Deutsche Welle Reports On Nagorno Karabakh

DEUTSCHE WELLE REPORTS ON NAGORNO KARABAKH

Yerevan, January 9. ArmInfo. "The constitutional referendum in Nagorno
Karabakh Republic (NKR) is a crucial moment for consolidation of
democracy in the self acknowledged republic. Authorities of Azerbaijan
can’t deny that", this is a preamble of one of the reports of Andrew
Brenner, Bonn journalist and a prominent editor of Russian service
of Deutsche Welle.

Brenner’s materials on Nagorno Karabakh’s attempts
to self-determination, youth of Nagorno Karabakh and the war,
agriculture, and other, went on air on 2, 3 and 4 January 2007. The
journalist tells stories of the present life and problems of NKR’s
population. He said that the negative resonance of international
community and organizations on constitutional referendum in NKR was
quite expected by majority of the population.

Masis Mailyan, Deputy Head of Foreign Ministry of NKR, said – "Frankly
speaking, expectations were a bit different. We thought the reaction
would be a silence. The thing is that when we held elections into
the parliament the only Azerbaijan and Turkey demonstrated negative
reaction. European entities revealed no reaction then. We accepted
it all right."

As per Mr. Mailyan, the very fact of denial of the referendum
is a negative reaction. His approach to this point coincides to
that of Gegham Baghdassaryan, Co-Chair of ‘Movement 88’. "Does the
international community want to make NKR a caserne? I don’t see how
democratization of one of the sides to the conflict would negatively
influence the negotiation process".

A.I. Bezzerides, 98; Novelist Became A Screenwriter Known For Film N

A.I. BEZZERIDES, 98; NOVELIST BECAME A SCREENWRITER KNOWN FOR FILM NOIR CLASSICS
By Dennis McLellan, Times Staff Writer

Los Angeles Times, CA
Jan 9 2007

A.I. Bezzerides, a novelist and short-story writer who became a
Hollywood screenwriter best known for the post-World War II film
noir classics "Kiss Me Deadly," "On Dangerous Ground" and "Thieves’
Highway," has died. He was 98.

Bezzerides died Jan. 1 at the Motion Picture & Television Hospital
in Woodland Hills after a brief illness, said his daughter, Zoe Ohl.

Bezzerides was working as a communications engineer for the Los
Angeles Department of Water and Power when his 1938 novel "Long Haul"
was turned into "They Drive by Night," a 1940 melodrama with George
Raft and Humphrey Bogart as struggling trucker brothers hauling
California produce.

It was only after Warner Bros. paid him $2,000 for the rights to his
novel and put him under contract as a $300-a-week screenwriter that
Bezzerides discovered that a script based on his book already had
been written.

"I had no idea whether it was guilt or conscience, or greed to swindle
more stories out of me, for peanuts, that motivated Warner Bros. to
offer me a seven-year contract, with options to be exercised every
six months," Bezzerides wrote in the afterword to the 1997 University
of California Press republication of his 1949 novel "Thieves’ Market."

"Whatever their reason, I grabbed their offer so I could quit my
putrid career as a communications engineer by becoming a writer,
writing scripts in an entirely new world."

Known to his friends as Buzz, Bezzerides’ first film credit was "Juke
Girl," a 1942 story of migrant farmworkers starring Ann Sheridan and
Ronald Reagan.

While under contract to Warner Bros. during World War II, he did
uncredited polishing of the scripts for the 1943 wartime drama
"Action in the North Atlantic," starring Bogart, and for other films.

"There Is a Happy Land," the second of his three novels, was published
in 1942.

After leaving Warner Bros., Bezzerides wrote or co-wrote films such
as "Beneath the 12-Mile Reef," "Desert Fury," "Sirocco" and "Track
of the Cat."

He segued into television in the 1950s, writing for such series as
"Bonanza," "DuPont Theater," "Rawhide," "77 Sunset Strip" and "The
Virginian."

He also was the co-creator of "The Big Valley," the popular 1960s
western series starring Barbara Stanwyck.

