Chess: Six share lead after second round in Masters

Gulf News
August 17, 2004

SIX SHARE LEAD AFTER SECOND ROUND IN MASTERS

Yasir Abbasher, Staff Reporter

A total of six players shared the leadership in the Masters
Championship at the ongoing 14th Abu Dhabi International Chess
Festival with two points from as many rounds. They will face each
other in the third round to decide the shape of the top of the
standings.

Second seeded Russian GM Mikhail Kobalia beat Uzbekistan IM Tahir
Vakhidov in the second round and will face his countryman GM Dmitry
Bocharov who defeated Iranian IM Morteza Mahjoob.

Kazakhstan GM Pavel Kostur beat IM Faruk Bistric from Bosnia and will
face GM Geleizerov Evgeny from Russia who defeated IM Emad Hekki from
Syria.

Armenian GM Ashot Anastasian beat UAE’s GM Taleb Moussa and will face
IM S Kidambi from India who beat GM Saidali Iuldacev from Uzbekistan.

In second place with 1.5 points are 13 players including top seed GM
Kazakhstan’s Evgeny Vladimirov, GM Pentala Harikrishna, GM
Ramachandran Ramesh and IM Neelotpal Das, all from India, GM Shukhrat
Safin and GM Marat Dzhumaev, both from Uzbekistan, GM Mikhail Ulbin,
GM Ramil Hasangatin and GM Konstantin Chernyshov, all from Russia,
France’s IM Yannick Govvoli, Armenia’s IM Artashes Minasian and
Iranian IM Elshan Moradiabadi.

UAE’s young woman player Amennah Mohammad Saleh was among the 42
players who shared the lead in the Open Tournament with two points
with her countrymen Ali Mahmoud, Ali Abdul Khalig, Ebrahim Mohammad
Khory, Meshaal Moussa, Mansoor Abbass, Hamed Abdul Razzag, Fahad
Ahmad, Eisa Mohammad Khory, Ahmad Abbass and Khalid Khamis.

The leader’s list also featured Germany’s Markus Huster, Bosnian
Boric, Iran’s Shirin Navabi, Egypt’s Ehab Al Sayed, Azerbaijan’s
Bajarani, Avlan Arsitosa and Dizon Manny from the Philippines,
Nicholas D. from Britain.

Kocharian: Armenian-Polish relations develop

Noyan Tapan, Armenia
Aug 14 2004

ROBERT KOCHARIAN: `THE ARMENIAN-POLISH RELATIONS DEVELOP QUITE

YEREVAN, 14.08.04. The Armenian-Polish relations develop quite
dynamically. RA President Robert Kocharian said about it, receiving
newly appointed Ambassador of Poland to Armenia Tomash Knohte on
August 13. The newly appointed Ambassador of Poland to Armenia
presented his credentials to the RA President. Robert Kocharian
mentioned the importance of the development of mutual relations with
Poland in the context of the European direction of the foreign
policies of Armenia. Stressing that Poland has been a full member of
the European Union since 1 May 2004, the RA President mentioned that
Armenia, which is on the way to the European integration, within the
framework of the European Union found a new partner in the person of
Poland supporting its aspirations. According to the RA presidential
press service, the sides considered the official visit of the RA
President to Poland scheduled for September 5-7 as key in the matter
of the further development of the Armenian-Polish relations.

VoA: International Community Criticizes Nagorno-Karabakh Election

Voice of America, DC
Aug 11 2004

International Community Criticizes Nagorno-Karabakh Election

Bill Gasperini

Moscow

The United States and some international organizations have
criticized last Sunday’s local elections in the Azerbaijan’s
breakaway region of Nagorno-Karabakh, saying it will not help ongoing
negotiations over the status of the enclave. The local elections,
which Nagorno Karabakh officials say could help pave the way for the
region’s international recognition, angered the Azeri government.
The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, which is
sponsoring negotiations to bring peace to the region, said Sunday’s
election in Nagorno-Karabakh, an Armenian-populated province of
Azerbaijan that broke away after a bloody war, was not helpful to the
peace process.

OSCE spokesman in Vienna, Ayhan Evrensel, says that any lasting
solution must come from within.

“What the OSCE through the co-chairs is trying [to do] is to
facilitate a solution, to bring the sides together and discuss about
the issues,” he said. “It has to come from both sides.”

Under the auspices of the OSCE, a group of countries forming the so
called Minsk group, has been talking with Armenia and Azerbaijan in
an effort to resolve the conflict. They have made numerous proposals
over the last decade, but little headway.

