California Courier Online, March 18, 2004

California Courier Online, March 18, 2004

1 – Commentary
United Kingdom Should Recall
Its Ambassador from Armenia

By Harut Sassounian
California Courier Publisher
**************************************************************************
2 – Steve Sarkisian Will Coach
Oakland Raiders Quarterbacks
3 – DSA Screening of Documentary
Benefits Projects in Armenia
4 – UCLA AGSA Hosts Academics to Discuss
Current Research in Armenian Studies
5 – Schwarzenegger Names Deukmejian
To Head State Prison Reform Panel
6 – Boghosian’s ‘One Woman Show”
Opens At Harvest Gallery, March 26
************************************************************************
1 – Commentary
United Kingdom Should Recall
Its Ambassador from Armenia

By Harut Sassounian
Publisher, The California Courier

A lot has happened in the short two weeks since we disclosed in this column
that the British Ambassador to Armenia, Thorda Abbot-Watt, made the
offensive remark that the Armenian Genocide was not a genocide. Hundreds of
Armenians and non-Armenians alike from around the world continued sending
indignant e-mails criticizing the Ambassador as well as the British
government for their denial of the Armenian Genocide. In the last few days,
we received many more copies of such e-mails. Here are brief excerpts from
some of them:
“Your denial is a disgrace to you and your government. Over centuries,
British diplomacy has practiced in lying, deception, and disregard of
historical truth. I trust you will do the honorable and apologize profusely
or failing that, leave Armenia and never return, as you are no asset to
Armenia or to humanity in general,” Mihran Keheyian.
“I think it would serve better to peace-loving Brits and Armenians alike if
you packed up and left Armenia. As a matter of fact, I have a suggestion
for a replacement for you: her name is Baroness Cox,” Levon Habeshian.
“As an Armenian citizen, I wish to express my dismay at the statement you
made recently in Armenia on the Armenian Genocide…. Upholding truth or
morality is clearly not an essential part of your job description. But,
needlessly, publicly restating your government’s position in Armenia seems
to me to go well beyond the customary cynicism of foreign policy. Indeed,
your statement is also a breach of the most elementary rules of courtesy
and hospitality…. I can only hope, therefore, that you will very soon take
the next opportunity to correct your gross lack of grace and style,” Lilia
Hayrapetyan.
“My stomach dropped as I read your comments on the Armenian Genocide. I
experienced disbelief that you would not only uphold your government’s
morally lacking stance of not taking sides, but go a step further into the
realm of genocide denial. In some countries that is a crime, though
unfortunately, Armenia is not one of them…. You could have had the decency
to simply ask any Armenians you work with in your very own offices what
happened to their own families…. The Genocide is a simple fact, and your
ignorance on the topic, whether real or feigned, is inexcusable. If you
want to continue representing your people in Armenia, you should apologize.
If not, you should have the decency to leave,” Raffi Kojian (born in
Ethiopia thanks to the Genocide you refuse to recognize, raised in Orange,
California, and moved to Armenia in 1999).
“[Your] words reflect an amazing lack of tact and sensitivity as to be
unbelievable for anyone, let alone a diplomat…. If that is what you think
about the Armenian Genocide, you should have turned down the post, or, as
Jacques Chirac said in another context, ‘perdre une bonne occasion de se
taire,’ ” Armen Kouyoumdjian.
“Your comments denying the Armenian Genocide do such violence to the
survivors and their children, grand-children and great grand-children. You
pick at their wounds and ridicule their sorrow,” Matthew Der Manuelian.
“How can you be so close to the Dzidzernagapert Genocide Memorial Monument
[in Yerevan] and have the guts to desecrate the memory of the 1.5 million
innocent victims? How dare you? I think your only salvation is to publicly
apologize to the Armenian people and ask for forgiveness,” Hratch Simonian.
“You have insulted the memory of my ancestors who fell victim to a
monstrous crime perpetrated by the Turkish government. I am not surprised.
Your mercenary interests are far from human decency and dignity. I believe
the only honorable thing to do for a ‘diplomat’ like you, if there is any
honor left, is to leave Armenia very swiftly. I would not even accept an
apology from your putrid mouth,” Dr. Stepan Simonian.
“I was appalled to read your recent quote and denial of the Genocide…. I
urge you to do some homework on the Armenian Genocide, if you are ignorant
on the subject, and apologize to the Armenian people. Should you not be
prepared to do so, then frankly, my Dear, you should consider leaving
Armenia,” Lena Majarian (Australian Armenian living in Yerevan).
“It is preposterous that we should not be prepared to denounce a crime for
fear of upsetting the criminal,” Paul Hampartsoumian.
“I would hope – fervently – that the memory of those who suffered in early
20th century Ottoman Turkey should not be sacrificed at the altars of
contemporary politics and historical revisionism,” Audrey Selian.
“I was enormously disturbed and offended to read of remarks you made
concerning the Armenian Genocide…. This denial of history is unforgivable
and unconscionable. Your comments are the fuel that contemporary and future
genocides are created from. You must apologize, and you must begin to
educate yourself about the history — documentation of the Armenian
Genocide is not hard to find,” Eileen Claveloux.
“That any Ambassador residing in Armenia should have the temerity and nerve
to even imply that what happened to the Armenians in 1915 was not a
genocide – when everyone from the United Nations to university scholars
have affirmed what any Armenian whose own family was killed already knows –
is beyond reckoning. My advice is that you apologize to the Armenian people
and then pack your bags and resign. In fact, it is remarkable to me that
the Armenian government has not already formally asked for your
resignation. As a last note, that a representative of the British
government – a country which has over the centuries been complicit in
colonialism and exploitations of the worst kind – would display her
ignorance and insult another people and their history in such flagrant
terms, is even more galling,” Christopher Atamian.
“Your statement has reinforced your government’s stance on the issue, but
it has also caused much pain for the survivors of this great calamity,”
Alex Sardar.
“TARC…commissioned a legal analysis by an independent legal counsel…. This
groundbreaking study…concludes unequivocally that the events in question
‘include all of the elements of the crime of genocide as defined in the
[UN] Convention, and legal scholars as well as historians, politicians,
journalists and other people would be justified in continuing to so
describe them,’ ” Alexander Arzoumanian, Former Minister of Foreign Affairs
of Armenia.
“The Ambassador’s statement on the Armenian Genocide is absolutely
unacceptable for the citizens of Armenia as well as all Armenians worldwide
and incompatible with the position of a foreign diplomat credentialed in
the Republic of Armenia. We appeal to her to make a public apology for her
