, located between two
larger arms known as the Perseus and Carina-Sagittarius spiral arms.

New Brunswicker joins Noah’s Ark expedition to Ararat

New Brunswicker joins Noah’s Ark expedition to Ararat

July 14, 2005
By Diane Trail
_ChristianWeek_ ()

MONCTON, NB — At his desk in front of a myriad of cords and server
engines that are the computer nerve center for _Atlantic Baptist
University_ () (ABU), David Graves seems an
improbable candidate for an archaeological expedition in search of
Noah’s Ark. He is the sole Canadian on the 18-member team with
_ArcImaging_ () , an evangelical Christian
archaeological research group preparing to scale Mount Ararat in
Turkey this summer.

Graves, director of computer services and a part-time faculty member
at ABU, is more than a little excited about the prospect of climbing
Mount Ararat. He is working on his doctorate in Biblical Studies from
the University of Aberdeen and Highland Theological College in
Scotland, and teaches archaeology as part of an ABU-Oxford program in
England.

The 48-year-old has visited many archaeological sites in Israel,
Turkey and Egypt, but this will be his first “dig.” Graves’ main task
on the mountain will be to run the Ground Penetrating Radar (GPR) to
map slices of everything beneath the ice to the mountain’s volcanic
surface. Ararat is 17,274 feet high — the highest mountain in Turkey
and the largest mountain in the world by mass. The mountain’s peak
above 15,000-foot elevation is under an icecap of 200-300 feet.

“When [Rex] Geissler asked me if I would consider joining him on the
expedition, I said ‘Let me think about it. Yes!'” says Graves,
sporting a shy smile and spiked white hair.

Geissler is president of ArcImaging (Archaeological Imaging Research
Consortium), based in Colorado. Geissler and Graves only met in March
of this year when they were together on a tour of archaeological sites
in Egypt.

“We just hit it off,” says Graves. “We have a lot in common with our
backgrounds in computers. He owns a database company. We were both
very interested in Turkey and archaeology . . . Next thing I knew I
was director of operations and logistics for the expedition and in
charge of the GPR for the site.”

Graves is undergoing rigorous physical training to improve stamina and
cardiovascular fitness in preparation for the climb. He also hopes the
training will help him avoid altitude sickness, a potentially fatal
respiratory illness associated with oxygen-thin mountain air. Other
hazards of the climb and mountaintop work site include lightning; no
trees to protect from sudden snowstorms; steep, icy cliffs; plus wild
dogs and scorpions at lower elevations.

Graves is also endeavouring to raise $14,000 for his winter clothing,
specialized ice-climbing equipment, training and general expenses.

As a biblical scholar, Graves believes the _biblical narrative_
(;version=31)
of the Great Flood, which says that Noah’s Ark went aground in Mount
Ararat region. Faith and science can co-exist, he says and he believes
this expedition is about seeking scientific proof for biblical fact.

In defence of their search for Noah’s Ark, ArcImaging’s website
states, “Liberal scholars [have] criticized many things throughout the
Bible. Archaeology has shown many of these criticisms to be wrong,
from Genesis 12 through Revelation. But Genesis 1-11 is still viewed
as myth. If part of Noah’s Ark were substantiated, it would support
the Bible and Noah back to Genesis 5 . . .

Noah’s Ark would actually give support for all three major [Abrahamic]
world religions — Judaism, Christianity and Islam.”

“This [expedition] is much more about adventure and raw research. It’s
not a holy pilgrimage,” says Graves.

ArcImaging is the first organization to receive permission from the
Turkish government to survey Mount Ararat since 1981. The
archaeological organization conducted previous research in 2001 on one
part of Ararat. The group is conducting its search in co-operation
with the Archaeology Department of _Ataturk University_
() and the Turkish
ministries in Ankara.

“ArcImaging does the research, but the artefacts remains in Turkey,”
says Graves. “If we find something, we melt a tunnel and take
samples.”

The team hopes the Turkish government will grant research visas for
the trip.

The threat of military manoeuvers — the cause of visa refusals for
the last couple of years — may prove their biggest obstacle. Mount
Ararat is on the border of Iraq and Iran, with Middle East tensions
posing danger to outsiders.

