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California Courier Online, November 11, 2004

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  • California Courier Online, November 11, 2004

    California Courier Online, November 11, 2004

    1 - Commentary
    Enhanced Armenian Activism Will Pay
    Good Dividends in Future Elections

    By Harut Sassounian
    California Courier Publisher
    ************************************************** ************************
    2 - APN Hosts Tribute
    To US-Armenian
    Military Veterans
    3 - Entries Sought for Sixth Annual
    Armenian Film Festival at CSUF
    4 - AESA and ARPA Sponsor Lecture
    On Armenia's CRD on Nov. 16
    5 - George & Flora Dunaians Host
    APS Benefit Tennis Tournament
    6 - Turkish Groups Agree Not to Appeal
    Armenian Genocide Plaque Decision
    7 - Armenian Film Foundation to Host Book
    Signing for Genocide Survivor's Memoirs

    1 - Commentary
    Enhanced Armenian Activism Will Pay
    Good Dividends in Future Elections

    By Harut Sassounian
    Publisher, The California Courier

    The re-election of Pres. Bush is not expected to result in any substantial
    changes in U.S.- Armenia relations during the next four years. Pres. Bush
    will most probably have his hands full for some time to come dealing with
    other more pressing issues that would command his full attention.
    Nevertheless, should unexpected complications arise with the Bush
    Administration regarding Armenian issues, Armenian-Americans can try to
    resolve them by: 1) Working with their Democratic and Republican friends in
    the House and the Senate; and 2) Using the connections that some
    Armenian-Americans have developed with Bush Administration officials as a
    result of their support for Pres. Bush in the presidential election.
    Since most Turkish-Americans, just like most Armenian-Americans, backed the
    candidacy of Sen. Kerry, the Bush Administration is not expected to favor
    either one of these communities simply because of their votes on November
    2nd.
    It is noteworthy, however, that one of the most respectable journalists in
    Turkey, Mehmet Ali Birand, wrote an opinion column on Pres. Bush's
    re-election in the Nov. 4, 2004 issue of the Turkish Daily News with the
    following headline: "Osama bin Laden is very happy with the results." He
    went on to say, "Ankara is [also] happy with the results." Birand does not
    explain the reasons why both Osama and Ankara are happy with Bush's
    re-election and what the two have in common!
    I would also like to mention the following incredible statement made by
    Turkish Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul: "We are Turks. If necessary, we burn
    a whole quilt for a flea!" According to the Nov. 4, 2004 issue of the
    Turkish newspaper Zaman on-line, Gul made that statement in a letter he
    sent to the European Union, complaining about parts of the report issued by
    the EU on Turkey's application for membership. Foreign Minister Gul's
    undiplomatic and threatening statement should be reason enough to
    disqualify Turkey from the European Union! It does not look like this
    "modern" and "European" Turkish official is much different from his Ottoman
    predecessors!
    Armenians, on the other hand, were much more gracious and diplomatic. As a
    routine protocol as well as a positive gesture, the President of Armenia,
    Robert Kocharian, sent a letter to Pres. Bush last week congratulating him
    on his re-election. Similar congratulatory letters were sent by various
    Armenian-American organizations, including the Armenian Assembly of America
    and the Armenian National Committee of America.
    One major positive by-product of the presidential campaign was the fact
    that, for the first time, the Armenian-American community was very
    extensively involved in practically all aspects of the election. In
    addition to issuing political endorsements of candidates by
    Armenian-American political organizations, Armenian individuals contributed
    heavily to the campaigns of both Pres. Bush and Sen. Kerry. In addition,
    hundreds of Armenian-Americans were involved in day-to-day campaign
    activities, everything from manning phone banks, going door to door in
    various states, sending supportive postcards to Armenians in swing states,
    organizing campaign events, etc. This is a far cry from previous
    presidential elections when most Armenian-Americans would just sit back,
    waiting to see if the winning candidate would keep the promises he made to
    them during the campaign.
    Armenian-Americans were not just voters in the 2004 elections. More than a
    dozen Armenian-Americans were candidates for various political offices. I
    am happy to report that most of them were successful in getting elected or
    re-elected:
    Congressional races: The two Armenian-American members of the House of
    Representative, Rep. Anna Eshoo (D-CA) and Rep. John Sweeney (R-NY), were
    re-elected;
    State Senate races: State Assemblyman Joe Simitian (D-CA) won, joining
