Sleuths Study Ancient UFOs

SLEUTHS STUDY ANCIENT UFOS

MSNBC

Oct 28 2010

Alan Boyle writes: One of the best-known scientific sleuths of UFO
sightings is focusing his search not on today’s flying saucers,
but on the sky wonders of antiquity.

Jacques Vallee, the French-born computer whiz and venture capitalist
who also served as the model for Francois Truffaut’s UFO-hunting
character in “Close Encounters of the Third Kind,” says such sightings
show that the UFO phenomenon did not start in 1947. He’s a co-author
of a newly published book, “Wonders in the Sky,” that lists 500
unexplained aerial observations dating back as far as 1460 B.C. and
going up to the dawn of the industrial age in 1879. (That 500th case
involved an unknown “airship” that was sighted over eastern Iowa,
where I grew up. Coincidence? I think not.)

Vallee and fellow researcher Chris Aubeck also delve into longstanding
UFO legends that they’ve excluded from their list for various reasons.

For example, take the story about Alexander the Great seeing a flying
object that shot out a blaster ray. “We traced the story and discovered
it was about the use of gunpowder, not an unexplained flying object,”
Aubeck and Vallee write.

About 90 percent of UFO reports turn out to have perfectly natural
explanations, but Vallee says the reports that remain unexplained are
provocative enough that they deserve more thoroughgoing study. He
stated his case this week during a telephone conversation. By the
way, when he points out that the modern flying-saucer era began in my
“neck of the woods,” he’s not talking about eastern Iowa, but about
western Washington, where msnbc.com is headquartered. (Coincidence? I
think not.)

——————————————————————————–

Here’s an edited transcript:

Cosmic Log: It’s interesting to see that these sorts of sightings
go back into antiquity. It almost makes one feel as though this is
a phenomenon that goes along with being human.

Jacques Vallee: It certainly has had an impact on humanity. We’re
staying away from theories, because we don’t think we’re ready to
have a good hypothesis about this phenomenon. What we’re trying to do
is … well, as you know, when you’re doing science you want to know
how did something begin, and what were the conditions under which it
began. So far, if you read most UFO books, they say this started in
1947. In fact, they say it started in your neck of the woods when a
pilot named Kenneth Arnold described seeing six objects similar to
saucers in flight. The problem with that is, it didn’t start in 1947.

We have cases just like it earlier in the 20th century, and when you
look at the literature of the 19th century, we find experiences of
the same kind.

Courtesy of Chris Aubeck

Jacques Vallee and Chris Aubeck, seen here in a 2003 photo, are
co-authors of “Wonders in the Sky.”

Forty years ago, I published a book called “Passport to Magonia,”
saying, “Look, this is very similar to ancient folklore, about elves
and demons and angels and other types of creatures, leprechauns and
so on, who in many cases were also coming from the sky and were doing
very similar things.” Of course this became folklore, and the question
I raised was, are we being faced with the same kind of folklore with
modern UFOs? Could there be a real phenomenon underneath all of this
that has not been recognized? Whether or not it’s extraterrestrial
is a different question. Of course, it could be. It’s a big universe
out there. Many astronomers — including myself — strongly believe
that there is life throughout the cosmos.

But we still need to know the characteristics of the phenomenon. And
thanks to the Internet, now we have the means to look at vast
collections of records, from newspapers and books, from museum
collections. Chris Aubeck is an Englishman living in Madrid who is
very much a scholar of history and languages, and he contacted me
about doing this research together. So we merged our databases. He
had assembled a remarkable network of people in Russia, Germany,
Latin America, the U.S. and so on who were interested in the same
kind of research. We started tracking down every case, trying to
find original references. It took six years. Nobody got paid. It’s
very much a labor of love. I think all of us fell in love with the
material, it’s so rich and so interesting.

Q: How does one approach a study of this sort of thing? The scientific
study of these observations, and the assessment of it, is so fraught
with difficulty. Some people might say there’s a high “giggle factor.”

A: We went beyond the giggle factor. Today there are pilots and
military people willing to talk openly about what they’ve seen. The
records of many countries have been made available. You know, I’m a
member of the expert committee for the aerial phenomena study group
of the French equivalent of NASA, CNES. It has been working on this
phenomenon officially since 1975 and has a database. I built one of the
early databases of sightings. My background is in computer science,
so I started looking for patterns. Of course we all know that 90
percent of the reports are explainable, as illusions or airplanes,
or meteors or atmospheric phenomena. The second part of our book is
all about the cases that we have excluded, and why we did. But you’re
left with a significant number — dozens of thousands of cases —
all unexplained. Not only are they unexplained, but they’re also very
well documented, well enough that scientists can begin to look for
patterns in the phenomenon.

