Boxing: Fenech foe plots Vic’s fall

FOX SPORTS, Australia
Townsville Bulletin, Australia
Advertiser Adelaide, Australia
March 23 2005

Fenech foe plots Vic’s fall
By Grantlee Kieza

HE once broke the heart of Jeff Fenech – and this Sunday Harold
Volbrecht wants to crush the apple of his eye.

Volbrecht, South African welterweight champion for a staggering 14
years, was the architect of Fenech’s worst defeat. And now he’s back
in Australia confident his flyweight Mzukisi Sikali will take the IBF
world flyweight title from Fenech’s pride and joy, Vic Darchinyan.

It’s the first title defence for the Fenech-trained Darchinyan, and
the Armenian-born world champ has picked a fight with a slick-moving
veteran who is unbeaten over his last six years, and supremely
confident of springing an upset at the State Sports Centre.

Volbrecht was one of the world’s top welterweights for a decade and
has trained some of South Africa’s greatest fighters of the last 20
years.

These range from Corrie Sanders, the giant policeman and rugby
five-eighth who held a version of the world heavyweight championship,
to the sublimely gifted Brian Mitchell and the flamboyant Lovemore
Ndou.

He also trained Phillip Holiday, the world lightweight champ who
ended Fenech’s career with a devastating second-round knockout back
in 1996 in Melbourne.

And Volbrecht says Sikali is the best fighter of the lot.

“He is a far more talented boxer than Darchinyan,” Volbrecht said.

“In terms of style he fights a lot like Sugar Ray Leonard, but from a
southpaw stance.

“Sikali is a beautiful mover and I have always said that a skilful,
thinking fast boxer will always beat the strong, hard-punching
aggressive types like Darchinyan.

“I have trained a lot of fighters over the years and we have come a
long way for this fight. I don’t often travel with losers and I will
be very surprised if Vic Darchinyan is still the world champion on
Monday.”

Volbrecht has been able to back up his confidence in the past.

He says he planned for the deeply-religious Holiday to nail Fenech
with overhand rights from the fourth round of their world-title bout
in 1996. Instead Holiday unleashed a barrage of punches in the
opening seconds with the fury of a biblical plague.

“We had a TV monitor in our room and we could see Fenech in his
dressing room just sitting there and not warming up properly,”
Volbrecht said.

“I knew then we could catch Fenech cold and I told Phillip to throw
the right hands we were planning for round four.

“Phillip was a very good fighter but he was helped a lot in that bout
by catching Fenech cold.”

Volbrecht says Sikali’s lack of a proper warm-up was responsible for
his worst defeat, a 48-second loss to WBC flyweight champ Pongsaklek
Wongjongkam in Thailand eight years ago.

Since then he has lost just once, and that was by a split decision in
a world super-flyweight title fight in Italy six years ago.

Darchinyan, 29, also fights as a southpaw. He won the world title in
an epic battle against the Colombian fighter Irene Pacheco in
Hollywood, Florida in December.

KOSTYA Tszyu’s protege, Anton Solopov, and Newcastle’s most popular
fighter, Chad Bennett, will both be in action tomorrow night at
Newcastle Panthers.

Solopov, who is a former world junior amateur champion and the first
fighter to be managed by Tszyu, will be looking for his 10th
professional victory when he faces Argentina’s Raul Eduardo Bejarano,
the South American welterweight champion.

Bennett, who is the current IBF Pan Pacific welterweight champ, will
face another South American fighter, Oscar Samudio from Paraguay.

The Time is Now to Act on Sudan Posted: 03.22.05

The Time is Now to Act on Sudan Posted: 03.22.05

NewsHour Extra (NewsHour with Jim Lehrer)
March 22 2005

Student Jennifer Dewey urges American teens to educate themselves
about the atrocities occuring right now in the Darfur region of Sudan
and then to act on that information and do something about it.

Imagine this: you are in your kitchen making lunch. It is a warm,
sunny, breezy day outside, and your friends are on their way over.
You give your ten year-old sister a plate, when all of a sudden a
group of militia men break down the door and point guns at you.

They take your sister by the hair and drag her outside where they throw
her on the ground, bind her hands and feet then take turns brutally
raping her. When they are done destroying her tiny womb, mutilating
any chance of bearing children, they burn her alive and drive off in
their truck with you in the back, wondering what they will do to you.

