Lithuanian President Visits Armenian Genocide Memorial

LITHUANIAN PRESIDENT VISITS ARMENIAN GENOCIDE MEMORIAL

AZG DAILY #82, 07-05-2011

By Hovik Afyan

On May 5, President of Lithuania Dalia Grybauskaite, visited the
Armenian Genocide Memorial. After putting a wreath at the memorial of
Tsitsernakaberd, Grybauskaite visited the Armenian Genocide
Museum-Institute, where she left a note in the Commemoration Book.
President of Lithuania planted a fir at the Memorial Alley. We should
mention that on December 15 of 2005, Lithuanian Parliament adopted
unanimously and condemned the Armenian Genocide committed in the
Ottoman Turkey. President of the Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute
Hayk Demoyan gave to President of Lithuania Dalia Grybauskaite a
“Fridtjof Nansen 150” gratitude medal.

The visit of the President of Lithuania Dalia Grybauskaite to the
region ended in Tsitsernakaberd. On May 4 the RA President received
Mrs.Grybauskaite, and she arrived to Yerevan after her visits to Baku
and Tbilisi.

From: A. Papazian

Azeris Change The "History"

AZERIS CHANGE THE “HISTORY”

AZG DAILY #82, 07-05-2011

By Vahram Atanesian

“Changes should be made to process of teaching Azerbaijani history of
Azerbaijan’s educational institutions”, said Elnur Aslanov, head of
the political analysis and information department of the Azerbaijani
Ilham Aliyev’s Administration.

“Azerbaijan needs modern youth, with good knowledge of history of his
people and the state, guided by the national idea of Azerbaijanism.
When the youth says, “I am Azerbaijani”, they should be proud and be
able to convey those feelings to other nationalities through their
intellectual potential, initiative and creativity,” he continued.

And what is the purpose of this initiation. According to Elnur
Aslanov, “Azerbaijan has become a leader in the region from economic
and political viewpoint. The country should also become a leader on
human potential, not only in the region, but also in the world.”

If a certain Khalil Rza thinks so, it would be possible to hope that
“the mad poet” just dreams. But it turns out, that this is a summary
to “State Program on Azerbaijani Youth for 2011-2015”. Ilham Aliyev
ordered the appropriate offices to “present within two months” the
main directions of the project.

“Correcting” one’s own history one more time could still be accepted.
Though we should be sure that the “correction” will be carried out on
account of the neighboring nations – Georgians, Persians, Lezghins,
Armenians and others. That is no news. The roots of Azerbaijani
“historiography” are not clean from the very beginning.

The most dangerous is that Azerbaijan is developing a program and will
implement it, according to Elnur Aslanov, in order “to convey those
feelings of “being Azeri” to other nationalities through their
intellectual potential, initiative and creativity”. That is, the
peoples of the region, and potentially, of the world should “stand
proudly and shout”: “I am Azeri”.

And it must “happen” because “Azerbaijan has become a leader in the
region from economic and political viewpoint.”

What is this, if not an obvious fascism? Or, to put it mildly,
xenophobia, hatred towards the others and implantation of the worship
of their own “exceptionality” among the youth, moreover, by the
state-targeted program.

Could you imagine that by cultural, traditional and scientific
potential, by new times economic and demographic potential, such a
program could approve China, a country that has leading position not
only in the region but also worldwide. And convey the pride of “being
Chinese” to the others in the region and the world through the every
possible way. Or Japan. Or Russia, the United States, India. Or, the
entire Arabic world would unite by saying “I am Arab” and “convey that
pride to Jews”.

All of the above mentioned countries, however, keep their own national
pride, history, culture and traditions within the borders of their
states. And, at the same time, they respect the others, respect
other’s rights to be proud of their history and culture. Since the
source of co-existence is tolerance towards others, but never obliging
ones national pride to others.