statement, otherwise terminate her diplomatic activities in the Republic of
Armenia,” students at Yerevan State University.
In a letter addressed to Jack Straw, the Secretary of State for Foreign and
Commonwealth Affairs, Dr. Tessa Hofmann, the Chairperson of the
Berlin-based “Working Group Recognition – Against Genocide, for
International Understanding,” wrote: “As an international NGO which is
focusing on the recognition of denied genocide crimes, we urge you to
reconsider whether it is advisable that Mrs. Abbott-Watt, who is ignorant
of basic facts of legal history and international relations and who makes
repeated incompetent and offensive statements, may continue her diplomatic
career in a country where half of the population descends from survivors of
genocide.”
Meanwhile, in a lame attempt at damage control, Amb. Abbot-Watt sent the
following standard response to all those who had e-mailed her: “I am sorry
that my Government’s position on how we refer to the events of 1915-16
causes you personal distress. Please accept that we understand why
Armenians feel so strongly about what happened, and have ourselves always
condemned the massacres. We extend our sympathy to the descendants of all
the victims and our assurance that what happened will not be forgotten.”
Her response, needless to say, did not satisfy anyone. Many readers sent a
second e-mail to her expressing their irritation and displeasure. Here are
some excerpts from their e-mails:
“It appears that you are quite a character! Your government has found the
perfect spot for you (Armenia) to exercise your right of free speech, while
mysteriously avoiding a slap on your wrist, if not your face. I am puzzled
as to why you have not been summarily thrown out as a persona non grata. If
I were the President of Armenia, I would have done just that, especially
now that you have become the darling of the Turks,” Hovsep Fidanian, Ph.D.
“I would dare you to stand up in the middle of Tel Aviv and say a Holocaust
did not take place — it was just a massacre. You are either ignorant or
worse yet, knowingly committing a moral crime. God help you Ms.
Abbott-Watt,” Levon Habeshian.
“Thank you for your prompt, but unconvincing reply,” Dr. Hagop Bessos.
“The notion that the historical record is ‘not sufficiently unequivocal’
maligns history and historians everywhere…. Those who are ‘equivocal’ on
this matter are simply sympathizing with state terror and murder. Armenians
worldwide will not forget your callous disregard for the lives lost and
maimed across generations,” Anahid Kassabian, Associate Professor, Fordham
University.
“Thank you for your ‘cookie cutter’ response,” Nader Rastegar. In response
to his follow-up e-mail, asking specific questions about the British
government’s denial of the Armenian Genocide, Amb. Abbott-Watt responded:
“I am sorry. I lack the resources in a small Embassy to enter into a
lengthy debate. I understand, and respect, the position you hold. It does
not, however, accord with ours, for which I would, ideally, like your equal
respect and understanding.”
“When you state that there is not enough empirical data to prove genocide
and that historians are still debating the issues, you and your government
have assumed the role of deniers…. You call one of the most astute
statesmen of the 20th century, Mr. Winston Churchill, a fabricator since he
called what happened to the Armenians a holocaust, long before the word was
applied to the Nazi quest of ‘the Final Solution.’ …I have much training
and experience in international conflicts, and have yet to discover that
denial of the truth leads to reconciliation,” Moorad Mooradian, Ph.D.
“While I understand the need for regional cooperation and the need to look
to the future, you must also accept that your failure to accept a known
injustice as Genocide and a crime against humanity is a major obstacle to
such endeavors,” Onnik Krikorian.
Scores of readers also sent critical e-mails to the Armenian Foreign
Ministry urging the Armenian government not to remain silent in the face of
the British Ambassador’s denial of the Armenian Genocide. Here are excerpts
from some of their e-mails:
“How can our officials accept such lies and misinterpretations by the
Ambassador? Please don’t hesitate to throw the Ambassador out of her
office. Take action and throw her out of Armenia so the other Ambassadors
to Armenia witness this and understand that Armenians can not be insulted,”
Tony Topsakalyan.
“I would like to see a more robust response from the Armenian Foreign
Ministry and government regarding the despicable statements from Amb.
Abbott-Watt and consider expelling her form Armenia forthwith. It is about
time that your response to such serious matters be more in tune with the
facts and public opinion rather than be so tame and defensive. We don’t
need Great Britain to give us lectures on genocide and historical facts.
She is no asset to Armenia nor to humanity in general,” Mihran Keheyian.
“This very improper statement should be officially condemned by the
Armenian government so other Ambassadors in Armenia would think long and
hard before making similar statements in the future,” Ara Manoogian.
“An insult of this nature must not be tolerated no matter who says it. I
would strongly demand that you expel her from Armenia,” Dr. Stepan
Simonian.
“I write to request that you expel the British Ambassador immediately. Her
statement displays a blatant disregard for the lives lost in the Genocide
and for her host country, Armenia. She should not be allowed to insult the
dead and the survivors in this way,” Professor Anahid Kassabian.
“We appeal to the Foreign Minister of Armenia to put pressure on the
British Ambassador through diplomatic channels so that she would issue a
public apology, and failing that, we appeal to the Foreign Minister of
Armenia to send a note of protest to the Foreign Ministry of the United
Kingdom, and if need be declare the British Ambassador persona non grata,”
students at Yerevan State University.
Swiss-Armenian organizations issued a joint appeal demanding that: “the
Armenian Parliament and Government adopt all necessary legislative and
diplomatic measures to prevent, in the future, others from making such
offensive statements against the memory of the Armenian nation; and that
the British Ambassador in Armenia, Mrs. Thorda Abbott-Watt, apologize
publicly for her statement and officially retract them; if she refuses, the
Ambassador should be declared persona non grata in the Republic of
Armenia,” Armenian Community of Neuchatel-Jura, Armenian Ladies Association
of Geneva, and Switzerland-Armenia Association.
In an unexpected development, while Armenia’s Foreign Minister continued to
maintain his mystifying silence on this matter for the past two months,
Pres. Kocharian inadvertently became the first Armenian official to comment
on this controversy, when students at Yerevan State University, during a
question and answer session on March 10, asked him for his views on the
British Ambassador’s statement. The President said that while he did not
condone those who deny the Genocide, he thought it would be naïve to think
that the Ambassador of a country that did not recognize the Genocide could
say anything else. Then, contradicting himself, the President said that the
British Ambassador could have avoided the issue altogether and could have
provided a vague answer. He said that Ambassadors representing other