The U.S. State Department said the elections have no effect on the
peace process. In a written statement, the State Department said,
“Obviously we don’t recognize Nagorno-Karabakh as an independent
country. The future status of Nagorno Karabakh, the State Department
said, is a matter of negotiation in the Minsk process.

The United States, along with France and Russia are leading the
negotiation process.

Azerbaijan lost control of Nagorno-Karabakh and seven adjoining
districts after a six-year conflict with Armenia, which broke out in
1988 and claimed more than 30,000 lives. It ended with a cease-fire
agreement in 1994, and left Armenian forces in control of the enclave
and the buffer zone around it.

The United Nations Security Council has denounced the occupation of
Azerbaijani lands and has demanded that Armenia withdraw its forces.
With the exception of Armenia, no nation recognizes Nagorno-Karabakh
as an independent political entity.

Nagorno-Karabakh authorities defended Sunday’s elections as an
expression of democracy in the enclave. But authorities in Azerbaijan
reacted strongly to this assertion, calling the elections illegal
because they were held outside their jurisdiction.

Officials in the Azeri capital Baku said people uprooted during the
war over the enclave were unable to vote, and that the elections
could not be called representative.

While the cease-fire generally holds the two countries at an uneasy
peace, shooting incidents still occur periodically along the
cease-fire line not far from Nagorno-Karabakh’s capital city,
Stepanakert.

Elections locales au Nagorno-Karabakh

Edicom, Suisse
8 août 2004

Elections locales au Nagorno-Karabakh

YEREVAN, Arménie (AP) – Le Nagorno-Karabakh, enclave arménienne en
Azerbaïdjan, organisait dimanche des élections locales, malgré la
désapprobation du Conseil de l’Europe.
»Des élections libres et équitables constituent le seul moyen de
former un gouvernement légitime au Nagorno-Karabakh», a estimé
Sergueï Davidian, qui préside la Commission électorale centrale de
l’enclave.
Le Conseil de l’Europe avait regretté l’organisation d’un tel scrutin
dans cette ancienne région d’Azerbaïdjan qui avait fait sécession.
«Les actions unilatérales sont contreproductives», avait noté Walter
Schwimmer, le secrétaire général de l’organisation qui regroupe 45
pays.
Plus de 85.000 électeurs sont inscrits sur les listes pour choisir
les dirigeants locaux, les membres du Conseil des anciens et le maire
de Stepanakert, la capitale régionale. AP

Chess: Anand faces Shirov in duel of world champions

Newindpress, India
Aug 5 2004

Anand faces Shirov in duel of world champions
Thursday August 5 2004 00:00 IST
PTI

MAINZ (GERMANY): Fresh from his triumph at the Dortmund Sparkassen
chess meet, Viswanathan Anand will battle it out against Grandmaster
Alexei Shirov of Spain in the duel of the world champions at the main
event of the Chess Classic at Rhinegoldhalle here.

A winner here in the last three events, Anand yet again starts as the
favourite to clinch the title.

There will be eight games under rapid chess time control with 25
minutes to both players at the start of the game and an addition of
10 seconds after every move is made. In the event of a 4-4 tied score
tiebreak games will come into effect to determine the winner.

The Mainz organisers have been known to rope in exciting challengers
for Anand and this time Shirov is a natural choice given his ability
to play high quality tactical chess.A runner-up of the world
championship 2001 in Iran, Shirov is referred to as vice world
champion 2001 in this match.

For Anand, Shirov thus far has been an easy customer but the Indian
knows only too well that he cannot be underestimated even though in
match play, Anand has an enviable record against the Latvian born
Spaniard.

In the last two world championships that Anand played in, he beat
Shirov twice — once in the finals in 2000-2001 at Tehran, Iran and
next in the quarterfinals of the Moscow edition in 2001-2002.

“Nothing ever changes in this world, Vishy always beats me,” Shirov
had said after his dismal result against Anand in Moscow.

in the last edition, the Indian ace had beaten world’s top rated
women player Judit Polgar in a hair-raising battle that finally ended
5-3 in his favour. The most remarkable thing about this contest was
that not a single game ended in a draw and Anand struck back after
conceding lead thrice to Polgar.

In 2002, Anand had beaten Ruslan Ponomariov in a real close fight
that ended 4.5-3.5 while in 2001 it was Vladimir Kramnik who was made
to suffer by the Indian via tiebreaker.

