Armenians arrested trying to smuggle radioactive material to Turkey

ARMENPRESS

ARMENIANS ARRESTED WHILE TRYING TO SMUGGLE RADIOACTIVE MATERIAL TO TURKEY

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 26, ARMENPRESS: Georgian border guards have
detained four citizens of Armenia as they were trying to smuggle into
Turkey radioactive material, Georgia’s border police told
Novosti-Georgia news agency.
The Armenians were arrested on Georgian-Turkish border when trying
to go through Sarpi border check point. Georgian border guards found
on one of them 2.04 grams of a radioactive material known as
`lovresium.’
Georgian authorities said the Armenians were arrested on October
24. They refused to reveal the Armenians’ names `not to damage the
investigation.’ No other details are available.

Kicking pioneer makes his case

Los Angeles Times
October 27, 2007 Saturday
Home Edition

Kicking pioneer makes his case

by Bill Dwyre

Ben Agajanian is alive and kicking. OK, alive.

At 88 and living in Los Alamitos, the man who pioneered placekicking
as a separate job in professional football, is walking around on two
replaced hips and two replaced knees and getting to the racetrack to
see and bet on his horses quite nicely, thank you.

Horse racing has been part of his life for about the last 50 years,
but the only big-time run he had was with Alyrob, eighth in the Santa
Anita Derby in 1996 and also eighth in the Kentucky Derby that year.

He had a horse named A.P. Charlie that was claimed from him Oct. 8. A
few days later he claimed a 4-year-old filly named Lockitup. Lockitup
is scheduled to run Friday at Santa Anita in one of the cheap races.

No matter to Ben, who just likes being in the game.

Always did, matter of fact.

His father was a sheepherder who came to this country from Armenia in
1913, soon ended up in Santa Ana with a garbage truck and a couple of
pigs, built a farming and disposal business into a fortune and had
sons named Ben and J.C.

J.C. was six years older, liked to tinker with cars and got into the
field full throttle when a local promoter tried to run off with the
bag of money that was the purse to pay the drivers. J.C. chased him
down, got the money back and the other drivers decided he should be
the promoter.

Eventually, he owned cars that won two Indianapolis 500s, one driven
by Parnelli Jones and the other by Troy Ruttman.

J.C. Agajanian, a fixture for years at the Indy 500, riding around
the pits in his huge cowboy hat and cowboy boots, died at 70 in 1984.

Ben was a football player of some local repute who went from Compton
Junior College to the University of New Mexico, then had what would
have been to most a career-ending injury. He was at a summer job and
had the toes on his right foot crushed so badly in an elevator
accident that he had to have them amputated.

Ben wrote the New Mexico coach a letter and said he wanted to come
back, try to keep playing the defensive line, but mainly continue as
a kicker.

"Didn’t hear a thing," he says, "so when it was time for practice to
start, I got in my car, drove to Albuquerque, walked into the middle
of a coaches’ meeting, sat down and waited for them to finish. After
a while, the coach looks up and says, ‘What are you sitting there
for? Go get your uniform on.’ "

So Bootin’ Ben, the Toeless Wonder, was reborn.

He eventually got a bootmaker to make him a squared-off kicking shoe
for his size 7 1/2 right foot (the left is size 11).

"First one the guy made, it was crooked," Ben says. "I’d kick and
it’d go squirtin’ off to the left. Second boot he made, he got it
right."

When he finished at New Mexico, one of the things furthest from his
mind was pro football. In those days, a field goal was an
after-thought, kind of a shameful consolation prize for a stalled
offense, and that job was handled by guys who played other positions.

"I came home, went to where we lived in San Pedro, and there was
nobody there," Ben says. "My father had bought this huge house — 20
rooms for $25,000, and it’s still there — and then my mother got
nervous because of the Japanese submarines off the coast and so she
made him move to Pico Rivera."

When he found them, he got marching orders.