countries that do not recognize the Genocide approach this issue with more
caution. Pres. Kocharian also said that Great Britain is not a country the
Ambassador of which could simply be kicked out, because Armenia would then
find itself in a diplomatic deadlock.
His foreign policy aides must not have properly briefed the President.
Rather than cautioning foreign diplomats that the Armenian government would
not tolerate such offensive remarks on the Armenian Genocide, the
President, unintentionally, seemed to be giving advice to them on how to
sidestep the Genocide issue. By stating that the British Ambassador could
not be easily expelled, the President has overlooked a series of other
options available to him ranging from its current position of inaction to
expulsion. Regrettably, the Armenian government’s lack of any kind of
response projects an image of weakness to the Armenian public and the
international community.
In other developments, Erik Grigoryan, the President of the Club of Young
Diplomats of Yerevan State University, in collaboration with the Noyan
Tapan news agency, just set up a web site, , that will
post the latest developments on this issue as well as all letters,
articles, and other relevant documents. The Club issued a press release
calling on the British Ambassador to apologize for her statement and urged
the Foreign Minister of Armenia to take a more resolute stand on this
issue.
Send your e-mails to British government officials in London asking them to
recall their envoy from Yerevan, since Amb. Abbott-Watt could no longer
effectively carry out her diplomatic duties after having insulted all
citizens of her host country. Send your e-mails to: Michael Jay, the
Under-Secretary and Head of the UK Diplomatic Service:
[email protected], and to Prime Minister Tony Blair through the
following web site: Click
on select a subject, select “international affairs,” and then click on the
GO button.
Please continue sending e-mails to the British Ambassador:
[email protected] and to the Armenian Foreign Ministry:
[email protected]. Please send me a copy of your e-mails and
any responses: [email protected].
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2 – Steve Sarkisian Will Coach
Oakland Raiders Quarterbacks
OAKLAND, Calif. – Steve Sarkisian, most recently quarterback coach to 2003
National Champion USC where he also tutored the 2002 Heisman Trophy winner
and NFL No. 1 overall pick, will operate in the same capacity for the
Oakland Raiders.
Sarkisian, 29, handled quarterbacks at USC for the past two seasons.
Last year, he tutored Matt Linehart, who was named Pac-10 Player of the
Year – only the second sophomore to win the award, John Elway being the
first in 1980 – as USC went on to win the National Championship. The
previous year, Sarkisian coached Carson Palmer, the NFL’s top overall pick
in 2002 who won the Heisman Trophy and the Unitas Award en route to setting
Pac-10 career records for passing yards and total offense. He was offensive
assistant at USC in 2001 and in 2000 was quarterbacks coach at El Camino
Junior College in Torrance (Calif.) where his quarterback, Robert Hodge,
earned All-American honors.
As a senior in 1996, he led the nation in passing efficiency (173.6, the
seventh best mark ever) as the Western Athletic Conference champion Cougars
went 14-1 and won the Cotton Bowl.
He was the WAC Offensive Player of the Year in 1996 and a second-team
All-American. As a junior, he was All-WAC and led BYU to the WAC title.
Against Fresno State that season, he set an NCAA game completion percentage
record when he hit 31-of-34 passes (91.2 percent).
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3 – DSA Screening of Documentary
Benefits Projects in Armenia
LOS ANGELES – The Organization of Developmental Services for Armenia (DSA)
showed the award-winning documentary “Khachaturian” on March 13, at the
Glendale Cinema, with a Gala Reception, Silent Auction and Dinner following
the screening at the Brandview Collection in Glendale.
A highlight of the benefit dinner was guests of honor, Dr. Robert Lawrence
Kuhn and Dora Serviarian Kuhn, the Executive Producers of the film which
was released as a Kuhn Foundation Film.
The success of this event will provide much needed resources for DSA
projects in Armenia. The most recent accomplishment was the delivery of
four ambulances distributed to various hospitals in Armenia.
In the past year DSA renovated the kitchen and cafeteria at the Children’s
School #154, (Grades 1 to 10). In addition, a gas heating system was
installed, providing heat throughout the school for the first time.
Another achievement was at Primary Pre-School #301 for children ages 1 to
7, where DSA renovated bathrooms, the Nurses Facility which was collapsing,
plus installing a new roof.
DSA also completed a request for staples of sugar, pasta, butter and rice,
for the Psychiatric Hospital in the Sevan Region.
The DSA has also furnished and set up Computer labs at five different
schools in Armenia. DSA also renovated the Library at the Vartanantz Asbed
School.
DSA is a 501C-3 non-profit organization and registered NGO in Armenia.
**************************************************************************
4 – UCLA AGSA Hosts Academics to Discuss
Current Research in Armenian Studies
LOS ANGELES – The UCLA Armenian Graduate Students Association held the
second annual international Graduate Student Colloquium in Armenian Studies
at UCLA on Feb. 20. It drew numerous academics and students from UCLA as
well as local universities who enjoyed presentations on themes from
Classical Literature, the Contemporary History and Politics of
Transcaucasia, Modern Literature, as well as Armenians and Education Issues
in the US.
“I found putting the colloquium together to be a most rewarding experience
and the day itself was not only informative and academically stimulating,
but exciting as well,” remarked Ani Moughamian, a UCLA graduate student in
the School of Education and Project Director of the 2004 colloquium. “We
really brought a great group of students together from so many different
places and it was a thrill for me to see how successful the colloquium was
this year in terms of scholarship and camaraderie between students.”
“It was a pleasure to be able to attend such a wonderful event. The AGSA
members did an excellent job and the colloquium has developed in so many
ways since last year. I can only expect its continued growth in the coming
years and the UCLA AGSA is happy to provide the foundation for the creative
and ambitious graduate students of this and future organizing committees,”
commended Haig Hovsepian, Executive Officer of the UCLA AGSA. He also
expressed his thanks to Dr. Peter Cowe (Professor and holder of the
Narekatsi Chair in Armenian Language and Literature) for his participation
in the organizing committee. “Dr. Cowe helped make the 2003 colloquium a
reality and continued to provide a professional experience for the 2004
organizing committee in its efforts to put together a quality event.”
The first panel of the morning session featured Andrea Scala (Austria) and
Lilit Hovsepyan (Armenia) who presented their works regarding texts by John
Chrysostum and Gregory of Narek, respectively. Andrea hails from the
Armenology community of Italy where, since submitting his abstract in
response to the 2004 call for papers, he received his degree from the State
University in Milan. For Lilit, it was the first time presenting her work
