CV Church presents "History of Iraqi Armenian Churches" on Sunday 9/

Armenian Apostolic Church of Crescenta Valley-Education Committee
6252 Honolulu Ave.
Lacrescenta, CA. 91214
Tel: 818-244-9645
E-mail: [email protected]

Under the auspices of Archbishop Moushegh Mardirossian, Prelate of the
Western Prelacy, the CV Church Education Committee is organizing an
event dedicated to the history of Iraqi-Armenian churches. This special
event will take place at the Armenian Apostolic Church of Crescenta
Valley inside the Western Prelacy’s `Dikran and Zaruhi Der
Ghazarian” Hall, at 6252 Honolulu Ave., in La Crescenta, California on
Sunday, September 7, 2014 at 1:15 pm. There will also be a special
requiem presided by Archbishop Moushegh Mardirossian, at 11AM during the
church liturgy, in memory of Iraqi-Armenian clergymen and church
benefactors who participated in and contributed to the construction and
maintenance of churches.

This event will cover a variety of topics such as: the establishment of
churches due to Armenian immigration into Iraq, the history of such
churches throughout Iraq, and their spiritual impact on Armenian life.
The program will be followed by Archbishop Moushegh Mardirossian’s
message and will also include musical entertainment.

The small minority of Armenians in Iraq have established communities in
the cities of Baghdad, Mosul, Basra, Kirkuk, Zakou, Arbil and Dohuk.
Iraqi-Armenians are predominantly members of the Armenian Apostolic
Church with a majority of their parishioners attending St. Gregory
Illuminator Armenian Apostolic Church, the main Church located in
Baghdad. Several other Armenian Apostolic Churches have been established
in different regions of Iraq. The Armenian Catholic Church maintains a
presence in Baghdad, as does the Armenian Evangelical Church of Baghdad.
Armenians traditionally have played an important role in Iraqi society,
particularly in medicine, science, literature, music and all arts in
general.

The roots of the Armenian community in Iraq can be traced back to 1604
when Shah Abbas forced relocation of the Armenians to Iran, some of whom
subsequently emigrated and settled in Iraq. During the Armenian Genocide
in the early twentieth century, Iraq became home to 25,000 Armenians
fleeing persecution in their homeland. The construction of churches is a
characteristic rooted within the Armenian people. In both Armenia and
the Diaspora, churches became priority as they were a means of eternal
salvation.

We would like to invite everyone to be present at this event. There will
be a reception prior to the program. Admission is free and open to the
public. There will also be complimentary valet parking. Please contact
us at [email protected] if
you would like to financially sponsor or contribute to this event or
upcoming monthly lectures. This will help cover costs and sustain future
activities.

For further information please contact Arous Melkonian at
(818) 399-0321, Nazar Ohanian at
(818) 294-0819, Rafi Garabedian at
(818) 415-3550 or Berj Zadoian at
(818) 400-4597.

12-Year education must be compulsory for all, says minister

12-Year education must be compulsory for all, says minister

15:09 * 25.08.14

Armenia’s minister of education and science announced on Monday a plan
for switchover to the 12-year compulsory education system.

At a news conference devoted to the 100th day of his re-appointment,
Armen Ashotyan said that a relevant bill has been already put on the
National Assembly’s agenda to be considered in detail.

Referring to the past statistics, the minister noted that 4,000-5,000
young people annually dropped out of school in the country after
completing the nine-year basic education.

“We all know that a citizen with such a qualification will have
difficulty on the job market in future,” Ashotyan said.

He further unveiled a plan for launching a credit system in high
schools, noting that the method has already proved its efficiency at
institutions of higher learning.

Ashotyan also spoke of a new loan project, noting that their next
reform will focus on the re-equipment of high schools.

“Some 17-20 schools will be thoroughly repaired,” the minister said,
adding that their selection will be based on a professional evaluation
of school buildings, and geographic balance (to have at least one
school repaired in each region of Armenia).

Ashotyan added that the loan program also envisages supplying
universities with modern laboratory equipment.

The minister said that they have are planning to develop a joint
project with the Ministry of Defense and the volunteer union Yerkrapah
(defender of land) in an effort to elaborate a concept aimed to
promote the younger generation’s patriotic upbringing.

Armenian News – Tert.am

Karabakh will have better infrastructures by 2015, says parliament s

Karabakh will have better infrastructures by 2015, says parliament speaker

17:31 * 25.08.14

The president of Nagorno-Karabakh’s (Artsakh) National Assembly says
he expects the country to have better and more developed
infrastructures by 2015, the year which marks the 100th anniversary of
the Armenian Genocide.