That’s what I’ve been doing. That’s what my earlier books were about.

I’ve been doing that with a small group of scientists from other parts
of the world who are very interested in this phenomenon. Again, I have
no firm conclusion, but this certainly behaves like a technology that’s
very much in the science of our own. I’m interested in the physics of
this. There are radar records, visual observations, electromagnetic
observations, so there is quite a bit of material that one can begin
to work with.

Q: I suppose the fact that these sightings in the sky, at least the
small percentage that are unexplained, could be taken as evidence that
there are entities that have been around here for a long time. It’s
not as if someone just showed up in 1947 and said, “We’re going to
save humanity from themselves.” It could suggest that alien visitors
have been here for a long time, but there could be other explanations.

For example, it could say something about how our mind works … that
this is a purely psychological or mental phenomenon.

A: It’s not simply a psychological phenomenon. Many of the cases,
both ancient and modern, involve a number of trained people —
sometimes the entire crew of an aircraft. … There is a database of
over 500 reports by pilots in the first person. This is not hearsay,
this is not a case of “my nephew told me there was something that a
pilot saw.” This is first person, and official reports by pilots which
in many cases involved near-collisions. So this is serious business,
and everybody knows it.

There is a reaction of ridicule simply because we don’t know what it
is. The tendency is to laugh, and it’s probably a healthy tendency.

It’s a psychological reaction to protect ourselves from things we don’t
understand. Many of the reports in our book came from professional
scientists in the 18th and 19th centuries. Two directors of the Paris
Observatory. People who have left their name in the history of science,
like Lagrange and Messier. These are not casual observers. These are
serious men.

Q: This subject sometimes leads people to say that the government must
know more than it’s telling, and that there’s some kind of global
conspiracy going on. I think you’ve resisted that pull to point to
conspiracies. But if it seems as if there’s credible evidence, how
do you avoid falling into that way of thinking?

A: You know, there is a great difference between having a lot of
data and having an explanation for something. For example, we have a
lot of data about people dying of cancer every day. We have samples,
we have X-rays, we have everything about what happened to them. And
we’ve been applying high technology to this problem for 50 years. But
we still don’t know how to cure cancer. So there’s a big difference
between saying “the government must have a lot of data” and saying
“the government knows what this is.”

Tarcher / Penguin

“Wonders in the Sky” chronicles 500 cases of unexplained aerial
objects.

The place where I end up is, parts of the government must have a lot
of data that should be turned over to the scientific community. What
are they afraid of? The way to approach this is to turn over any data
to the scientists, and they can compete to try to explain it. That’s
the way modern software is created. That’s the way the Internet
was built. I know that from my professional history. As you know, I
was involved in ARPANET as a principal investigator. You do it with
small teams, working on a competitive basis for two or three years,
and that’s how you do science. What’s wrong with that?

We know there is data. All of us who have investigated this have
spoken to pilots and radar operators who said that after a sighting,
a couple of people in blue jeans showed up with some identification
from somewhere and confiscated the tapes or the film, and they took
it somewhere and no one ever saw it again. There’s enough of that
now that we know that data went somewhere.

You know how the government works: They accumulate things they never
do anything with. I’d certainly love to see that data, and many of my
colleagues would love to see it. To that extent, I think there should
be more openness, especially from the military. They can strip out
anything that’s confidential or classified. If it’s data that came from
a special kind of radar, we don’t need to know what type of radar. We
should just see what the phenomenon was and go on from there. To that
extent, I agree with people who say there should be disclosure. I have
no evidence to tell me that the government has a solution to this,
but I could be wrong. The government doesn’t tell me what it does.

Q: You’ve worked in this field for decades now. How does it make you
feel? Do you feel fearful? For a lot of people, this can get to be
scary stuff.

A: Well, first of all, I’m certainly not frustrated. We’re making a
lot of progress, and this book is an example. We think this is only
the beginning. This book will stimulate scholars in other countries
to start looking at their records. That’s exciting.