To film buffs, Bezzerides was best known for "Thieves’ Highway,"
director Jules Dassin’s thriller based on Bezzerides’ 1949 novel;
"On Dangerous Ground," Nicholas Ray’s 1952 crime drama; and "Kiss Me
Deadly," Robert Aldrich’s 1955 crime thriller loosely based on the
Mickey Spillane novel.

"Buzz was more of a pivotal figure in the development of American
film noir than he has been given credit for," said writer-publisher
Garrett White, who interviewed Bezzerides for the foreword White
wrote for the reprint of "Thieves’ Market."

In an interview with White, Bezzerides said Aldrich called him shortly
before he died in 1983.

"He wanted to tell me that he had just reread my script for ‘Kiss Me
Deadly,’ " Bezzerides recalled. When he asked why, Aldrich told him,
"I wanted to see how I could’ve shot it in three weeks. You know
what? It was all there" in the script.

White said a common thread runs through all of Bezzerides’ work, "and
that has to do with his constant meditation on human – and particularly
male – destructiveness. He thought long and hard about why people
do what they do to nature, to each other and to themselves. Hence,
he was able to write about violence, which is often key to the crime
stories that film noir tended to revolve around."

White, who knew Bezzerides for 20 years, said that "for all of his
toughness and for writing about the dark side of human nature, he
was simply one of the most gentle, big-hearted and generous people
I’ve ever known. He gave away a lot of his money trying to help drug
addicts and just people in need."

During his time at Warner Bros., Bezzerides was a close friend with
another contract writer at the studio: William Faulkner.

"Faulkner actually stayed with Buzz and his first wife [Yvonne]
in Brentwood from time to time," White said.

He said Bezzerides is quoted "in most of the Faulkner biographies,"
and he wrote the documentary "William Faulkner: A Life on Paper,"
which aired on PBS in the late 1970s.

The son of an Armenian mother and a Turkish-speaking Greek father,
Albert Isaac Bezzerides was born Aug. 9, 1908, in Samsun, Turkey. He
moved to America with his parents before he was 2, and they settled
in Fresno, where his father worked in the fields before becoming a
produce-hauling trucker.

Bezzerides, who grew up with young William Saroyan, began writing
short stories while studying at UC Berkeley. His first published story,
"Passage Into Eternity," appeared in a 1935 issue of Story magazine.

Three of his Fresno-set short stories from the 1930s will appear in
the anthology "Forgotten Bread: Armenian American Writers of the First
Generation," to be published in the fall by Heyday Books in Berkeley.

Bezzerides was the subject of two recent documentaries, "The Long
Haul of A.I. Bezzerides" (2005) and "Buzz" (2006).

A longtime Woodland Hills resident whose first marriage ended in
divorce, Bezzerides was married to film and television writer Silvia
Richards until her death in 1999.

In addition to his daughter Zoe, he is survived by a son, Peter;
daughter Rachel Morgan; a granddaughter; and four great-grandchildren.

The More Turks Try To Deny Armenian Genocide The Greater Number Of S

THE MORE TURKS TRY TO DENY ARMENIAN GENOCIDE THE GREATER NUMBER OF STATES RECOGNIZE IT

PanARMENIAN.Net
08.01.2007 15:02 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ On the New Year’s eve Harut Sassounian, the editor
of The California Courier, commented on the brightest events and
publications of the year 2006 on the Armenian Genocide issue. "The
Foreign Minister of Turkey, Abdullah Gul, announced this week that the
Turkish government is planning to launch in 2007 a new comprehensive
propaganda campaign to deny the Armenian Genocide. All previous Turkish
government attempts to bury the facts of the Armenian Genocide have
ended in failure, after wasting millions of dollars on lobbying firms
and books by phony "scholars." Ironically, the more the Turks try
to deny the crime committed by Ottoman Turkey in 1915, the greater
the number of countries, international organizations and individuals
that recognize it. In recent weeks, after the Argentinean Parliament
recognized the Armenian Genocide, Ankara warned that country’s Senate
not to follow suit. Despite the Turkish warning, and maybe because of
it, the Argentinean Senate adopted the Armenian Genocide resolution
unanimously! A couple of months ago, when the French Parliament adopted
a bill that would make it a crime to deny the Armenian Genocide, the
Turkish government gave a similar warning to the French Senate," he
says. " Several Turkish newspapers reported last week that the Armenian
American lobby scored a major victory when Pres. Bush could not get
the Senate to confirm Richard Hoagland, the Ambassador-designate
for Armenia. The Turkish press quoted an analyst as saying that the
blocking of Hoagland’s nomination was a major success for Armenians:
"The Armenian lobby has never been this strong," he continues.