"My dad told me not to play football, to work on his hog farm,"
Agajanian says. "I said to him, ‘Are you crazy? You send me to
college and you want me to work on a hog farm?’ "

Soon, he was playing in the NFL, on the defensive line with the
Steelers, and kicking. He broke his arm, but the coach still needed
him to kick a field goal. So, arm in sling, he kicked it and didn’t
miss for the rest of the season.

Suddenly, the NFL had a kicking specialist.

He played, on and off, from that 1945 NFL season in Pittsburgh,
through 1964 with the AFL in San Diego, at age 45. In all, he played
in three pro leagues, including the old All-American Football
Conference. Only one other, Hardy Brown, did that.

Agajanian’s highlights were kicking for the ’56 New York Giants and
the ’61 Packers, both NFL champions. For the Packers, he was a
fill-in for Paul Hornung, who missed several games while on weekend
military duty. But even with Hornung there, Agajanian occasionally
played.

"One time, Lombardi called me in," he says. "He told me I was gonna
kick off ’cause he didn’t want Hornung to get hurt."

All told, he played for 10 pro teams, made 57 field goals and 201
extra points.

And he had legendary moments.

One time, a wide-lens newspaper camera caught him, after kicking off,
already on the sidelines before the receiver of his kick had been
tackled. Another time, miffed over his salary, he kicked off and
watched as the receiver ran past him for a touchdown. When asked why
he hadn’t made the tackle, Agajanian replied, "I’m just paid to kick,
not to tackle."

For years after his career ended, he served as a kicking coach for
several teams, mostly the Dallas Cowboys, where he developed, among
others, Rafael Septien. While Agajanian was a straight-on kicker, he
takes some credit for originating the standard approach for today’s
soccer-style kickers.

He also has a bit of disdain for all the hoopla over kickers in the
modern game. Asked about Jason Elam’s last-second, game-winning field
goal for the Broncos to beat the Steelers last weekend, Agajanian
shrugs and says, "Hell, in Denver, I can spit 60 yards."

Soon, the luncheon table has salt shakers and knives and forks
pointing in all different directions to serve as goal posts and hash
marks and Agajanian is showing the angles a kicker needs to use, how
to stand, and when the holder should slant the football (only into a
big wind).

The passion remains, and he has been enough of a pioneer to attract
the attention of local film makers, who are proposing the movie
"Bootin’ Ben."

Then, he has his horses.

"I’ve probably owned 50 of them over time," he says. "I’m not a big
bettor. Wouldn’t matter. When one of them wins, my son comes over and
wants to borrow money."

Mostly, he continues to be driven by a desire to be recognized for
his pioneering by the Pro Football Hall of Fame, an honor he realizes
is not likely because his numbers don’t approach those of the modern
era, when field goals became part of the offensive strategy, not a
symbol of offensive failure.

He sent his kicking shoes to Canton, Ohio, more than 20 years ago.
Now, he’d like the rest of him to follow.

"To hell with the movie and the horses," he grumbles. "Get me in the
Hall of Fame."

8 years passed since terrorist act in Armenian parliament

PanARMENIAN.Net

8 years passed since terrorist act in Armenian parliament
27.10.2007 14:36 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ 8 years have passed since the terrorist act in the
Armenian parliament. October 27, 1999 a group of terrorists rushed
into the parliament and gunned down Prime Minister Vazgen Sargsyan,
Speaker Karen Demirchyan, Minister for Operative Issues Leonard
Petrosyan and deputies Armenak Armenakyan, Mikael Kotanyan and Henrik
Abrahamyan.

The terrorist group included journalist Nairi Hunanyan, his brother
Karen Hunanyan, their uncle Vram Galstyan, Derenik Bejanyan and Ashot
Knyazyan. The trial started February 15, 2001.

December 2, 2003 the First Instance Court of Kentron-Nork Marash
sentenced Nairi and Karen Hunanyans, Edik Grigoryan, Vram Galstyan,
Derenik Bejanyan and Ashot Knyazyan to life imprisonment.

Hamlet Stepanyan was given a 14-year sentence.

All seven were found guilty of treason. The Court of Cassations upheld
the sentence.