We’ve worked for a long time, and we don’t have an answer — but
that’s the way it works in science. I’ve worked at the University
of Texas on the structure of galaxies, and we still don’t know the
structure of galaxies. We are puzzled by dark matter and all those
things. There are very few sciences where you have definite answers
in your lifetime. You can work on cancer research for decades and
see only a marginal improvement in rates of success.

Personally, I’ve nver been afraid of the phenomenon. I’m occasionally
awed by it. One thing that kept us going through the six years of
the book project was that the material was so amazing. Here you
have Michelangelo observing a triangle in the sky. You have Cassini
observing something in the sky, and not publishing anything about it
until he saw it a second time, some years later. You’re touching upon
not only the history of science, but also the history of culture.

Q: If there was anything you could change about the way anomalous
phenomena are reported in the media, what would it be? What would be
your prescription?

A: If you go out in the streets of Seattle tonight and see something
in the sky, where would you report it? If you call the Air Force,
they will say, “We’re no longer entrusted with this.” If you call
an observatory, they will laugh at you. If you call the police, they
will say, “We’ve got more important crimes to go after.” You have no
place to go. So you might call the newspaper, and the newspaper will
write a somewhat tongue-in-cheek article about somebody who maybe had
a little bit too much to drink. And that’s the end of that. You’ll
never report anything anymore after that.

Why not have a series of small scientific projects with a
well-advertised reporting number, where people can be taken seriously?

Again, most of those reports will be explained very quickly. People
do misunderstand Venus for a spacecraft, they do misinterpret the
moon rising through a layer of fog as a flying saucer. Most of these
witnesses are really genuinely looking for an ordinary explanation,
and if you give it to them, they will be happy. But once in a while
you have something that does not have the usual explanation, and then
you have to do research.

So I would set up four or five small projects around the country,
just looking into this with no preconceived notions, not saying that
this is an invasion by E.T. or anything like that. Potentially this
is a very important phenomenon.

Jacques Vallee’s top-ten list of pre-20th-century unexplained aerial
objects:

~UJuly 7, 1015: Objects emerge from “mother stars” over Kyoto, Japan.

~UOct. 2, 1235: Stars are seen circling over Japan. Astrologers say
“it is only the wind making the stars sway.”

~UJune 3, 1277: Chinese poet Liu Ying immortalizes flying-saucer
sighting in a poem titled “Event Seen at Dawn.”

~UNov. 1, 1461: The legal adviser to Philip III, duke of Burgundy,
describes a bright object that spirals upward, spins around, rolls over
“like a loose watch” and disappears.

~U1513: Michelangelo observes a triangular light with three tails of
different colors. He even paints a picture of it, but the painting
has not survived.

~UMarch 1638: Puritan settler James Everell and two companions report
seeing a bright object appearing in the sky above Massachusetts’
Muddy River … and experiencing the “missing time” phenomenon.

~USept. 14, 1641: An Armenian chronicler describes the appearance of
a light that “revolved like a wheel” in the sky and moved away.

~UJan. 25, 1672: While serving as the director of the Paris
Observatory, astronomer Giovanni Cassini spots an object he takes to
be a moon of Venus. He announces the discovery after seeing the object
again in 1686. But no such moon exists. (The hypothetical moon, which
came to be known as Neith, was reported by other astronomers as well.

Scientists have speculated that the object was actually an optical
illusion or a nearby star.) ~USept. 7, 1820: Astronomer Francois
Arago, director of the Paris Observatory, watches a formation of
unknown objects making turns with “military precision” during a
lunar eclipse.

~UJune 18, 1845: Crewmates on the British brig Victoria report seeing
“three luminous bodies” rise from the sea between Malta and Turkey.

From: A. Papazian

http://cosmiclog.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2010/10/27/5361166-sleuths-study-ancient-ufos

Azerbaijan 25 Times Violates Ceasefire Regime

AZERBAIJAN 25 TIMES VIOLATES CEASEFIRE REGIME

news.am
Oct 28 2010
Armenia

On October 27-28, over 25 ceasefire violations by the Azerbaijani
side were registered in the frontline between the armed forces of
Azerbaijan and Nagorno-Karabakh.

The Azerbaijani units 450 times fired at Karabakh positions from
different types of small arms, including sniper rifles in the
directions of Hadrut, Martuni, Askeran and Martakert, NKR Defense
Ministry press service informed NEWS.am.

With retaliatory fire the NKR Defense Army neutralized the enemy.