Any regularity is not a regularity in Azerbaijan, however, if it is
not crossed the mind of “know-all” Ilham Aliyev. And recently he
“thought” that “the separation of the Turkish united world is the
greatest injustice of the 20th century”. And he decided to “restore
the historical justice” throughout conveying to the whole region the
pride “I am Azeri”, which should be understood as “I am Turkish”, as
this is the slogan of the older brother Turkey.

And after “making Turks” the peoples of the region he intends to
“occupy positions of intellectual leader” in the entire world. Turkish
President Gul says the truth, when he says that soon Turkey would not
want to become an EU member. Why should it want, if Ilham Aliyev
develops a program “to make Turkish the entire world”. Perhaps Turkey
prompted this.

And “naive” Europeans try to convince that “there is no Pan-Turkism”.
Perhaps they only try to calm themselves.

From: A. Papazian

Shoushi Victory

Shoushi Victory

asbarez
Friday, May 6th, 2011

The view of the gorge, which Karabakh soldiers climed to liberate
Shoushi (photo by Ara Khachatourian)

BY ARA KHACHATOURIAN

Standing on a vast field surrounded – enveloped – by the majestic and lush
mountains of the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic – Artsakh – I look down a steep
and rugged gorge and can’t help by wonder how they did it. It must
have required strength, resilience, but more important, an
unmistakable will to push forward in the name of survival, not just of
a people but of a nation.

It was humbling, to say the least, since the awe-inspiring place with
its breathtaking surroundings was the very field to which the Karabakh
Liberation Army soldiers climbed on May 9, 1992 and fought one of the
most strategically important battles of the Karabakh war. In the end
came the turning point – the liberation of Shoushi.

As the director of the Shoushi History Museum, Ashot Haroutunian,
recounted in vivid detail, the Azeri soldiers were caught off guard,
because never in their wildest dreams would they have imagined that
soldiers would actually traverse and climb the rugged gorge from
Karintak to reach the highest point in Artsakh on foot.

But the Karabakh Liberation Army soldiers did and they neutralized one
of the deadliest of Azeri strongholds, from where missiles and rockets
rained on the population of Stepanakert and other areas in Karabakh.
They not only neutralized the Azeri firepower, but they also drove
away the panicking Azeri soldiers and reclaimed the once magnificent
capital city and a bustling epicenter of Armenian civilization.

Walking around Shoushi one is compelled to feel the heroism that
allows us today to stroll through its streets, to wonder in amazement
at its magnificent beauty and to be humbled by its significance.

Yet today, almost two decades since its liberation, there is a lot of
work to be done in Shoushi. As buildings have risen and old one
refurbished, as roads have been paved and businesses established,
Shoushi needs critical elements to strengthen its infrastructure and
to return it to its former glory of a cultural hub in the region.

What is not lost, however, on anyone in Karabakh – young and old,
visitor or local – is that any attempt to alter the current situation of
Karabakh, short of reunification with Armenia, will be met with the
same resilience and spirit that guided our soldiers and our people
since the Karabakh liberation movement began in 1988.

One constant that seems to be discounted today is that threats to
resume the war by Azerbaijan and the cat-and-mouse-game that has
become the OSCE Minsk Group-led negotiation merry go round have
nothing over a people who overcame incredible odds to emerge
victorious.

The field atop the gorge serves as a gathering place every May 9 for
people to remember our heroes, celebrate our victories and to reaffirm
their commitment.

The poignant serenity of Shoushi, and all of Artsakh for that matter,
is an incomprehensible paradox. How can a place where terror reigned
and, in order to stifle that horror, so much blood was shed be so
tranquil – so peaceful? How can a people who lived through hell be so
optimistic and reselient?

This is the legacy of a liberation movement… A struggle to determine
one’s own destiny, to protect one’s own homeland and to ensure that a
nation will persevere.

From: A. Papazian

I’m neither an ebru nor a tessera*; nor am I ‘a color of Anatolia!’

I’m neither an ebru nor a tessera*; nor am I ‘a color of Anatolia!’

