Volleyball: Yeghegnadzor and Arabkir Left Out of Future Competition

YEGHEGNADZOR AND ARABKIR LEFT OUT OF FUTURE COMPETITION IN ARMENIAN
MEN VOLLEYBALL CHAMPIONSHIP

YEREVAN, APRIL 16, NOYAN TAPAN. The first tour of Armenian men
volleyball championship finished on April 15 on the Kilikia training
ground. FIMA is at the top of the tournament table with 10 points
after 5-day competition. Kilikia has 9 points and PPV Dinamo 8
points. Vanadzor takes 4th place with 7 points. The next two places
are taken by Yeghegnadzor and Arabkir teams, which were left out of
the future competition.

The second tour of the tournament will be held on May 17-22.

7 Greco-Roman, 7 Free-Style Wrestlers at Euro Wrestling in Sofia

7 GRECO-ROMAN AND 7 FREE-STYLE WRESTLERS FROM ARMENIA TO TAKE PART IN
EUROPE WRESTLING CHAMPIONSHIP TO START IN SOFIA

YEREVAN, APRIL 16, NOYAN TAPAN. Regular Europe Wrestling Championship
will start on April 19 in the Bulgarian capital Sofia.

In the Greco-Roman style Armenia will be represented by Ashot
Khachatrian (55 kg, Yerevan), Khosrov Melikian (60 kg, Gyumri), Arman
Adikian (66 kg, Etchmiadzin), Arsen Julfalakian (74 kg, Yerevan),
Denis Forov (84 kg, Yerevan), Arman Geghamian (96 kg, Akhurian) and
super-heavyweight Yuri Patrikiyev (Yerevan).

Mihran Jaburian (55 kg, Yerevan), Artyom Nalbandian (60 kg, Gyumri),
Zhirayr Hovhannisian (66 kg, Vanadzor), Ruslan Kokayev (74 kg,
Yerevan), Vadim Laliyev (84 kg, Yerevan), Shamil Gitinov (96 kg,
Yerevan) and Ruslan Basiyev (120 kg, Yerevan) will perform in the
free-style wrestling tournament.

Iran soon to accept bids for two more nuclear power plants

Iran soon to accept bids for two more nuclear power plants

15:04 | 15/ 04/ 2007

TEHRAN, April 15 (RIA Novosti) – Iran will soon announce a tender for
the construction of two more nuclear power plants in the south of the
Islamic Republic, an official of Iran’s Atomic Energy Organization said
Sunday.

Ahmad Fayazbakhsh said the power plants will each have a capacity of
1,000 to 1,600 megawatts and will be built at Bushehr where Russia is
completing the construction of Iran’s first nuclear power plant.

Iran has been at the center of international concerns since January
2006 over its nuclear program, which some countries, particularly the
United States, suspect is geared toward nuclear weapons development.
Tehran has consistently denied the claims, saying it needs nuclear
power for civilian purposes.

Fayazbakhsh said some major European and Asian contractors have already
displayed interest in the construction of NPPs.

Fayazbakhsh also said the two nuclear power plants will cost about
$1.4-1.8 billion and their construction will last about 9-11 years.

Iran: Egypt and Armenia discuss Iran’s nuclear program

Tehran Times, Iran
April 16 2007

Egypt and Armenia discuss Iran’s nuclear program

TEHRAN, Iran (AP) — Armenian President Robert Kocharian and
President Hosni Mubarak discussed Iran’s nuclear program in Cairo on
Saturday.

"Their talks covered the Iranian nuclear issue, developments in the
region and the Persian Gulf. Armenia is particularly interested in
the nuclear file since it shares its southern frontier with Iran,"
Suleiman Awad told journalists.

Iran’s uranium enrichment program is for peaceful civilian purposes
and under the supervision of the UN atomic energy agency.

"Iraq also featured in the discussions, which covered regional
problems in Central Asia, particularly the conflict between Armenia
and Azerbaijan over Nagorno-Karabakh," Awad said.

During Kocharian’s three-day visit, the interior ministers of both
countries are expected to sign accords on organized crime, judicial
cooperation and customs.

On Sunday, Kocharian was to meet the Grand Sheikh of Al-Azhar,
Mohammed Sayyed Tantawi

Like It or Not, the Word is Authoritarian

The Moscow Times, Russia
April 16 2007

Like It or Not, the Word is Authoritarian

Of the epithets regularly applied to President Vladimir Putin and his
political practices, "authoritarian" in particular seems to rankle
the Kremlin and its supporters. But what other word comes to mind
when 9,000 riot police officers are sent out onto the streets to
handle several thousand protesters, as they were Saturday?