From: A. Papazian

ANKARA: Turkey Removes "Reactionaryism" From New Threat List

TURKEY REMOVES “REACTIONARYISM” FROM NEW THREAT LIST

WorldBulletin.net
Oct 28 2010
Turkey

MGK agreed to make radical changes to a document referred to as
the “Red Book,” in which the main threats to Turkey’s security are
outlined.

The National Security Council (MGK) on Wednesday agreed to make radical
changes to a document referred to as the “Red Book,” in which the
main threats to Turkey’s security are outlined, referring to Israel’s
instability-inducing actions in the Middle East as a threat.

Turkey’s approach to its neighbors has changed with the revisions,
which were drafted by a team of experts headed by Prime Ministry
Undersecretary Efkan Ala. Syria, Bulgaria, Georgia and Armenia are
no longer among Turkey’s list of external threats. The changes made
to the National Security Policy Document (MGSB), which was drafted by
the military in the past, are a sign that the government’s priorities
are finally reflected in state policy.

Turkey has for the first time referred to Israel’s actions in the
Middle East as a threat to Turkey. In the section on relations with
neighbors and external threats, the document draws attention to the
instability in the region caused by Israel and the possibility that
Israel’s actions may lead the countries in the region to be engaged
in an arms race.

Turkey’s bilateral relations with Israel have also changed since
the deaths of nine Turks in a lethal attack by Israeli soldiers on
a Gaza-bound humanitarian aid convoy on May 31.

The MGK convened on Wednesday under the chairmanship of President
Abdullah Gul to discuss changes to the MGSB, also known as Turkey’s
secret Constitution or the Red Book. The statement made after the
MGK meeting said, “The new MGSB was discussed and approved.” The new
document will be in effect for five years.

As for Greece, with which Turkey has come to the brink of war three
times in the past over territorial disputes in the Aegean, Turkey still
sees any Greek attempt to extend the country’s territorial waters
to 12 nautical miles as a casus belli (a cause for war). Turkey and
Greece are at odds over the boundaries of their territorial waters
and airspace in the Aegean due to the peculiar geography of the
Aegean Sea, where some Greek islands are lined up along Turkey’s
western coasts. In 1995, Parliament declared any unilateral attempt
by Greece to extend its territorial waters to 12 nautical miles from
the current six miles as a casus belli.

Greece is not included in the “external threats” list either, aside
from the “12 mile problem.” Iran, seen as a major threat in earlier
versions of the confidential document because of its Islamic rule
and nuclear capacity, is no longer the number one threat for Turkey,
although the document emphasizes that the Middle East should be
cleansed of nuclear weapons.

Reactionaryism no more a threat

Turkey’s perception of domestic threats has also been revised with
changes to the document, which has been in effect since 2005. In the
document, religious reactionaryism is no more mentioned as a domestic
threat. The ruling Justice and Development Party (AK Party) had been
working on the changes for a long time and said the state should
not see its citizens as potential threats. The military wing of the
council also agreed with the government on the issue and the famous
“reactionary threat” was not cited in the new document. Instead, it
mentions “radical groups exploiting religion,” a term which, under the
Turkish Penal Code (TCK), refers to groups that, by employing violent
methods, use religion for destructive and separatist activities.

The MGSB was prepared for the first time after Turkey became a NATO
member with US support against the threat of communism. Until the coup
d’état of Sept. 12, 1980, communists and all of the left were seen as
the biggest threat to Turkey. After the coup, separatism was included
in the list of domestic threats. With the rise of the Welfare Party
(RP) in 1995, religious reactionaryism and separatism became the main
domestic threats. The latest version of the MGSB was approved on Oct.

24, 2005 by the MGK and then by the Cabinet on March 20, 2006.

New threats: Cyber terror, global warming and aging population

The edited MGSB also contains new threats such as cyber terror, global
warming and the aging population of Turkey. The document says cyber
threats pose a threat to national security and that global warming
may lead to environmental disasters.

The problem of aging population, an issue which started to dominate
Turkey’s agenda recently, also found a place in the new security
document.

Population increase has been a matter of debate since the foundation
of the Turkish Republic; for decades people have argued about whether
it poses a challenge or is an advantage for Turkey. Latest demographic
data reveal that the productive population, aged between 15-65, is
on the rise in Turkey, while the population below 15, which had been
on the rise until recently due to the high fertility rate in Turkey,
is now on the decline.

Currently, 10.1 percent of the overall population is above 60 and it
is predicted that that this percentage will increase to 10.7 in 2011,
14.3 in 2014 and 20.3 in 2020.

