Armenia’s President visits Byurakan Observatory – Photos

Armenia’s President visits Byurakan Observatory – Photos

November 09, 2013 | 16:41

President Serzh Sargsyan on Saturday paid a visit to Byurakan
Astrophysical Observatory Named After Viktor Hambardzumyan – the great
Armenian theoretical astrophysicist – of the National Academy of
Sciences (NAS) of Armenia.

The President got familiar with the renovation and upgrading carried
out at the observatory, and the working conditions of its
administrative building.

Sargsyan also toured the vacuum station of the observatory and
examined the Viktor Hambardzumyan Telescope. The President was
informed that the Armenian NAS Presidium had reached a decision to
upgrade this telescope.

According to the persons in charge of the observatory, ever since when
the latter was included in the list of Armenia’s national values at
the beginning of this year and as a result of making respective
allocations to the budget of the observatory, an opportunity was
created to carry out considerable work and to upgrade its management
system. It was noted that the majority of the respective works is
completed.

From: Baghdasarian

http://news.am/eng/news/180039.html

Finance Minister `beautifies’ Ministry

Zhoghovurd: Finance Minister `beautifies’ Ministry

13:34 09/11/2013 » DAILY PRESS

Armenian Finance Minister David Sargsyan soon after his appointment
began to `beatify’ the Ministry.

According to Zhoghovurd daily, in September, the Finance Ministry
spent AMD 700,000 (about USD 1,700) from the country’s budget on
purchase of new furniture for the Ministry’s session hall. The
newspaper reported earlier that the Finance Ministry spent AMD 847,000
on purchase of curtains for one room alone.

Source: Panorama.am

From: Baghdasarian

Armenian activists march in support of detained protesters

Armenian activists march in support of detained protesters

15:12 – 09.11.13

A crowd led by the civic activist Arthur Sakunts organized on Saturday
a march in central Yerevan to urge for the release of Shant
Harutyunyan , the leader of the Tseghakron (Race religion) party, and
several other supporters detained earlier this week in the wake of an
anti-government rally.

As they started the protest, a policeman accompanying the crowd seized
a poster featuring President Serzh Sargsyan, Chief of Armenian Police
Vladimir Gasparyan and the businessman-MP Samvel Alexanyan (Republican
Party) from a young man, angered by an abusive remark below the
portraits.

Their move met the activists’ spontaneous outcry, driving policemen to
a stricter action against the young protester. But Sakunts, the
chairman of the Helsinki Assembly’s Vanadzor Office, prevented their
attempts of taking the activist to a police station.

The participants of the Saturday march claim the police used violence
against the crowd at the November 5 rally. Most believe that they had
sent provokers to the protest site to disrupt the peaceful rally.

Armenian News – Tert.am

From: Baghdasarian

Violent protest in Yerevan was in authorities’ interest – opinion

Violent protest in Yerevan was in authorities’ interest – opinion

12:35 – 09.11.13

The November 5 violent protest in Yerevan, which saw the
veteran-activist Shant Harutyunyan rally a crowd of people in an
effort to stage a revolution, was absolutely in the Armenian
authorities’ interests, according to a politician.

Speaking to Tert.am, a former deputy head of the National Security
Service (NSS), Gurgen Harutyunyan, said the state security service
adjacent to the president could have prevented the November 5
anti-government publicevent had it really wished to. He said the
authorities would have really been interested in such a protest to
move ahead with their `dark business’.

Having absolutely no doubt about the sincerity of Harutyunyan’s
intention, Yeghiazaryan said nonetheless that the move served as a
kind of trump card for certain security officials.

`What they needed was just to register an emergency call and take
appropriate measures on their level, to call them a prevention,’ he
explained.

Asked what the `dark purposes’ could be, the politician replied,
`Either to discredit the opposition from head to toe or to discredit
the NSS and the police, involving them in the brawl or, perhaps, all
this was organized to demonstrate what utterly difficult conditions
the president faces inside the country,’ he said, noting that the
replacement of the NSS chief is now high on the agenda.

Yeghiazaryan added that the authorities must immediately release
Harutyunyan and his supporters after being through with what he called
their black business. `Their operations were without coordination.
They release murderers in broad daylight today; Shant and his friends
haven’t done anything wrong. They have said [the authorities] aren’t
legitimate, and they weren’t wrong,’ he added.