in an academic conference outside Armenia. She happily relayed that “… it
was a good chance to come into contact with other people [in the field], to
make friends, and learn much about the students and educational system at
UCLA.” She also noted that her participation in the colloquium and the
colloquium itself has received positive support and feedback from her
colleagues in Armenia. She looks forward to more graduate students
presenting their work in the coming years.
Leading off the second panel of the day, Ohannes Geukjian (Peace Studies –
University of Bradford, UK) presented a paper on the historical and
territorial dimensions of the conflict in Artsakh. He was joined by Asbed
Kotchikian, a political science doctoral student from Boston University,
who delivered a lecture on the perceived roles of Russia and Turkey in
Georgian and Armenian foreign policy.
“I was excited both about the geographical range of participants in this
year’s colloquium as well as the diversity of disciplines which they
represented within the broad field of Armenian Studies,” expressed Dr.
Peter Cowe. “This is a real indication of the growth and expansion of our
field and is very stimulating.”
His sentiments were echoed by Talar Chahinian, a UCLA graduate student in
the Department of Comparative Literature, who presented her work on
French-Armenian writers in the years immediately following the Armenian
Genocide. “It is very exciting to see graduate students from different
countries and across various disciplines coming together… The colloquium
did a great job of providing a forum for these different voices and also of
providing a space for community building among the participants.”
Talar was joined by fellow UCLA graduate student Tamar Boyadjian (Near
Eastern Languages and Cultures) who presented her latest work exploring the
use of natural imagery by late-19th and early-20th century Armenian poets.
Rounding off the third panel on modern literature was Karen Gharslyan of
the Bryusov State Linguistics University (Armenia) who compared the
literary perceptions of Giambattista Vico and James Joyce as it related to
the Biblical Flood, Noah and his descendent, as well as the role of the
Armenian people in this beginning of humanity.
Though the day’s program was nearing its end by the end of the fourth
panel, the question and answer session that followed was no less energetic
than those that preceded it. Artineh Samkian who presented on the topic of
language use in Armenian private schools expressed her appreciation of the
dialogue between academics in the audienc
e. “I received some important comments and constructive criticism that will
help me to better shape my project in its ‘final’ state.” Artineh, UCLA
graduate student in the School of Education was joined by Ani Moughamian
and Yeprem Mehranian (University of Massachusetts, Amherst). Whereas Ani
presented data on the literacy achievement of Armenian-American learners of
the English Language, Yeprem delved into the issue of the search for
identity and the negotiation between that of being Armenian and American.
Ramela Grigorian, a graduate student from the Department of Art History at
UCLA noted that a number of this year’s participants had indicated that
they would be returning to their home institutes and students as well as
colleagues to excitedly inform them about the colloquium and the active
Armenian studies community. “How wonderful that a symposium like this has
the power to inspire! I do hope to see more members of the community attend
the conference next year!”
With only a week to rest, the organizing committee is already back to work
and is in the process of drafting the next year’s call for papers. The UCLA
AGSA looks forward to February 2005 and hosting the next Graduate Student
Colloquium in Armenian Studies.
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5 – Schwarzenegger Names Deukmejian
To Head State Prison Reform Panel
By Don Thompson
SACRAMENTO (AP) – Former Gov. George Deukmejian will chair an independent
review panel
charged with finding ways to “turn around the crisis of confidence” in
California’s youth and adult correctional systems, Gov. Arnold
Schwarzenegger said last week.
Panel members said they plan a report by June, including recommendations on
prison closures and the future of San Quentin, the state’s oldest prison
that sits on prime development land.
Critics noted “Iron Duke” Deukmejian, who held office from 1983-91, helped
build the state’s prison system into the nation’s largest during a
law-and-order administration.
That system has become Schwarzenegger’s biggest unexpected policy crisis
since he took office after October’s recall election, diverting attention
from his attempts to rein in the state’s massive budget crisis.
A federal court-appointed monitor found that a prison employee “code of
silence” protects wrongdoers and punishes whistleblowers, and recommended
the Department of Corrections’ former director be charged with contempt of
court.
A series of scathing national experts’ reports criticized the California
Youth Authority as a cruel version of the adult prison system, unable to
meet its responsibility to rehabilitate children before it’s too late.
There are no boundaries on the panel’s recommendations, including
sentencing changes, said Joseph Gunn, who was named the panel’s executive
director. Gunn was executive director of the Los Angeles Board of Police
Commissioners and co-chaired the independent review panel that investigated
the city’s Rampart police corruption case.
He said Schwarzenegger is concerned the youth authority is “set up for the
1950s and not the 2000s, and maybe they have to be brought up to modern
times.”
Schwarzenegger said Deukmejian’s experience as a legislator, state attorney
general and governor makes him the ideal chairman.
“George Deukmejian presided over one of the biggest prison-building
programs in the history of the world, and that’s no exaggeration. His
record on prison reform is not good,” countered Rose Braz of the sentencing
and prison reform groups Critical Resistance and a new coalition called
Californians United for A Responsible Budget.
“We know what kind of reforms are needed” after years of audits,
investigations and reports by experts and blue ribbon panels, Braz said.
“What we need now is the political will to do it.”
******************************************************************
6 – Boghosian’s ‘One Woman Show”
Opens At Harvest Gallery, March 26
LOS ANGELES – Anahid Boghosian’s “A One Woman Show” opens with an artist
reception on March 26, from 6 to 10 p.m., at the Harvest Gallery, 938 North
Brand Boulevard, Glendale.
She brings tremendous presence to her stills with influences from the
greats combined with a distinctive signature flare, her Armenian heritage.
Boghosian exploits perceptions of sexuality, sensuality and its
contradictions. “Life is full of contradictions. It is our job to make
sense of them within our lives,” says Boghosian.
Boghosian continues to discover and push the boundaries by exploring
different concepts, materials, and views thus, creating a truly unique
vision.
“A One Woman Show” will be on display from March 26 to March 28 at the
Harvest Gallery.
For general information about the exhibit, call Harvest Gallery at
818.546.1000.
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**************************************************************************