Part of the explanation for the government reaction Saturday is that,
with Putin leaving office next year, those in power are determined to
make sure nothing like the 2004 Orange Revolution in Ukraine happens
here. It is difficult to see how Saturday’s gathering posed such a
threat.

One of the leaders of the event was former Prime Minister Mikhail
Kasyanov, whose liberal economic credentials, along with allegations
about corrupt dealings while still in government, would make it
impossible for him to win election in today’s Russia.

Another, Eduard Limonov, is a writer whose National Bolshevik Party
has been stripped of its official recognition and, despite offensive
nationalist rhetoric in the past, has been in recent years limited to
preaching social populism and staging publicity stunts.

The third, Garry Kasparov, who is handicapped in the eyes of much of
the public because he shares Kasyanov’s liberal bent, also carries
the additional baggage of being an Armenian Jew in a country where
ethnicity is still a major issue.

There is little chance that Kasparov, for example, could become for
today’s Russia the kind of figure Viktor Yushchnko became for the
Ukraine of 2004. The police detained him anyway Saturday.

There were even more preposterous detentions. A Moscow Times reporter
— himself detained while trying to get comments from other marchers
who had been corralled — overheard a young man explaining to his
girlfriend by cell phone that he could not meet her as promised
because he had been detained on the platform of the Pushkinskaya
metro station.

Another man told a call-in show on Ekho Moskvy radio that he, his
wife and young child had been detained while they were trying to see
what was happening. His wife and child were grabbed and bundled into
one police vehicle, while he was stuffed into another. They were
released not too long after.

Some of the younger members of the crowd wearing National Bolshevik
regalia did start rushing the riot police following the speeches on
Turgenev Square, apparently trying to provoke a confrontation. But
the police did not bother detaining these protesters. They simply
shoved them back.

The deliberate targeting of Kasparov and the arbitrary detentions
were part of the day’s absurd nature. They provide more than a hint
of its authoritarian nature, too.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

ANKARA: Abandon genocide law, Talat Pasha tells France

Hürriyet, Turkey
April 15 2007

Abandon genocide law, Talat Paþa tells France

Addressing a conference in Paris organised by the nationalist Talat
Paþa Committee and the Paris Association for Kemalist Thought (ADD),
Talat Paþa general secretary Ferit Ilsever said that France should
abandon legislation that would make it a crime to deny the Armenian
Genocide.

`Last week the Turkish Minister of Justice and Turkish Ambassador to
Paris, Osman Korutürk, called to ask us to cancel the protest march
we were planning in the Place de la Bastille, so as not to `provoke
the French’. We have postponed it for now, but the protest will
certainly take place in the near future, because we are of the belief
that Turkey has backed down one too many times and lost far too much
time in order not to provoke anyone. We have come together to tell
people that the proposed law regarding the denial of Armenian
Genocide is misleading the French public. The forced emigration that
took place was in defence of the nation, there was no genocide, the
nation was defending itself.’

Also attending the conference were Worker’s Party leader Doðu
Perinçek, Prof. Dr. Zekeriya Beyaz, Prof .Dr. Kemal Alemdaroðlu,
former National Movement Party (MHP) MP Mehmet Gül, retired
Lieutenant General Yaþar Müjdeci, ex-Senator Servet Bora and Paris
President of ADD Ali Rýza Taþdelen.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Immigrants face loss of classes

The Republican, MA
April 15 2007

Immigrants face loss of classes

Sunday, April 15, 2007By ALEX PESHKOV [email protected]

BOSTON – Serpil Durdu has 14 years of experience working as a nurse
in Turkey. Now living in Ludlow, she moved to the United States in
2003 hoping to continue her nursing career.

"But first, I need to learn English well enough, and I am so lucky to
be able to take the language classes" at the Ludlow Area Adult
Learning Center, the 36-year-old said.

Her classmate, Marine Kirakosian, 38, also of Ludlow, joined the
group in November after waiting for a vacancy for about a year.

"The course means so much to me," said Kirakosian who came from St.
Petersburg, Russia, three years ago, following her husband, the Rev.
Peter Shetelian, the priest of the Armenian Apostolic Church, who was
sent to serve in Western Massachusetts.

"It’s not just about the language, which is very important, of
course, but this is also a place for us to socialize, to share our
stories and experience and learn about American culture," she said.
"I can’t imagine leaving the class right now,"

However, Kirakosian said, she’s afraid that her class might be
canceled.

On the eve of Immigrant Day, which was celebrated for the 11th time
at the Statehouse Thursday, came the news of a possible $5 million
budget cut in adult education programs.