From: Baghdasarian

http://www.tert.am/en/news/2013/11/09/gurgen-yeghiazaryan/

Une jeune fille de 13 ans violée en Arménie par ses amis de son rése

ARMENIE
Une jeune fille de 13 ans violée en Arménie par ses amis de son réseau social

Selon la police, une jeune fille de 13 ans de la ville de Sevan a été
violée par des hommes de 24 et 25 ans qu’elle a rencontré par
l’intermédiaire d’un réseau social.

Selon les parents d’un des accusés, Sasson G., 25 ans, s’est lié
d’amitié avec la jeune fille mineure via un réseau social. Plus tard,
il l’a invitée et ce jour là un autre jeune homme, ami de Sasson,
employé de la police Vahagn H. 24 ans l’a rejoint.

Les parents des accusés insistent sur le fait que la jeune fille a
accepté d’avoir des relations sexuelles avec des hommes, cependant,
selon la police les deux hommes ont violemment violé la jeune fille de
13 ans.

samedi 9 novembre 2013,
Stéphane ©armenews.com

From: Baghdasarian

Les « Journées d’Erévan à Moscou » du 26 au 29 novembre

EREVAN-MOSCOU
Les « Journées d’Erévan à Moscou » du 26 au 29 novembre

Du 26 au 29 novembre se dérouleront à Moscou les « Journées d’Erévan à
Moscou » organisées par les mairies des deux capitales. A l’invitation
du Maire de la capitale russe Sergueï Sobianine, son homologue
d’Erévan Taron Margaryan sera également présent aux cérémonies
d’ouverture de ces « Journées d’Erévan à Moscou ». Parmi les
manifestations sont prévus des rencontres sportives entre équipe de
jeunes de Moscou et d’Erévan une exposition sur les arts arménien au
Musée d’histoire moderne de Russie, des conférences économiques et
exposition-vente des vins d’Arménie, ainsi que de nombreuses autres
manifestations. Les responsables des villes d’Erévan et de Moscou se
réuniront également pour échanger ainsi que de mettre en place une
coopération.

Krikor Amirzayan

samedi 9 novembre 2013,
Krikor Amirzayan ©armenews.com

From: Baghdasarian

La « révolution du 5 novembre » à Erevan ravive les souvenirs des tr

ARMENIE
La « révolution du 5 novembre » à Erevan ravive les souvenirs des
troubles de 2008

Le calme relatif dans le domaine politique arménienne a été « perturbé
» mardi soir lorsqu’un opposant peu connu a réuni des centaines de ses
partisans portant des masques d’Anonymous et armés d’explosifs
artisanaux, de btons et de slogans révolutionnaires et marchant dans
le centre d’Erevan. L’action de protestation s’est terminée en
affrontements avec la police anti-émeute, à la suite de quoi des
dizaines de manifestants ont été arrêtés.

Shant Harutyunyan, un leader de 48 ans du parti nationaliste obscure
Tseghakron, a entamé une grève dans le parc de la Liberté en fin de
semaine dernière avec une affiche qui disait : « Je commence une
révolution ». L’ancien prisonnier qui a été impliqué dans « l’affaire
des sept » (lorsque les organisateurs présumés des malaises de 2008 y
compris l’ex-ministre des Affaires étrangères Alexander Arzumanyan,
ont été jugés), a lancé une manifestation dans le cadre de l’évènement
du Million Mask March, événement mondial promu par Anonymous, un
réseau international vaguement associé à des militants connus pour
porter des masques de Guy Fawkes. Ce qui était initialement annoncé
comme une marche pacifique pour demander la paix, la justice, la
démocratie, la transparence et la liberté a tourné à la violence
lorsque les manifestants se sont mis à utiliser des pétards et des
btons pour affronter les forces de sécurité.

Avant le début de l’action, près de Place de la Liberté, Harutyunyan
s’est adressé à ses partisans, en utilisant un langage fort et en
disant qu’il allait faire une révolution à tout prix. Le militant a
appelé les autres manifestants à aller vers le palais présidentiel
situé dans un boulevard à proximité et ont lancé des bouteilles
d’essence vers le btiment.

« Il vaut mieux que je sois tué par une balle de sniper pendant que je
tiens des bouteilles d’essence dans mes mains … Je ne veux pas
quitter l’Arménie, je vis ici, je ne veux pas que le reste du monde
dit au sujet de ma nation qui il n’y a pas de gens là-bas, ils sont
tous corrompus comme [le président] Serge [Sarkissian] », a dit
Harutyunyan, ajoutant qu’ils n’avaient pas d’armes autres que des
bouteilles d’essence, des pierres, des btons et des pétards.