Liberalization Of Internet Services Contributes To Reduction In Thei

LIBERALIZATION OF INTERNET SERVICES CONTRIBUTES TO REDUCTION IN THEIR PRICES

Noyan Tapan
Oct 26, 2007

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 26, NOYAN TAPAN. Since liberalization of Internet
international services in Armenia on October 1, a fall in prices of
Internet access channels’ provision and data transmission services
has begun, the executive director of the Union of IT Enterprises of
Armenia (UITE) Karen Vardanian said at the October 26 press conference
dedicated to the opening of "DigiTec 2007" exhibition.

In response to NT correspondent’s question, he replied that the
sector of creating the Internet channel networks has already become
competitive in Armenia because many companies providing Internet access
and data transmission services (with the use of various technologies)
are operating in this sector. In the opinion of K. Vardanian, at
present their problem is to inform consumers about these services
so that they will be able to choose the companies offering the best
quality-price proportion.

The executive director of UITE added that the fall in prices of data
transmission services may reach the level, which is limited by the
traffic price of the channel to Armenia. According to him, in order
to reduce it, joint efforts of the state and private sector are needed.

No Weddings Until New Year

NO WEDDINGS UNTIL NEW YEAR

KarabakhOpen
26-10-2007 10:38:06

According to the NKR Statistics Service, weddings over the past
three quarters were fewer by 100 compared with the same period of
the past year.

At the same time, the birth rate has gone up while the rate of death
is down.

There is no need for sophisticated sociological analyses to answer the
question how it happened. At the beginning of the election campaign
in spring Bako Sahakyan, still a presidential candidate, pledged 300
thousand drams to each young couple on wedding. As a president, Bako
Sahakyan kept his promise. The prime minister has already stated that
the sum will be allocated from next year’s budget. After January 1.

Therefore, young people have put off their desires. There have been
cases when the bride and the groom withdrew their application for
registering their marriage. In fact, numerous wedding salons and
restaurants suffered.

Usually it is impossible to hire a hall for wedding in September
and October, now it is not a problem. Dresses can be hired for a
smaller pay.

Never mind. Everything will be fine after January 1. Only the budget
needs to prepare to be able to supply the demand in wedding presents.

Built On 14 Billion Drams

BUILT ON 14 BILLION DRAMS

KarabakhOpen
25-10-2007 16:32:46

Over the past 3 quarters 14 billion 226 million drams was spent on
construction, which is up by 3 billion 17 million drams compared with
the same period last year.

63.6 percent of construction was financed by the government (7 billion
625 million drams), 12.1 percent was financed by charity organizations
(1 billion 722 million drams).

Second Stage Of Judicial Reforms Underway

SECOND STAGE OF JUDICIAL REFORMS UNDERWAY

ARMENPRESS
Oct 25, 2007

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 25, ARMENPRESS: The government of Armenia has launched
the second stage of judicial reforms. Arthur Tunyan, head of an office
in charge of implementing the reform said the government has a $22.5
million credit from the World Bank and a $3 million grant from the
government of Japan to fulfill the program.

He said the government’s contribution to each of the program’s project
will 22 percent of the total cost, but according to Tunyan, the entire
project does not enjoy any tax privileges.

Tunyan said the government negotiated with the counterparts in Holland
a 4 million euro grant and if it comes the entire budget will rise
to $39 million.

The second stage was officially started last summer. When it ends
in 5.5 years there will be no un-repaired courthouse across the
country. As part of the first stage of the reforms many courthouses
in Yerevan and outside it were repaired and brought as close to
international standards as possible.

Tunyan said part of the budget will be spent to bolster new judicial
institutions- the Judicial Department, the Council of Justice, the
Institution of Court Bailiffs and so on.

He said a special attention will be given to raising the people’s
awareness of the judiciary.

Special terminals will be installed in courthouses for all people to
obtain any information they need.