‘m-neither-an-ebru-nor-a-tessera*-nor-am-i-‘a-color-of-anatolia’/
May 6, 2011 by talin suciyan
Talin Suciyan

First you made me into a tessera in your mosaic of cultures just to be
able to put up with me. But soon you found that too static and then
you resorted to the image of ebru. Whether an ebru or a tessera, you
all agreed that I was ‘a color of Anatolia.’ Yet, I’m neither your
ebru nor your tessera, nor am I a color of your Anatolia. I know that
I can acquire a color only if I’m dead and gone, mute and traceless;
more colorful I become as you further destroy my history.

I’m neither your ebru nor your tessera, nor am I a color of your
Anatolia. ‘What are you then?’ you might ask. I’m the child of the
remnants of sword; the daughter of women whose bodies have been
ravaged; the daughter of a people which many times has been forced to
exile and whose traces have been erased throughout the last century
from the land it had lived in for millennia. I’m the daughter of a
people which has been captivated, alienated from itself, subjugated,
and whose existence as well as extermination have been denied, and
temples, schools, foundations, even the hearts and minds of its
members have been turned inside out. They call me a Turkish Armenian.

On April 24th an Armenian died (shot dead) in barracks. The Armenians
knew from their guts what that meant. But the minister for EU affairs
Egemen Bagis says that ‘our brother Sevak represents the colors of
Anatolia.’ Bagis is right; a dead Armenian is always ‘our brother!’
And yes, we do represent a color: A deep, bottomless black. An
infinite black!

Sevak’s pitch-black eyes are staring at us; Sevak is draped in the
blackest of all colors. Will you be able to look into those eyes
without that gibberish about food, folk songs, and brotherhood?

Don’t try to feel the suffering that has lasted a century. However,
you can understand the oppression we were subjected to at Sevak’s
funeral ceremony; how the church has been taken away from its
congregation and the funeral from its rightful owners; and just by
looking at the archbishop’s post-service speech, you can understand
how the Armenians remaining in Turkey have been sentenced to pay a
perennial price for their survival. Don’t expect us to talk any longer
for words stand in front of us and laugh mockingly as we try harder to
tell. Share in this loneliness.

* The two images that are most commonly used in the discourse of the
so-called ethno-cultural diversity in Turkey are ebru and mosaic. Ebru
is the art of paper marbling in which a special kind of paper is laid
onto the water in a square or a rectangular tank to ‘record’ the
intertwined figures and lines in different colors floating on the
surface. The other image envisions each ethnic group in the country as
a tessera, which, in combination with the others, creates a mosaic. In
both cases it is assumed that the artwork that comes into being
represents Turkey itself. (T.N.)

(This article has been published in Agos Weekly, Nr.787, translated by
Serhat Uyurkulak)

From: A. Papazian

http://azadalik.wordpress.com/2011/05/06/i

Western Prelacy News – 05/06/2011

May 6, 2011
Western Prelacy of the Armenian Apostolic Church of America
H.E. Archbishop Moushegh Mardirossian, Prelate
6252 Honolulu Avenue
La Crescenta, CA 91214
Tel: (818) 248-7737
Fax: (818) 248-7745
E-mail: [email protected]
Website:

PRELACY 39TH REPRESENTATIVES ASSEMBLY
TO BE HELD ON MAY 13 & 14

The 39th Representatives Assembly will convene on May 13th, 2011, at
the Prelacy “Dikran and Zarouhie Der Ghazarian” Hall. H.E. Archbishop
Moushegh Mardirossian, Prelate, will preside over the meeting which is being
hosted by St. Garabed Church of Hollywood.
The Assembly will cover a number of issues related to our churches,
schools, and committees serving under the Prelacy.
In preparation for the Representatives Assembly, a clergy conference
will be held at the Prelacy on Wednesday, May 11th, and a meeting of our
churches’ Boards of Trustees and Ladies Guilds on Thursday, May 12th.