Les manifestants ont été accueillis par la police anti-émeute et plus
de trois douzaines ont été arrêtés à la suite de la bagarre qui
s’ensuivit et dans laquelle des explosifs et les fusées artisanales
ont été utilisés par les manifestants.

Alors que la plupart des observateurs n’ont pas fait avant beaucoup
d’attention aux appels d’Harutyunyan, à la fin de la journée de
nombreuses personnes ont comparé ce qui s’est passé ou aurait pu
arriver les 1er et 2 mars 2008 à Erevan lorsque 10 personnes ont été
tuées alors que les forces de sécurité ont dispersé une manifestation
antigouvernementale pour protester contre le résultat de l’élection
présidentielle.

L’Avenue Mashtots, qui est l’artère centrale de la capitale
arménienne, est resté bloquée à la circulation pendant plusieurs
heures mardi soir lorsque les affrontements se sont produits entre
manifestants et policiers près de l’Opéra. Des blessures ont été
signalées des deux côtés. Un total de 37 manifestants, dont
Harutyunyan, a été arrêté.

Aujourd’hui sur le site Armenia Today l’activiste Argishti Kiviryan a
déclaré : « De cette façon, la police du régime criminel-oligarchique
a une nouvelle fois prouvé qu’il n’abandonnera pas le pouvoir
facilement et aura recours à toute forme de violence pour se maintenir
au pouvoir … »

Pendant ce temps, le politologue Tigran Abrahamian a dit que ce qui
s’est passé est « rien de plus qu’un processus mal calculé qui a
échoué, qui était hors de la logique de la lutte contre les autorités
». « C’était une mauvaise aventure qui ne pouvait pas résoudre tous
les problèmes, » a-t-il dit.

Tard dans la nuit de nombreux militants attendaient au département de
la police centrale que leurs camarades soient libérés. Quelques
affrontements mineurs ont également eu lieu là-bas. Les députés
affiliés à l’opposition, au Congrès national arménien et au parti
Héritage étaient aussi présents.

Plus d’une douzaine de militants ont été libérés peu après minuit.

La dernière amnistie générale en Arménie a été annoncé en Septembre.
C’est dans le cadre de cette amnistie que le dernier opposant qui a
prétendu être un prisonnier politique a été libéré. Il n’est pas exclu
que la plupart des militants arrêtés le 5 Novembre, y compris
Harutyunyan, seront poursuivis pour utilisation de la violence contre
les représentants des autorités (ainsi qu’éventuellement, pour
violence ou même tentative de renverser le gouvernement). C’est sur
ces accusations que de nombreux manifestants ont été arrêtés en 2008
et plus tard ont été décrits comme des « prisonniers politiques ».

Par Gohar Abrahamian

ArmeniaNow

samedi 9 novembre 2013,
Stéphane ©armenews.com

From: Baghdasarian

ISTANBUL: Islamized Armenians voice their 100 years in `purgatory’

Hurriyet Daily News, Turkey
Nov 6 2013

Islamized Armenians voice their 100 years in `purgatory’

ISTANBUL ` Hürriyet Daily News
Vercihan ZiflioÄ?lu

Muslim Armenians say they are left in between `in a purgatory,’ saying
they are accepted by neither Turkey nor the Armenian Patriarch and
community.

Gathering at a conference titled `Islamized Armenians’ held at
Istanbul’s BoÄ?aziçi University, members of the community gave details
about their lives, mostly spent hiding their identities in the eastern
and southeastern provinces of Turkey.

`They ask what we have gone through and I answer, `What haven’t we
gone through?’ All through our lives we have been in purgatory,’ said
one of the participants, identified as Sadık from Adıyaman.

The feeling of not being accepted by different cultures in society has
defined their lives, Sadık added. `I was staying at a boarding school,
and the other kids called me `infidel.’ I didn’t know what this meant,
I just thought they didn’t like me,’ he said.

Berfin, a 23-year-old who is studying the question of Muslim Armenians
for her Master’s degree at Oxford University, said her identity was
also problematic abroad.