    Chuck Poochigian and Jackie Speier in the California State Senate; while
    candidates Harry Haytayan (R-NH) and Danny Tarkanian (R-NV) lost;
    State Assembly races: Greg Aghazarian (R-CA), Brad Avakian (D-OR), John
    Garfield (R-MI), John Fresolo (D-MA), John Geragosian (D-CT), Rachel
    Kaprielian (D-MA), Peter Koutoujian (D-MA), and Jim Miceli (D-MA) were
    elected or re-elected; while Rita Topalian (R-CA), Aida Aloian (R-PA), and
    Jasper Bedrosian (R-RI) lost their bids;
    Mayoral races: Scott Avedisian (Warwick, RI) and Kirk Cartozian (Downey,
    CA) were successfully re-elected.
    In order to accomplish the political objectives of the Armenian-American
    community, Armenians must be actively involved in political campaigns and
    help elect Armenians as well as supportive non-Armenians. Even though for
    many Armenian-Americans their preferred presidential candidate did not win,
    they nevertheless made good progress and gained significant capital in
    terms of heightened political participation and experience, which they
    would hopefully be able to convert to future victories.
    ************************************************** ************************
    2 - APN Hosts Tribute
    To US-Armenian
    Military Veterans
    BURBANK, Calif. - The Armenian Professionals Network of the Western Diocese
    of the Armenian Church of North America (APN-WD), under the auspices of
    Primate Archbishop Hovnan Derderian, Primate, will host a reception, paying
    tribute to the dedication of Armenian American men and women who have
    served in the Armed Forces of the United States.
    The event will take place on Nov. 12, at 7:30 p.m., in the Hampar Primate's
    Reception Room, Arshag and Eleanor Dickranian Diocesan Headquarters, 3325
    North Glenoaks Blvd., Burbank.
    Participating in the program will be; Lieutenant Colonel George
    Ampagoomian, master of ceremonies; and special guests, Major General (Ret.)
    Ron Markarian, Nishan Derderian, Mike Hartunian, Darwin Avedisian. Richard
    N. Demirjian, author of "The Faces of Courage: Armenian World War II,
    Korea, and Vietnam Heroes," will sign copies of his book.
    For reservations, contributions, or further information, contact Arthur
    Zabounian at (818) 974-9454.
    3 - Entries Sought for Sixth Annual
    Armenian Film Festival at CSUF
    FRESNO - The organizers of the 6th Annual Armenian Film Festival be held
    April 1, 2005 in Fresno are calling for entries of films made by Armenian
    directors/writers, or films with an Armenian theme.
    The festival is being sponsored by the Armenian Students Organization
    Armenian Studies Program California State University, Fresno. The festival
    is being partially funded by the Diversity Awareness Program of the
    University Student Union, CSU Fresno
    Requirements are: Films up to 1 hour in length; films may be in any
    language, English preferred; films may be on any topic, Armenian theme
    preferred; Film must be in video/DVD format- if in video it should be in
    NTSC format.
    Entries should be accompanied by a CV of the director/writer and a synopsis
    of the film. The Festival Committee will meet to view and judge which
    entries will be accepted for the Film Festival. Entrants will be contacted
    by email with the decisions.
    Deadline for entries to be received is February 1.
    The video/DVD should be sent to:Armenian Film Festival, c/o Armenian
    Studies Program, 5245 N Backer Ave. PB4 Fresno, CA 93740-8001; Telephone
    559-278-2669, or Email: [email protected]
    ************************************************** ************************
    4 - AESA and ARPA Sponsor Lecture
    On Armenia's CRD on Nov. 16
    SHERMAN OAKS, CA - The Armenian Engineers & Scientists of America (AESA)
    and the ARPA Institute will present a Lecture/Seminar on "The Cosmic Ray
    Division (CRD) of Armenia" on November 16, at 7:30 p.m., at the Merdinian
    Auditorium, 13330 Riverside Dr., Sherman Oaks.
    Admission is free
    The Cosmic Ray Division (CRD) of the Alikhanian Physics Institute in
    Armenia is one of the world's premier centers, conducting research in high
    energy astrophysics and space weather forecasting. At research stations
    high on Mt. Aragats and offices in Yerevan, a staff of 100 scientists,
    technicians, support personnel and students conduct leading research on
    forecasting energetic events on the sun which can damage manmade satellites
    in space, disrupt communications and power stations on earth, and endanger
    space and air craft personnel. The CRD and its scientists have earned
    enormous respect among their colleagues in the international scientific
    community, putting Armenia among the top five countries of the world in
    cosmic ray research. Recent additions to the list of their scientific
    collaborators include the U.S. National Oceanographic and Atmospheric
    Agency, the European Space Agency, and the international Committee on Space
    Research. CRD has a longstanding partnership with Stanford University of
    California and with Nagoya University in Japan. Recently the Space Weather