ORIENTAL ORTHODOX CHURCHES
ANNUAL JOINT DIVINE LITURGY

On Thursday, May 5th, 2011, the Prelates and clergy of the Armenian,
Coptic, and Syriac Churches gathered at Holy Virgin Mary Coptic Orthodox
Church in Los Angeles for their annual joint Divine Liturgy.
The gathering was held under the auspices of the Council of Oriental
Orthodox Bishops headed by H.E. Archbishop Moushegh Mardirossian, Prelate,
H.E. Archbishop Mor Clemis Eugene Kaplan, Prelate of the Syriac Orthodox
Church, and H.G. Bishop Serapion, Prelate of the Coptic Orthodox Church.
Clergy members from the three churches participated in the Liturgy.
Divine Liturgy was celebrated jointly by the three Prelates. During
the service, prayers were offered for the three spiritual leaders H.H.
Catholicos Aram I, H.H. Pope Shenouda III, and H.H. Patriarch Zakka I. At
the conclusion of the service, Holy Communion was offered to all
participating clergy.
Following Divine Liturgy, Bishop Serapion greeted the Prelates and
clergy members, and invited Fr. John to speak about the life and works of
Coptic Church father St. Athanasius of Alexandria.
Remarks were then delivered by Archbishop Mardirossian and
Archbishop Kaplan. Archbishop Mardirossian noted how Easter and the 96th
anniversary of the Armenian Genocide coincided this year stating that this
coincidence was fitting given that as mankind was redeemed and reborn by the
Resurrection of our Lord, so were the Armenian people resurrected and reborn
from the ashes of Genocide. He continued, “Our Coptic and Syriac brothers
know well the pain and struggle of the Armenian people for you too have
tragically suffered persecution for your faith, which continues to this day.
What we all have in common is our steadfast faith in our Lord Savior Jesus
Christ, which has sustained us and our faith for centuries.” The Prelate
concluded by expressing hope for peace to prevail in the Middle East.
In his remarks Archbishop Kaplan hoped for all Christian churches to
unite and become one body and one soul as was the case in the early days of
Christianity.
The day concluded with a luncheon.

PRELATE WELCOMES UNITED NATIONS
RESIDENT COORDINATOR DAFINA GERCHEVA

On Wednesday, May 4th, 2011, H.E. Archbishop Moushegh Mardirossian,
Prelate, welcomed to the Prelacy United Nations Resident Coordinator Ms.
Dafina Gercheva and Senior Advisor Mr. Armen Baibourtian. They were
accompanied by Armenian American Chamber of Commerce Vice-President Mr.
Yervand Arjoyan, and Mr. Khatchadour Khoodigian, who had coordinated the
visit.
Very Rev. Fr. Barthev Gulumian, Central Executive member Mr. Vahe
Yacoubian, Executive Council Chair Mrs. Rima Boghossian, and Executive
Council Vice-Chair Mr. George Chorbajian participated in the meeting.
The Prelate gave a general overview of the Prelacy’s endeavors and
mission, focusing specifically on our churches and schools. The guests
reported on the endeavors of international organizations operating in
Armenia and also on United Nations development programs aimed at improving
Armenia’s financial and social sectors. There was also discussion on
Diaspora assistance to Armenia and how individuals and organizations can aid
Armenia through the United Nations.
In response to questions from the guests on Armenian communities in
America, the Prelate and Council members spoke of persecution by the Ottoman
Empire and the subsequent Genocide as the primary reason for emigration of
Armenians to America. They also noted that the Armenian community of Fresno
can play an important role in the development of Armenia since they live in
a largely agricultural area and have unique experiences that other
communities may not.
At the conclusion of their meeting, the Prelate presented the guests
with mementos.