Anand, who comes to Mainz after a brilliant victory against world No
3 Vladimir Kramnik of Russia at Dortmund, has had an excellent year
thus far with his victory in the Corus Chess Tournament at Wijk ann
Zee in the Netherlands followed by the rapid section of the Amber
Blindfold and Rapid Chess Tournament and in June this year he led the
world team to 18.5-17.5 triumph over players with Armenian
connections.

The Chess Classic will have a variety of event and the most popular
of them is the Chess 960, also known as Fischer Random Chess in which
the position of the pieces is changed randomly only a few minutes
before the game. Russian champion Peter Svidler is currently the top
ranked player in this form of the game. This year Svidler will be
challenged by former world junior champion Levon Aronian of Armenia
for the title he won last year.

There will also be an open category in Chess 960, in which Krishnan
Sasikiran will be one of the attractions following his second
position in the category-18 Biel Grandmaster Tournament. Besides
these a few simultaneous exhibitions and the Ordix Open under rapid
chess rules are also scheduled.

Dilijan as summer resort

Dilijan as summer resort

Yerkir/am
29 July 2004

During the dark and cold years, the people of Dilijan survived by
cutting down their vast woods. For a person on the verge of death the
legality of that action was not important. Mayor Jora Sahabalian says
the forest of Dilijan is now saved and it promotes tourism.

Tourism in Dilijan was also spurred by construction of the
Sevan-Dilijan tunnel and reconstruction of historical monuments. This
year Dilijan expects 6000-7000 tourists who usually prefer to rent
private apartments rather than stay at resorts.

The rooms at the resorts before reconstruction cost 2500-3000 drams
per day. Now that they have been ameliorated the price reaches
13000-5000 drams.

The major problems of Dilijan are absence of sewage pipes and lack of
drinking water. The latter will be solved in the near future. The
present tendency gives hope that all the issues will find their
solutions, since Dilijan is not ignored by the authorities, especially
local ones.

Symbol For Pan-Armenian Festival is Chosen

SYMBOL FOR PAN-ARMENIAN FESTIVAL IS CHOSEN

Azg/am
27 July 2004

Recently the journalists were among the happy that saw Nare and Narek,
the young Armenians, symbols for “One Nation, One Culture”
Pan-Armenianfestival. They wore tricolor national dresses decorated
with Armenian ornaments. R. Sahakian managed to elaborate this
variant after testing many. Over 100 volunteers will accompany the
participants of the festival on August 14-23 in Armenia and Nagorno
Karabagh. The employees of the hotels, cafes and halls will wear the
uniform. Karnie Khodikian, RA Deputy Culture Minister, Naira
Melkumian, RA Fund’ s director, and Hrachia Ashughian, director of the
festival were present at the meeting with the journalists.

The festival will contribute to the development of the relations
between Armenia and Diaspora, it will represent the cultural values
and help discussing the art and cultural issues.

By Marieta Makarian

Movie Review: Armenian film “Vodka Lemon” avoids exoticism

Armenian film “Vodka Lemon” avoids exoticism
By Bas Blokker

NRC Handelsblad (Dutch newspaper)
July 21, 2004

The first images make one flinch. An old man in a bed is dragged by a van
through a motorway covered in snow. A little later the bed stops near a
newly dug grave at a cemetery in a desolate valley. Then the old man removes
his teeth from his mouth and purses his lips to play on a pitiful wind
instrument.

Is this again a Caucasian film full of coquettish exoticism like Luna Papa?
No, Vodka Lemon fortunately just skims past, shuns however neither the
absurd nor the surreal, but stands as an authentic and not coquettish film.

The Kurdish film director Hiner Saleem has a rather bare and timid love
story between two elderly people, widow Nina and widower Hamo, soberly
decorated with few secondary characters who fortunately have little in
common with the toothless musician at the beginning of the film. At times
music plays a magical role in Vodka Lemon, but not obtrusive. The film is
more modest than the beginning suggests, although the exotic bed scene was
chosen for the poster – exoticism sells better than silence.

Saleem does well in transmitting the hopelessness in this remote corner of
Armenia. The poverty is all the more harrowing as money always seems within
reach. One of Hamo’s sons lives in France and each letter from him is
received like a lottery ticket; it is always a no. Hamo sells all the
objects in his house on the market to richer Russians or Armenians where he
accepts any price they offer for his late wife’s favorite furniture or for
his old military uniform.

Hamo says that he sometimes misses the old Soviet Union. No, they had no
freedom, he must admit that to his friend, but they did have the other. Now
gas, water and electricity are all privatised and the villagers have to
divide their little money into portions for their creditor companies.