http://campaign.nt.am
http://www.number-10.gov.uk/output/Page821.asp.

A Writer At Large: In Search Of The (Live) Lost Chord;

A Writer At Large: In Search Of The (Live) Lost Chord;

IT MIGHT SEEM ODD TO SAY LONDON ISN’T A GREAT CITY FOR CLUBS, BUT IF…

March 7, 2004, Sunday
By Tim Marrs

In Seville recently for the Womex Conference, I fled the official
conference showcases and sought out La Carboneria, a bar I remembered
from years ago. Its signless wooden door in a back alley was marked
only by a row of parked bicycles and a few people exiting as we
approached.

You enter an extraordinary room, the high-vaulted central chamber of
what was once a charcoal-maker’s workplace. The walls are covered with
old bullfight ***** faded photos of flamenco singers, abstract
daubs with a Fifties air about them and relics of the craft of turning
wood into fuel. In a corner of the room by a fireplace, a woman
dressed in scarves and a long, flowered skirt and accompanied by a
guitarist sang coplas, a flamenco-esque song form from the
Forties. The crowd was mixed by age and type and paid attention to the
music rather than chatting. Through the far door is a large shed with
rows of benches, a long bar and a small stage. The back door opens
onto a huge hidden garden sheltered by palms and banana trees with
more tables, chairs and a bar. When the coplas finished, an Armenian
trio with clarinet, oud and percussion started in the shed, a
belly-dancer joining them towards the end of their set. By that time
the place was packed and the crowd was younger and hipper. It seemed
to have become more fashionable than I remembered from prior visits
listening to young flamenco rebels jamming after hours, but it had
retained its eccentricity and its atmosphere. It has also, like the
rest of Spain, kept its wilfully egalitarian ethos: the bartender
scrupulously insisted on returning the loose change I left on the bar.

As I sat sipping my ginda, I pondered why no equivalent exists in
London. Our past gets ploughed under by changing trends and rising
real-estate values. Clubs soar upwards on a tide of tribal fashion
then disappear. The Jazz Cafe was a great little joint in Stoke
Newington before it moved aspirationally to Camden Town; now it’s a
cog in the Mean Fiddler machine. The original Mean Fiddler in
Harlesden, for that matter, was once a pretty good place for live
music, but has long been closed. Momo tries to create the equivalent
atmosphere, but it is too relentlessly hip, exclusive and small to
match the democratic flavour of La Carboneria.

It sounds odd to say London isn’t a great city for music. Kids come
from all over the world to go clubbing here. But most London musical
destinations are in thrall to the world of DJs, or the shifting sands
of popular fashion, or both. Dancing, if it is done, is to recorded
music. And to be fair, London has raised the club-DJ scene to a level
of sophistication and up- to-dateness easily the equal of New York or
Paris. But the dance hall or venue with memories of years of great
nights of live music clinging to its unfashionable wallpaper is not to
be found.

There’s Ronnie Scott’s of course, but for decades that has been a kind
of landing strip for American, Cuban or other foreign jazz artists of
international repute. “The Old Place” lasted for a while as a haven
for local jazz talent in the original Gerard Street basement, but
walking through Chinatown now, you are hard pressed to remember which
stairwell once led down to its grimy but soulful rooms. The Pizza
Express jazz venues are good, but adhere pretty closely to the jazz
cliches.

One problem is that there is no native London musical tradition you
can dance to. You could never imagine a local version of the Mid-City
Rock ‘N Bowl, for example. As the name suggests, this is a bowling
alley, located in a strip mall in an unfashionable district of New
Orleans. Most nights, the lot is full and cars prowl the murky side
streets looking for a place to park while queues form at the foot of
the stairs. Once you gain entrance, you find yourself in a gigantic
hangar where the rumble of bowling balls blends with the clatter of
pins and the creaking of automated machinery re-setting the
lanes. It’s a good bowling alley, one of the best in the city, and in
excellent unaltered condition. Which means it reeks of the Fifties,
even down to the barmaids’ and waitresses’ tight little blue jackets,
pleated mini- skirts and black ankle boots. Murals on the wall
celebrate the Pelicans, the city’s minor-league baseball team, and
their sponsoring local beer.