PRELATE VISITS CHAMLIAN SCHOOL

Upon the invitation of the school administration, on Tuesday, May
3rd, 2011, H.E. Archbishop Moushegh Mardirossian, Prelate, visited Vahan and
Anoush Chamlian School where he was greeted by Principal Mr. Vazken
Madenlian and Vice-Principal Mrs. Rita Kaprielian. Rev. Fr. Vazken Atmajian
and Executive Council Vice-Chair Mr. George Chorbajian joined the Prelate.
Upon his arrival the Prelate first visited several classrooms and
addressed the students. Later, they gathered at the auditorium where the
8th grade students spoke of their experiences and feelings during their
recent trip to Armenia. The Prelate expressed his joy at the positive
sentiments expressed by the students about their trip, and urged them to
always remain faithful to our heritage and traditions.
The Prelate later attended a reception organized by the Parent
Support Committee for the administration in honor of teacher appreciation
week. The Prelate blessed the tables and thanked the Parent Support
Committee for honoring the teachers with this reception.
On May 25th, the 8th grade students will visit the Prelacy where
they will participate in a prayer service led by the Prelate and receive
Holy Communion.

From: A. Papazian

www.westernprelacy.org

AUA Alumna Receives Publication Award – press release

PRESS RELEASE
May 6, 2011

American University of Armenia Corporation
300 Lakeside Drive, 12th Floor
Oakland, CA 94612
Telephone: (510) 987-9452
Fax: (510) 208-3576
Contact: Gaiane Khachatrian
E-mail: [email protected]

American University of Armenia Alumna Receives Publication Award

Gayane Yenokyan – AUA MPH Alumna receives the 2010 “Best Paper Award” by
Circulation, Journal of the American Heart Association.

Gayane Yenokyan, MD, MPH, Ph.D. has been selected as the winner of
Circulation’s “Best Paper Award” in the category of Population Science, for
the article she co-authored “Prospective Study of Obstructive Sleep Apnea
and Incident Coronary Heart Disease and Heart Failure: The Sleep Heart
Health Study. The 2010 award will be presented at the end of Circulation’s
symposium, “Groundbreaking Studies in the Practice of Cardiovascular
Medicine,” to be held at the American Heart Association’s Scientific
Session, on November 13, 2011, in Orlando.

Circulation publishes articles related to research in and the practice of
cardiovascular diseases, including observational studies, clinical trials,
epidemiology, health services and outcomes studies, and advances in applied
and basic research. The journal’s “Best Paper Award” is determined by the
editors, who consider the paper’s importance in the field and evaluate usage
statistics to identify those papers that have the greatest impact.

Circulation has the highest impact factor of all the cardiology journals”,
says Dr. Haroutune Armenian, AUA President Emeritus, UCLA Professor of
Epidemiology. “Dr. Yenokyan has been my advisee when pursuing her Ph.D.
degree at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. She
collected her data for her Ph.D. research work in Armenia on Familial
Mediterranean Fever, also known as Armenian disease. It was remarkable to
witness her work on her research project with such a great enthusiasm, and
simultaneously raise two little children at home”.

Such recognition is a testimony to the high quality of education that AUA’s
academic programs continue to provide to its graduates to achieve
excellence.
_________________________________________________________________________

Founded in 1991, the American University of Armenia is affiliated with the
University of California system and is accredited by the Western Association
of Schools and Colleges, one of the six regional accrediting bodies
recognized by the US Department of Education. Through teaching, research
and public service, AUA serves Armenia and the region by supplying high
quality education in seven different major fields, encouraging civic
engagement, and promoting democratic governance.

From: A. Papazian

Russian skinheads jailed for filmed race attacks

Agence France Presse
May 5, 2011 Thursday 4:48 PM GMT

Russian skinheads jailed for filmed race attacks

SAINT PETERSBURG, May 5 2011

A Russian court jailed 19 skinheads Thursday for up to nine years for
carrying out a series of brutal race attacks, including two murders,
and then posting films of the assaults on the Internet.

The group’s leader, Andrei Linok, 20, who goes under the alias
Lincoln-88, received the highest sentence of nine years at the hearing
in Saint Petersburg, while the other gang members, aged 17 to 23,
received lesser terms of up to seven years, a court spokesman told
AFP.

The group were convicted of 12 hate crimes in 2007 against non-Slavic
looking people, including the murders of an Armenian and an Uzbek.
Their trial had heard how many of the attacks were filmed and then
uploaded by the gang onto the Internet, prosecutors said.