Stories like this happen every day in Sudan.

You can’t bury your head in the sand

Now, I apologize for ruining your otherwise fine day with this
gruesome bit of reality, but you know what? You’re not children and
you’re not ostriches. Life is not like a box of chocolates, and you
can’t keep burying your head in the sand.

PEOPLE ARE DYING, something to the tune of 10,000 per month in the
Darfur region of Sudan. According to The New York Times, “a figure
of 70,000 is sometimes states as an estimated death toll, but that
is simply a U.N. estimate for the deaths in one seven-month period
from non-violent causes.”

The actual death toll from the past two years of genocide is hard
to report, mostly because the Sudanese government is blocking
the U.N. and other agencies from knowing the truth and making such
an estimate. According to The New York Times, independent mortality
estimates exceed 220,000, and, as I said before, is rising by about
10,000 per month.

President Bush, Congress and the European Parliament have already
declared that genocide is under way, yet they have done almost
nothing. In previous incidences of genocide, such as those against
the Jews, Armenians and Cambodians, it was reasonable to believe that
our passivity was a result of ignorance; but not anymore. As Nicholas
Kristof from The New York Times put it, “This time, we have no excuse.”

Act now!

How can we allow Sudanese documents to urge to “change the
demography of Darfur and make it void of African tribes,” encouraging
“killing, burning villages and farms, terrorizing people, confiscating
property from members of African tribes and forcing them from Darfur?”

The truth is this: we can’t. We all know it’s wrong, and we all know
about it. It is our passivity which has allowed this grave injustice
to continue.

Former senator Paul Simon said after the Rwanda genocide, “If every
member of the House and Senate had received 100 letters from people
back home saying we have to do something about Rwanda, when the
crisis was first developing, then I think the response would have
been different.”

IT’S NOT TOO LATE. We can still do something. PLEASE write a letter
or email your congressman, your senator, someone; I already have.
This is not the last you will hear about this from me. I must inform
you, move you and inspire change, or I wouldn’t be doing my job as
a human. Now you need to do yours. SO DO IT.

— Senior Jennifer Dewey is the Editor-in-Chief of Bourgade Catholic
High School’s newspaper The Eagle’s Eyrie in Phoenix, Arizona.

A New Look at Old Buildings

A New Look at Old Buildings
By Victor Wishna

Humanities Magazine, DC
March 22 2005

>>From the nave floor of the Amiens Cathedral in northern France,
Stephen Murray’s gaze sweeps upward to the vault high above. “This
really is my favorite view inside the cathedral,” he says, pointing
out the diagonal and transverse ribs that crisscross the ceiling of
this Gothic structure completed in 1269, a mere forty-nine years
after construction began. “It was really quite quick,” he says.

Click. Now he is in Turkey, soaring over the rooftops and zipping
through the streets of historic Istanbul. “Ooh, look at that!” Murray
exclaims, pointing to the intricate stonework in the courtyard of the
Sultan Ahmet Mosque, built in 1616. “I’ve not seen that before.”

Click. A building looks familiar . . . the Parthenon? “This is the
treasury,” he says. “Let’s go into the main hall.” Suddenly he is
standing before the statue of Athena, her golden veneer shimmering in
the light rays reflecting off the pool at her feet.

Of course, he’s not really in the Parthenon; it’s a reproduction in
Nashville, Tennessee. And he’s not exactly in Nashville, either-nor
was he in Amiens or Istanbul, but in Room 605 of Schermerhorn Hall,
Murray’s comfortable but architecturally less impressive office at
Columbia University.

Murray, a professor in the Department of Art History and Archaeology
and founder of its Visual Media Center, conducts his whirlwind tour
across continents entirely on the small screen of his PowerBook. Each
tap on the touch pad reveals another lifelike panorama offering
360-degree views in every direction.

These “nodes”–image modules rendered in QuickTime Virtual Reality
(QTVR)–are all part of the Visual Media Center’s new History of
Architecture web project supported by NEH ().
When the site officially launches this spring it will contain more
than six hundred such nodes encompassing dozens of buildings, from
temples in Greece to the great churches of Europe and shrines of
Yemen and Iran, to Frank Lloyd Wright’s Fallingwater house in
Pennsylvania. Even in its nascent stages, the site is revolutionizing
the teaching of architecture and changing the way professors and
their students see and think about buildings that have stood for
centuries.