"The Turkish Culture Minister announced last week that the official
opening ceremonies for the renovated Aghtamar Armenian Church would
take place on April 24.

The Patriarch of Constantinople, Archbishop Mesrob Moutafian,
issued an uncharacteristically bold statement, saying that holding
the ceremony on that date would be exploiting Armenian people’s
suffering for political gain. He said that neither he nor any other
Armenian would participate in such a ceremony on April 24. It has
been obvious to me from the very beginning that Turkish officials were
planning to exploit the renovation of Aghtamar for political purposes,
independently of the date of the ceremony.

Maybe the Patriarch, instead of objecting, should have accepted that
date and turned the ceremony planned for April 24 into a commemoration
of the Armenian Genocide — which would have been a first in Turkey
since 1915," Sassounian says.

"Sylvester Stallone announced last week that he is interested in
making Franz Werfel’s famous novel, "The Forty Days of Musa Dagh,"
into a blockbuster movie.

Turks went into total panic and organized a worldwide e-mail
campaign urging Stallone not to be "an instrument of Armenian
lobbies." Armenians on the other hand were so excited that they
started celebrating as if the movie was already made.

Surprisingly, neither Turks nor Armenians seem to remember that
Stallone has made this same announcement several times in the past
with nothing to show for.

However, should Stallone end up making this movie someday, he can
count on the Turks to provide a lot of free publicity, ensuring its
success!" he goes on.

"Turkey’s Prime Minister, Recep Erdogan, told the editors of the New
York Times last week that they had become "a tool in the hands of
the Armenians." He was unhappy that the N.Y. Times had decided that
the newspaper would refer to the Armenian Genocide as a historical
fact. This is the second time that the Turkish Prime Minister has
personally complained to the N.Y. Times on this issue in the past
couple of years. Maybe it’s about time that Erdogan realized that
the N.Y. Times, true to its noble calling, is a tool for the truth
and not a tool for Turkish denialism," Sassounian remarks.

Reconstruction Of Martakert Regional Hospital To Finish In August

RECONSTRUCTION OF MARTAKERT REGIONAL HOSPITAL TO FINISH IN AUGUST

Noyan Tapan
Jan 08 2007

YEREVAN, JANUARY 8, NOYAN TAPAN. The "Hayastan" (Armenia) All-Armenian
Fund, within the framework of the "Re-Birth of Artsakh" program,
started the program of reconstruction of the Martakert regional
hospital. As the Noyan Tapan correspondent was informed by the fund’s
Public Relations Department, it is envisaged to finish the construction
works on August 25.

It was mentioned that the building of the hospital built in 1971
was seriously damaged during the years of the Artsakh war. After
the reconstruction, the population of both city of Martakert and
neighboring villages will make use of the hospital services. Besides,
the fund bought 4 ambulances for the hospital. It is also envisaged
within the framework of the program to provide the hospital with
medical equipment and furniture.

Stopping genocide at the wallet stage

Posted on Sun, Jan. 07, 2007

Stopping genocide at the wallet stage

By ADAM STERLING and SAM BELL
Special to the Star-Telegram

The first genocide of the 21st century enters its fourth year with no
end in sight. For four brutal years, the Sudanese government has
successfully silenced the international community while hoarding
foreign investment to fund its military and the brutal militias
seeking to wipe Darfur from the face of the Earth.

Hope does still exist. In October, President Bush signed the Darfur
Peace and Accountability Act (DPAA). This legislation comes at a
crucial moment for the people of Darfur, as 2 million teeter on the
brink of elimination and the government of Sudan has flatly rejected a
multilateral U.N. peacekeeping force.

Bush showed that he won’t be bullied by Sudan. He authorized action
that will hit this genocidal government where it hurts most: the
wallets of its leaders. Provisions in the bill included asset freezes
and a denial of entry at U.S. ports for oil tankers doing business
with the government of Sudan.