At the time of the attacks, Linok was still in his final year of
school in the town of Zelenogorsk and most of the other members were
minors.

Photographs posted on a neo-nazi website show Linok, a slight figure
with cropped brown hair, throwing Hitler salutes and posing with the
flag of the banned nationalist group, the Movement against Illegal
Immigration (DPNI).

The DPNI was banned as extremist by a Moscow court last month. It
earlier announced plans to join forces with an already banned group,
the Slavic Union, to create a unified national movement called
Russkiye, or Russians.

Attacks against foreigners of non-European appearance occur regularly
in Russia, although the authorities say that numbers have been
dropping amid a crackdown on extremist organisations.

An NGO that monitors hate crimes, Sova, said in a report released in
March that there were 37 hate killings in 2010, while 382 people were
injured in attacks with racist or neo-nazi motives.

mak-am/co

From: A. Papazian

President Serzh Sargsyan Received Deputy Foreign Minister of Japan

Economic News (Information Agency Oreanda), Russia
May 5, 2011 Thursday

President Serzh Sargsyan Received Deputy Foreign Minister of Japan

Yerevan. OREANDA-NEWS . May 05, 2011. President Serzh Sargsyan
received today the Deputy Foreign Minister of Japan Hisasu Tokunaga.

The President of Armenia once again expressed his condolences on the
March 11 devastating earthquake in Japan, which claimed many lives and
caused devastation. He noted that, unfortunately, in 1988 the Armenian
people too felt the wrath of natural disaster. According to Serzh
Sargsyan, that is probably one of the reasons why the people of
Armenia were particularly upset by the tragedy in Japan. We admire the
courage and resilience of your people in the face of this enormous
blow. We certainly follow closely steps undertaken by the Japanese
government toward the elimination of the consequences of the accident
at the Fukusima-1 nuclear station and remain hopeful that you will be
able to remove them all, President Serzh Sargsyan said.

President Sargsyan also expressed hope that even though Japan is
currently having difficult times, it will not interfere with the works
aimed at the invigoration of our bilateral relations, which the
Armenian side enahnced by opening last June the Embassy of Armenia in
Tokyo.

The Deputy Foreign Minister of Japan expressed gratitude to President
Sargsyan for the words of compassion and warm attitude toward the
people of Japan and provided assistance and assured that despite all
difficulties, Japan will carry on with its assistance programs in
Armenia. Hisasu Tokunaga noted that he was visiting Armenia for the
first time in his official capacity and has no doubt that the meetings
held in the framework of this visit will strengthen the development of
the Armenian-Japanese cooperation in different areas.

From: A. Papazian

At age 10, he’s already an old pro

Los Angeles Times
May 5, 2011 Thursday
Home Edition

COLUMN ONE;
At age 10, he’s already an old pro;
Sam Sevian holds the title of youngest U.S. chess master — for now

by Scott Kraft

DATELINE: SANTA CLARA, CALIF.

The two chess masters hunched over their royal armies, lost in thought.

On one side, playing white, was 10-year-old Sam Sevian, who a few
months ago became the youngest chess master in the history of the U.S.
Chess Federation.

His opponent, playing black, was David Adelberg, 14, who had been
crowned Arizona’s youngest chess master when he was 12.

Sam had lost a match to David two years earlier. This time, he vowed,
would be different.

The windowless hotel meeting room in Agoura Hills, filled with dozens
of players, was as silent as a church sanctuary.

Sam and David came out playing the Scheveningen variation of the
Sicilian defense, a favorite of the grandmaster Garry Kasparov, one of
their idols.

As the match entered its fourth hour, Sam decided to stir things up.
For 40 minutes, he studied his position, brown sneakers suspended
above the carpet, fists pressed against his chestnut-colored hair,
lips moving silently.

Finally, Sam made his move: a bishop sacrifice.

Sam’s father, Armen, smelling of the cigarette he’d smoked on the
balcony, caught his son’s eye with an expression that silently asked:
How’s it going? Sam shrugged his shoulders and raised his palms: Who
knows?