Although Graves is inexperienced in some ways, Geissler has great
confidence in him.

“What stood out was his organization and computer skills, and his
ability to put together plans,” Geissler told Times-Transcript by
phone from Colorado.

“He exhibited a real sense of excitement about the project as well,
and that’s one thing that attracts me to people when they’re excited
about being a part of it and helping out with it.”

“He becomes one of most valuable members of our team because of his
[GPR] training,” Geissler said.

The international team, including nine Christian archaeologists,
glaciologists, experienced Ararat climbers and photographers, is being
recruited to investigate the site sometime between July 15 and August
15.

http://www.christianweek.org/
http://www.abu.nb.ca/
http://arcimaging.org/
http://bible.gospelcom.net/passage/?search=genesis%206-9&amp
http://www.atauni.edu.tr/english/english.htm

Energy Distribution Networks of Armenia Handed Over to Interenergo

ENERGY DISTRIBUTION NETWORKS OF ARMENIA HANDED OVER TO INTERENERGO FOR
TRUST MANAGEMENT FOR 99 YEARS

YEREVAN, JULY 22, NOYAN TAPAN. The Energy Distribution Networks of
Armenia have been handed over to the company Interenergo making part
of RAO EES for trust management for a period of 99
years. Interenergo’s Deputy Director Mikhail Mantrov stated at the
July 22 press conference that the agreement on the deal was signed
with Midland Resources Holding on June 23. It was noted that under the
agreement, the right of property has not been changed and Midland
Resources remains the owner. According to M. Mantrov, no Armenian law
has been broken by this deal. He said that the Armenian government has
not asked them to give it a copy of the agreement. M. Mantrov noted
that the information on the website of RAO EES that 73 mln USD was
allocated for the purchase of the distribution networks was
misunderstanding. At the same time M. Mantrov stated that RAO EES has
serious interests in the international energy sphere. Particularly, it
has its own energy companies in Georgia, Bulgaria and Moldova and is
currently participating in the tender for privatizing Turkey’s
networks. As regards the recent statements of the WB Yerevan Office’s
Director Roger Robinson, M. Mantrov said that ” for the Energy
Distribution Networks, a specialized company with serious investment
and stable financial capacities that would come for a long term rather
than 1-2 years was needed. RAO EES met these satndards.” Director of
Midland Resources Evgeny Gladunchik announced that they will continue
implementing the investment program submitted to the RA Public
Services Regulatory Commission. Asked why a tender had not been held,
he replied: “I am just a director and it is ouside my competence to
answer this question.” In response to the question why RAO EES did not
apply directly to the Armenian government by submitting a bid for
privatization of the networks, M. Mantrov said: “Let’s wait a bit.”

Russian Electricity Monopoly Gets Right to Manage grid for 99 years

Russian electricity monopoly gets right to manage Armenian grid for 99 years

AP Worldstream; Jul 22, 2005

Russia’s electricity monopoly Unified Energy Systems has acquired the
right to manage and receive profits from Armenia’s national grid
company for the next 99 years, UES said Friday.

The giant Russian utility paid US$73 million (Aâ=82¬60 million) in the
deal, which was signed June 23, making UES the effective owner of the
company _ but sidestepping the need to seek approval from the Armenian
government as in the case of an outright purchase.

A spokeswoman for UES said Friday that the company would not comment
on the structure of the deal. She did not rule out, however, that the
company could acquire shares in the grid company _ Electricity
Networks of Armenia _ in the future.

UES had reported in its 2004 financial statement at the end of June
that it had paid the US$73 million (Aâ=82¬60 million) to buy the
company. It said Friday this information was not true and had been
mistakenly included in the financial statement.

State-controlled UES, hungry to cement influence in the former Soviet
republics, has struck several high-profile electricity deals with
Russia’s smaller neighbors.

In Georgia it controls a chunk of generation and power distribution,
and has negotiated generator-building deals in Tajikistan, which
supplies neighbors Afghanistan and Kyrgyzstan.