The document says the aging population may pose a threat for Turkey
if the country fails to develop specific policies on the issue.

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has been expressing concern over
the declining younger population in Turkey and suggests that his
government may consider giving a “prize” to families that have at
least three children.

PKK and missile shield issue

The changes made to the MGSB were not the only agenda item during
Wednesday’s MGK meeting. Another topic on the agenda was a missile
defense system project proposed by the US. Several US officials have
implied in various statements that part of the missile shield could be
set up in Turkey. The issue was taken up at a summit between defense
and foreign ministers of NATO members in Brussels. Prime Minister
Erdogan, President Abdullah Gul and Chief of General Staff Gen. IÅ~_ık
KoÅ~_aner had a brief meeting after the MGK and reportedly discussed
whether Turkey should be part of the defense shield.

The activities of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) were also
discussed during the meeting. The council once again drew attention to
the clandestine support given to the PKK by some countries, accusing
these countries of insincerity in supporting Turkey’s counterterrorism
efforts.

Cihan news agency

From: A. Papazian

Young Turks Arrived In Armenia

YOUNG TURKS ARRIVED IN ARMENIA

Panorama
Oct 28 2010
Armenia

The President of “Powerful Turkey” party Tuna Beklevic and Vice
President Baybars Orseq arrived today in Armenia and will have a
meeting with the reporters tomorrow instead of today. The head of
Globalization and regional cooperation analytical center Stepan
Grigoryan who cooperates with the young Turkish politicians told
Panorama.am that “they are rather active” and decisive to cooperation
with Armenia.

Expert said the young Turks requested Armenian FM Edward Nalbandyan
and has got “some answer.” Grigoryan said he didn’t know what answer
they got, and said that the guests would tell about it the other day.

Tuna Beklevic is the young Turk who declared he passed Armenian-Turkish
border through River Akhuryan.

From: A. Papazian

Ruling Party’s Stance On Karabakh Bill Depends On OSCE Summit

RULING PARTY’S STANCE ON KARABAKH BILL DEPENDS ON OSCE SUMMIT

news.am
Oct 28 2010
Armenia

Republican Party of Armenia welcomes Heritage’s decision to postpone
voting on the bill on Karabakh’s independence until December 9, the
head of RPA parliamentary group Galust Sahakyan told the journalists.

“I am pleased that Armenia’s political forces do not raise speculations
over the issues of national importance despite the fact whether they
are representing ruling power or the opposition,” Sahakyan said.

He stressed that ruling coalition’s stance on the bill during Dec. 9
vote will mainly depend on the OSCE summit scheduled for December
1-2 in Astana.

The Heritage party has decided to come to terms with the ruling
coalition and postponed the vote on Karabakh’s bill until December
9 that is following the OSCE summit in Astana.

From: A. Papazian

Highly educated people ‘could miss out on Alzheimer’s treatment’

Highly educated people ‘could miss out on Alzheimer’s treatment’

Highly educated people could miss out on Alzheimer’s treatment while others
are wrongly given drugs because the diagnosis test is not sufficiently
accurate, a Cambridge neuropsychology professor has warned.

By Rebecca Smith, Medical Editor

11 Oct 2010

Prof Barbara Sahakian warned that intelligent people could pass the test
despite being in the early stages of the disease.

The NHS drugs rationing body has proposed changing its guidance to allow
three drugs previously limited to those in the moderate and severe stages of
Alzheimer’s to be given to those in the mild or early stages.

While welcoming the reform, Prof Sahakian warned that the test currently
used to detect early Alzheimer’s is so poor the new guidance may make little
practical difference.

The “mini mental state examination” is used to screen for early Alzheimer’s
but includes questions such as who is Prime Minister, what is the date today
and remember three things you did yesterday.

As well as missing high functioning people with early Alzheimer’s disease,
the test is language based so people who cannot speak good English are at a
disadvantage and may fail the test even though they are healthy, she added.

“The MMSE is not fit for purpose in detecting early dementia. It is far too
easy and not sensitive enough.

“The trouble is that it is not going to detect mild people, especially
bright people, so what is the point in changing the drugs guidance?”

She said other tests are available which examine a person’s ability to
remember newly acquired learning as this is the first sign of deterioration.

One test produces six patterns in boxes on a screen and patients then have
to remember where they were once they are hidden again.