But Sam’s chess coach, standing nearby, watched with a small smile of
satisfaction. “What he’s doing is very complicated, very complicated,”
he said. “But it might work.”

::

The title of chess master is awarded to players who reach a threshold
of points, earned in official tournament competition and based on
their performance as well as the strength of their opponents.

The average age of chess masters has been steadily falling for years,
but recently, that pace has quickened. To win a tournament in Reno
last year, Jesse Kraai, a 28-year-old grandmaster from the Bay Area,
played four of his six matches against children; the average age was
13.

“Today, you have 7- and 8-year-olds who are training better than Bobby
Fischer did a generation before,” said David Pruess, content manager
for chess.com, a global chess website with 3 million members. He holds
the international master ranking, one step higher than master and one
below grandmaster.

This bounty of prodigal talent has had an unintended side effect: The
half-life of a newly minted chess star has shrunk “to a year or two,
tops,” said Pruess, 29. “It’s easy for a kid on his way up, full of
confidence bordering on arrogance, to forget that he’s become a target
for even younger players.”

Pruess, in a column last year, detailed his own loss to David Adelberg
and good-naturedly warned the youngster that he’d better start
preparing “for the 10-year-olds who will soon be coming to get him!”

That was prescient. Young David’s nemesis turned out to be Sam Sevian,
a fourth-grader from Santa Clara who, in December, became a chess
master at the age of 9 years, 11 months and 11 days.

(Sam followed in the footsteps of Fischer, who earned the title of
youngest chess master in 1956, at the age of 13 years, 3 months and 29
days.)

Sam is the pre-pubescent embodiment of the single-minded passion for
chess that H.G. Wells once described as “a desire that dieth not, and
a fire that is not quenched.”

He lives with his obsession, and his parents and younger sister, in a
modest two-bedroom condominium near San Jose International Airport.

A professional chess board sits on the coffee table in the small
living room; chess books, in English and Russian, are stacked on the
side tables.

Sam and Isabelle, 8, share a bedroom with three single beds; one is
for their grandmother, who often visits from Armenia.

He keeps his favorite inspirational reading material on the bedside
table: the fantasy adventure series “Percy Jackson & the Olympians,”
which features a 12-year-old demigod on a journey to prevent
apocalyptic wars between three Greek gods.

In some ways, Sam is a typical kid. He rides his bike inside the gated
condo complex and watches television when his parents allow it. (“Two
and a Half Men” is a favorite).

Most afternoons, though, are devoted to homework and chess. “I never
get tired of playing chess,” he said, “but I do get tired of studying
it.”

One afternoon before his rematch with David, Sam arrived home from
school and immediately went into his parents’ bedroom, where he sat
down at the family computer. He logged onto a chess website, looking
to challenge someone to a game of blitz chess.

In an official chess match, each player is allowed a set number of
hours to make all his moves and six-hour games are not uncommon.

In blitz chess, each player gets three to five minutes. Blitz chess
games aren’t official, but many players use them to hone their skills.

A 57-year-old international master from Serbia accepted Sam’s invitation.

Swiftly moving the pieces with his computer mouse, Sam finished off
his opponent like an afternoon snack. “That felt good,” he said.

Later, Sam logged onto a laptop on the kitchen table for a lesson,
over Skype, with his coach, Andranik Matikozyan, 32, an international
master who lives in Los Angeles.

They practiced opening moves and went over exercises to prepare for
the tournament.

Sam’s father, Armen, 39, is a physicist with a doctorate from the
University of North Carolina who works at a Silicon Valley company
that makes lasers.

He grew up in Armenia, where chess is a closely followed sport, and
was himself a strong player as a youngster.

Not so long ago, Sam and his father would spend evenings playing chess. No more.

“I don’t want to waste his time,” Armen Sevian said with a laugh.

Sam was born in New York, and the family followed his father’s job
changes to Florida, Los Angeles and, three years ago, to Santa Clara.

