Sarkozy sought to win Armenians’ sympathy ahead of presidential race

Sarkozy sought to win Armenians’ sympathy ahead of presidential race – Komersant
13:03 – 08.10.11

(Photocredit A1plus)

French President Nicolas Sarkozy’s visit to Yerevan can be
characterized as nothing more than an attempt to gain the
French-Armenians’ sympathy ahead of the presidential election in
France, a Russian analyst has said.

In an interview with the Komersant newspaper, Sergei Strokan spoke of
Sarkozy’s diminishing popularity in France, considering his visit to
Yerevan an important part of his South Caucasus tour.

“Nicolas Sarkozy, whose reputation has dropped to 26% and who is going
to struggle for re-election in next year’s presidential campaign,
began a tour to the South Caucasus, with the visit to Yerevan being a
key element of his initiative. And the most important thing for him
was to win the votes of the Armenian Diaspora,” he said, adding that
the French leader’s recent statement on the Armenia genocide was
mostly targeted to the electorate in his country, rather than Armenia
and Turkey per se.

As for the Turkish authorities criticism over the statement, the
expert noted that Sarkozy urges Turkey to do something that his
country has not implemented so far.

“As a matter of fact, the topic of the Armenian Genocide is very
complicated and ambiguous,” Strokan said, emphasizing that France has
not fully acknowledged the Genocide. “The lower house of the French
parliament has recognized the fact of the Genocide, but the upper
house has not done so. So Sarkozy is calling on Turkey to do something
his country has not fully implemented so far.”

Asked whether Sarkozy managed to gain the sympathy of Yerevan, he
said: “He did win the sympathy of Yerevan but let me note that his
principal target was the voter. But the latter’s response will be
moderate as the French electorate is sensible enough to be cheated
easily.”

Tert.am

Western Armenian is in crisis – Aram I

Western Armenian is in crisis – Aram I
11:39 – 08.10.11

Catholicos of the Great House of Cilicia Aram I finds that the Western
Armenian language is facing a serious crisis.

Speaking to the USA Armenian Life, the Catholicos expressed concerns
that the language may become extinct if no appropriate measures are
taken to preserve it. He addressed a recent conference dedicated to
Western Armenian, dwelling on the practical steps proposed as measures
towards preventing the loss of the language.

“As a practical step, the conference proposed the formation of a
Western Armenian Language Preservation Council through the initiative
of the Catholicosate of the Great House of Cilicia, with the
participation of individuals knowledgeable in Armenian studies who can
further the cause. We will conduct consultations on the makeup of the
Council after the completion of our Pontifical Visit to the Prelacy of
Western United States,” he said, stressing the importance of not
restricting the efforts towards the preservation of Western Armenian
to conferences.

“Organizing conferences and proposing ideas are not enough. It is
essential that we implement the ideas and execute the developed plans
within our communities. It is in this area that we fail. The
preservation of Western Armenian language must be carried out on local
levels – within the churches, schools, homes, and clubs. Therefore our
work has to be collective and an awareness of responsibility
shouldered by all,” the catholicos added.

Tert.am

Génocide arménien : Sarkozy devrait cesser de jouer les historiens

TURQUIE
Génocide arménien : Sarkozy devrait cesser de jouer les historiens
(ministre turc)

Le président français Nicolas Sarkozy ferait mieux de s’occuper des
problèmes des Français plutôt que de jouer les historiens sur la
question du génocide arménien, a estimé vendredi le ministre turc aux
Affaires européennes Egemen Bagis, réagissant à des déclarations de M.
Sarkozy.

`Il serait mieux, pour la sérénité en France, en Europe et dans le
monde que M. Sarkozy abandonne le rôle de l’historien et se creuse un
peu la tête pour sortir son pays du gouffre économique dans lequel il
se trouve et produise des projets pour l’avenir de l’Union
européenne`, a déclaré M. Bagis, cité par l’agence de presse Anatolie,
lors d’une visite à Sarajevo.