Speaking to reporters who visited the second Armenian republic last
week, Ashot Ghulyan particularly stressed the importance of the
ongoing construction of the highway connecting city of Martakert with
Armenia’s Vardenis town (Gegharkunik region). He also addressed the
existing problems in the country and the activities accomplished in
the past couple of years.

At what stage is Artsakh’s re-population process? What achievements do you have?

The re-population continues, as there isn’t any special project to
establish timeframes of several years to accomplish the process. We
must work towards implementing a re-population program in Artsakh,
always having the demographic development plan on the agenda. We
simply have to admit that re-population is never a self-driven
process. Our desire is to simultaneously organize several thousand
people’s re-population, but the economic and financial resources
aren’t big enough to allow us to implement such large-scale
[projects]. Several scores of people settle in Artsakh every year. A
similar program was also implemented for the re-population of
Syrian-Armenians.

What’s your point of view on the re-population of Yezidis in Artsakh?
Is it likely to change demography?

It is necessary to work in that direction without talking too much.
The authorities of Karabakh have never ruled out that possibility, and
I don’t think the volumes will be that [big] to have any influence.

What about the on-going activities in the road-development sector?

That’s a sensitive issue; we have been implementing very big strategic
projects since 1994-1995. As for the roads connecting villages with
one another, those are continuing activities, so we annually invest
money in that. I believe the construction of the Vardenis-Martakert
highway will be of considerable help in the coming couple of years.
Given that all the villages there are connected to that highway,
that’s likely to resolve big infrastructure problems. By 2015, we will
have a more developed system in Artsakh in terms of the
infrastructures. But that should not be thought the end point of our
activities, as we are also planning the launch of a power system
connecting Armenia with Artsakh.

What assistance projects are being implemented for young families?
Have there been any changes in the population records?

The projects under way are aimed at boosting young families’ birth
rate. For every newborn child, a bank account is opened by the Artsakh
authorities. For every sixth child, the family receives a new
apartment or a separate house. And we now think about doing the same
for every fifth child. Our projects are enough to enable young
families to have [many] children. The population hasn’t decreased; it
just has been relatively low compared to the past couple of years. I
cannot say we don’t have the emigration problem, but its volumes are
not big enough to raise any concerns. Most leave to work [abroad].

The journalists’ visit to Artsakh was organized upon the initiative of
the Holy See of St Echmiadzin and World Vision Armenia.

http://www.tert.am/en/news/2014/08/25/ghulian/

Armenia submits application to ECtHR to engage in Dogu Perinçek’s ca

Armenia submits application to ECtHR to engage in DoÄ?u Perinçek’s case
as 3rd party

14:26, 25 August, 2014

YEREVAN, AUGUST 25, ARMENPRESS. The Government of the Republic of
Armenia has submitted an official application to the European Court of
Human Rights to be engaged as a third party in DoÄ?u Perinçek’s case.
Christine Melkonyan, the Press
Spokesperson of the Prosecutor General of the Republic of Armenia
Gevorg Kostanyan, stated about this in a conversation with
`Armenpress’. Among other things she stated that the deadline of
submitting the applications is August 26 of the current year and
Armenia uses its right and has already sent the relevant documents to
Strasbourg.

Previously it was reported that on July 15, in a conversation with
`Armenpress’, the Prosecutor General of the Republic of Armenia Gevorg
Kostanyan stated that the Armenian side is serious and decisive and
probably an advocates’ group will be created to record success in the
case.

http://armenpress.am/eng/news/773636/armenia-submits-application-to-ecthr-to-engage-in-do%C4%9Fu-perin%C3%A7eks-case-as-3rd-party.html

President congratulates Uruguay’s President on Independence Day

Armenia’s President congratulates Uruguay’s President on Independence Day

13:36, 25 August, 2014

YEREVAN, AUGUST 25, ARMENPRESS. The President of the Republic of
Armenia Serzh Sargsyan has sent a congratulatory address to the
President of the Oriental Republic of Uruguay José Alberto Mujica
Cordano on the occasion of the country’s Independence Day. The Mass
Media and Public Relations Department of the President’s Office
informed “Armenpress” about this.

http://armenpress.am/eng/news/773627/armenias-president-congratulates-uruguays-president-on-independence-day.html

A quarter of Russians consider Nagorno-Karabakh as an independent st

A quarter of Russians consider Nagorno-Karabakh as an independent state

YEREVAN, August 25 / ARKA /. Almost a quarter of Russians consider
Nagorno-Karabakh as an independent state, according to the findings of
a survey conducted by the Russian Public Opinion Research Center.