Mikhail Mantrov, the head of UES’ international division Interenergo
B.V., said Friday in Yerevan that UES also controls 10 percent of the
former Soviet republic’s electricity-generating capacity via the
Sevano-Razdansky hydroelectric power station.

British company Midland Resources Holding paid US$37 million
(Aâ=82¬30.4 million) for Electricity Networks of Armenia in 2002, of
which US$25 million (Aâ=82¬20.5 million) was earmarked to pay down the
cash-starved company’s debts and overdue wages.

BAKU: Azeri leader backs independent media

Azeri leader backs independent media

ANS TV, Baku
21 Jul 05

[Presenter in studio] Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev who attended
a ceremony to mark the national press day today has expressed his
attitude to the press which he described as an important promoter of
democracy. He said the abolition of censorship and the value added
tax on the media was an indicator of the [government’s] attitude to
the press.

[Correspondent over video of the ceremony] The prosperity of every
nation is closely intertwined with the development of its media.
Speaking about the path covered by the Azerbaijani media in 130
years and the media’s contribution to the promotion of democracy and
universal values, the chairman of the Press Council, Aflatun Amasov,
described the abolition of censorship and the value added tax as an
indicator of [the government’s] care for the media.

Amasov described as the main problem the fact that the media have
has lost their independence as a result of economic weakness. The
chairman of the Press Council suggested that official newspapers be
privatized and long-term loans be issued to newspapers.

President Ilham Aliyev said in his remarks that there is a strong
need for independent media today.

[Aliyev shown speaking at the ceremony] The independence of the
media in Azerbaijan is the requirement of time. I think the media
should not come under pressure from political circles and should be
truly independent.

[Correspondent] Ilham Aliyev pointed out that it was important for
government officials to be open to the press and to be tolerant
of criticism.

[Aliyev] Criticism helps make changes in our work. This is very
important. There must be permanent contacts between the authorities
and the media.

[Correspondent] Touching on Armenian media speculation that the
Azerbaijani press is not democratic, the president said newspapers
were playing an important propaganda role because Azerbaijan has
defeated Armenia in all spheres and because there is progress in the
negotiations to resolve the Nagornyy Karabakh problem.

[Passage omitted: names of journalists who have received different
state awards]

Zamina Aliyeva, Ramin Yaqubov, ANS.

Antelias: The National Assembly of the Bolivarian Republic ofVenezue

PRESS RELEASE
Catholicosate of Cilicia
Communication and Information Department
Contact: V.Rev.Fr. Krikor Chiftjian, Communications Officer
Tel: (04) 410001, 410003
Fax: (04) 419724
E- mail: [email protected]
Web:

PO Box 70 317
Antelias-Lebanon

Armenian version:

VENEZUELA ACKNOWLEDGES THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

Antelias, Lebanon – The National Assembly of Venezuela adopted a resolution
on July 14 recognizing the Armenian Genocide of 1915 and expressing support
for the just cause of Armenians. MP Victor Hugo Morales and lawyer Janette
Madris presented the resolution to the National Assembly after persistent
attempts by Venezuelan Armenians to have their cause discussed.

Archbishop Gomidas Ohanian, the spiritual leader of the Venezuelan Armenian
community and Dr. Krikor Posdalian, the chairman of the Executive Council of
the Diocese, as well as Venezuelan Armenians attended the session of the
assembly.

The members of the National Assembly adopted the resolution unanimously and
commended the persistence of Armenians in their struggle for their rights.

The resolution adopted by the Venezuelan National Assembly states:

“The National Assembly of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela

Whereas

The first scientifically planned, organized and executed genocide in the
history of humanity took place 90 years ago, perpetrated by the regime of
the “Young Turks” and their ideology of “Panturkism”, against the Armenian
People, involving the extermination of almost two million people.

Whereas

Crimes of this nature must be denounced in order to prevent them from
happening again, in order to restore to the victims their human and national
rights and to condemn the perpetrators.

Whereas

This genocide deserves repudiation from the Turkish People and all the
peoples of the world.

Whereas

The People and the State of Venezuela have continuously condemned terrorism
and racial, ethnical, religious and political discrimination.