`When I applied to a student dormitory in France, they asked me for a
baptism document, and they did not accept me when I couldn’t provide
one. Yes, Christian Armenians have had huge problems, too, but they
went on to live their identities in one way or another. We have had to
live on through 100 years of silent desperation,’ Berfin said.

Another participant, only identified as H.T., said Muslim Armenians
were trying to practice Christian practices in their homes but were
trying to behave as Muslims outside.

`We said, `Living is resisting,’ and so we stayed on our feet.
Whatever we did, we were called infidels. Now the Christian Armenians
don’t accept us either, so we are left in between,’ H.T. said, adding
that they were still trying to hide their identities today.

Responding to a question on renowned Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant
Dink, who was killed in Istanbul in 2007, H.T. said, `Yes, we fear.’

One of Dink’s lawyers, Cem Halavurt, also attended the conference. He
said that he personally did not fear revealing his identity, but also
thought the Armenian Patriarch and other Istanbul Armenians were right
to act with prudence.

`There is still a taboo of missionaries in this country. Even the
slightest step by the Patriarch could be seen as a missionary act,’
Halavurt said.

November/06/2013

From: Baghdasarian

http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/islamized-armenians-voice-their-100-years-in-purgatory-.aspx?pageID=238&nID=57432&NewsCatID=339

Trip Tips: Armenia’s capital Yerevan, scenic and full of history

GMA News
Nov 8 2013

Trip Tips: Armenia’s capital Yerevan, scenic and full of history

By MARIE-LOUISE GUMUCHIAN, Reuters

YEREVAN – Steeped in history and surrounded by mountains, Armenia’s
capital Yerevan offers lively cafes, a bustling weekend market,
stunning scenery and a rich religious heritage as one of the world’s
oldest continuously inhabited cities.

Here are tips about getting the most out of a trip to Yerevan from
Reuters, whose 2,600 journalists in all parts of the world offer
visitors the best local insights.

Founded in 782 BC, the city of about 1.1 million people is nestled in
the shadow of Mount Ararat, which is just across the border in Turkey.
The mountain features prominently on Armenia’s coat of arms and in
Judeo-Christian tradition as the place where Noah’s ark landed.

A man holds a baby as he stands inside an ancient church of Khor Virap
village next to the Armenian-Turkish border, some 80 km (49.7 miles)
west of Yerevan in this photo taken on October 27, 2009. Reuters/David
Mdzinarishvili/File

The country has been modernizing since independence in 1991 but still
shows its past as a distant fencepost of the Soviet Union. In Yerevan,
Soviet-era buildings contrast with glamorous new apartment blocks and
the designer shops and eateries that line Northern Avenue and other
thoroughfares.

Yerevan has a variety of luxury and standard hotels but a growing
trend – and cheaper option – is to rent an apartment during your stay.
Numerous websites offer this service.

Listings in English of shows, concerts and events can be found at

History and culture

With a collection spanning Stone Age cave dwellers to the modern day,
the State Museum of Armenian History at 4 Republic Square is the place
to start learning about the country.

Artefacts from various periods include costumes, jewelry, pots and
wooden funeral chariots but the highlight is the world’s oldest
leather shoe, found in 2008 under sheep dung in a cave in the
southeastern Vayots Dzor region.

Dating from 3,500 BC, the moccasin-like shoe is a woman’s US size 7,
was worn on the right foot and is 1,000 years older than the Great
Pyramid of Giza in Egypt.

The museum also has a section dedicated to the 1915 mass killing of
Armenians by Ottoman Turks. Armenia, backed by many historians, says
about 1.5 million Christian Armenians were killed in what is now
eastern Turkey during World War One in a deliberate policy of
genocide.

Turkey says there was heavy loss of life on both sides during the
fighting in which Armenian partisans supported invading Russian
forces.

For more on this dark time in history, take a short taxi ride to
Tsitsernakaberd, the Armenian Genocide Memorial and Museum that pays
tribute to those killed.

A short stroll west from the history museum takes you to Mashtots
Avenue, a busy tree-lined boulevard that was known as Lenin Avenue
until 1990.

Up Mashtots Avenue is Opera Square, a leafy area with outdoor cafes,
nightclubs and shops. The Opera and Ballet Theater hosts performances
by Armenian, Russian and Western European composers and companies.

Further up Mashtots Avenue is Matenadaran, Armenia’s manuscript museum
with thousands of ancient items that include gospels, bibles,
scientific documents and song books. Bound in leather, silver and
ivory, their colourful swirls of red, gold and lapis lazuli still
shine brightly after hundreds of years.