In September, Sens. John Cornyn and Kay Bailey Hutchison, both Texas
Republicans, supported the speedy passage of the
DPAA. U.S. Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee, D-Houston, voted for a resolution
calling on the president to appoint a special envoy on Sudan. Texans
should be proud of the important actions that their congressional
delegation have taken.

Now that Texas’ federal legislators have stepped up to the plate, it’s
time for state officials to do the same. If history has taught us one
thing in Sudan, it’s that money talks.

In September, California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger joined former U.S.

Secretary of State George Shultz and actors Don Cheadle and George
Clooney in adopting a targeted divestment policy for California,
barring the state from investing in companies that enable genocide in
Darfur.

To date, five other states and more than 30 U.S. colleges have taken
similar action. Texas should follow suit. As Texas Railroad
Commissioner Michael Williams recently wrote on his Web site in
support of targeted divestment, "Texans can take an unequivocal stand
against genocide and protect the financial health of our investment
portfolios. We ought to get started."

By adopting a targeted divestment policy, Texas can focus its efforts
on the worst-offending companies in Sudan, protecting innocent
civilians on the ground and ensuring that the state’s investment
returns are safeguarded in the process.

In its latest policy briefing on Sudan, the International Crisis Group
— a world-renowned, nonpartisan think tank — called for targeted
divestment as a necessary measure for achieving long-term peace and
security in Darfur.

The Sudanese government, concerned that its genocidal credit line may
be soon cut off, sent out a news release urging U.S. institutions to
stop divesting, claiming that Sudan has entered "a new era of peace
and development."

The continuing murder, rape and pillage of Darfur indicate otherwise.
Jan Egeland, the U.N. emergency relief coordinator, said recently that
violence and insecurity were escalating in Darfur. The Sudanese
government-funded militias "are much better armed, they are more
brutal than ever," he said, "and their potential to do bad is bigger
than ever."

Genocide is an expensive venture that should not occur on our watch
and must not occur on our dime.

Last March, Bush said: "This is serious business. This is not playing
a diplomatic holding game. … When we say genocide, that means
genocide has to be stopped."

It’s time for Texas to stop investing in the carnage of Darfur. This
is a call for heroes to lead that charge.

IN THE KNOW
Read the bill
To read HB419, the bill concerning targeted divestment and Darfur, use the
"Search Legislation" feature at _
( e.tx.us/) .
Select 80(R) for the Legislature from the pull-down menu, and click on
"Word/Phrase," then enter "Darfur" and click on "Go."

Coming Tuesday
Colin Thomas-Jensen, the Africa Advocacy and Resource manager for the
International Crisis Group, on what the crisis in Darfur means to you
— and what you can do about it.

Adam Sterling is the executive director of the Sudan Divestment Task Force.

Sam Bell is the director of advocacy for the Genocide Intervention Network.

http://www.capitol.stat
www.capitol.state.tx.us_

Western Prelacy News in Brief – Jan. 5

January 5, 2007

PRESS RELEASE
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] <mailto:[email protected]>
Website: <;

HOLY MASS AT THE COLORADO AND LAS VEGAS PARISHES

On Sunday, January 7, Holy Mass will be offered at our parishes in Colorado
and Las Vegas on the occasion of the New Year and the Nativity and Epiphany
of our Lord, Jesus Christ.
Rev. Nareg Pehlivanian will be at the Armenian Apostolic Church
of Colorado and the Rocky Mountain Region where he will conduct Mass and
deliver the sermon.
Archpriest Fr. Khoren Habeshian will conduct Mass and deliver
the sermon at the Armenian Apostolic Church of Las Vegas.

ARMENIAN YOUTH FEDERATION
FAST FOR REMEMBRANCE

The Armenian Youth Federation, in collaboration with the United
Human Rights Council, has organized a four-day `Fast for Remembrance’ in
front of the Turkish Consulate in Los Angeles to raise awareness of the
Armenian Genocide. The fast began on the evening of Tuesday, January 2nd,
and will continue until the evening of Saturday, January 6th.
Rev. Ashod Kambourian, pastor of Holy Cross Cathedral, was
present at the start of the fast to offer prayers and encouragement to the
participants. Rev. Vazken Atmajian, pastor of St. Mary’s Church, will be
present at the end of the fast to offer blessings.

http://www.westernprelacy.org/&gt
www.westernprelacy.org

Russian President Wishes Happy New Year To Armenian Counterpart

RUSSIAN PRESIDENT WISHES HAPPY NEW YEAR TO ARMENIAN COUNTERPART

ARKA News Agency, Armenia
Dec 28 2006

YEREVAN, December 28. /ARKA/. Russian President Vladimir Putin has
addressed a message to his Armenian counterpart Robert Kocharyan.