When Sam was 5, his father introduced him to the game.

“Most kids just move the pieces quickly,” Sevian said. “But Sam really
studied the board. From the first moment I watched him play, I
thought, ‘there you go.’ ”

When Sam was 7, and playing a tournament in Santa Monica, he met
Matikozyan. “I was amazed at how he was thinking 10, 15 moves ahead,”
the coach said.

This summer, Sam has been invited to a two-day master class with
Kasparov in New York.

In the fall, his father plans to take him to Brazil for the World
Youth Championships, sponsored by the World Chess Federation.

If Sam does well, he will earn more points toward his next goal,
becoming an international master.

His mother, Armine, worries that her son sometimes spends too much
time playing chess.

“The thing is, though, he likes to play,” she said. “Even in his free
time, he goes to the computer and plays. I don’t know … he’s not
like other children.”

Sam and his father made the drive on a Friday in March from their Bay
Area home to the Agoura Hills Renaissance Hotel for the three-day
Western Class Championships, a U.S. Chess Federation-sanctioned
tournament on the professional circuit.

The field included about a dozen masters such as Sam, seven
international masters and one grandmaster, the top chess rating, held
by about 1,300 players worldwide. Also on hand were an army of
less-accomplished players who aspire to become masters.

The first night, Sam played an international master to a draw, the
match ending just before midnight.

He slept nine hours in his hotel room, ate breakfast with his father
and returned to the tables for the Saturday morning match with David
Adelberg.

Their match seesawed back and forth for several hours and seemed
headed for a draw. But then Sam began introducing complications, the
first of which was the move to sacrifice a bishop. David recognized it
was a trap and declined to take it.

Soon David made a small slip in defending his position, and Sam
responded with an additional flurry of sacrificial moves, forcing
David to part with his queen to avoid being checkmated.

After five more anguished moves, only a few minutes remained on each
boy’s clock. David grimly studied the board as the seconds ticked
away.

Finally, he turned his king on its side and reached across the board
to shake Sam’s hand.

“Neither Andranik nor I really understood what he was up to at the
time,” Sam’s father would say later. “When he showed us, we realized
it was really a series of beautiful tactical combinations.”

David’s father, Dan Adelberg, an eye surgeon from Scottsdale, Ariz.,
later ascribed the loss to “one miscalculation, which certainly
happens in many chess games.”

In the hotel lobby, a few of Sam’s young chess friends came by to
offer congratulations.

“What do you want to do now?” his father said, suggesting they go to a
nearby restaurant for buffalo wings and talk over the match.

Sam gave a thumbs-up sign.

From: A. Papazian

BAKU: Azerbaijani railways suffer great damage due to Armenia’s aggr

Trend News Agency, Baku, Azerbaijan
Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Business News
May 5, 2011 Thursday

BRIEF: Transport Ministry: Azerbaijani railways suffer great damage as
result of Armenia’s military aggression

by E.Ismayilov, Trend News Agency, Baku, Azerbaijan

May 05–AzerbaijanAs a result of Armenia’s military aggression, 240.4
km-long railways in Azerbaijan have remained in the occupied
territories, Azerbaijani Transport Minister Ziya Mammadov said in an
interview posted on the official website of the ruling New Azerbaijan
Party.

He said as a result of the occupation, Azerbaijani railways have
suffered damages amounting to $45.06 million.

According to Azerbaijani Railways spokesman Nadir Azmammadov, as a
result of the occupation, 144 km of the Horadiz-Ordubad section of
railways, 51 km in the Tazakend-Khankendi section, as well as 6.3 km
in the Gazakh-Barkhudarli section and other sections became
non-operating.

The total length of railways in Azerbaijan is 2,929.4 km, 2,099.7 of
which are operational. Some 804.7 km of the total length of railways,
which are in operation, are two-lane roads. Furthermore, 1271.4 km or
60 percent of the operational railways are electrified and 1,650
kilometers are equipped with an automated signal system.

From: A. Papazian