“There are a lot of new issues being raised-and that’s part of what
technology does,” says Robert Carlucci, who took over as director of
the Visual Media Center in 1999 and has overseen the rapid growth of
the History of Architecture project. “It’s a lot more information.
The psychology of the classroom is really changing.”

“What the media has done is not just unleash all these wonderful
images, but it allows you to ask questions that otherwise wouldn’t
have occurred to you,” Murray says, such as “‘How does it feel? What
do you hear?'”

The new technology, says Murray, allows for the dispersal of old
assumptions and for discussions that go beyond structural design. For
example, by enabling students to peer up into the corners, to see
where the vaulting shafts had been reinforced with chains and the
flying buttresses refortified and replaced, the node reveals that
Amiens was not the sturdy feat of engineering that stood the test of
time.

“There’s this old-fashioned view that Gothic architecture was driven
bit by bit, that it was so technical,” Murray says, when in fact, it
was the result of a series of creative leaps. “It was the ideological
that drove the thing, not the empirical.” He acknowledges that George
Lucas of Star Wars fame makes for a good analogy to a Gothic planner:
“Both projected a dream where the technology didn’t yet exist, but
that dream had an amazing effect.”

The lesson, he says, is that “scientific revolutions often come with
a paradigm shift,” that is, through grand visions rather than
incremental advancements. In the case of Gothic architecture, such
plans brought together great theologians, planners, and masons, who
otherwise wouldn’t interact.

An up-close look at the pilier columns and vault ribs reveals that
the magnificent concave and convex shapes of the cathedral were
created through the relatively low-tech methods of printing and
stamping, similar to how Jell-o retains the shape of a mold. For this
reason, Murray says, cathedrals were viewed as repositories of
memory; in medieval times, stamping-to stamp an image on the
brain-was the metaphor for memory. “Today, of course, that metaphor
is the computer,” he says.

The new technology has already been incorporated into the
undergraduate core curriculum at Columbia, one of the few
universities to include structural design in its required courses.
“The idea is that any educated person should have something to say
about a piece of architecture,” Murray says. Some of the nodes have
been used to teach at colleges and private high schools on an
experimental basis, and the goal of the site is to make them
accessible to teachers everywhere.

“More and more schools have electronic classrooms,” Carlucci says.
“That’s especially true at community colleges and state schools-more
than in the Ivy League in a lot of ways.”

While the project has blossomed in the last few years, its seeds were
planted nearly a decade ago, at the dawn of userfriendly
virtual-reality technology. Murray had been interested in “animating
architecture” ever since, as an undergraduate at Oxford more than
thirty years ago, he was part of an expedition to film an
eleventh-century cathedral in Armenia.

By the time he arrived at Columbia to teach medieval architecture in
1986, he had grown frustrated with the visual resources available,
especially because most great cathedrals stood on the other side of
the ocean. “There’s only so many times I could take my students to
St. John the Divine, which is a beautiful building, and we’re lucky
to have it,” he says of the nineteenth-century church that rises a
few blocks from Columbia’s campus. “Otherwise, I had to rely on
pictures. I can’t bring Amiens Cathedral into my classroom.”

With the help of colleagues in the architecture school and a grant
from NEH, he created a three-part film series entitled The Amiens
Project to recreate the geometric conception and construction of the
cathedral. The experience gave Murray the idea to animate the
medieval segment of Columbia’s core curriculum. This initiative led
to the founding of the Visual Media Center, which has since been
folded into the Department of Art History and Archaeology.

Student response to the medieval component was so positive that it
seemed shortsighted to stop there. “That’s when the idea arose that
we could create a general resource for the history of world
architecture,” says James Conlon, a staff research associate who has
worked on the site since 1999, collecting much of the imagery from
Turkey and Yemen. “Medieval, Renaissance, Baroque, Byzantine,
Islamic, even modern–we kept expanding.”

Today, the site contains all those categories, and a few more. In
many cases, the nodes are paired with interactive floor plans of the
building, enabling users to click on a “hot spot” to see the
perspective from that point. Some views are from dramatic
locations-thirty feet up on the triforium, on the roof, even inside
the massive spire-where normal tourists never go.