Whereas

The People and the State of Venezuela fight permanently against all types of
terrorism, including State Terrorism.

Whereas

Due to political causes and interests, there is an ongoing attempt to change
history through the negation of this genocide.

The National Assembly resolves

First: To express to the Armenian People, to their government and to the
strong Armenian-Venezuelan Community, support on their valid and delayed
humanitarian aspirations of justice.

Second: To request the European Union to postpone Turkey’s membership bid,
until the recognition by Turkey of the Armenian Genocide.

Third: To designate a Committee in charge of delivering this resolution to
the Armenian Parliament and to the Armenian Religious Authorities.

Fourth: To form the Parliamentary Group of Friendship to the Armenian
People.”

The resolution followed unrelenting efforts by Armenians for the recognition
of the Armenian Genocide over the past years. These efforts had been
intensified lately on the occasion of the 90th anniversary of the Armenian
Genocide.

The resolution is also tangible proof of the efforts carried out by the
Catholicosate of Cilicia for the recognition of the Armenian Genocide.
Archbishop Gomidas and his associates had been in constant contact with His
Holiness Aram I for advice and guidance in their efforts for the recognition
of the Genocide.

##

View picture here:

*****

The Armenian Catholicosate of Cilicia is one of the two Catholicosates of
the Armenian Orthodox Church. For detailed information about the history and
the mission of the Cilician Catholicosate, you may refer to the web page of
the Catholicosate, The Cilician Catholicosate, the
administrative center of the church is located in Antelias, Lebanon.

http://www.cathcil.org/
http://www.cathcil.org/v04/doc/Armenian.htm
http://www.cathcil.org/v04/doc/Photos/Pictures40.htm#1
http://www.cathcil.org/

Istanbul: Eminonu Mayor Visits Patriarchal Church

Lraper Church Bulletin 19/07/2005

Contact: Deacon Vagharshag Seropyan
Armenian Patriarchate
TR-34130 Kumkapi, Istanbul
T: +90 (212) 517-0970, 517-0971
F: +90 (212) 516-4833, 458-1365
[email protected]

BREAKFAST WITH THE MAYOR OF THE EMINONU MUNICIPALITY

isplayNews&NewsCode=N000000718&Lang=ENG

O n the morning of 13 July 2005, Nevzat Er, mayor of the Eminonu
Municipality, together with his senior officials, visited the Holy
Mother of God Patriarchal Church. They then had breakfast with His
Beatitude Mesrob II, Armenian Patriarch of Istanbul and All Turkey,
and members of the parish council, headed by Efrim Bag.

Hidayet Isik, chairperson of the Eminonu Branch of the ruling
Justice and Development Party (AKP), also joined the breakfast. The
conversation covered issues being faced by the Kumkapi neighbourhood.

http://lraper.org/main.aspx?Action=D
www.lraper.org

ANCA Interns Gather in DC for Intensive Grassroots Training Program

Armenian National Committee of America
888 17th Street, NW, Suite 904
Washington, DC 20006
Tel. (202) 775-1918
Fax. (202) 775-5648
[email protected]
Internet

PRESS RELEASE
July 7, 2005
Contact: Elizabeth S. Chouldjian
Tel: (202) 775-1918

ANCA INTERNS GATHER IN THE NATION’S CAPITAL FOR
INTENSIVE GRASSROOTS TRAINING PROGRAM

Washington, DC – Now in its 21st year, the Leo Sarkisian Summer
Internship has brought together interns from across the nation and
Canada, providing them an opportunity to hone their grassroots
activism skills by attending seminars, participating in an
intensive lecture series and working on specifically designated
projects, reported the Armenian National Committee of America
(ANCA.) The eight-week program is geared to provide proven student
leaders with the skills they need to effectively advance Armenian
American concerns in their hometowns and campuses around the
country.