What is so emotional about Vodka Lemon, and possibly the reason it won one
of the big prizes at the Festival of Venice, is that the main characters
curb great tragic with a small lust for life. A marriage of convenience, a
small dance, chatting outside on wooden chairs on a night with snow. There
is not much more pleasure in it, but apparently not much more is needed.

Vodka Lemon. Director: Hiner Saleem. With: Romen Avinian, Lala Sarkissian,
Rouzanna-Vite Mesropian. In: Cinecenter, Amsterdam; Chassé, Breda; Cinerama,
Rotterdam; Louis Hartloopercomplex, Utrecht.

Chess: Anand starts favourite

Times of India, India
July 21 2004

Anand starts favourite

PTI[ WEDNESDAY, JULY 21, 2004 07:41:58 PM ]

DORTMUND: World Rapid champion and World number two Viswanathan Anand
would start as hot favourite in the Dortmund Sparkassen chess
tournament that begins with a new format here on Thursday.

The Indian stalwart comes back to competitive chess after nearly a
months rest. Earlier in June Anand had led the World team to victory
over Armenia in a match organised in Moscow to mark the 75th Birth
Anniversary of late Armenian world champion Tigran Petrosian.

This time the Dortmund saga changes in a big way as the format of the
event has been changed completely.

Till 2003 it used to be a 10-player round robin tournament. But this
time around, the organisers have found a unique way of holding the
preliminaries, semi-finals, classification matches and the finals.

As a result of this apparently fine shift – expected to give more
decisive and hard-fought games – the players have been divided into
two groups of four.

Anand heads his group along side Grandmasters Peter Svidler of
Russia, his compatriot and 2004 Aeroflot open champion Sergei
Rublevski and local talent GM Arkadij Naiditsch.

Briangames champion Grandmaster Vladimir Kramnik of Russia, also
second seeded, leads the other group.

Kramnik is expected to face a stiff challenge from GMs Peter Leko of
Hungary, defending champion Viktor Bologan of Moldova and youngest
ever Grandmaster Sergei Karjakin of Ukraine.

Ethnic Ambiguity

Back Stage, NY
July 19 2004

Ethnic Ambiguity
More Roles, But Still a Mixed Bag

By Simi Horwitz

With the high visibility of such cultural icons as baseball player
Derek Jeter, singer Mariah Carey, and action hero Vin Diesel, it’s
not really a big surprise to learn that talent agents, casting
directors, and talent management firms are now receiving requests for
actors who are “ethnically ambiguous,” of “mixed ethnicity,” or have
a “global look,” especially for commercials, films, and television
shows.

“Within the past three or four years, it has become a growing trend
across the board,” says Jessica Schoenholtz, a talent manager with
the New York City-based J. Mitchell Management. “In theatre, the
casting still tends to be a little more traditional, although the
ethnically ambiguous actor may be cast when directors or producers
want to do nontraditional casting.

“I believe producers, but especially advertisers — in fashion,
phones, and fast food, for example — are getting wise to the fact
that the world is changing,” she continues. “It’s a smaller place,
with lots of intermarriage, and the diversity is only going to
increase. A network like Nickelodeon often looks for ethnically
ambiguous actors. Ensemble casting routinely includes the ethnically
ambiguous.”

Carole Russo of New York’s Agents for the Arts agrees, adding, “There
is more opportunity for actors who are ethnically mixed than ever
before. I often get requests for actors who are biracial. Sometimes
it’s very specific, like African-American and Caucasian; other times,
the request for biracial is broadly nonspecific, leaving it wide
open. The breakdowns for many musicals now include ‘all ethnicities,
unless otherwise noted.’ ”

Back Stage talked with several actors who are indeed ethnically mixed
for their spin on the new opportunities available to them and the
concomitant obstacles. Most acknowledge more accessibility to roles.

Joanne HartsHorne, who is biracial (African-American and Caucasian),
says, “I don’t like labels. But being ethnically ambiguous has helped
me. I certainly get a lot of calls, so I’ve come to accept terms like
‘ethnically ambiguous.’ I sometimes think the term means almost
anything other than all white, which is also another way of saying
there’s a lot of competition for those roles.”

She adds that she is often cast as a Latino. In fact, HartsHorne has
had a recurring role as a woman of Brazilian descent on “As the World
Turns” for more than a year. “They specifically asked for a
light-skinned African-American to play a character who was half
Brazilian.”