Healthy elderly people tend to do very well on the test while those who are
in the early stages of the disease are detected easily and cheaply.

Prof Sahakian said: “It is so frustrating. After all those people had to
suffer because the drugs were withheld and now they have finally reversed
that decision they are going to continue with a poor test that will not
detect those early cases who can now benefit from treatment.”

© Copyright of Telegraph Media Group Limited 2010

From: A. Papazian

Singer-songwriter to perform honest, original songs at Fowler Museum

Acoustic Night Out

Singer-songwriter to perform honest, original songs at Fowler Museum

By CHRISTINE GRACE RENDON

October 20, 2010

Fourth-year ethnomusicology student Cameron Hovsepian will perform his
original acoustic music at Fowler Museum tonight. Hovsepian will be
performing along with ethnomusicology alumnus Jake Jamieson, who will be
playing percussion. Hovsepian has recently performed in Spring Sing in
Pauley Pavillion, a larger, less intimate venue than that of tonight’s
perfomance.

Nestled in the courtyard of Fowler Museum, fourth-year ethnomusicology
student Cameron Hovsepian strummed the strings of his guitar in an impromptu
and unplugged music session. This scene was in preparation for a photoshoot
for the upcoming Fowler Out Loud season.

While Hovsepian remains no stranger to UCLA’s music scene, the brief musical
interlude was enough to give his small audience a taste of what he is
planning to play in his upcoming performance at the Fowler Museum.

UCLA ethnomusicology alumnus Jake Jamieson will accompany Hovsepian on
percussion and drums for the performance.

“The music is kind of a mix, a little (bit) of soul, a little bit of blues,
a little bit of funk,” Jamieson said.

Hovsepian’s musical inclination began when he was a young boy, writing songs
with no vocalist to perform with him. When no singer emerged to vocalize his
melodies, he picked up the mic himself. Since then, Hovsepian has released
his EP “Tonight at Noon,” sung for students at Kerckhoff Coffee House and,
this past school year, performed in front of thousands of Bruins at one of
UCLA’s largest musical productions, Spring Sing.

“When you do Spring Sing, everyone is watching everything you do . whereas
Kerckhoff . you can just get away with so much, you can go longer on these
chords, you can make up verses if you want. It lets you try stuff out. .
Fowler is somewhere in between, where you make a cleaner, more organized
show,” Hovsepian said.

According to Jamieson, the words to Hovsepian’s musical mash-up of genres
are drawn from his own personal experiences.

“He’s got a great voice with a lot of character and he’s got lyrics to
match, which is speaking from personal experience about a lot of interesting
things. His lyrics are definitely poetic and the music is fun and upbeat,”
Jamieson said.

The personal atmosphere of Fowler is also attractive to Hovsepian, who said
performing at the museum space will be a chance to personalize his upcoming
set.

“It’s really intimate, so I’ll be glad that I’ll be able to take my time. I
like talking about songs that I write and how songs come about, and if you’re
playing at a coffee shop with all this noise, no one really cares, but they’re
forced to listen to me,” Hovsepian said.

Hovsepian said he looks forward to performing in a more personal
environment.

“You can still fit 100 and something people, and it’ll still feel intimate,”
Hovsepian said.

Hovsepian’s ability to capture an audience based on his simple and natural
approach is what sets him apart from his counterparts, said Sara Stranovsky,
coordinator of Fowler Out Loud, recalling the earlier photo shoot with
Hovsepian.

“He’s got the kind of hook ability, kind of the acoustic rock stuff. I say
‘hook’ like in terms of catchy and upbeat . but he’s also got his own
heartfelt lyrics, his own style as well. He’s got an ability to be playful,”
Stranovsky said.

According to Stranovsky, Hovsepian’s vocal talents focus more on the
simplicity in his rhythm rather than an extravagant style.

“There’s something more about sharing than flashy performing. . I think he
has a natural calm to his performing,” Stranovsky said.

Jamieson, who has both performed and recorded with Hovsepian in the past,
said their friendship is an additional element of their musical set that
makes performing easier.

“He’s great to play with musically because he’s such a funny guy. . He’s got
a great sense of humor. . We’re friends first and foremost. . It’s just
natural to play music because we get along,” Jamieson said.

Stranovsky said Hovsepian’s audience will experience an intimate feeling
because of Hovsepian’s organic and sincere performance style.