Behind the museum, the statue of Mother Armenia stands tall. The
female warrior, with a sword, faces towardsTurkey.

Breakfast, lunch and dinner

Armenian cuisine mixes fresh salads, spiced meats and lots of lavash,
a chewy flat bread. Other favorites include soups, stews and
dolma – rice mixed with meat wrapped in vine leaves.

Food in the western part of the country is similar to Lebanese and
Turkish cuisine. In the east, the cooking has more Russian and
Georgian influences.

Start the day at a cafe on central Abovyan Street with some freshly
ground Armenian coffee called soorj. Popular spots include Jazzve,
which has several branches around the city.

For lunch, try Afrikyanneri Pandok at 39 Sayat Nova Street. This
tavern features timbered walls, rustic furniture and a menu of
traditional fare plus what it calls “Tsarist Russia” cuisine. Try the
harissa, a national dish of chicken coarsely coated in soaked wheat.

For dinner, Kapela at 13/1 Leo Street has many Armenian favorites with
traditional music in the background. Dig into khorovats, barbecued
meat similar to kebabs, and finish off with sweet, nutty and flaky
baklava.

Another good option is Dolmama at 10 Pushkin Street, an upmarket but
homey restaurant that takes its name from dolma. While that dish is
certainly on the menu, mountain lamb stew – cooked in sweet wine and
crème freche – is also a highlight.

Nightlife

The cafes and bars around Republic Square are popular places to relax
on warm evenings, when fountains dance to music and lights. Dive
straight in with some local brandy, reputed to have been a favourite
of British leader Winston Churchill.

>From Republic Square, take a short walk up Abovyan Street to Northern
Avenue, a modern pedestrian laneway with coffee shops, restaurants and
clubs.

For live music, check out Malkhas Jazz Club at 52/1 Pushkin Street, an
upscale spot that offers food and jazz, including cameos by the
piano-playing owner.

Music Factory at 1/1 Marshal Baghramyan Avenue features live shows by
bands that range from rock to salsa to reggae, while UPtown at 19A
Koryun Street is a new bar that doubles as a music and arts venue.

Other options include Stop Music Club at 37 Moskovyan Street and Bobs
Pub at 26A Tumanyan Street.

Shopping

The main weekend market is Vernissage, stretching out along Aram and
Buzand streets, where you can browse for handicrafts, chess sets,
jewelry, books, paintings and Soviet memorabilia. Carpet sellers line
one side of the market, along with women selling lace tablecloths.

Brandy is a popular item to take home and there are many liquor stores
on Yerevan’s main streets. Among the best-known is the Ararat brand,
produced by the Yerevan Brandy Company.

Shops with well-known luxury goods and fashion brands are clustered in
central Yerevan.

Short trips

Armenia has plenty of history centered around Yerevan but the
countryside is a virtual museum of religious sites.Armenia adopted
Christianity as its official religion in 301 AD, about a decade before
Rome. Here are some options for short trips:

1. Echmiadzin
About 20 km (12 miles) west of the capital, Echmiadzin is the heart of
Armenian Christianity and the headquarters of the Armenian Apostolic
Church.

As the faithful tell it, the site is where St Gregory the Illuminator,
patriarch of the Armenian Apostolic Church, had a vision in which
Jesus Christ descended from heaven to show where the cathedral should
be built. The name of the church and the city means “Descent of the
Only Begotten Son of God.”

The main cathedral, known as Mayr Tachar, and its environs are a
UNESCO World Heritage site.

A short drive away, the smaller church of Surp Hripsime was built in
618 AD on the foundation of a pagan temple. The site is where
Hripsime, a nun who fled marriage from the Roman emperor Diocletian,
was killed after she refused to marry King Trdat III, choosing instead
to remain true to her faith.

The ruins at the nearby Zvartnots archaeological site were once a
cathedral built when much of Armenia was under Byzantine control.
Circular and three-tiered, Zvartnots exerted a major influence on the
architecture of its own and later times.

2. Geghard Monastery
This spectacular cave church stands deep in a steep, scenic canyon
about 40 km (25 miles) east of Yerevan.

Named after the holy lance that pierced Christ’s side at the
crucifixion, Geghard was gouged out of the mountain and some of its
chapels are said to date from the 4th century.