The $27 million budget recommendation for those programs submitted by
the House is $2 million less than recommended by the governor and $5
million below current levels, said Barbara Paul of Lutheran Community
Services.

Thursday morning Durdu, Kirakosian and some other 100 Western
Massachusetts immigrant students boarded buses in West Springfield,
Ludlow and Northampton to travel to Boston to participate in the
Interfaith Summit for Immigrant Justice at the Statehouse where they
told their stories and voiced concerns.

Hundreds of immigrants gathered at the historic building for the
celebration sponsored by Massachusetts Immigrant and Refugee Advocacy
Coalition. Virtually every speaker discussed the importance of
learning English and of their willingness to find a job as soon as
possible.

"Just in January we started additional classes for our program, which
is being offered in partnership with Holyoke Community College," said
Kermit Dunkelberg, program coordinator at Ludlow Center.

"We have people from 17 different countries," he said. "We still have
some 50 people on a waiting list at our center, and now, with the
proposed budget, we are looking at canceling some of the classes.
They all want to be able to communicate well enough to land a job."

"They are people from all over the world," said Paul, whose
grandparents came to America from Ukraine. "Some of them have been
living here for 25 years. Some of them came here just a couple of
weeks ago, but all of them want to contribute to this country. They
want to get a job, to raise a family, and learning the language is
the first step in achieving that goal."

"They are all legal immigrants, yet often they don’t get fair
treatment in terms of education or job opportunities," she said.

There are more than 300,000 legal immigrants in Massachusetts who are
eligible or in the process of naturalization to become U.S. citizens,
a journey that can take from five to 15 years, according to the
Massachusetts Immigrant and Refugee Advocacy Coalition.

Limited funding for language and civics classes, Paul said, is a
waste of highly skilled workers.

"Investing in them is investing in the state’s work force," she said.

All roads lead back to speed demon Kowalski

Toronto Star, Canada
April 15 2007

All roads lead back to speed demon Kowalski

REAR VIEW | Drugged-up vet and muscle car star in 1971 existential
classic. By Geoff Pevere

Apr 15, 2007 02:30 AM
Geoff Pevere

VANISHING POINT (1971, 20th

Century Fox Home Entertainment)

Who made it?

Richard C. Sarafian was born in New York City of Armenian descent.
After establishing himself in television, he began making mostly
low-budget films in 1960. Specializing in movies that unfold in open
spaces (Man in the Wilderness, Run Wild Run Free), Sarafian’s output
as a director slowed down in the late 1970s, when he established
himself as a capable character actor (Bugsy, Don Juan DeMarco). He
remains best known for his 1971 existential muscle-car classic
Vanishing Point.

What’s it about?

After picking up a spiffy white 1970 Dodge Challenger, the ex-cop,
ex-racer and Vietnam vet Kowalski (Barry Newman) bets his amphetamine
dealer double the cost of the next bag of bennies that he can make
the run from Denver to San Francisco in 15 hours. Burning rubber
across half the country, Kowalski becomes sort of a national
countercultural hero for his ability to leave a blazing trail of
crashed cops and smashed roadblocks. Egged on by the blind DJ Super
Soul (Cleavon Little), Kowalski becomes a symbol of existential
freedom, eventually sacrificing himself in order to, as Jim Morrison
once sang, "break on through to the other side."

What’s the context?

In 1970, studios were looking for their Easy Rider: a hip, low-budget
road movie that would click with the kids. Made in mere weeks on a
budget of less than $2 million (U.S.), Vanishing Point was intended
for that market. It helped that Dodge had just introduced the sleek
Challenger and was willing to provide 20th Century Fox with free cars
provided they were used prominently in a movie. Sarafian was asked if
he could make a cheap film that would showcase the Challenger, and
Vanishing Point was born. Scripted by the future Cuban novelist G.
Cabrera Infante (billed as Guillermo Cain) the movie was originally
intended by Sarafian to star Gene Hackman as Kowalski, but the studio
insisted on newcomer Newman. Due to an abrupt regime change during
production, it was under-promoted and had a limited release, but
ended up as one of the decade’s more enduring cult items. If you’ve
seen Death Proof, Quentin Tarantino’s half of the mock-retro double
bill Grindhouse, you’ve heard Vanishing Point being invoked like
something holy.

How was it received?

Reviews were mixed and, given the movie’s scant visibility, fairly
scarce. Often dismissed for its turbocharged minimalism or its
hippie-dippy pretensions, it took time for Vanishing Point to develop
its current rep as the ultimate transcendental speed demon movie.
Roger Greenspun’s comments in Penthouse were pretty much par for the
course: "It must have seemed like a sure-fire idea. So many dumb
movies have been saved by an exciting automobile chase in the last
few minutes – why not make a dumb movie that is nothing but an
automobile chase?"

So what’s the big deal?

Like its now-legendary car, Vanishing Point is compact, unadorned and
built for one thing: speed. At once a breathless non-stop chase movie
and a metaphor for transcendent experience (a big theme of the day),
the movie uses speed as both a visceral thrill and a means to an
alternate consciousness. Set largely in high desert country, the
movie uses physical locations beautifully and stages chases with
stunning economy and immediacy. Along with Bullitt and The French
Connection, it forever changed the way cars were seen on screen. Plus
the car is dead fricking cool.

Most endlessly quotable dialogue?

"And there goes the Challenger, being chased by the blue, blue
meanies on wheels. The vicious traffic squad cars are after our lone
driver, the last American hero, the electric centaur, the, the
demi-god, the super driver of the golden west!"

Most endlessly watchable scene?

There are many, but Kowalski’s final act of flaming automotive
kamikaze self-sacrifice is a definite keeper.

Most cogent critical appreciation?

"Kowalski would be a contemporary Lone Ranger but for one thing: he
forgets to do anything heroic." (Danny Peary)

I Influence the NY Times . . . just kidding

Michigan Daily, MI
April 15 2007

I Influence the NY Times . . . just kidding

By Jared Goldberg, written on Apr. 14, 2007

Two weeks and a day after my column on the Armenian Genocide, The New
York Times runs an interesting editorial on it. A nice little quote:

`It’s odd that Turkey’s leaders have not figured out by now that
every time they try to censor discussion of the Armenian genocide,
they only bring wider attention to the subject and link today’s
democratic Turkey with the now distant crime. [Emphasis added, ed.]’

It’s that one line that got me. It definitely addressed something
that I did not, and which further demonstrates my point that it is
frivolous, even for the Turks, to continue to deny the genocide.

The government that carried out the genocide was a different one than
Ataturk’s, and certainly different than that of the present day
Republic of Turkey. As the NY Times pointed out, the more the current
government denies the genocide, the differences between that old
government and this new one diminish.

If you happen to wander over to the Daily’s site and look at the
comments for my column, they now number about 50. Many of those who
have posted negatively, demonstrate the absurdity of denial. A little
FYI, I did do my research. I’ve probably read and studied more on the
subject than the jackasses who wander over to the site to deny the
Armenian Genocide. There will come a time when Turkey will recognize
the genocide. It’s a just a question of when.

um/?p=262

http://apps.michigandaily.com/blogs/thepodi

TBILISI: Advocacy Group Slams MP for Hate Speech

Civil Georgia, Georgia
April 15 2007

Advocacy Group Slams MP for Hate Speech

Advocacy group Public Movement Multinational Georgia said on April
14 that MP Beso Jugeli’s remarks in defense of a proposal envisaging
new housing tax for residents of old part of the capital city
Tbilisi, was `manifestation of fascism.’

A new initiative to impose a tax on those residents of Tbilisi, who
live in the old part of the city, has triggered political debates
this week. If approved, a resident living in this part of the city
will have to pay from GEL 0,1 to GEL 3 per square meter of dwelling
space per month. Funds collected from the tax, reportedly, will be
spent on rehabilitation of the old part of the city. Some opposition
politicians have claimed that the initiative is aimed at forcing
local residence of the district, which has turned into an attractive
area for real estate investments, to sell their dwelling spaces.

Speaking in defense of the initiative, Beso Jugeli, a lawmaker from
the ruling National Movement Party, said that the proposal `is not
directed against Georgians.’

`Mainly Armenians, Azerbaijanis, Kurds and other nationalities live
in these historical districts… There is no necessity for Mikirtich
[an Armenian name] to always live in Sololaki [a district in old part
of Tbilisi] ,` the daily 24 Saati (24 Hours) quoted MP Jugeli on
April 12.

Ethnic minority advocacy group Public Movement Multinational Georgia
said that these remarks were `absolutely unacceptable and
inadmissible for any civilized society.’

`We address leaders of the governing party with a request to comment
statement made by MP Jugeli and undertake corresponding measures in
regards to this fact,’ the statement reads.

`We give an opportunity to MP Jugeli to apologize on the very first
working day – Monday – to the whole population of Georgia, and
particularly those living in Tbilisi, whose historical traditions of
friendship, brotherhood, tolerance and diversity he does not share,’
the group said.