“I think there’s something personal about the way that he performs, I kind
of feel that it’s the vibe as if you’re . sitting around a camp fire . just
sharing something kind of naturally beautiful, so I think that’s what the
audience can expect, although unfortunately there is no campfire,”
Stranovsky said.

Published October 19, 2010 in A&E, Music

From: A. Papazian

Tolling Help To Armenian Industry

TOLLING HELP TO ARMENIAN INDUSTRY

news.am
Oct 28 2010
Armenia

Armenian Minister of Economy Nerses Yeritsyan believes tolling would
facilitate the recovery of Armenia~Rs light industry. At discussions of
the 2011 draft budget the Minister said the Armenian textile industry
has great export potential, being third after jewelry industry and
agriculture.

The RA Government plans to submit a bill exempting the equipment
imported for the country~Rs light industry from the value-added tax.

Yeritsyan said that some of the EU member-states seek to ~Smove to
the right along the map,~T which is an opportunity for exploiting new
capacities. It is possible by means of tolling, which will enable the
country~Rs light industry to recover within a few years and export
clothing. A new Armenian brand can be created later.

From: A. Papazian

Wacky Cardboard Homeless Shelters Fold Out Like Origami

Wacky Cardboard Homeless Shelters Fold Out Like Origami

10/26/2010

Fold a thousand, make a wish?

Origami has inspired countless gadgets: bicycles, MP3 players, and now,
homeless shelters?

Sounds like a gimmick, but yeah. Tina Hovsepian, a recent grad of USC’s
architecture school, has invented a cardboard shelter that pops up like an
origami balloon. A repeating diamond shape in the walls keeps the structure
stiff. When it’s time to move, the shelter folds flat, making it easy to
cart around. She calls it — wait for it! — Cardborigami.

A glorified cardboard box? Sure. The idea, though, is to make the shelters
(which can also be deployed in disaster situations) waterproof and
fire-resistant so they hold together better than something you’d find in the
parking lot of Office Depot. At the moment, she’s testing a treatment made
of a non-toxic by-product of sugarcane.

Hovsepian first created the structure in her fourth year at USC. Of course,
she isn’t the first young designer to turn a hand to housing the homeless. A
bunch of students at MIT made shelters out of recycled junk they found in
and around Cambridge a few years back. And in L.A., Eric Lindeman and Jason
Zasa designed EDAR, a shopping cart that converts into a tent, when they
were students at the Art Center in Pasadena. Hovsepian’s project is
different because, if all goes according to plan, it can be mass produced
for a pittance.

Visit for more information.

The Architect’s Newspaper
a.. Copyright © 2010 Mansueto Ventures

From: A. Papazian

www.cardborigami.org

Medvedev-Sargsyan-Aliyev Astrakhan Meeting Positive: A. Iskandaryan

MEDVEDEV-SARGSYAN-ALIYEV ASTRAKHAN MEETING POSITIVE: A. ISKANDARYAN

Panorama
Oct 28 2010
Armenia

The statement made by the Presidents after the trilateral meeting says
nothing, the director of “Caucasus” institute Aleksander Iskandaryan
told reporters today speaking about Medvedev-Sargsyan-Aliyev meeting
in Astrakhan. As he said, the statement doesn’t include the term
“Meyendorff” while Russia’s President Medvedev used it during his
meeting with reporters.

“The term “Meyendorff” makes Azerbaijani side nervous, evidently,
this is why the term is missing in the statement,” the expert said.

According to Iskandaryan, the Russian side does what it should: first,
it is trying to maintain the status quo, then, it’s trying to show
the talks are advancing. Obviously, the other mediators agree with it.

Nevertheless, Iskandaryan said the meeting was positive. “They could
have made no statements, but they have. The talks continue,” he said
adding that nothing new should have been expected from the meeting.

As regards Medvedev’s statement that Armenia and Azerbaijan might come
to an agreement on the principles of settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh
conflict before the OSCE summit in Astana in early December,
Iskandaryan called it just a good will of the Russian President.

Remind that the Armenian, Russian and Azerbaijani Presidents issued a
joint statement following the Astrakhan meeting. They re-affirmed the
Meyendorff Declaration and stressed that a political settlement of the
problem requires further efforts to bolster the ceasefire regime and
strengthen confidence-building measures. The Armenian and Azerbaijani
presidents agreed that their first step would be an immediate exchange
of prisoners of war and the return of the bodies of those killed. This
would be organized with the help of the co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk
Group and the International Committee of the Red Cross.

From: A. Papazian