Ancient carved stone crosses – or khatchkars – surround the monastery.
Sunbeams shoot through narrow windows and the acoustics are excellent.

About 10 km (6 miles) on the road back towards Yerevan is Garni
Temple, built in the 1st century to honor the pagan sun god Mitra. It
eventually became a summer house for Armenian royalty after the
Christian conversion.

A Roman bathhouse nearby features an intricate mosaic but the views
around the temple – a deep valley with rock cliffs – are what get tourists
taking the most pictures.

In Garni, head for lunch at Sergey’s, run by a resident who has opened
up his garden to the public. Served on tables set up under vines and
fruit trees, the home cooking features lavash, cheese, barbecued meat,
potatoes, salads and plates of herbs.

3. Khor Virap Monastery
At the foot of Mount Ararat, about 45 km (28 miles) south of Yerevan,
Khor Virap is an important pilgrimage site and a destination for many
families to baptize their children.

Overlooking pastures and vineyards, the monastery is where pagan King
Trdat III imprisoned St Gregory the Illuminator in a well for 12
years. Visitors can climb down into the well, where Christian women
secretly threw food to St Gregory.

The king was later cursed with madness but cured by St Gregory. He
converted to Christianity and St Gregory became the first Catholicos
of the Armenian Apostolic Church.

– Reuters

From: Baghdasarian

http://www.gmanetwork.com/news/story/334569/lifestyle/travel/trip-tips-armenia-s-capital-yerevan-scenic-and-full-of-history
www.visitarm.com/culturalevents.html.

Reddit co-founder Ohanian to speak Friday on new book

States News Service
November 5, 2013 Tuesday

REDDIT CO-FOUNDER OHANIAN TO SPEAK FRIDAY ON NEW BOOK

Charlottesville, VA

The following information was released by the University of Virginia:

University of Virginia graduate Alexis Ohanian, co-founder of the
social news site Reddit, will be on Grounds Friday to share lessons
learned from the companies he’s started and to discuss his
best-selling new book, “Without Their Permission: How the 21st Century
Will Be Made, Not Managed.”

Ohanian will speak at 8 p.m. in Rouss/Robertson Hall, room 120, along
with three fellow young alumni entrepreneurs: Greg Herrington,
co-founder of DealStage; Jaffray Woodriff, co-founder of Quantitative
Investment Management; and Tommy Nicholas, co-founder of
Coffitivity.com, The City Swig and High Five.

The talk will be preceded by an informal cookout at Hack Cville (#9
Elliwoood Ave. on the Corner) starting at 6 p.m., and will be followed
by a networking opportunity in Rouss/Robertson Hall and then an
afterparty at Hack Cville, starting at 10 p.m.

All events are free and open to the public. Seating is first-come,
first-in, although organizers request that those interested in
attending RSVP here.

Books will be available for purchase, and Ohanian will be signing
books after the talk.

Billing itself as the “front page of the Internet,” Reddit is a
user-driven social news site and global discussion board with more
than 80 million users whose collective wisdom rises to the top of
thousands of subsections dedicated to just about any topic or interest
imaginable, from cute cat photos to nuclear weapon technology. This
has made Reddit one of the 50 biggest U.S. websites.

Ohanian and fellow Wahoo Steve Huffman co-founded Reddit in 2005 while
they were still undergrads at U.Va. Ohanian continued to manage the
product and business at Reddit until leaving in 2010 to volunteer in
Armenia for Kiva.org. Today he sits on the board of Reddit.

Ohanian has gone on to help start or invest in more than 60 other
startup ventures, including the travel website Hipmunk, founded by
Huffman, and his own social enterprise, Breadpig, which has generated
more than $200,000 for charities. Based now in Brooklyn, Ohanian is
also “Ambassador to the East” for the influential Silicon Valley-based
early-stage venture firm Y Combinator.

His new book combines “advice for building successful startup ventures
and marketing secrets with examples of heartwarming stories about
using the Internet for grassroots campaigns,” according to a CNN
review. “It will also include doodles, which perhaps shouldn’t be
surprising coming from the man who designed the logos for Breadpig,
Hipmunk and Reddit.”

The Ohanian events are presented by Hack Cville, the Entrepreneurship
Group at U.Va., the Alpha Kappa Psi co-ed business fraternity at
U.Va., the Galant Center for Entrepreneurship at the McIntire School
of Commerce, and the Batten Institute at the Darden School of
Business.

From: Baghdasarian