Why Those Who Love America Are Feeling Brokenhearted

WHY THOSE WHO LOVE AMERICA ARE FEELING BROKENHEARTED
Andrew Greeley, [email protected]

Chicago Sun-Times, IL
Oct 24 2007

I am ashamed for America. Note carefully that I do not say I am ashamed
of America. Despite all its inherent flaws and all its tragic mistakes,
the United States stands, however incompletely and with whatever
imperfections, for the highest standards of freedom and democracy
that the world has yet known.

I am ashamed for America because all the evil done in the nation’s
name in recent years is turning off the light on the mountaintop.

1. The president urges Congress in effect to accept the Turkish
protest against the attribution of Armenian genocide because it might
interfere with Turkish logistic cooperation in the ill-starred and
foolish Iraq war. That’s like silencing all congressional action on
the Holocaust because we need Germany on our side. If Turks expect to
become part of Europe and the West, they must acknowledge what their
ancestors did. They could pass a resolution of their own accusing us
of genocide against Native Americans if it would make them happy. How
humiliating that the president wants us to ignore what happened to
the Armenians so we can be victorious in the "global war on terror"
(the current replacement for "weapons of mass destruction"). That’s
called appeasement, and it was appeasement when President Bill Clinton
did the same thing.

2. The government kidnaps, tortures and murders the way the Gestapo
did in Nazi Germany. The president blithely dismisses these charges.

The United States, he says, does not torture. But that deception
is based on a memo from Attorney General Alberto Gonzales defining
torture, which the White House won’t let anyone else look at.

3. The government pays large salaries to 148,000 "individual
contractors" in Iraq — more than the total American military there.

A third of these are toting guns. They are mercenaries — often,
it would seem, with very quick trigger fingers. Ironically, the most
recent victims were two Armenian Christian women. These contractors
are a kind of American Foreign Legion, like the notorious French and
Spanish foreign legions. They may well be very brave people who do
very tough jobs. They also compensate for Mr. Rumsfeld’s criminal
underestimate of the number of troops required. If, however, the
country is going to have a Legion Etranger, it should make sure
that it works under tight control. An unrestrained security force
quickly becomes a mafia. Humphrey Bogart, where are you when we really
need you?

4. At a remarkably frank meeting of middle-range officers (majors and
colonels) at Fort Leavenworth, the soldiers debated not whether there
should have been a war in Iraq, but who was to blame for losing it.

Was it the senior officers or the joint chiefs or the civilian
leaders? The war is not even over yet, and already the officers who
fought it and will have to fight its continuation have already given
up hope. Too bad for them, because the president has made up his mind
that we are still going to win the war and the Democratic presidential
candidates speak about a 10-year presence in Iraq.

Whatever the political leadership is or will be in 2009, no candidate
seems capable of saying, "We’re getting out now!" And the rest of
the world laughs at us because both parties are led by fools.

Anyone who cares about the United States and its legacies has to be
brokenhearted at what has been done to our beloved country by the
crazy people who are running it — people who have become so skilled
at deception they don’t even realize anymore that they are deceiving.

Just like the Democrats don’t realize they are again stealing defeat
out of the jaws of victory.

FACTBOX-Facts About Armenians In Iran

FACTBOX-FACTS ABOUT ARMENIANS IN IRAN

Reuters
Oct 24 2007

(Reuters) – Iran is applying for an ancient Armenian monastery,
St Thaddeus Church, to be declared a U.N. World Heritage site. If
successful, it would be the first such site in the Islamic Republic
to be a Christian monument.

Here are some facts about Armenians in Iran:

* Armenians are Iran’s largest Christian minority, but their numbers
have declined since the 1979 Islamic revolution. Representatives
of the minority say there may be as few as 100,000 Armenians left,
representing less than 0.2 percent of the Islamic Republic’s 70
million population.

* Christians, Jews and Zoroastrians, who are members of a creed that
pre-dates Islam and Christianity, are recognised religious minorities
in the Islamic state’s constitution and free to perform their religious
rites "within the limits of the law."

* In ancient times Armenians in the Persian empire shared religious
and other ties with Persians — the largest ethnic group in modern
Iran — but their conversion to Christianity and the 7th century Arab
Muslim conquest of the empire changed that.