But what sets Mid-City Lanes apart is the huge dance floor between the
bar and the bowlers. The space is about 30 lanes wide, with a stage at
either end for the busy nights when two groups alternate until two in
the morning. Week nights, they tend to have zyedeco or cajun bands,
with R&B or Latin music on the weekends. The roar of the lanes is
curiously supportive of the music, like a drone that never goes out of
tune. There are two-step lessons for the newcomers at 7pm on Wednesday
and Thursday evenings. By 11, the place is heaving, with dancers of
all races, ages and classes mixing it up and girls sitting on the
banquettes in hot dresses waiting to be asked. Couples come and bowl a
few frames, drink a few beers, eat some fried chicken, then have a
dance.

London’s closest equivalent to the democratic mileu of Rock ‘N Bowl is
the DJ Gaz Mayall’s Rockin’ Blues which has made its home in various
dives over many years. I remember running into an ex-girlfriend at a
dinner party 20 years ago who wanted me to take her, her Tory minister
husband and their friends out dancing after the meal. We ended up at
Gaz’s listening to early reggae and R&B while the minister rubbed
shoulders with a party of skinheads at the next table toasting one of
their number who was shipping out next day for the Falklands.

In later years, Jerry Lyseight, Max Reinhardt and Rita Ray opened the
legendary Mambo Inn which specialised in Latin and African music and
would present live bands in one of the rooms of the glorious
rabbit’s-warren that is Brixton’s Loughborough Arms. But it died at
the end of the Eighties, leaving Gaz to carry the roots torch
alone. Bricks and mortar are a problem in a prosperous place like
London. Seville and New Orleans are wonderful cities, but one has very
strict preservation orders to protect the old quarters from
development and the other is too poor to grow. Both recognise that
preserving their past is a better economic plan than developing it.

It sounds as foolish to accuse London of having no sense of history as
it does to accuse it of having no good music. But think about it – in
Seville and New Orleans, the past comes right up to the
present. London’s past is safely preserved in architecture from
distant centuries. Punk clubs? All closed. Murray’s Club, where
Stephen Ward first danced with Christine Keeler? Long gone. Eel Pie
Island, home to trad, skiffle, the blues, and finally The Who and The
Stones? No preservation order saved that century-long mecca of
decadence from the weeds. And don’t get me started on Battersea Power
Station …

Readers who may have gone along with me thus far would quickly turn
the page were I to suggest that London ought to preserve its own
native musical past the way those other cities do. What would that be?
The country dances brought into sweaty city dance palaces that Charles
Dickens so admired? The big dance floors and the equally big bands of
the Forties? Clearly, there is no chance of that. What, come to think
of it, is London’s musical culture? Cockney Music Hall?

No, London is a chameleon city, turning absorbed styles from across
the Atlantic into something it can call its own. Eric Clapton and Mick
Jagger did America’s white blues wannabes one better, as did Zep, Roxy
Music, The Clash, Britpop and Radiohead with their Transatlantic
equivalents. But these groups were primarily turns. They didn’t meet
kindred souls at after-hours clubs and jam. English pop groups work
out their act and then show it on a stage for kids their own age or
younger. Its whole point is to violate whatever tradition is
around. There is no undercurrent of musical texture seeping up from
London’s earth. Unless you count reggae and calypso – but the question
of why there has never been an established venue here for live West
Indian music is another subject entirely …

Bordeaux has a reputation as an up-tight bourgeois city. The beauty of
its 17th century river-front buildings is chilly and severe and the
place reeks of money and respectability. Spending time in the
countryside nearby, I despaired of ever having a Bordelais laugh. One
day I was sipping a pastis and idly thumbing a copy of Sud-Ouest when
I spotted a small notice announcing the Kocani Orchestra, the Balkan
brass band who appeared in Emir Kosturica’s films Underground and Time
of the Gypsies. Where on earth could they be playing in Bordeaux?

Many wrong turns later, I found myself in what resembled a scene from
one of those films. On the dingy far bank of the Garonne
Christmas-tree lights were strung along a chain-link fence between two
forbidding warehouses beside a disused railway line. The signs
announced two names, take your pick: La Guinguette and Chez
Alriq. True to guinguette tradition, it has tables, a dance floor and
a stage under the trees by the river. The bar and restaurant are
inside a crumbling workshop. You fetch your (excellent) food from a
counter and enjoy the summer breeze off the river. In winter, there’s
a stage at one end of the workshop and the tables crowd together
around a dance floor.

And behold, here was the Bohemiam Bordeaux I had been searching for:
art teachers, overgrown moustaches, charity-shop fashion, mixed-race
couples, teenagers hanging out contentedly with their parents
… Alriq’s wife, Rosa, greets and looks after the bar and the
musicians, and together they create an admirably louche
atmosphere. Every night there is music: cajun, musette, jazz, Latin,
gypsy, flamenco, tango. Never a DJ, always a band.

The atmosphere generated by live musicians playing danceable music is
impossible to replicate with recordings. People behave differently
towards each other. Electronic beats have the effect of hardening
manners to match the punch of the rhythm tracks. Watching the music
take shape in front of your eyes and touching your dance partner
softens people. At least that is my experience.

London does have a market for this musical agenda. The audience for
real musicians playing real music with a bit of history is satisfied,
to a degree, by our public spaces. We are lucky to have people like
David Jones of Speakout, Bryn Ormrod from the Barbican, David Sefton
of the South Bank (head-hunted and now running Royce Hall in Los
Angeles) and Andy Wood from Como No. They manage to parade a series of
concerts and musical events not just onto the formal stages but into
the foyers of the Barbican and the Festival Hall where there is room
for dancing. Mambo Inn’s Max and Rita now run the periodic Shrine and
try to blend their beats with live music in imaginative ways. The
Lyric Hammersmith fills time between plays with imaginative music
programming. The crowds at these events show that there would
certainly be an audience for a London guinguette. Maybe someone should
bring Eel Pie Island back to life.