`Notre mission, en tant qu’hommes politiques, n’est pas de définir le
passé ou les événements du passé. C’est de définir l’avenir`, a
insisté le ministre, avant d’accuser le président français
d’`exploitation à l’approche de l’élection` présidentielle française,
de la thématique arménienne.

`Sarkozy a probablement adopté ce type d’approche après avoir été
effrayé par les derniers sondages politiques en France`, a-t-il
commenté.

Le chef de la diplomatie turque Ahmet Davutoglu a lui aussi dénoncé
`l’opportunisme politique` de `propos qui s’inscrivent totalement dans
le contexte électoral en France`.

`Ceux qui disent à la Turquie de se réconcilier avec son passé doivent
d’abord se regarder dans un miroir`, a-t-il asséné, faisant référence
au passé colonial de la France.

En visite à Erevan jeudi et vendredi, M. Sarkozy a appelé Ankara à une
`reconnaissance du génocide` dans un délai `assez bref`, avant la fin
de son mandat en mai 2012, en évoquant les massacres ottomans
perpétrés en 1915 et 1916 en Turquie, qui ont fait plusieurs centaines
de milliers de morts.

La Turquie reconnaît que 300.000 à 500.000 personnes ont péri lors de
cette période, mais, selon elle, elles n’ont pas été victimes d’une
campagne d’extermination mais du chaos des dernières années de
l’Empire ottoman.

Pour les Arméniens, il s’agit d’un `génocide` qui a fait plus d’un
million et demi de morts.

Présent à Ankara vendredi pour la signature d’un accord de coopération
sécuritaire, le ministre français de l’Intérieur Claude Guéant a
répondu aux questions de journalistes en les appelant à ne pas
surinterpréter les propos de son président.

`Il convient de s’en tenir strictement aux propos du président de la
République sans les interpréter`, a dit M. Guéant, affirmant que M.
Sarkozy `n’a pas évoqué de délai` pour qu’Ankara reconnaisse le
`génocide` arménien.

Interrogé sur le point de savoir comment réagirait la France si la
Turquie décidait de reconnaître `le génocide des Algériens`, M. Guéant
à répondu : `Le président de la République française est allé en
Algérie, il a eu des propos extrêmement forts sur ce moment douloureux
de notre passé entre l’Algérie et la France. Il a tourné la page`.

Avant son élection en 2007, le candidat Sarkozy avait promis aux
représentants de la forte communauté arménienne de France, estimée à
un demi-million de personnes, de soutenir le vote d’un texte de loi
spécifique réprimant la négation du génocide de 1915.

Mais ce texte a été enterré en mai faute d’une majorité au Sénat
(chambre haute) et surtout du soutien du gouvernement de Nicolas
Sarkozy, suscitant l’amertume des Arméniens de France et de leurs
partisans. L’élection présidentielle est prévue en France en avril et
mai.

samedi 8 octobre 2011,
Stéphane ©armenews.com

Génocide arménien : pour la Turquie, Sarkozy devrait balayer devant

atlasinfo.fr , France
7 oct 2011

Génocide arménien : pour la Turquie, Sarkozy devrait balayer devant sa porte

Vendredi 7 Octobre 2011 modifié le Vendredi 7 Octobre 2011 – 23:43

Le président français Nicolas Sarkozy, en déplacement dans le Caucase,
a fait escale en Arménie aujourd’hui. Arrivé à Erevan, il s’est rendu
au mémorial du génocide arménien de 1915 avec le président Serge
Sarkissian. Il a appelé la Turquie à “revisiter son histoire” et à
admettre sa réalité. En 2007, Nicolas Sarkozy avait promis à la
communauté arménienne de France, environ 500.000 personnes, de faire
voter une loi réprimant la négation du génocide arménien. Le texte n’a
jamais été voté faute d’une majorité au Sénat et du soutien du
gouvernement.