* Most Armenians in Iran today live in the capital Tehran and other
cities, including Esfahan, and northwestern areas. They are known for
being skilled in technical professions, for example as electricians
and car mechanics.

* Armenians in Iran have the right to school education in their own
language, which belongs to a separate branch of the Indo-European
family of languages and has a unique 39-character script.

Congress Indignant About 90-Year-Old Atrocities, Silent On Current P

CONGRESS INDIGNANT ABOUT 90-YEAR-OLD ATROCITIES, SILENT ON CURRENT PLIGHT OF N. KOREANS

World Tribune
07/ss_turkey_10_22.asp
Oct 24 2007

SEOUL – Turkish sensitivities regarding affronts to the country’s
name, policies and history are legendary. Some years ago in Tokyo,
the Turkish ambassador lodged a formal protest with the Japanese
Foreign Ministry after a mix-up with a taxi driver.

When ordered to take him to the Turkish embassy, the cabbie took
him instead to a toruko, which in Japanese means a Turkish bath –
a euphemism for a brothel.

The protest was enough for Japanese authorities to get Turkish baths
in Japan to call themselves "soaplands", pronounced "so-poo-landoh",
which sounds a lot closer to what’s going on inside.

Now the Turkish government is infuriated on a much higher level.

This month, the U.S. House of Representatives’ Foreign Affairs
Committee approved a bill denouncing the slaughter and expulsion of
Armenians 90 years ago as "genocide". Armenians put the death toll
in the order of at least 1.5 million. Turkey says 300,000 died, most
of them in battle, in freezing weather or from starvation and disease.

The Democrat-dominated committee, sending the bill for a vote by the
full House, has embarrassed the U.S. government. It needs bases in
Turkey to support its operations in Iraq and Afghanistan, and sees
Turkey as a stable Nato ally.

Without minimising the atrocities that occurred, the question is what
is an American legislative body doing passing judgment on a tragedy
and a conflict that happened nearly a century ago that had nothing
to do with the United States?

The claims of members of the House committee that they cannot gloss
over the horrors of the massacre represent the last word in political
hypocrisy. All that is on their minds is that many, if not most,
Armenians are orthodox Christians whereas the Turks are Muslims; the
political brains on the committee see votes in righteously defending
Christians while offending Muslims.

House Democrats have no qualms about undermining the policies of the
Bush government. Nor do they seem concerned about Turkey’s problems
with a restive Kurdish minority, which is in close contact with Kurds
in northeastern Iraq.

If the House committee is so eager to immerse itself in an ancient
conflict, why does it not show similar concern about North Korea?

Three years ago, the US Congress passed the North Korean Human Rights
Act after a great deal of opposition from critics, who believed it
would anger North Korea in the midst of the ongoing nuclear weapons
crisis. Since the passage of that act, however, the U.S. has done
little to turn it into an effective instrument for combating abuses in
North Korea. Although options appear limited, Washington could begin
by raising the human rights issue, assisting refugees and linking
aid to the North to improved human rights conditions.

US policy today calls for dropping references to "human rights" from
all contacts with North Korea. The term is so offensive to Pyongyang
that US negotiators fear the North Koreans would walk out of talks
on nuclear weapons the moment they heard it.

Members of the U.S. House committee were brave enough to join in
condemning Turkey for what happened 90 years ago. Surely they should
have the courage to go after North Korea for more than half a century
of persecution in which millions have been killed, died of disease
or starvation or have frozen to death – the same fates that befell
the Armenians in Turkey.

It’s unlikely, however, that the committee will display such courage.

Perhaps Democrats are waiting for time to pass before addressing
the lessons of history. Maybe in 50 years or so, Congress will look
back on the suffering of North Koreans and pass another righteous
resolution. By that time, so many Koreans will have fled to the U.S.

that opportunistic members of Congress will salivate over the votes
they will get from a bold resolution condemning Pyongyang.

http://www.worldtribune.com/worldtribune/WTARC/20