I ran a club once: “UFO” Friday nights in a Tottenham Court Road
basement. Pink Floyd were our resident group, there were light shows
and Kurosawa movies at 4am, Yoko Ono cut a paper dress off a naked
girl on a stepladder with amplified scissors and it became the centre
of the annus mirabilis of 1967. History has memorialised it as the
cradle for groups like the Floyd, the Soft Machine and Arthur Brown.

But we used to present jazz, theatre, folk and the uncategoriseable
avant- garde as well. The openness of the programming was part of the
point. When my partner, Hoppy, was jailed and I found myself running
it on my own, I made the mistake of trying to keep it at the centre of
the new scene instead of maintaining its original free-form spirit. In
trying to become a commercial succes, it lost its way and
disappeared. (Having police and skinheads busting and beating up our
crowds probably didn’t help much, either …)

New York has recently lost both The Bottom Line and Village
Underground, but still boasts the Tonic, Joe’s Pub and The Knitting
Factory. Moscow now has great live venues, led by the quirky
Jao-Da. LA has Largo, Paris La Java, Cafe de la Danse, Divan du Monde,
Amsterdam the venerable Milkveg and Paradiso. Here, Stuart Lyon’s
Sunday nights at Ronnie’s carry on, while the admirable Kashmir Klub
has lost its lease. The Jazz Cafe, Spitz, 12-Bar, Cargo and Borderline
have their merits, but you wouldn’t send an out-of-town visitor to any
of them for the crowd and the ambience.

Is there room for a place in London with the Bacchanalian spirit of
Eel Pie Island, the agape booking policy of Chez Alriq, a dance floor
as big and springy as Mid-City Rock ‘N Bowl and the atmosphere and
cheap drinks of La Carbonaria. Well, I am certainly not going to open
one. But if someone is brave enough, he or she can count on my buying
a round on opening night.

Armenian Deputy Speaker Unhappy About “Crisis of Tolerance”

ARMENIAN DEPUTY SPEAKER UNHAPPY ABOUT “CRISIS OF TOLERANCE”

Yerkir, Yerevan
5 Mar 04

March “Parliament deputy speaker urges government, opposition to start
dialogue”

Yerevan, 5 March: Speaking at the National Press Club on Friday (5
March), National Assembly Deputy Speaker Tigran Torosyan said there
was a “crisis of tolerance” in Armenia.

“There is no serious polemic in Armenia today,” Torosyan said, hinting
at the pro-government and the opposition parties. “Both sides are
avoiding polemic.” The deputy speaker called on both sides to sit at
the negotiating table to correct the situation. “Both sides should
realize that this is the only way,” he said.

Torosyan also pointed to the need for fair elections. The speaker
described the opposition’s boycotting of the National Assembly as
“parliamentary bargaining” and “pressure on parliament”.

Hungarian Lawyer to Defend Azeri Officer Charged w/Armenian Murder

HUNGARIAN LAWYER TO DEFEND AZERI OFFICER CHARGED WITH ARMENIAN’S MURDER

ANS TV, Baku
March 8, 2004

(Presenter) Lawyer Adil Ismayilov who will assist the defence of Ramil
Safarov (Azerbaijani officer facing charges of killing an Armenian
serviceman during NATO courses in Hungary) arrived in Baku today. He
met Safarov in a police department in Budapest. Ismayilov is now ANS
TV’s guest. Mr Ismayilov, who is the lawyer who will defend Safarov
and how do you assess him from a professional standpoint?

(Ismayilov, in studio) I want to take this opportunity to congratulate
all the Azerbaijani women on 8 March, on my behalf and on behalf of
Ramil Safarov. I especially want to congratulate his mother on
bringing up a courageous man like Safarov.

As for your question, I was in Budapest and a contract was signed
there with a lawyer. His name is (?Zalay Peter). I personally,
together with the lawyer, met Safarov. The lawyer was introduced to
Safarov and he agreed. From now on, the lawyer will be defending his
rights.

(Presenter) How experienced is the lawyer? Has he come across similar
cases? Is he experienced enough?

(Ismayilov) The lawyer was born in 1948 and is a police colonel. He
used to work as a police investigator. He became a lawyer several
years ago.

(Presenter) So are you satisfied with his level?

(Ismayilov) During this short period we had only two or three
meetings. It is impossible to say something definite, but at any rate,
I reckon that he has enough experience and knowledge.

(Presenter) You have met Azerbaijani Prosecutor-General (Zakir
Qaralov) and Defence Minister (Safar Abiyev). What are your
impressions?

(Ismayilov) Upon returning from Budapest, I met some state officials,
including Abiyev, Qaralov and his first deputy Ramiz Aliyev. During
those conversations I got the impression that the state is directly
interested in finding a positive solution to this issue. As far as I
know, this issue is being addressed at the highest level, at that of
the president.

(Passage omitted: Ismayilov refuses to detail the case before the
trial starts)

(Presenter) What is his condition?

(Ismayilov) He is very well, if one may say so. I visited him in
prison. His morale is high. I believe that this morale has to be
maintained at this high level. His condition must be regularly checked
and we need to regularly visit him. As far as I know, a delegation of
the Azerbaijani Prosecutor-General’s Office will visit him soon. Such
measures need to be taken.

(Passage omitted: Translator found for Safarov)

Government Change “Inevitable” in Armenia – Ex-Official

GOVERNMENT CHANGE “INEVITABLE” IN ARMENIA – EX-OFFICIAL

A1+ web site
March 5, 2004

A change of government is inevitable, the people’s hatred has matured,
Paruyr Ayrikyan, leader of the National Self-Determination
Association, said today. To secure the change of government, Paruyr
Ayrikyan considers the united action of forces in and out of
parliament as an important factor.

However, Ayrikyan fears that forces, which aim to reverse former
authorities and opportunities, may come to power.

As for the absence of a leader, Paruyr Ayrikyan suggested, if the
opposition does not come to power, that a two-year interim government
be selected to guarantee the conduct of fair elections provided it
itself cannot be elected.