    division of UCLA has also shown interest in collaborating with the CRD. A
    year ago CRD won the prestigious UN World Summit Award in the e-science
    category. The CRD has been featured in the international magazine Science,
    because of its excellence. An illustrated presentation, with pictures on
    the space weather effects, will be made and research at CRD will be
    explained in simple terms. Pictures of the stations, the scientists, and
    the World Summit Award ceremony in Geneva are part of this presentation.
    The presenter is Ms. Anahid Yeremian. She has a B.S. degree in Physics from
    Drexel University. She is a particle Accelerator Physicist at the Stanford
    Linear Accelerator Center since 1990. She designs the injector section of
    very large particle accelerators (the one at Stanford is 2 miles long) in
    the U.S., Japan and Europe. She leads a group of scientists, engineers,
    and technicians to construct and assemble the accelerators she designs and
    finally to commission them to perform to her specifications. Prior to
    coming to Stanford, she designed the electron accelerator at the Boeing
    Aerospace Company for the Free Electron Laser project as part of a star
    wars program.
    Yerimian's hobbies include mountain climbing. She became acquainted with
    the Cosmic Ray stations and the physicists on Mt. Aragats when she climbed
    to the mountain peak in 1999. Since then, she actively pursues
    opportunities for improvement of science in Armenia by working with the
    scientists and governments of Armenia and the United States. This summer,
    she spent seven days backpacking in the Geghama mountains and staying with
    the Nomads in the mountains of Armenia. Her presentation will include some
    spectacular pictures of the peaks in the Geghama mountain range and its
    people.
    For information, call Dr. Hagop Panossian at (818)586-9660 or e-mail at
    [email protected]
    ************************************************** ************************
    5 - George & Flora Dunaians Host
    APS Benefit Tennis Tournament
    PASADENA - The Armenian Professional Society held its annual Tennis and
    Backgammon tournaments on Oct. 24, at the spacious home of Flora and
    George Dunaians. This year marked the 25th anniversary of this event, with
    plenty of sunshine, friendly competition and good food.
    The winners were awarded with trophies. First place winners in the
    Advanced Division were Manvel Tabakian and Harout Ajdaharian. In second
    place were Varuzhan Tombakian and Ruben Zakarian. In the Intermediate
    Group, first place winners were Misak Oktanian and Harout Ishkhanian and
    second place winners were Raffi Ishkhanian and Varouj Azizian.
    The competition in the backgammon tournament was challenging. After hours
    of elimination play, and a very close match, the finalists were announced.
    Trophies went to John Sahakian for first place and to George Dunaians for
    second place.
    The festivities were planned by Ronnie Nazeley, APS 2nd Vice President, the
    chair of this year's event. Throughout the entire day, a continental
    breakfast and refreshments were provided and a lunch buffet was served.
    The Dunaians not only were gracious in providing their home for this
    tournament but also donated $3,000 toward the scholarship fund. APS
    President, Betty Jamgotchian thanked the Dunaians for their generous and
    continuous support of the APS for the past 25 years. The funds are used
    to award scholarships to graduate students of Armenian descent and to award
    grants to various colleges and universities in Armenia. The annual
    scholarship awards will be presented the APS banquet on November 14, at the
    Ritz Carlton Huntington Hotel in Pasadena.
    For further information, contact [email protected] or visit www.APSLA.org
    ************************************************** ************************
    6 - Turkish Groups Agree Not to Appeal
    Armenian Genocide Plaque Decision
    SAN FRANCISCO - Two Turkish-American organizations, and the Turkish Consul
    General, have withdrawn their lawsuit against the Council of Armenian
    American Organizations of Northern California rather than face the claim of
    the Council's attorneys for fees.
    The lawsuit attacked the plaque commemorating the Armenian Genocide which
    the Council had placed near the 103-foot cross on San Francisco's Mt.
    Davidson. The Council purchased the Cross and adjacent land in 1997 from
    the City of San Francisco, which sold it to settle a challenge to its
    ownership on church-state grounds.
    In their lawsuit, the Turks claimed that the plaque violates the terms of
    the deed under which the Council acquired the Cross and land from the City.
    The Council's attorneys denied any violation and also urged that the Turks
    lacked legal standing to challenge the plaque. The lawsuit, they said, was
    an impermissible attempt to suppress the Council's free speech rights.
    The court agreed and dismissed the case. This entitled the lawyers, who
    were representing the Council without charge, to recover their attorneys'
    fees from the Turks. Faced with a claim for $100,000 in fees, the Turks
    agreed to abandon their appeal of the court's ruling, and submitted to an
    injunction against any repetition of it. They also agreed to indemnify the
    Council if any such lawsuit is brought by any of their members. In return,
    the Council's lawyers, at its request, dropped their claim for fees.
    Speaking for the Council, a coalition of 35 Armenian American organizations
    in Northern California, its Chairman, Dr. Krikor Soghikian, stated that the
    Turkish challenge to the memorial plaque is part of a broad campaign to
    oppose any public acknowledgment of the Armenian Genocide, which is
    officially denied by the Turkish government. The 1915 event is considered
    by historians as the first genocide of the 20th century, and the most
    significant human rights crisis of World War I. The leaders of the Ottoman
    empire systematically carried out the extermination of 1.5 million
    Armenians, more than half of the Armenian population living in its historic
    homeland. The overwhelming majority of Armenians living in San Francisco
    and the United States are descendants of Armenian Genocide survivors.
    Armenian Americans wished to purchase the Mt. Davidson Cross to avoid the
    destruction of a San Francisco landmark. As the first nation to have
    accepted Christianity in 301 AD, they believed that the Cross site would be
    an ideal gathering place to remember their forefathers. Turkish groups
    actively opposed the purchase, conducting a protest campaign urging city
    officials, neighborhood and political groups, to vote against the enabling
    proposition, but 68% of San Francisco voters cast their ballots in favor of
    the proposition.
    The plaque was unveiled in 1988 by Mayor Willie Brown, in the presence of
    several Genocide survivors.
    The Council was represented in the lawsuit by David Balabanian, Geoffrey
    Holtz, and Matthew Gray of Bingham McCutchen, an 850-lawyer firm with
    offices in 12 cities.
    ************************************************** ************************
    7 - Armenian Film Foundation to Host Book
    Signing for Genocide Survivor's Memoirs
    LOS ANGELES - The Armenian Film Foundation will host a reception and book
    signing on Nov. 15 for A Hair's Breadth from Death, the memoirs of
    Hampartzoum Chitjian, which has been published in English and in Armenian.
    Scholar Hilmar Kaiser, a German historian who has authored two publications
    on the Armenian Genocide, will travel to Los Angeles to give his remarks on
    the book. "Chitjian's memoirs are a unique contribution to the field of
    genocide studies, immigration studies, and the social-economic history of
    the Ottoman Empire and Armenia," says Kaiser. "His encounters with other
    shattered Armenian survivors offer a panorama of Armenian survival
    strategies and the appalling conditions and choices these few had to make.
    Students of immigration to the United States will find the account of the
    author's journey to the U.S. most interesting."
    Publisher Ara Sarafian of Taderon Press in London, who will travel to Los
    Angeles to speak at the book signing, notes, "Chitjian's life story is
    remarkable for the amount of detail that is included, and that is why these
    memoirs are one of the most important first-person accounts of the Genocide
    and survival."
    J. Michael Hagopian, founder and chairman of the Armenian Film Foundation
    will present a short film on Chitjian, who appears in the AFF's "Witnesses"
    trilogy of documentary films, and will offer some personal reflections.
    Chitjian was J. Michael Hagopian's caretaker after the Genocide when some
    Armenians were allowed to stay in Kharpert.
    Chitjian's daughter, Sara, will speak about helping her father with his
    memoirs, which Seda Maronyan transcribed in Armenian over the course of
    several years. Sara translated the memoirs to English, finishing the work
    after her father passed away last year at the age of 102.
    The book signing is at 7 p.m. at the United Armenian Congregational Church
    hall, 3480 Cahuenga Boulevard West. Copies of the book will be available in
    English and in Armenian at a cost of $35 each.
    Admission is free and light refreshments will be served. For further
    information, contact 805-495-0717.
    ************************************************** ************************
    The California Courier On-Line is a service provided by the California
    Courier. Subscriptions or changes of address should not be transmitted
    through this service. Information in that regard should be telephoned
    to (818) 409-0949; faxed to: (818) 409-9207, or e-mailed to:
    [email protected]. Letters to the editor concerning issues
    addressed in the Courier may be e-mailed, provided it is signed by
    the author. Phone and/or E-mail address is also required to verify
    authorship.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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