The interns were chosen by the ANCA Eastern and Western Region
Boards, from a pool of applicants, based on leadership and academic
merit. The Leo Sarkisian Internship Program is an integral part of
the ANCA Capital Gateway Program, which provides Armenian Americans
greater opportunities to explore careers on Capitol Hill, in the
U.S. Foreign Service and key Washington, DC foreign policy think
tanks. Now approaching its third year, that year-round program is
designed to help university students and graduates find internships
and permanent positions in Congressional offices, government
agencies and policy groups by providing temporary housing and
assistance in transitioning from student to professional.

This year’s Leo Sarkisian interns, under the supervision of the
intern coordinator Megan Young, are Khajak Boghossian, Felicia
Garver, Talin Gregorian, Nazareth Markarian and Tamar
Meguerditchian.

“This year’s intern group – hailing from throughout the U.S. and
Canada – is a testament to the exceptional pool of Armenian
American student leaders committed to strengthening U.S-Armenia
relations and increasing Diasporan grassroots political power,”
said Young, a recent political science graduate from Roger
Williams University. She is a member of the Providence Homenetmen
and an executive member of the Providence AYF.

Coming from different backgrounds and bringing unique skill sets,
each intern aspires to gain a clearer perspective on Hai Tahd
activism.

Khajak Boghossian, from Toronto, Canada, is in his third year at
the University of Toronto where he is specializing in political
science. As the former vice president of the Armenian Students’
Association at the University of Toronto’s Scarborough campus, he
has helped create awareness of Armenian history and culture on
campus. Also, as a member of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation
Youth Organization of Canada and a frequent aid to the Canadian
Armenian Network, Khajak works to further advance the Armenian
cause. “I am grateful to the ANCA for affording me this excellent
opportunity. Working in a grassroots environment is a wonderful way
to instill activism, and to get the youth directly involved in the
American political process,” Khajak said.

Talin Gregorian, a recent communications studies graduate of the
University of California, Los Angeles, is from Glendale, CA. She
serves on the executive committee of the Scouting Division of
Homenetmen Glendale “Ararat” Chapter, where she manages the Cub and
Brownie troops. She has also interned at the ANCA’s Western Region
office. “The opportunity that I have been given by the ANCA is one
that will be an experience of a lifetime. I plan on using the
knowledge that I gain during my time in Washington to further my
activism at home,” she said.

Another Californian, Felicia Garver is going to be a freshman at
King’s College in Wilkes-Barre, PA, where she will study
neuroscience. She was a member of the Homenetmen Los Angeles
Chapter and a member of the local AYF chapter of Glendale. “This is
such a wonderful experience. I am very pleased and honored to have
this opportunity to come to Washington, DC and work directly with
the legislators. I strongly encourage all Armenians to participate
and get involved,” Felicia said.

Nazareth Markarian, a native New Yorker, is a deacon at St.
Illuminator’s Armenian Church. He is a senior history major with a
minor in political science at Queen’s College. “The Leo Sarkisian
Internship has given me the opportunity to work with Armenians who
share a similar interest, as well as gain insight into the lobbying
and activism process in the nation’s capital,” he said.

Tamar Meguerditchian, a native of New Orleans, LA, is entering her
second year at Louisiana State University where she is doing her
master’s in mass communication with a concentration in public
relations. She is an active member of the growing Armenian American
community in Louisiana where she serves as the church secretary and
has aided in getting the new church and community involved on the
national level. “As a summer intern, I have a unique opportunity to
get my community involved in the legislative process and the
Armenian American cause, networking with some of the most
influential individuals present on Capitol Hill,” Tamar said.

-30-

PHOTO CAPTIONS:

Intern_group.jpg – ANCA 2005 Leo Sarkisian interns – Khajak Boghossian,
Felicia Garver, Intern Coordinator Megan Young, Talin Gregorian, Tamar
Meguerditchian, and Nazareth Markarian.

Intern_group_work.jpg – ANCA interns gather around Executive Director Aram
Hamparian during the first of the summer lecture series on Armenian
American legislative concerns. Pictured from left to right: Khajak
Boghosian, Tamar Meguerditchian, Talin Gregorian, ANCA Exec. Director Aram
Hamparian, Nazareth Markarian, Felicia Garver and summer high school
volunteer Claire Semerdjian.

www.anca.org