Armenian Academicians Urge Speaker to Sack Education Minister

ARMENIAN ACADEMICIANS URGE SPEAKER TO SACK EDUCATION MINISTER

A1+ web site
March 5, 2004

Armenian Speaker Artur Bagdasaryan, at the request of Armenian
academicians, received them and heard their demands and questions.

Speaking on behalf of members of the National Academy, the director of
the biochemistry scientific and research institute, Konstantin
Karagezyan, said: “A minister like (Science and Education Minister)
Sergo Yeritsyan does not befit our science.” The academicians were
outraged by Sergo Yeritsyan’s statement that science did not need the
funds provided by the government.

The academicians suggested that “Sergo Yeritsyan and (Minister of
Culture and Youth Affairs) Tamara Pogosyan’s responsibilities be
merged to set up a department for culture and education, and the funds
allocated to the ministry be channeled into the development of
science”.

Artur Bagdasaryan’s reaction to the proposal was rather anxious and he
said that there was no intention to relieve Yeritsyan of his post.

(Passage omitted: academicians want to set up ties with colleagues in
other countries)

Armenian Deputy Speaker Urges “Fair” Decisions on Banned TV Channel

ARMENIAN DEPUTY SPEAKER URGES “FAIR” DECISIONS ON BANNED TV CHANNEL

A1+ web site
March 5, 2004

5 March: At today’s press conference (on 5 March), a correspondent of
Arminfo news agency asked Deputy Speaker of the National Assembly
Tigran Torosyan whether any measures are being taken to resume A+1 (TV
channel)’s broadcasting.

“Steps should be taken to ensure that the National Commission for
Radio and Television is not subject to pressure and its decisions are
fair. This problem cannot be tackled by making amendments to laws,
this is a broad problem,” Torosyan said.

Armenian Women Protest Against President’s “Dictatorial Regime”

ARMENIAN WOMEN PROTEST AGAINST PRESIDENT’S “DICTATORIAL REGIME”

Arminfo
March 8, 2004

YEREVAN

Women supporting the opposition are holding a rally in Yerevan
today. It has been organized by the Justice bloc under the slogan
Women Against Lawlessness. According to Ruzanna Khachatryan,
spokeswoman for the People’s Party which is part of the Justice bloc,
the rally is open not only to women “sympathizing with the
opposition”, but also “to those who are not indifferent to what is
going on in the country”.

She said the authorities were doing nothing to alleviate tension in
society in the aftermath of the 2003 presidential elections which were
marred with massive fraud. The present social and economic plight is
also a heavy burden for women, therefore they are saying their word on
8 March, Khachatryan said.

Despite the cold weather and piercing wind, more than 1,000 women have
joined the rally. The welcoming address was made by Greta Sarkisyan,
the mother of the former Armenian prime minister, Vazgen Sarkisyan,
who was killed in the shooting in the Armenian parliament (27 October
1999). She called on Armenian women to carry on fighting against
President Robert Kocharyan’s dictatorial regime and for the
restoration of democracy in the country.

After the rally, those taking part in it intend to march to the
Armenian president’s residency.

It is worthy of note that there is a large number of policemen around
the square outside the institute of ancient manuscripts where the
rally is taking place.

Austria’s Teos Holds Nearly 95% in Rubin

AUSTRIA’S TEOS HOLDS NEARLY 95% IN RUBIN

March 8, 2004

By Violeta Ivanova

AUSTRIA’S Teos Holding, which deals with asset and equity management,
has acquired 19,690 shares (4.49% of the capital) in Bulgaria’s Rubin
of Pleven after a tender offer to the minority stockholders. Now Teos
already holds 94.495% of the glass maker. The tender offer concerned
9.95% of the capital, or 43,609 shares, at a BGN 18.54 price per unit.

Rubin has a product list of more than 300 different items but
manufactures mainly bottles and jars. The capacity of the works
exceeds 120 million items a year. Clients of the company are mainly
Bulgarian producer of canned food, wine, beer, soft and alcoholic
drinks. Rubin also exports to Greece, Macedonia, Kosovo, Serbia and
Montenegro, Romania, Armenia and Moldova. .

Husband scores a winner with his band of all-stars

Husband scores a winner with his band of all-stars

March 8, 2004

By JACK MASSARIK

Gary Husband, Queen Elizabeth Hall

IT is an exciting moment when a musician comes of age. Gary Husband, a
respected pianist and drummer, has long been one of London’s most
versatile players, but one who also hankered to write.

Handed a five-city British tour as leader of a handpicked US
supergroup, he seized his chance. His superb scores – an engrossing
series of post-Zawinul, electric-Miles landscapes, deliberately devoid
of saxophones or guitars – made Friday’s concert a revelation.

It opened with sound portraits of Burt Bacharach, Bjork and John
McLaughlin, three musicians whose individualism Husband admires. His
suitably original orchestrations, packed with strong themes and
brooding synth chords, seemed to double the size of a septet whose
unusual front line (trumpeter Randy Brecker, trombonist Elliot Mason
and electric violinist Jerry Goodman) blended magnificently.

When not rising to conduct ensemble sections, Husband spend most of
his time at the drums, driving the tempos along with massive authority
and leaving most keyboard solos unselfishly to synthman Jim
Beard. Even during quieter passages, the rhythm team of Husband,
Beard, alert Fender-bassist Matthew Garrison and the amazing Armenian
percussionist Arto Tuncboyaciyan kept the atmosphere tingling with
creative possibilities.

Second-half highlights included Stone Souls, a suite featuring Arto’s
effective voice-effects and flying hands – “Try to resist him,”
quipped the leader – the British-born Mason’s prowess on the difficult
bass-trumpet, and the all-round expertise of Goodman and Brecker.

The Contemporary Music Network, which organised this tour, and BBC
Radio 3, who commissioned the music, can also take a bow.

It is one thing to hand taxpayers’ money to established stars, quite
another to risk it on an artist of untapped potential. Husband has
repaid that faith. The quality of his writing, and his all-stars’
inspired response to it, produced a performance that ranks among the
year’s best.