La contre-attaque n’a pas traîné. Ahmed Davutoglu, le ministre des
Affaires étrangères, suggère à Paris de commencer par balayer devant
sa porte. “Ceux qui ne sont pas capables d’affronter leur propre
histoire parce qu’ils ont mené une politique colonialiste pendant des
siècles, parce qu’ils traitent leurs étrangers comme des citoyens de
seconde zone, n’ont pas à donner une leçon d’histoire à la Turquie.”

Erevan considère qu’un million et demi d’Arméniens sont morts en 1915,
décimés par l’armée ottomane. La reconnaissance de ce massacre par
Ankara était l’une des promesses de campagne du candidat Sarkozy en
2007. Un débat qui n’a pas avancé depuis.

Vendredi 7 Octobre 2011 – 19:12

http://www.atlasinfo.fr/Genocide-armenien-pour-la-Turquie-Sarkozy-devrait-balayer-devant-sa-porte_a21386.html

Arménie : la volte-face de Sarkozy

Le Parisien, France
7 oct 2011

Arménie : la volte-face de Sarkozy

De notre envoyée spéciale à Erevan, Nathalie Schuck | Publié le
07.10.2011, 10h48 | Mise à jour : 11h01

Voilà qui lui aura peut-être remonté le moral à bientôt six mois d’une
présidentielle qui s’annonce très compliquée pour lui. Nicolas Sarkozy
est reparti ce vendredi matin d’Arménie avec, dans la tête, l’air de
«For me, Formidable» du grand Charles Aznavour, qu’a entonné pour lui
une chorale d’enfants.

Lors de sa visite à Erevan, le président n’a pas perdu 2012 de vue.
Pas question de laisser s’échapper les quelque 500 000 électeurs
d’origine arménienne vivant en France! Avant son élection, il leur
avait fait une promesse qui leur était allée droit au coeur : faire
voter définitivement la loi pénalisant la négation du génocide
arménien perpétré en 1915 et 1916 par le régime turc ottoman, qui fit,
selon Erevan, plus d’un million et demi de morts. Des massacres
toujours niés par la Turquie et que la France a reconnus en 2001 comme
«génocide». Mais voilà : Sarkozy élu, sa promesse s’est perdue dans
les sables…

Le texte réprimant le fait de nier ce génocide s’est ensablé au Sénat
en mai, faute de soutien de l’Elysée. Un conseiller du président
aurait même assuré aux autorités turques, dès fin mai 2007, que cette
loi «mourrait» au Sénat, selon un télégramme diplomatique révélé par
Wikileaks. Or, François Hollande, possible adversaire de Sarkozy, a
appelé ces derniers jours à faire voter ce texte avant les élections,
en profitant du basculement à gauche du Sénat.

Le «devoir de réserve» d’Aznavour

Sarkozy a donc profité de sa visite arménienne pour rectifier le tir.
Mettant la pression sur la Turquie, il l’a invitée à «regarder son
histoire en face» en reconnaissant enfin le génocide arménien. Une
invitation assortie d’une menace explicite : si Ankara n’accomplissait
pas ce «geste de paix» rapidement, il relancerait le processus
législatif au Parlement et ferait voter la loi d’ici la fin de son
mandat en mai. «Le temps n’est pas infini : 1915-2011, il me semble
que pour la réflexion, c’est suffisant!», a-t-il lancé à Ankara, en
précisant qu’il prendrait sa décision «dans un délai assez bref», sans
doute autour de la fin de l’année.

Dans l’avion qui l’emmenait en Arménie jeudi, le président, qui
s’oppose toujours à l’entrée d’Ankara dans l’Union européenne, avait
confié à ses invités : «J’ai fait mon deuil de bonnes relations avec
la Turquie.»

Présent vendredi à ses côtés à Erevan après avoir tenu la veille son
dernier concert à l’Olympia, Aznavour s’est gardé de tout commentaire
sur cette volte-face présidentielle, invoquant un «devoir de réserve».
Pas dupe, le chanteur, porte-drapeau des Arméniens de France, ne veut
pas être récupéré politiquement: «Personne ne saura pour qui j’ai voté
(en 2012, NDLR), comme d’habitude!» A bon entendeur…
LeParisien.fr

http://www.leparisien.fr/election-presidentielle-2012/candidats/armenie-la-volte-face-de-sarkozy-07-10-2011-1642666.php

Books: The First Lesbian Science Fiction Novel, Published in 1906

Oct 7 2011

The First Lesbian Science Fiction Novel, Published in 1906

Like most genres of popular literature, science fiction has been slow
to present lesbians in a positive light. During the late 19th century
and early 20th century, lesbians were entirely unrepresented in
science fiction, with homosexuality an act only depraved men engaged
in. Which makes Gregory Casparian’s The Anglo-American Alliance. A
Serio-Comic Romance and Forecast of the Future (1906), the first
lesbian science fiction novel, all the more notable.
Casparian (1855-1947) was a Turkish Armenian who emigrated to the
United States in 1877 after making himself unwelcome in Turkey as an
officer in the Armenian army. He settled in New York and became an
artist, painter, and photoengraver for an engineering firm. Little
else can be found about him, but he must have been an interesting and
thoughtful man, for The Anglo-American Alliance, his only book, is
remarkably progressive sexually.

The Anglo-American Alliance, set in the future of 1960, has two plots.
The first is a detailed history of a 20th century in which the United
States and the United Kingdom are the major powers on Earth,
colonialism is still in force (Great Britain having colonized central
Africa in the 1920s), and technology has advanced in a limited
fashion: prenatal sex determination and suspended animation are now
possible, a germicide for laziness has been developed, benefitting
“the negroes of the Southern States” [sic], and an enormous telescope
has discovered “vegetation and moving objects” on Mars and Venus. A
Persian astronomer, Abou Shimshek, has found an “ice lens” which
allowed him to discover a new planet on which live a race of
telepathic, furred, electric-wheel-riding aliens.

Full size The second is the romance between Aurora Cunningham, the
daughter of Great Britain’s Secretary of Foreign Affairs,” and
Margaret MacDonald, the daughter of an American senator. Aurora is
beautiful, blonde, blue-eyed, gentle, and has a speech impediment: “a
typical English maiden.” Margaret is Aurora’s “very antithesis. She
was somewhat taller, with sparkling black eyes and raven hair, of
imposing dignity and carriage, but withal the equal of Aurora in the
matter of natural gifts and accomplishments. She had, moreover, a
captivating frivolity and aggressiveness which almost bordered on
masculinity.” And she’s good at the kinds sports young women are fond
of, which sometimes involve donning armor.

The two meet at the Diana Young Ladies’ Seminary in Cornwall and fall
immediately in love: “they were drawn to each other with a mysterious
sympathy which attracted the attention of outsiders and furnished
ample excuse for comment. Directly after their first meeting they had
become inseparable companions and confidants.” But as time passed this
strange attachment grew so marked and its manifestations so alarmingly
flagrant that they themselves became aware of its dangerous
consequences.

Full size They realized that if they gave free license to indiscreet
emotional demonstrations class room or in public, not only would their
actions not be tolerated by the College faculty and cause their
expulsion from the Seminary, but they would also be subjected to
unendurable ostracism by the rest of the students. But still worse was
the confronting fact that they would undoubtedly become the topic of
unpleasant notoriety through the publicity given by the sensational
press. They had therefore the good judgment to pledge themselves to
control their emotions in the presence of class, and to exercise
wide-awake circumspection in their behavior in public and towards the
opposite sex.

Casparian further describes how Aurora and Margaret were the only
women in the Seminary who “refrained from making an alliance” with any
of the “gallant swains from the Academy.”

Now, passionate pairings among women were not unknown when Casparian
wrote An Anglo-American Alliance. Many Victorian women, both American
and English, formed “romantic friendships” or “passionate
friendships,” and a number of those became “Boston marriages,” in
which both women lived together, financially independent, and shared a
house. Such pairings were very occasionally represented in
late-Victorian fiction, though any lesbianism was absent or kept only
as a covert subtext. But Casparian went far beyond that.

Aurora and Margaret are on the verge of graduating from the Seminary,
which will mean their separation, a prospect which both loathes. So
they make “a solemn compact, bound by an inviolable oath, not to make
any alliance with any suitor whatever and to remain united to each
other in souls until death should them part.” Aurora goes further, and
in a “fatuous ardor of love” writes “an impromptu poem of fealty,
entitled `Wilt Thou Remember Thy Vow?’ It revealed the intensity of
their emotions, their utter subjugation and mutual abandonment of will
and desire each to the other….”

Full size Aurora returns home after graduation, and Margaret faints
after she leaves. She is brought to the famous Hindu “Vivisectionist
and Re-Incarnator” Dr. Hyder Ben Raaba, who discovers why Margaret is
so distraught, and helps her recover. A few months later, after
Margaret has inherited her dead father’s wealth, she receives a card
from Dr. Ben Raaba, asking after her health. Margaret then has a
brilliant idea, which Dr. Ben Raaba agrees to: a “mental and physical
metamorphosis” which transforms Margaret into a man. Margaret, now
“Spencer Hamilton,” becomes a famous musician, woos and wins Aurora,
and the pair live happily ever after.

An Anglo-Indian Alliance would have been better (and extraordinarily
progressive) had Aurora and Margaret lived happily ever after as
women, it must be admitted. Nonetheless, An Anglo-Indian Alliance is
the first science fiction novel with a pair of lesbian lovers as
heroines, one of whom becomes science fiction’s first transgender
hero.

All images taken from the original novel, which is available for free
download from Google Books.

http://io9.com/5847805/the-first-lesbian-science-fiction-novel-published-in-1906
www.io9.com

Books: Spooky inspiration behind ‘The Night Strangers’

CNN Living
Oct 7 2011

Spooky inspiration behind ‘The Night Strangers’

By Christian DuChateau, CNN

(CNN) — Witches, ghosts, a haunted house and a deadly plane crash:
“The Night Strangers” has all the hallmarks of a good ghost story, but
bestselling author Chris Bohjalian has put his own 21st-century spin
on the supernatural genre in his frightening new novel.

In the story, the haunted house is a charming fixer-upper in rural New
Hampshire. Don’t forget to ask the real estate agent about the
mysterious basement door, nailed shut with 39 6-inch-long carriage
bolts.

The witches are self-proclaimed herbalists who go to great lengths to
find the organic ingredients for their feel-good tinctures; just don’t
call them “potions.”

The ghosts are the victims of a commuter plane crash on Lake
Champlain, but don’t look for a “Miracle on the Hudson” finish to this
water landing.

At the heart of this creepy yarn is a not-quite-typical American
family: Chip and Emily Linton and their twin 10-year-old daughters.
Chip is an airline pilot with a bad case of survivor’s guilt. Emily is
suspicious of her new neighbors’ intentions and her husband’s sanity.
While the twins try to fit in at their new school, one of the young
girls begins to hear voices.

With more than a dozen novels under his belt, “The Night Strangers”
marks new territory for Bohjalian, who’s tackled domestic violence in
“Secrets of Eden,” a World War II love story in “Skeletons at the
Feast,” and mental illness and “The Great Gatsby” in “The Double
Bind.”

CNN recently spoke to Bohjalian (pronounced Bow-jail-yen) and the
real-life inspiration behind “The Night Strangers.” The following is
an edited transcript:

CNN: What was the spark behind “The Night Strangers”?

Bohjalian: Along one of the foundation walls of the basement of my
house in Vermont is a door. It’s about five and a half feet tall and
three feet wide and made of rough wooden planks. My guess is that it
was added at some point after the 1898 Victorian above it was first
constructed.

When my wife and I moved into the house, it was nailed shut. That’s
right: nailed. There was a moldy pile of coal beside it, and so I
convinced myself the door was merely a part of an old coal chute.
Sure, I never found the exterior entrance to the chute, but that was a
detail. Perhaps it was under a porch added at some point in the 1940s.

A few years later, in the early 1990s, I finally pulled the door open.
The project demanded a crowbar, a wrench and at one point an ax. After
hours of toil, behind that door I found … nothing. There was a
slender cubicle the height and width of the door and maybe 18 inches
deep. The walls were made of wood, and behind them was nothing but
earth. In no way did it resemble a coal chute. It was more like a
closet — or a crypt behind which you might wall up a neighbor alive.

So I nailed the door shut and made a mental note to steer clear of
that corner of the basement for as long as we lived in the house.
Nevertheless, on some level I understood even then that the basement
door was going to lead to a novel.

Now, it would take an airplane ditching one January afternoon in 2009
in the Hudson River before I would begin to understand what was going
to exist behind that door. Like many thousands of other people, I
raced to my television set and watched the evacuation of US Airways
Flight 1549 as it occurred, staring enrapt as passengers stood on the
wings and the plane floated amidst the waves.

Perhaps it was the shape of the jet’s cabin doors, but at that moment
I thought of the door in my basement.

The next morning, I wrote the following sentence: “The door was
presumed to have been the entry to a coal chute, a perfectly
reasonable assumption since a small hillock of damp coal sat moldering
before it.”

And so begins “The Night Strangers.”

CNN: There’s a plane crash in your book, reminiscent of the “Miracle
on the Hudson.” You went to great lengths to research plane crashes
for the novel?

Bohjalian: I did. I read a disturbing number of black box transcripts
from doomed airliners, watched a lot of terrifying NTSB computer
animations of crashes and interviewed pilots. But the most important
thing I did to add authenticity to the novel was to visit Survival
Systems in Groton, Connecticut.

There I climbed into a flight suit, got strapped inside a Modular
Egress Training Simulator and lowered into a 100,000-gallon tank of
water. I was rolled 180 degrees so I was upside-down. The point of
this, other than determining if my flight suit should have a diaper,
was to get a taste of what it’s like to exit a plane that has just
crashed in the water.

The METS is a cylinder that resembles an aircraft cabin. It has
interchangeable exits, so Survival Systems can replicate egress from
most types of fixed- and rotary-wing aircraft. The device is lowered
into the tank, submerged underwater and then rolled upside down or to
an off-angle, depending upon the scenario. The ceiling can be set on
fire because, let’s face it, when your plane or chopper has become a
lawn dart, there’s a chance that something is ablaze.

The day I was dunked, there were three National Guardsmen being
trained as well. I had an instructor in the simulator with me, and
there were divers in the water around it to make sure that all of us
got out with, worst case, a snootful of water. Altogether, I was
dunked three times, twice rolled until I was upside-down. Escaping the
simulator the two times I was strapped into a seat and had to push out
exit windows while upside-down were particularly satisfying.

CNN: Without giving away too much, your book features ghosts and
witches, a first for you. What prompted you to write about the
supernatural?

Bohjalian: If you look at my personal library, you will notice that it
ranges from Henry James to Steig Larsson, from Margaret Atwood to Max
Hastings. There’s Jane Austen and Tom Perrotta and volumes of letters
from Civil War privates. It’s pretty eclectic. And there’s Shirley
Jackson and Stephen King and Edgar Allan Poe.

The Poe is a paperback I bought when I was a boy. It cost 45 cents
when it was brand new. It’s a little more squat and a little more wide
than a traditional mass market edition, and has a red moon and a raven
on the cover. I wrote my name atop the first page with a blue Magic
Marker, the ink bleeding through the thin sheet onto page three, and
the letters are evidence that my mother was on to something when she
would insist that our dog had better handwriting than I did.

It is one of the only books from my childhood I still own. I loved Poe
when I was a boy. I loved all ghost stories. So I guess it was only a
matter of time before I wrote one. Moreover, I hope I will never write
the same book twice.

So, why a ghost story? Well, I love them. They’re fun to read — and,
yes, fun to write. And when I imagined the subject matter of a plane
crash and a pilot’s post-traumatic stress disorder, ghosts seemed as
good a way in as any.

CNN: What’s next for you?

Bohjalian: I just finished a love story set amidst the Armenian
Genocide in 1915 and the World War I battle of Gallipoli. A young
Boston graduate from Mount Holyoke and an Armenian engineer are two of
the main characters. It’s called “The Sandcastle Girls.” I am
half-Armenian, and three of my four Armenian great-grandparents died
in the Genocide, and so I found the research particularly wrenching.

http://www.cnn.com/2011/10/07/living/chris-bohjalian-author-interview/

Sports: The Originator of the Modern Boxing Belt Turns 90

BoxingNews24.com
Oct 7 2011

The Originator of the Modern Boxing Belt Turns 90

October 7th, 2011

October 4 – Union City, NJ – The past weekend was one of great joy for
the Sahaghian family and Sartonk Designs, which celebrated Ardash
Sahaghian’s 90th birthday. Surrounded by loved ones, the pioneering
craftsman enjoyed dinner and dancing on Saturday night at a local
Mediterranean restaurant. Familiar Armenian and Greek tunes brought
the bright-eyed Sahaghian’s lively spirit to the dance floor with
fellow patrons.

The weekend was topped off with a trip to a farm in upstate New York,
where the family spent hours walking through orchards, picking apples,
and enjoying sweet desserts. The time spent on the farm harked back to
Sahaghian’s childhood in his native Romania, where he went fruit
picking with his brother and friends. Now, at 90, a little less agile
but still full of vigor, he and his wife, Nazeli, picked enough apples
and tomatoes to give out to family and friends. `It was heart-warming
to see them so joyful, walking arm-in-arm, taking in the fresh air.
They got lost in the fun of the experience, forgetting both age and
ailments,’ commented Edward S. Majian, Ardash and Nazeli’s grandson
and President of Sartonk Designs.

Of course, the weekend could not have been complete without
conversations about work. As the originator of modern championship
boxing belts over three decades ago, the elder Sahaghian still
consults Sartonk Designs, providing valuable insight and experience.
`So, this order you’re working on must be completed in a few days,
right?’ asked Ardash, while savoring his slice of strawberry
shortcake. `Absolutely, but let’s enjoy the cake right now,’ replied
Edward with a smile, knowing his grandfather’s unparalleled work ethic
all too well.

The Sahaghian family extends their deep appreciation to all the
heartfelt birthday wishes they’ve received from friends in the boxing
community!

http://www.boxingnews24.com/2011/10/the-originator-of-the-modern-boxing-belt-turns-90/

Sports: UEFA Euro 2012 Qualifying: Armenia Beat Macedonia 4-1

SB Nation
Oct 7 2011

UEFA Euro 2012 Qualifying: Armenia Beat Macedonia 4-1 To Take
Temporary Lead In Group B

by Kirsten Schlewitz

Congrats to Armenia for recording their first-ever home victory
against Macedonia — and a decisive one at that, winning 4-1 to
temporarily take the lead in Group B. The home side had already
recorded two goals, from Marcos Pizzelli and Henrikh Mkhitarian, when
Macedonia captain Velice Sumulikoski was handed a red card in the 54th
minute. After that, there was really no coming back for the visitors,
although they did manage a consolation goal from Vance Sikov, who,
coincidentally I’m sure, also has the fewest number of letters in his
name of any starters in the Macedonia side.

It looked like the match would finish 3-1 before Macedonia keeper
Martin Bogatinov elected to sit down rather than, you know, save,
allowing Artur Sarkisov to score a fourth in added time. Now the
pressure’s on for Russia, who travel to Slovakia, and Ireland, who
host Andorra. Any mistakes and Armenia will likely make the playoffs.

http://www.sbnation.com/soccer/2011/10/7/2475478/uefa-euro-2012-qualifying-armenia-beat-macedonia-4-1-to-take

Sports: Armenia have all to play for

The Sunday Times (London)
October 9, 2011 Sunday
Edition 1; Ireland

Armenia have all to play for

One of Europe’s rapidly improving sides will provide a stiff test. By Paul Rowan

by Paul Rowan

THE Armenia manager, Vardan Minasyan, earns in the region of
(EURO)50,000 per year for two jobs – he also manages the Armenian club
side Pyunik – and such is his lack of airs and graces that he was
happy to let the midnight hour pass in Yerevan one night last week
talking about the unexpected emergence of his small nation as a force.

A useful starting point is the under-21 game in Tallaght in March 2010
between the Republic of Ireland and Armenia when Don Givens’ side lost
2-1 after being hammered 4-1 in Yerevan a few months’ earlier. Those
results jolted Irish football and the FAI, but also convinced Minasyan
that the youngsters were worth the gamble of drafting into the senior
team. About five of them should play in Dublin again on Tuesday.

“I’m surprised about how well we have done because I’ve been trying to
build a new team by changing the generations and that was the main
thing,” Minasyan says . “I wanted to improve the performance level,
but I wasn’t expecting such good results.”

The groundwork was laid by the former Sunderland player Ian
Porterfield, who died of cancer in 2007 and Minasyan, a member of the
backroom staff at the time, has proved himself an able operator since
taking the helm. He didn’t panic when Armenia were beaten 1-0 by
Ireland in the opening game of the group in Yerevan last September,
conceding an opportunist goal in the 75th minute by substitute Keith
Fahey after dominating for long periods.

“We were a little bit unlucky, but we were much younger and lacking
that little bit of experience and some of the players felt the
pressure because it was their first senior competitive game,” Minasyan
says. “But they have grown in belief and they trust each other.”

The defeat of Slovakia at home a year ago gave them the belief that
they could beat anybody in the group but few others took notice until
the return fixture against Vladimir Weiss’s team last month when they
travelled to Zilina and won 4-0, producing the most dynamic
performance in Group B so far.

“In the first half we were lucky because Slovakia had two or three
good chances but in the second half we played much better and we
matched them physically, which was very pleasing.”

Minasyan admits that this is an area where Armenia might struggle
against Ireland on Tuesday, but unless Ireland give Armenia the
respect they deserve they are in for a rude awakening. Armenia play
more on the counterattack when away from home but the days where they
would pack players around the 18-yard box and invite teams to stick
four or five past them are over. Like Russia in Dublin a year ago,
Armenia will have five players in midfield – they favour a 4-2-3-1
formation – and Minasyan, 37, is happy to reference the best side in
the world as an influence.

“We base our style on Arsenal and Barcelona and the way I want us to
play. I want us to be positive. We are not so strong physically, but
good technically. We cannot play like the Scandinavians, or the
British.”

In a country whose development has been hampered by a series of
disasters both natural and man-made, formal training has finally been
organised with the establishment of well-run academies at the two big
clubs in Yerevan, Minasyan’s Pyunik and Bananz Yerevan. Still the
domestic league – consisting of eight clubs, most of them in and
around Yerevan – is not strong enough to support the national team.

“We sold four players from Pyunik in the summer who all play for
national team. We want to make our national team stronger so we need
these players to play abroad.

They have moved to Ukraine where the league is much stronger.”

There are other common factors with Ireland which Minasyan points out.
“You fought against the British and if you see our history we are also
a small country who have fought a lot against our neighbours. Ireland
always fight and they are good under pressure and we need that
fighting spirit.”

There the similarities end and Tuesday offers a fascinating clash of
styles and plenty of scary moments for Ireland fans.

ON TV TODAY Republic of Ireland v Armenia 6pm RTE2, kick-off 6.45pm 6.30pm SS1