There is almost no text on the site, which is by design. Carlucci
says the idea is to make the site as user-friendly as possible, a
place to explore and discover rather than read. “The kind of
intellectual excitement one gets from a building-it dies on the page
with all this boring prose,” Murray says. “The whole idea that we
don’t have to kill the work of art in order to study it is a fabulous
thing.”

Most of the photography from Amiens and other medieval
sites–particularly the precarious shots from the parapets–is the
work of Andrew Tallon, a doctoral student in early Gothic
architecture.

As Tallon explains it, the technology is, conceptually at least,
rather simple. A highresolution digital camera is attached to a
special tripod and carefully calibrated to take several dozen photos
around a central point. These photos are then stitched together using
virtual-reality software. It’s a little like the tourist who takes
several overlapping pictures, and then, after developing them, cuts
and pastes them together to create his own 360-degree panorama. Only
the site’s panoramic nodes are perfectly seamless spheres and can be
downloaded from the Internet.

On the site, most nodes are rendered at low resolution so they can be
accessed with low-speed connections. For classroom use, the nodes can
be rendered at high resolution for a teaching demonstration that’s
light years beyond blurry slides. “I was able to zoom into
individual, sculptural details and move around without ever having to
change photographs,” says Tallon, who taught an introductory art
history class at Columbia last year. “This is an extraordinary
advance in terms of teaching medieval sculpture. The node is able to
preserve an entire view of a space in a way that no other
photographic technology can.”

Beyond the classroom, the most beneficial aspect of the site may be
in how it lets anyone explore the great buildings of the world at
their own pace, in their own homes, without the interference of tour
guides “charging ahead with their brightly colored umbrellas,” Murray
says.

Murray says he had two objectives when he began the project: first,
that it should provide students access to the same resources their
professors use, and second, that it should bring together faculty
from different institutions to form new collaborative relationships.

The first mission has been a success. Rather than sending students
home with only their notes and memories of the slides they saw in
class, “now I can say, ‘Go study Amiens Cathedral,’ and they can.
It’s changed me as a teacher,” Murray says. “I’m a much better
teacher than I was just a few years ago.”

While Murray and Carlucci have recruited colleagues at MIT, Bryn
Mawr, Mount Holyoke, and other institutions to contribute to the
site–Murray envisions a single great online course called Medieval
Architecture with each expert adding a segment-getting them to
actually use it has proven more challenging.

For some, the technology–and what it offers-may be intimidating.
“Say you’re a faculty member who’s been teaching the same image since
the beginning of time because that’s the only one that had been
published,” Carlucci explains. “And maybe that image was a view down
the center of the building. Well, now suddenly students can look up
and see something going on in the ceiling. Before you know it, you’ve
got questions being thrown at you that you were never prepared for.”

But Murray believes teachers will learn to welcome those
uncertainties. “I was amazed at how my students, on their own,
grasped the subtleties,” Tallon says from Paris, where he is
continuing to shoot for the site while completing his thesis on
flying buttresses. “They managed to understand spatial aspects of
Gothic architecture that would have taken an actual trip to the
building to communicate otherwise.”

And even then, says Murray, they may not get quite as good a look.
“The only way to get that perspective is to lie on your back in the
middle of the floor,” he says, studying his favorite view of Amiens.
“In reality, that’s not something you’re likely to do.”

Victor Wishna is a writer in New York City.

Columbia University received $575,000 from NEH to create the History
of Architecture web project. Stephen Murray received an NEH
fellowship and grant of $138,000 to create a multimedia education
tool on Amiens Cathedral. Murray has conducted four NEH summer
seminars for college teachers on the Gothic in the Ile-de-France.

www.mcah.columbia.edu/ha

President Kocharian Receives Eduard Rossel

PRESIDENT KOCHARIAN RECEIVES EDUARD ROSSEL

YEREVAN, MARCH 22, NOYAN TAPAN. On March 22, the RA President
Robert Kocharian received the delagation headed by Governor of the
Sverdlovsk region Eduard Rossel. According to official information,
the main subject of the meeting was the problem of developing the
economic cooperation. The governor in particular suggested setting up
a working group to develop a concrete program on cooperation between
Armenia and the Sverdlovsk region in a short period of time, as well
as founding a chamber of commerce to ensure export of the Armenian
goods. The sides also discussed the issue of possible cooperation in
engineering industry and machine-tool construction, noting that finding
mutual interests with the well-known Sverdlovsk enterprises will open
new development prospects for the similar Armenian enterprises.

