Diocese and Primate Celebrate 40 Years

PRESS RELEASE
Diocese of the Armenian Church of Australia & New Zealand
10 Macquarie Street
Chatswood NSW 2067
AUSTRALIA
Contact: Laura Artinian
Tel: (02) 9419-8056
Fax: (02) 9904-8446
Email: [email protected]

7 August 2008

DIOCESE AND PRIMATE CELEBRATE 40 YEARS

Sydney, Australia – "1968 ~ A Year of Significance" headed the program for
the 40th Anniversary Celebration Evening held in Sydney on Saturday, 2
August. Unbeknown at the time of formation of the Diocese of the Armenian
Church of Australia and New Zealand on January 15, 1968, the future Primate
of the Diocese was to be ordained a celibate priest in Jerusalem on 28 July
of the same year.

In fitting tribute to these two occasions, a community concert was organised
encompassing the theme of "Unity".

The evening showcased an array of young talent including musicians,
vocalists, choirs and dance groups from all spheres of the Armenian
Community of Sydney. The cultural performances were staged as interludes to
the evening’s main presentation which consisted of young speakers narrating
a chronicle on the history of the foundation of the Diocese concurrently
with the Primate’s story, of how His Eminence Archbishop Aghan Baliozian
came to join the seminary and enter the priesthood.

During the course of the program, messages of congratulation were conveyed
by the heads of major Armenian organisations and many more community groups
were represented amongst the guest list. The audience who filled up the
auditorium too represented the community mix that makes up the microcosm of
Sydney’s Armenian population. "Unity", the intended purpose of the evening
was truly reflected in the gathering that celebrated the two historical
milestones.

As the program concluded, the encyclicals of His Holiness Karekin II Supreme
Patriarch and Catholicos of All Armenians were read as all remained
upstanding ~ the first on occasion of the Diocese’s foundation and the
second for the Primate’s anniversary celebration. Following, Chairman of the
Diocesan Council, Dr Peter Ansourian congratulated the Archbishop on behalf
of the community presenting him with a jewel-encrusted ring and more
congratulatory wishes ensued with Reverend Krikor Youmoushakian of the
Armenian Evangelical Church of Sydney.

In his closing address, Archbishop Baliozian thanked the community for
engaging together and embracing the celebration evening. He paid special
tribute to all who had contributed, served and partaken in building up the
Diocese over the past 40 years.

Among the list of distinguished guests were clergy, local government and
community representatives. The occasion also welcomed guests from the
Armenian Church of Kolkata, India ~ Very Reverend Father Oshagan Gulgulian
and Wardens Mrs Susan Reuben and Mrs Sunil Sobti with their spouses.

Paperback Pickings: Wayward Men, Women And Children

PAPERBACK PICKINGS: WAYWARD MEN, WOMEN AND CHILDREN

Calcutta Telegraph
p/opinion/story_9654389.jsp
Aug 8 2008
India

The Bastard of Istanbul (Penguin, £11.99) by Elif Shafak transports
the reader to the shores of the Bosphorus where beautiful, rebellious
women break the Rules of Prudence scripted by a conservative society
to chain smoke in cafés, sprint across streets in broken high heels,
and have abortions. Retribution follows, but the women react by smoking
even more cigarettes and cooking delicious dishes with golden raisins,
dried apricots, figs, pistachios — and cyanide. The last ingredient
is added with the man who sired the bastard of Istanbul in mind. When
twenty-year-old Asya Kazanci is not drafting her Personal Manifesto of
Nihilism, she ponders over the question of her paternity. The arrival
of her American-Armenian cousin, Armanoush, results in a search
into the past of the Kazanci family and the discovery of secrets
in which the histories of Armenia and Istanbul are woven together
inextricably. Shafak’s style — understated, laconic, humorous —
makes her novel extraordinary.

Love and Biology at the Center of the Universe (Nal Accent, Rs 395)
by Jennie Shortridge is a novel whose central question is: "How does
a good girl know when to finally let herself be bad?" In the case of
Mira Serafino, it happens when she finds that her husband has fallen
for another woman. The plot gets marginally interesting once Mira
leaves for an unknown future. But at the end, after some reflections
on sex and reproduction, the novel is nothing more than a Hollywood
‘drama’ where wayward husband cheats on good wife, causing heartbreak,
only for the wife to come back on realizing that none of the men she
has bedded after she left him matches up to him. This is the kind of
novel that, when turned into film, makes teenage girls cry buckets.

No one brews coffee and conversation like Karan (Diamond, Rs 395)
reads as if the Koffee with Karan episodes have been transcribed by an
utterly incompetent sub and sent off to press without any editing. The
mistakes are too many and the conversations too incoherent at places
to be discussed in any seriousness. Karan Johar and his guests
deserved better.

Child Develop- ment: Your Questions Answered (Byword, Rs 199) provides
a comprehensive guide to raising children, with doctors, teachers,
speech therapists and psychologists coming forward to solve the
problems of parents with their young ones.

–Boundary_(ID_unocOpeMpitQpaceQYnf3g)–

http://www.telegraphindia.com/1080808/js

BAKU: Russian aircraft bombing Tbilisi took off from Armenia

wap.apa.az
Russian aircraft bombing Tbilisi took off from Armenia – UPDATED

08 Aug 2008

Moscow – APA. Russia’s Defense Ministry confirmed that additional forces had
been sent to support peacekeepers in Georgia-Ossetia conflict zone, APA
reports quoting RIA Novosti.

The ministry said necessary assistance would be offered to the Russian
peacekeepers and citizens of unrecognized republic. North Caucasus military
district said that Russian combat equipment entered Tskhinvali. Georgian new
agencies report that Russian military aircrafts bombed Vaziani base near
Tbilisi at 15.10 by local time. Two bombs were reportedly dropped on the
military base. No casualties are reported in the base. Gruziya Online
website reports that the aircraft that bombed Vaziani base had taken off
from the territory of Armenia. The agency mentions that there is an air
regiment in Russian army’s 102nd base in Gumru, Armenia. According to the
agreement signed between Georgia and Armenia, Armenia can not allow any
other state to attack Georgia from its territory.

U.S. President George Bush met with Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin in
Beijing and called on the parties to cease the fire in Georgia-Ossetia
conflict zone immediately. European Union and OSCE released analogous
messages.

After Campaign Featuring KKK Ad, Voters In Tenn. Will Pick Democrati

AFTER CAMPAIGN FEATURING KKK AD, VOTERS IN TENN. WILL PICK DEMOCRATIC CONGRESSIONAL CANDIDATE
By Woody Baird

Newsday
s/wire/sns-ap-tennessee-primary,0,139703.story
Aug 7 2008
NY

MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) _ After a racially charged Democratic primary
campaign that turned particularly ugly in its final days, voters
were to decide Thursday between a Jewish incumbent congressman and
a black opponent who ran a television ad juxtaposing photos of him
and a hooded Ku Klux Klan member.

Democrat Steve Cohen is the first white congressman from Memphis
in more than three decades and one of only two white congressmen
representing a majority black district.

The ad was run by his chief opponent, Nikki Tinker, a corporate
lawyer whose supporters argue the 9th District in Memphis should be
represented by a black candidate.

Low turnout was predicted for the primary, which will likely decide the
next congressman in the heavily Democratic district that has returned
incumbents to the House since 1974. The district is 60 percent black
and 35 percent white, and Cohen won his first term after a 2006 primary
in which a dozen black candidates, including Tinker, split the vote.

Tinker said her ad linking Cohen to the KKK for opposing a 2005 effort
to remove a statue of Confederate Gen. Nathan Bedford Forrest from a
downtown park "merely states the facts. I think the nation needs to
know Steve Cohen’s complete record."

The ad, which ran in the campaign’s final days, drew condemnation
Thursday from Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama. It
juxtaposed pictures of a statue of Forrest, the founder of the KKK,
and a hooded Klansman in front of a burning cross while asking,
"Who is the real Steve Cohen?"

"These incendiary and personal attacks have no place in our politics,
and will do nothing to help the good people of Tennessee," Obama said
in a statement.

Cohen, a former state senator with a long record as a civil rights
supporter, led an effort last month to get the U.S. House to issue
an unprecedented apology to black Americans for wrongs committed
against them and their ancestors who suffered under slavery and Jim
Crow segregation laws.

The ad was also incongruous because of Cohen’s religion — Jews are
another group targeted by the KKK.

John Geer, a Vanderbilt University political science professor,
said the KKK ad indicates Tinker knows her campaign is in trouble.

"Steve Cohen has been very conscious that he’s representing a black
majority district, and he’s not a member of the KKK," said Geer,
who called such tactics risky. "Voters are not fools, and they can
sort this out. They are savvy enough to figure out if the attack is
credible or not. I’d be surprised if she wins."

Another issue has been Cohen’s opposition to a House resolution
labeling the killing of Armenians in World War I as genocide. The House
Foreign Affairs Committee passed the nonbinding resolution last year
despite arguments it would anger Turkey, which allows U.S. military
shipments headed for Iraq to cross its borders.

During a news conference at Cohen’s home Wednesday to call Tinker’s ad
an act of desperation, a cameraman who identified himself as working
for an Armenian-American citizens’ group interrupted. Cohen pushed
the man, Peter Musurlian of Glendale, Calif., out of his house and
called police.

Musurlian said his group supports Tinker because of Cohen’s opposition
to the genocide resolution. The district does not have a large
Armenian population.

In other primary races Thursday, former state Democratic Party Chairman
Bob Tuke and former Knox County Clerk Mike Padgett have been the
most active candidates for the Democratic nomination to challenge
Republican Sen. Lamar Alexander.

Neither has managed to drum up much campaign cash or public attention,
and yet both argue that Alexander is out of touch with Tennesseans
and ripe to be picked off.

In the state’s other major congressional primary, in the solidly
Republican 1st District in northeastern Tennessee, Republican
Rep. David Davis is being challenged by Johnson City Mayor Phil
Roe. The campaign heated up toward the end, moving from joint stump
appearances to negative ads.

Tennessee’s other four congressional incumbents faced no primary
opposition — Republican John Duncan of the 2nd District, and
Democrats Jim Cooper of the 5th, Bart Gordon of the 6th and John
Tanner of the 8th.

Republican Marsha Blackburn faced challenger Tom Leatherwood in the
7th District, while Republican Zach Wamp in the 3rd District and
Democrat Lincoln Davis in the 4th District faced only token opposition.

http://www.newsday.com/news/politic

Obama Tells Tennessee Democrats To Unite During Party Primary

OBAMA TELLS TENNESSEE DEMOCRATS TO UNITE DURING PARTY PRIMARY
Kris Alingod

Gant Daily
91/2008-08-07.html
Aug 7 2008
PA

Washington, D.C.(AHN) – Sen. Barack Obama (D-IL) weighed in on the
racially charged race for the Democratic nomination in Tennessee’s
9th congressional district on Thursday as voters in the state went
to the polls.

"These incendiary and personal attacks have no place in our politics,
and will do nothing to help the good people of Tennessee," Obama said
in an emailed statement. "It’s time to turn the page on a politics
driven by negativity and division so that we can come together to
lift up our communities and our country." Rep. Steve Cohen (D-TN)
is in a bid to seek a second term as the only white U.S. congressman
to represent a predominantly black district. He faces Nikki Tinker,
an African American, who has ignited controversy by launching an ad
criticizing Cohen for not supporting efforts to remove a statue of
Confederate Gen. Nathan Bedford Forrest, a Klu Klux Klan leader.

Fliers asking, "Why do Steve Cohen and the Jews Hate Jesus?" and
written by an African-American minister who supports Tinker have also
been distributed in Memphis.

Cohen, who is Jewish, sponsored a recently passed bill in the
House "apologizing for the enslavement and racial segregation of
African-Americans." He has reportedly been accused of assault after
he threw out a filmmaker from his home on Wednesday.

Cohen says Tinker has the support of Armenian-Americans and that the
filmmaker, Peter Musurlian, has inaccurately reported about his House
bill condemning Turkey’s treatment of Armenian during World War II as
"genocide."

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.gantdaily.com/news/35/ARTICLE/275

Caught On Camera: Congressman, Cameraman Scuffle

CAUGHT ON CAMERA: CONGRESSMAN, CAMERAMAN SCUFFLE

NBC 11.com
tml
Aug 7 2008
CA

MEMPHIS, Tenn. — A scuffle between a filmmaker and a U.S. congressman
from Tennessee has been caught on tape.

U.S. Rep. Steve Cohen, D-Tenn., who is running for re-election, held
a press conference in his Memphis home on Wednesday. That was when
the altercation started.

Peter Musurlian is making a documentary about the election and entered
Cohen’s home trying to interview the congressman.

The two got into an argument and Cohen shoved Musurlian out of the
house, the video shows.

Musurlian said he planned to file assault charges against Cohen.

The filmmaker, who is Armenian, is upset that Cohen didn’t support
a congressional referendum recognizing the killing of 1.5 million
Armenians in the early 1900s as genocide.

http://www.nbc11.com/news/17120487/detail.h

Azerbaijan And Its Partners Can Guarantee Pipeline Security – Foreig

AZERBAIJAN AND ITS PARTNERS CAN GUARANTEE PIPELINE SECURITY – FOREIGN MINISTRY

RedOrbit
Aug 7 2008
TX

BAKU. Aug 6 (Interfax) – Azerbaijan and its partners in the Baku-
Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline project are taking every step to neutralize
security threats to the pipeline, press secretary of the Azeri Foreign
Ministry Hazar Ibrahim has said.

"We believe that sides to the pipeline project – Azerbaijan, Georgia
and Turkey – are capable of guaranteeing the security of the oil
pipeline both through joint efforts and separately," he said to
Interfax.

The spokesman added that in the world today nobody can be 100%
guaranteed against all risks.

Ibrahim said Azerbaijan regards Armenia as a threat to the pipeline.

"The threat is real. If Armenia does not stop at an aggression
against a neighboring state, it is difficult to ignore the threat
of that country to regional projects to which Azerbaijan is party,"
Ibrahim said.

"On the other hand Azerbaijan and its partners in the pipeline project
are doing their utmost to minimize such risks," he added.

(c) 2008 Daily News Bulletin; Moscow – English. Provided by ProQuest
Information and Learning. All rights Reserved.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

NY AYF Hosts Annual Summer Bar Party, Benefit to ARS Sponsor-A-Child

NY Hyortik AYF Chapter
69-23 47th Ave.
Woodside, NY 11377
(718) 651-1530
[email protected]
July 30, 2008
For Immediate Release

New York AYF Hosts Annual Summer Bar Party, Proceeds Benefit ARS
Sponsor-A-Child Program

NEW YORK – On July 26, the New York Armenian Youth Federation (AYF) Hyortik
chapter brought to together youth from all corners of the Armenian community
for its annual summer bar party. Armenians from New York, New Jersey and as
far away as Boston and Philadelphia, packed a room at Latitude Bar in
Manhattan where they danced all night to the music of DJ Ash.

Attendees talked, mingled and danced under the large Armenian flag centering
the room as they watch photos and video projected on TVs in the bar
depicting the activities of the New York AYF, the AYF Eastern Region, and
AYFers around the world. "Our members had a great time at the Annual AYF
Summer Bar Party this past weekend. We can always count on the New York AYF
to saturate Armenian celebrations with wholesome happiness, excitement, and
pride in our heritage. It is with great joy that I partake in AYF events.
Keep us posted!" said Columbia University Armenian Club president Shaunte
Baboumian.

The Hyortiks donated a portion of the event proceeds to the ARS
Sponsor-A-Child Program. Established in 1992, the program provides financial
support to children whose parents were killed in the devastating 1988
earthquake in Gyumri, Armenia and in the Artaskh struggle for
self-determination. Over 7,000 children have been assisted by generous
sponsors who annual contribute $130 per child, per year.

Heated Races In Tennessee Draw National Coverage

HEATED RACES IN TENNESSEE DRAW NATIONAL COVERAGE

Memphis Commercial Appeal
ug/07/heated-races-draw-national-coverage/
Aug 7 2008
TN

When polls opened at 7 a.m. in precincts throughout Shelby County,
coverage of the State and Federal Primary and County General Election
had extended to national newspapers and websites closely following
Greater Memphis’s two contested Congressional elections.

Much of the coverage focused on the 9th Congressional District
Democratic Primary, where incumbent Steve Cohen was in a rematch of
sorts with corporate lawyer Nikki Tinker in a heated campaign that
pushed to a boil in the hours before polls opened. State Rep. Joe
Towns Jr. is also on the ballot, as are two others.

The New York Times ran a 700-word story in its A section. A
well-followed Washington Post blog had this headline on a lengthy
writeup: "Tennessee Primary Gets Nasty". National political
publications like The Hill, CQ and Politico.com gave extended coverage
to the race. Cohen won the 2006 Democratic primary with 31 percent
of the vote to Tinker’s 25 percent of the vote and won the general
election to succeed 30 years of Harold Fords serving the district.

It was Politico.com that first reported, on Wednesday, that the
pro-choice feminist political action committee EMILY’s List was
distancing itself from Tinker because of two ads her campaign put
out in the campaign’s final days attacking Cohen.

"We were shocked," said the group’s director, Ellen Malcolm,
according to Politico.com. "We believe the ads are offensive and
divisive. EMILY’s List does not condone or support these types of
attacks."

MSNBC’s Keith Olbermann also weighed in Wednesday, naming Tinker as
his show’s featured "Worst Person In The World."

"It has no place from a Democratic candidate, nor a Republican
candidate, nor a white candidate, nor a black candidate. It is
shameful," he said of the ads.

In one ad, Tinker’s campaign raised the issue of Cohen’s 2005 Center
City Commission vote against removing the statue and remains of Nathan
Bedford Forrest from a park near the Medical Center. Using images of
the Ku Klux Klan wearing robes and hoods and burning crosses, the ad
attempted to paint Cohen as a pandering hypocrite whose 3-year-old
vote should be weighed against his success last week in pushing
Congress to approve a resolution apologizing for slavery.

The other ad, first seen Wednesday, featured the voice of a little
girl reciting the prayer "Now I Lay Me Down to Sleep" and attacked
Cohen for his 1997 State Senate vote against a bill the ad claims was
meant to protect the right of students to pray in school. Cohen is
white and Jewish in a Congressional district that is mostly Christian
and 60-percent black.

Cohen pushed back hard against both ads, with his campaign organizing
a press conference Saturday featuring local black leaders defending
Cohen’s three decades of liberal public service and successes as a
first-term Congressman advocating for African-Americans in his district
(60 percent of 9th District voters are African-American). Cohen has
said he felt that voting to remove the statue and remains would have
been a mistake because it would have unnecessarily stirred racial
tensions.

Cohen said Wednesday he is not opposed to prayer in schools but
objected to that bill because he considered it meaningless and an
attempt by legislators to pander to voters.

Tinker has not responded to numerous requests for comment since the
release of the first ad last Friday.

The Washington Post quoted Cook Political Report’s David Wasserman,
who closely follows House races, as saying: "The final ads of this
race seem more like a Hail Mary than a long, well-thought out plan
of attack."

Wasserman added that "usually ads as immediately acerbic as these do
not play well."

Cohen’s press conference, at his Overton Park home, got off to a
rocky start when the Congressman’s campaign staff refused to allow
a documentary cameraman to participate. The staff told the man,
an Armenian-American activist named Peter Musurlian, that only
invited local media were allowed into Cohen’s house. Cohen eventually
intervened by saying he would grant an interview outside.

When Musurlian retreated to the door, Cohen grabbed his forearms with
both hands and shoved him out. "Outta here," he said.

Musurlian, from Glendale, Calif., said he is in town producing a
documentary on the race. Armenian-Americans from around the country
have donated between $25,000 and $30,000 to Tinker. Cohen has angered
Armenian-Americans because of his opposition to a Congressional
resolution that would condemn Turkey for a genocide against Armenians
as the Ottoman Empire disintegrated during and after World War 1.

Cohen said his opposition is related to a request received from
Gen. David Petraus while on a trip to Baghdad not to pass the
resolution because it would result in Turkey cutting off aid to the
American forces in Iraq and could harm American troops. That stance
is in agreement with all U.S. presidents going back to Jimmy Carter
and many former secretary of states.

Whether that incident will have an impact is yet unkown. Polls close
at 7 p.m.

The 7th Congressional District Republican primary between
U.S. Rep. Marsha Blackburn and challenger Tom Leatherwood, Shelby
County’s register of deeds and a former state senator has revolved
basically around charges and counter-charges the two have lobbed at
each other. Leatherwood first attacked the incumbent for becoming part
of a Republican majority that "squandered" its power by failing to
accomplish many of its conservative goals and then lost its majority
after several ethical lapses.

He repeatedly hammered away at her on media reports that her
daughter pocketed over $325,000 in commissions as a paid fundraiser
for Blackburn’s campaign, and Blackburn’s son-in-law’s Washington
lobbying career that grossed him nearly $1 million in fees since
Blackburn took office in 2003.

The Blackburn campaign insisted that daughter Mary Morgan Ketchel’s
commissions are not out of line and that Blackburn never discusses
issues with her son in law, Paul Ketchel III, that he is lobbying on.

Blackburn returned fire with a barrage of campaign mailers that
Leatherwood says are "outright lies," with considerable evidence to
back up his claim.

Blackburn’s mail pieces all revolve around the claim that in a
Clarksville speech June 3, he said he supported the 2007 federal
legislation to expand the State Children’s Health Insurance Program,
or S-CHIP. The mailers cite a June 4 Commercial Appeal article as
the basis for the charges.

But the article contains no such assertion; in fact, it quoted
Leatherwood as telling the Montgomery County audience that opposed
illegal immigration. And he never said he supported S-CHIP.

Instead, he used the June 3 speech to attack what he called the
"hypocrisy" of Blackburn’s vote against expanded funding for the
Regional Medical Center at Memphis while voting for earmarked funding
for the Houston zoo. Leatherwood said — when asked by a reporter after
that speech which vote on funding for The Med he was referring to —
that it was the S-CHIP bill.

Blackburn defended the mail piece Tuesday. "It was a legitimate issue.

Leatherwood stayed close to his home base this morning, campaigning
in Bartlett. Around lunchtime, he was greeting voters at the Bartlett
Elementary School precinct while seeking shelter from the sporadic
showers. Like many precincts around Shelby County, the turnout was
light where Leatherwood was campaigning.

"We have two more cars coming up," Leatherwood said by
telephone. "We’re having a bit of a flurry here."

A light turnout is not to the challenger’s favor in his effort
to unseat Blackburn of Brentwood, who is seeking her fourth term
representing the district that stretches from the outskirts of
Nashville to the outer edges of Shelby County. Leatherwood said
earlier this week, he needed a strong showing in West Tennessee and
a heavy swaying of undecided voters to his side of the ballot if he
was to have a chance.

"I would have preferred the heavier turnout," Leatherwood said. "I’m
hearing from people working other polls for me that it’s been kind
of a mix. There’s been steady traffic in places like Collierville
and Germantown, but still not heavy."

http://www.commercialappeal.com/news/2008/a

Gift From Stranger Sending Teen To UC Davis

GIFT FROM STRANGER SENDING TEEN TO UC DAVIS

CBS 47
Aug 7 2008
CA

17-year-old Artur Mkoyan was almost deported to Armenia, but now he’s
going to UC Davis, thanks to the generosity of a total stranger.

For the family, the sudden change of fortune is hard to believe.

When Athur Mkoyan and his family first heard the news, they thought
it was a joke. A woman they had never met was offering to pay more
than $20,000 a year for college tuition.

Artur’s father, Ruben Mkoian, was recently re-united with his
17-year-old son. He spent more than two months in an immigration
detention center in Arizona.

The family fled the old Soviet Armenia 16 years ago for political
persecution. They came to the US on a legal visa and had been through
multiple appeals to stay in this country, but the appeals finally ran
out. Just as Artur was graduating from Bullard High, he was told he
would be deported back to Armenia.

A bill was introduced by Senator Diane Feinstein that says the Mkoyan’s
can stay, at least until next March. The family says senator Feinstein
promises to re-introduce the bill next year so they can remain in
the US.

Artur was accepted to U.C. Davis but his family said they could not
afford the tuition. That’s when Sherry Heacox stepped in. The bay
area mom recently watched her own daughter graduate from UC Santa
Barbara. She heard about Artur’s story and was moved by it. Heacox
is not wealthy but said, "I guess the question is, will we miss the
money? Yeah, the money will be missed. But I can’t think of a better
reason to miss it."

Artur Mkorian said, "It’s amazing. I mean, somebody’s offering to
pay over $80,000. That must mean something, you know?"