In his message President Vladimir Putin pointed out that the
current year has been enriched by the Year of Armenia in Russia. The
large-scale humanitarian project has to a full extent contributed to
comprehensive development of Russian-Armenian strategic cooperation,
Putin said.

Combined efforts allowed the two nations to raise the level
of political dialogue and strengthen the foundations of mutual
understanding and mutually advantageous cooperation in all spheres,
says the Russian President’s message.

MCA-Armenia Receives Second Transfer Of Intitial Disbursement From M

MCA-ARMENIA RECEIVES SECOND TRANSFER OF INTITIAL DISBURSEMENT FROM MILLENNIUM CHALLENGE CORPORATION

Noyan Tapan
Dec 28 2006

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 28, NOYAN TAPAN. As it was scheduled, the Millennium
Challenge Corporation (MCC) on December 28 made the second transfer
of the intitial disbursement – 507,653 USD to the Millenium Challenge
Account – Armenia (MCA – Armenia) Program. The first transfer of 882
thousand USD was made earlier this month. The funds for Armenia’s
Millennium Challenge Compact expected to total USD 236 million over a
five year period are not disbursed as a lump sum to Armenia. They are
approved quarterly by the MCC and disbursed monthly into MCA-Armenia’s
bank account.

Preparation For Kars-Akhalkalaki-Tbilisi-Baku Railway Construction T

PREPARATION FOR KARS-AKHALKALAKI-TBILISI-BAKU RAILWAY CONSTRUCTION TO START IN MAY 2007

PanARMENIAN.Net
27.12.2006 14:20 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Azerbaijani Premier Artur Rasizade stated
yesterday that efforts to establish a transportation link between
Azerbaijan and Turkey are continuing, and that an agreement on the
Kars-Akhalkkalaki-Tbilisi-Baku railway will be signed in January. The
announcement of the planned agreement on the railway project came
during Georgian Prime Minister Zurab Noghaideli’s meeting with
Rasizade in Azerbaijan. Rasizade also announced that the construction
and preparation work for the Kars-Akhalkalaki-Tbilisi-Baku railway
project are planned to begin in May, reports The New Anatolian.

It’s worth reminding that U.S. President George Bush signed the bill
prohibiting financing construction of the railroad isolating Armenia
from economic and regional transport corridor.

Constitutional Law Union Weakens Not By Aram Karapetian’s Efforts Bu

CONSTITUTIONAL LAW UNION WEAKENS NOT BY ARAM KARAPETIAN’S EFFORTS BUT BECAUSE OF ITS SOME MEMBERS’ WORSHIP OF MONEY,
IS MENTIONED IN INFORMATION SPREAD BY NOR ZHAMANAKNER

Noyan Tapan
Dec 27 2006

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 27, NOYAN TAPAN. The "Nor Zhamanakner" (New
Times) party disproved the statement spread on December 26 by the
"Constitutional Law Union" party about the issue that "Nor Zhamanakner"
Chairman Aram Karapetian, whose activity assists implementation
of the authorities’ strivings, has his direct participation in the
shameful process of making to silence the Constitutional Law Union
party and its official newspaper." According to the information
of the "Nor Zhamanakner" party’s information service, A.Karapetian
"only responded Constitutional Law Union’s factual Chairman Hrant
Khachatrian’s letter and told the truth about the issue that 51
members of the "Nor Zhamanakner" party’s Talin structure took part
in the Constitutional Law Union’s congress under the guize of that
party’s delegates. "It is obvious that the Constitutional Law Union
party separated because of some people’s worship of money, dark
bargains and putting the 15-year frienship to auction," is said in
the information of the "Nor Zhamanakner" party.