Russian defense enterprises interested in supplies from Armenia

RUSSIAN DEFENSE ENTERPRISES INTERSTED IN SUPPLIES FROM ARMENIA

PanArmenian News
March 22 2005

22.03.2005 03:10

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ At a meeting in Moscow May 13-15, 2004 the Presidents
of Russia and Armenia Vladimir Putin and Robert Kocharian confirmed
that Russia and Armenia are strategic partners and allies and intend
to further develop economic cooperation. It was stated by Russian
Minister of Energy Victor Khristenko, the Ministry of Energy of Russia
reported. In the Minister’s words, special attention should be paid
to the restoration and sustaining of previous ties and mutually
favorable partnership between the Russian and Armenian defense
and industrial enterprises. Traditionally the defense enterprises
of Armenia specialized in producing radio and electric items and
equipment, which were consumed by air, space, ammunition, shipbuilding,
radio and arms industries of Russia, V. Khristenko noted. At present
Russian defense enterprises are interested in supplies of production,
necessary to produce Su planes, Mi helicopters, anti-aircraft missile
complexes, antitank managed reactive shells, patrol ships and air
cushion ships and other types of arms and military equipment, he added.

Potential of Armenian enterprises conveyed to Russia can be used inf

POTENTIAL OF ARMENIAN ENTERPRISES CONVEYED TO RUSSIA CAN BE USED IN
FULL IN RUSSIAN STATE PROGRAMS

PanArmenian News
March 22 2005

22.03.2005 04:15

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The potential of Armenian enterprises conveyed to
the Russian Federation can be used in full in state programs, which
exist or are planned in Russia, while the enterprises themselves
can be integrated into industrial chains of Russia. Minister of
Energy of Russia Victor Khristenko stated it, Russian Ministry of
Energy reported. In his words, the inter-state integration cannot be
provided for within one day. Forming respective economic and other
preconditions is necessary to that end. An innovatory development
course is among the most important ones. «I think that scientific,
industrial and entrepreneurial circles of our countries should lay
a special emphasis on the need of innovatory growth, activation
of intellectual potential, development and application of high
technologies. Rapt attention should be paid to it. We should be
competitive at the international level. This can be attained only
in case we take the course of innovatory development,» Victor
Khristenko noted. The Minister also noted that the main document
regulating the relations of the Armenian and Russian Enterprises in
the military-economic sphere is the Agreement between the Government
of Russian Federation and the Government of the Republic of Armenia on
industrial and scientific-technical cooperation of defense enterprises
(March 30, 1994). In Khristenko’s words, in 1999 to strengthen
the available production ties of the defense industry enterprises
of Russia and Armenia (first out of the CIS countries) signed an
inter-governmental Agreement on maintaining the specialization of
the enterprises participating in military production. The agreement
refers to 23 Russian and 18 Armenian enterprises. The experience
gained and new integration opportunities of our countries allowed to
move from preserving the available production and scientific-technical
cooperation to the concept of their development and integration within
the framework of creation of new inter-state entities.

–Boundary_(ID_qXJHaXJbWo7juAMmw7/65g)–

Argentinean senate chair to visit Armenia April 21-22

ARGENTINEAN SENATE CHAIR TO VISIT ARMENIA APRIL 21-22

PanArmenian News
March 22 2005

22.03.2005 04:30

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Argentinean Vice-President, Senate Chairman Daniel
Scioli will arrive in Armenia April 21-22, Scioli stated in
conversation with Armenian Ambassador to Argentina Ara Ayvazian, the
Press Service of the Armenian Foreign Ministry reported. In the
course of the meeting the interlocutors discussed prospects of
development of the Armenian-Argentinean relations.