RIA Novosti news agency reports that the study has also showed that
56% of Russians favor a peaceful settlement of the Karabakh conflict,
and only 14% of respondents believe that it can not be solved without
the use of force. Some 30% of respondents had no idea about how it
could be resolved.

At the same time, some 45% of Russians were aware of the heightened
tension in the conflict zone a month ago with 10% of respondents
having detailed information about the situation, while 35% had only
heard about the heightened tension.Also 52% of respondents first heard
about the mounting tension in the conflict zone during the survey.

In the latest upsurge in fighting on the Karabakh “line of contact,”
which followed the July 31 killing of two Armenian soldiers in an
Azerbaijani incursion the latter’s forces lost 25 soldiers. The
Armenian size’s death toll was six servicemen. -0-

http://arka.am/en/news/politics/a_quarter_of_russians_consider_nagorno_karabakh_as_an_independent_state/#sthash.hJh4Jkw6.dpuf

No pressure placed on Armenia for speedy CU accession – president

No pressure placed on Armenia for speedy CU accession – president

YEREVAN, August 25. /ARKA/. The allegations that Armenia has been
under pressure to join the Customs Union at a breathtaking pace are
not true, Sargsyan said at his meeting with young reporters at
Baze-2014 youth gathering in Tsakhkadzor on Sunday.

The entire accession process is the outcome of Armenia’s actions, but
not someone else’s wishes or requests, the president said.

“It is an important period for development of our country. A lot will
change in the country. I have no problems – either with those
criticizing me or the ones making every effort to support this idea
(of accession to the Customs Union – edit.). Time will show and people
will see who was right”, the president said.

Sargsyan somehow agreed that not all CU member-countries may be happy
about Armenia’s accession.

“We are a small country, a country with problems, and, naturally, our
accession may create problems also for the member-countries”, Sargsyan
said. Yet, they could have vetoed Armenia’s accession if they were
against, the president said.

The Russian government approved the agreement on Armenia’s accession
to the Eurasian Economic Union and submitted it for president’s
approval on August 14. The agreement was developed by the Eurasian
Economic Commission in cooperation with the authorities of Russia,
Belarus, Kazakhstan and Armenia. -0–

http://arka.am/en/news/politics/no_pressure_placed_on_armenia_for_speedy_cu_accession_president/#sthash.gq4Edlnq.dpuf

Bloomington-founded WTTV continues to grow, change

The Olathenews, KS
Aug 24 2014

Bloomington-founded WTTV continues to grow, change

By JEFF LAFAVE
The Herald-Times

BLOOMINGTON, Ind. WTTV’s television legacy started with a converted
drugstore, Herman B Wells and a puppet show.

And now, after nearly 65 years on the air, Bloomington’s former
homegrown station will be the host of some marquee TV moments,
including David Letterman’s final “Late Show,” with its new network
affiliation.

Tribune Broadcasting Indianapolis LLC announced Aug. 11 that its
formerly Bloomington-based station — and Indiana’s second-ever TV
station — will replace WISH-TV as the CBS affiliate in Indianapolis as
of Jan. 1, 2015. It will show longtime favorites such as “60 Minutes”
and “The Price is Right” on a daily basis, as well as CBS’
presentation of Super Bowl 50.

The programming move for the current CW affiliate, however, is just
the latest in WTTV’s curvy, yet wholesome, history.

It all started in the careful hands of engineer Sarkes Tarzian, an
immigrant from Turkish Armenia, and his wife, Mary, in the late 1940s,
The Herald-Times reported ( ).

As electronics began to capture the attention of postwar America,
Sarkes Tarzian, the chief engineer of Bloomington’s RCA plant,
manufactured table-model and car radios.

Together, the ambitious couple had saved $50,000 at a time when many
Americans were seeking normalcy and long-term direction. Mary was
pushing Sarkes to start his own business.

By the end of the decade, the young couple would own a TV station, an
AM radio station and businesses manufacturing semiconductors, TV
tuners and broadcast equipment.

“It’s amazing that two people who weren’t so well-off were able to
save that much money,” said son Tom Tarzian, current president and CEO
of Sarkes Tarzian Inc.

Tom, born in 1946, essentially grew up alongside WTTV. He and sister
Patricia were raised by parents who also were attempting to curate an
entire TV station. They saw the struggle firsthand.

“They had to be thrifty with money they didn’t really have,” Tom said.

The decision was sudden, but decisive: Sarkes came home one day and
told Mary it was time for their mutual dream to become a reality.

“Let’s talk about it,” Mary said — but Sarkes had already quit his
position at RCA.

They would set up base camp in an empty storefront with Sarkes as a
special consulting engineer. He manufactured switch-type tuners to
keep up with video’s broadcast boom, and became responsible for an
estimated 35 percent of output of electrical equipment, such as
selenium rectifiers, in the U.S.

His ingenuity kept overhead low en route to building the family TV
station. Vintage television blog “Faded Signals” estimates that Sarkes
Tarzian was able to re-create a $300 microphone boom for a tenth of
the price.

The original transmitting antenna for WTTV, Tom Tarzian says, was at
least partly made from household guttering. Whatever did the trick,
Sarkes Tarzian’s crew of 10 do-it-alls was up for the challenge.

“To these engineers,” Sarkes Tarzian told The Herald-Telephone
newspaper upon the channel’s debut, “I have only the highest of
praise, since they made most of the major equipment to be used in the
operation of WTTV.”

On Nov. 11, 1949, WTTV — “Tarzian TeleVision” — broadcast its
inaugural show from a converted drugstore at 535 S. Walnut St.,
according to H-T archives. Today, that’s the street address of an
Arby’s fast-food restaurant.

Bloomingtonians tuned in to Channel 10 promptly at 7:30 p.m. to see
the new sensation. H-T records indicate that 96 residents bought their
first TV set that week.

Viewers were welcomed by Indiana’s U.S. Sen. Homer E. Capehart,
legendary Indiana University President Herman B Wells, Bloomington
Mayor Thomas L. Lemon, the city school superintendent H.E. Binford,
and station owners Sarkes and Mary Tarzian, all in the studio to
dedicate the channel, according to H-T archives.

And then, at 8 p.m., NBC’s nationally syndicated puppet show, “Kukla,
Fran and Ollie,” promptly took over.

The pioneer Armistice Day broadcast lasted from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m.,
rounding out with Big Ten football highlights and a feature on the
lumber industry — then promptly signed off for the night.

WTTV had reached the two-hour broadcast minimum established by the FCC
for that era, and the station would continue this broadcast minimum in
its early years, operating from 7 to 9 p.m., Monday through Saturday,
with extended hours for sports.

The station also used coverage of Bloomington High School and
University High School basketball games as a dynamic selling point.
Families could see a Hoosier tradition in their own homes for the
first time. The game between UHS and Ellettsville, on Nov. 22, 1949,
became the first local sports match shown on Bloomington TV.

“I’m sure it was very exciting for Bloomington in those days,” Tom Tarzian said.

Even the NCAA got in on the action, when a road game for IU’s men’s
basketball team against Illinois further developed the station’s
capabilities. WTTV used microwave hops to get the signal from
Champaign to Chicago, to two or three locations in Ohio, then
Cincinnati, and finally back to Bloomington for the Hoosier Nation.

The same ingenuity was used in local broadcasts: A cable strung across
the street to the nearby high school would later transmit local sports
games, student plays and more. “Meet Your Teacher,” where students
interviewed their instructors, became a city favorite.

Tom Tarzian, only 3 years old when the station was founded, recalls
being a so-called “plant rat.”

“If you found some people around today, they’d tell you I was a real
pest,” Tom said. “You’d see the tuners and smell the solder. You’d go
hang out in one of the broadcast studios, especially for the radio
stations, and try to be quiet.”

WTTV, a station on the move, was anything but quiet. WTTV created and
fostered its own distinct newscast in 1950, which would last four
decades.

The station became an independent juggernaut, adopting a buffet of
programming from CBS, ABC, NBC and the former “DuMont” network, which
ceased broadcasting in 1956. Today, the norm of TV broadcasting is
brand exclusivity — reflected in Tribune’s current decision to
transfer WTTV to CBS in 2015.

In 1954, WTTV moved to its longtime Bloomington home at Highland
Avenue and East Davis Street, where it got a proper 1,000-foot
broadcast tower. Its signal was strong enough to reach Indianapolis
and Terre Haute, pivotal TV markets.

A short time later, WTTV changed its frequency from Channel 10 to
Channel 4, which remains its current channel number today, and opened
an official station in Indianapolis, becoming a two-city broadcast
operation from the 3900 block of Bluff Road.

And then, there were the glory years folks in Indiana grew to love
with cult fervor: Bob Carter played “Sammy Terry,” a ghoulish figure
who hosted campy horror movies for WTTV-4 on Saturday nights from 1962
through the late 1980s.

“Cowboy Bob” Glaze joined the mix for a Western-themed program
starting in the 1970s, earning the hearts of kids and adults alike.

And “Janie” Woods Hodge, the ukulele-playing woman who hosted cartoon
segments — thus, the titular “Popeye and Janie” — received her own
variety show simply called “Janie,” appearing every weekday from 1963
to 1986, according to the websites “Hoosier History Live” and
IMDB.com.

The regional achievements came rolling in, too, for the young station:
WTTV became the first Indiana station to broadcast a show in color,
and made a full-color transition in 1965. It was the first Indiana
station to extend its broadcast day to 24 hours, in 1979.

But by the late 1970s, the Tarzian family was finished with WTTV.
According to David J. Bodenhammer’s book “Encyclopedia of
Indianapolis,” Sarkes Tarzian sold WTTV-4 to the Teleco Media company
for more than $26 million in 1978, the most of any nonmajor network in
the United States at the time.

WTTV would be subject to constant repackaging, including ownership
from the Tele-Am Corporation in 1984, Warner Brothers in 1998 and
current parent Tribune Broadcasting since 2002.

Sarkes Tarzian Inc. continues to operate as a radio and TV company
from 205 N. College Ave. in Bloomington. Its child, WTTV, is almost
completely an Indianapolis station these days: It operates adjacent to
sister Tribune station WXIN, near West 71st Street and I-465, under
Tribune’s FCC license permit issued to Bloomington.

WTTV’s closest relation to Bloomington today is its massive
broadcasting antenna signal near Trafalgar — the largest structure in
the state at 1,132 feet — built in 1957. Under the FCC’s power rules,
that location is the closest spot to Indianapolis where Bloomington
can still consistently get a city-grade signal.

And although the WTTV station has gone from a simple two-hour-a-day
operation into a national affiliate within the span of a lifetime, its
early history is truly Hoosier: Created with saved money, built with
callused hands and managed by local folks.

However, Tom Tarzian remembers vividly what made Sarkes Tarzian Inc.’s
affiliation with the channel a homespun Bloomington success for nearly
30 years:

“Dad came home every night for dinner and stayed,” he said. “He
traveled a lot, but he made time for the thing he considered to be
more important — his family.”

Information from: The Herald Times,

http://bit.ly/YRxDI7
http://www.heraldtimesonline.com
http://www.theolathenews.com/2014/08/24/2558420/bloomington-founded-wttv-continues.html

Bill Gates s’arrose à l’aide d’un sceau aux couleurs de l’Arménie ;-

Clin d’oeil du Ice Bucket Challenge
Bill Gates s’arrose à l’aide d’un sceau aux couleurs de l’Arménie 😉

Dans le cadre du “Ice Bucket Challenge”, une opération lancée par le
créateur de Facebook, Mark Zuckerberg, dans le but de lutter contre la
maladie de Charcot, l’homme le plus riche de la planète, Bill Gates
fondateur de Microsoft a relevé le défi du sceau d’eau glacé en
s’aspergeant avec un récipient de sa fabrication, curieusement peint
aux couleurs de l’Arménie… La vidéo a été vue 15 millions de fois.

L’opération a rapporté 11 millions de dollars, contre 1,7 M$ en 2013.

dimanche 24 août 2014,
Jean Eckian (c)armenews.com

http://www.armenews.com/article.php3?id_article=102648

Anoush Krikorian (boxe, 51 kg) médaille de bronze à Nanjing (Chine)

SPORTS
Anoush Krikorian (boxe, 51 kg) médaille de bronze à Nanjing (Chine)

A Nanjing (Chine) la boxeuse Anoush Krikorian (51 kg) a remporté la
4ème médaille de l’Arménie aux Jeux Olympiques de la Jeunesse.
L’Arménienne parvenue en demi-finale était opposée à la Chinoise Yang
Youan. Mais Anoush Krikorian a perdu son combat…empochant la
médaille de bronze. L’Arménie dispose désormais 2 médailles d’or, 1
d’argent et 1 de bronze à ces 2ème Jeux Olympiques de la Jeunesse
auxquels prennent part près de deux cents pays. Au tableau provisoire
des médailles l’Arménie est 19ème.

Krikor Amirzayan

dimanche 24 août 2014,
Krikor Amirzayan (c)armenews.com

http://www.armenews.com/article.php3?id_article=102671