Actress Alexea Lawson, who is of African-American, Native American,
Hispanic, and British heritage, has had similar experiences. “I’m
multiracial and have very little Spanish blood, but producers see a
Spanish girl when they look at me. They also continue to have
stereotypical notions of what an African-American looks like. They
don’t seem to accept the idea that a black person can have blue eyes
or blond hair. But if the casting notice says ‘ethnic,’ that changes
the picture. I then become ‘culturally unique’ and that character
description has opened doors for me in casting.”

However, within the parameters of “ethnic ambiguity,” she hones her
image depending on the specifics of the role. “If they want ‘ethnic
and funky,’ I’ll wear my hair curly. If they want ‘ethnic and
preppy,’ I’ll straighten it.”

By contrast, HartsHorne refuses to “second-guess what producers are
looking for, although they seem to have clear ideas of what a young
black girl looks or sounds like. I just go to an audition as me. But
when the character is African-American, I’ve been asked more than
once, ‘Can’t you look and sound more street?’ ”

Filipino performers have traditionally faced casting problems in
mainstream theatre, observes actress Ching Valdez-Aran. “We are of
mixed blood — part Hispanic, part Asian — and when I started in the
theatre in 1983, producers had no idea how to cast us. Many producers
thought of Asians as being Chinese, Japanese, or Korean. I don’t look
like any of these and I don’t look Hispanic either. I have never
heard the term ‘ethnically ambiguous’ or the ‘global look,’ but I
think it’s great. And I do think there are more casting opportunities
today.”

South Asian actors Back Stage has interviewed in the past echo the
viewpoint [See Back Stage, May 14, “The South Asians Are Coming…In
Fact, They’re Already Here”]. Undoubtedly, there are more roles today
for South Asians: Consider “Bombay Dreams.” But they are also being
cast as characters from the Middle East. Actress Sarita Choudhury
enjoyed a featured role in Betty Shamieh’s “Roar,” a play about
Palestinians. Similarly, Bombay-born actor Aasif Mandvi took on the
featured role of Ali Hakim, a Persian peddler, in Trevor Nunn’s 2002
production of “Oklahoma!”

This was a groundbreaking bit of casting. For starters, Mandvi was
among the first East Indians to be cast in a major part in a Broadway
musical. But equally relevant, until this production Ali had been
played as a Jewish vendor pretending to be Persian — feeding into
notions of Mideastern exoticism — and speaking with a generic
Mideastern accent. It was a Borsht Belt interpretation. Clearly, Nunn
was dead set against that vision, determined to present in its stead
a realistic portrayal of a Persian peddler, admittedly within a comic
framework. Still, a Persian was not cast in the role but rather a
South Asian who could “pass” for an Arab.

Interestingly, while producers and directors have become very
concerned with accuracy in language, dialect, and accent, they may be
a little less stringent in their casting. Stereotypes persist.

Actor Josh Levin-Soler — part Caucasian Jew, part Hispanic — says,
“I have European features, but I’m olive-skinned with dark hair. I’m
not exactly Latino looking, but I’m certainly not all-American
looking either. I could probably be cast as an Italian-American,
although so far I haven’t.

“Recently I got cast in a TV ad for AT&T Wireless,” Levin-Soler
continues. “They were looking for four Hispanics, three from Latin
America and one from Spain. [The latter] was me. I probably got that
role because people from Spain may be more European looking than
those from Latin America. I like the idea of ethnically ambiguous
casting. I’m sure for some actors it has opened up opportunities. For
me, it has been more limiting.”

Nora Armani, a performer of Armenian-Egyptian-American heritage, has
not been restricted by her mixed ethnicity, at least not for the most
part. Still, she recounts one stunning episode: “A movie
writer-director who wrote a character in a script based on me would
not cast me in the role because, he said, ‘You are not ethnic looking
enough.’ He wanted a more stereotypic Armenian look than I have. I’ve
lived abroad and speak with a British accent, but I look Eastern
European or Mediterranean.”

Armani also talks about the intangible influences of milieu and
culture. “I somehow look and sound different depending on where I am.
When I’m in Hollywood, I become more California. When I’m in Europe,
I’m more ethnic. I think that’s because it’s valued there. New York
is the best place for me. I can be who I am and accepted for it.”

In the byzantine world of casting, Armani feels that great strides
have been made and she is optimistic about the future, as she is
about the evolution of the species.

“There are so many mixes and matches today that we are now creating a
new breed. I foresee a time when many white actors will not really be
white.”