Russian province delegation discuss cooperation in Armenia

RUSSIAN PROVINCE DELEGATION DISCUSS COOPERATION IN ARMENIA

ArmenPress
March 22 2005

YEREVAN, MARCH 22, ARMENPRESS: Prime minister Andranik Margarian
received today members of a Russian delegation, headed by the
governor of Sverdlovsk province Eduard Rossel. Russian and Armenian
officials were quoted by the government press office as saying that
Russian Putin’s visit to Armenia later this week will give a new
incentive to further strengthening of diverse bilateral ties.
Margarian said Armenia expects the visit of the delegation to give
a fresh muscle to advancing cooperation between Armenia and the
Russian province. He said Armenia has established vivid trade
relations with 25 Russian provinces.
Governor Rossel who contributed to rehabilitation of the
earthquake zone in late 1980-s, spoke highly of the Armenian
community in his province. Andranik Margarian and Eduard Rossel
discussed also a range of other issues.
Also Martin Sarkisian, the president of Armenian Commerce and
Industry Chamber, welcomed today chief managers of several industrial
enterprises in the Russian province of Sverdlovsk who have arrived
here together with the provincial governor to explore ways to expand
cooperation with Armenian counterparts.
Addressing participants of a joint business forum, Sarkisian said
it was evidence of their interest towards Armenian counterparts.
Larisa Scharf, deputy economic minister of the Russian province,
said the trade between Armenia and the province last year amounted to
$3 million, but added there are all chances to double and triple it.

NK, Pridnestrovie, S. Ossetia & Abkhazia leaders to meet in Abkhazia

PanArmenian News
March 22 2005

KARABAKH, PRIDNESTROVIE, SOUTH OSSETIA AND ABKHAZIA LEADERS TO MEET
IN ABKHAZIA IN APRIL, SERGEY BAGAPSH STATED

22.03.2005 07:59

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The leaders of Nagorno Karabakh, Pridnestrovie,
South Ossetia and Abkhazia will meet in Abkhazia in April, Abkhazian
President Sergey Bagapsh stated. In his words, before that meeting
the Foreign Ministers of the unrecognized republics will arrange for a
respective declaration. As noted by Bagapsh, if there is aggression or
intervention against South Ossetia, the Abkhazian party reserves the
right to withdraw the negotiations and provide practical assistance
to Tskhinvali. Such statements will also be made by other participants
of the meeting, the Abkhazian President said.

Rossel suggested founding Armenian trade center in Sverdlovsk region

EDUARD ROSSEL SUGGESTED FOUNDING ARMENIAN TRADE CENTER IN SVERDLOVSK REGION

PanArmenian News
March 22 2005

22.03.2005 07:11

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Armenian Prime Minister Andranik Margarian has met
with Sverdlovsk Russian region Governor Eduard Rossel, the Press
Service of the Armenian Government reported. In the course of the
meeting Margarian noted that active cooperation between Armenia and
25 administrative subjects of Russia was established recently,
agreements between the Governments of Armenia and Moscow, Leningrad,
Saratov, Astrakhan, Kirov regions and the Krasnodar territory are
signed. In his words, the commodity turnover between Armenia and
Russia grows constantly, also due to cooperation with the
administrative subjects. Eduard Rossel acquainted with the social and
economic situation in the Sverdlovsk region and development
prospects, noting that the region is the first one in Russia to
implement a long-term development program, one of its main components
being stimulation of cooperation with neighbor countries, including
Armenia and its regions. He suggested Armenia founding a trade center
in Sverdlovsk region, organizing an exhibition of the Armenian
production, creating joint ventures, as well as invited the Armenian
party to participate in an annual international economic forum.
Having accepted the Governor~Rs proposals, Mr. Margarian noted that
after the signing of the agreement it will be possible to use the
potential of the Commercial and Industrial Chambers of Armenia and
Russia, the Association of the Russian-Armenian Business Cooperation.
The interlocutors also noted that the Vladimir Putin~Rs coming visit
to Armenia and the official opening of the Year of Russia in Armenia
will be a new stimulus for further strengthening the Armenian-Russian
relations. At the completion of the meeting the parties signed a
Protocol on the outcomes of the visit of the Sverdlovsk delegation to
Yerevan, which notes the main directions of the commercial and
economic, industrial and humanitarian cooperation, as well as
emphasizes the need for signing an inter-governmental agreement for
the realization of the cooperation.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress