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  • Armenian Rhapsody

    Salt Lake City Weekly, UT
    Nov 17 2004

    Armenian Rhapsody

    by John Saltas

    I have this friend I'll call Auburn. Not that he doesn't like seeing
    his name in print, but Homeland Security being what it is, there's no
    real reason to reveal his true identity. One never knows. Anyway,
    Auburn thinks I can't write a column without mentioning a particular
    Balkan country known in the early part of this century for importing
    into America a great number of swarthy men willing to work for cheap
    wages in unsafe working conditions. Remember, the key word here is
    `work,' so if you've guessed Albania, guess again.

    I imagine it's safe to say I may have annoyed Auburn. So much so that
    he's willing to make a bet with me. His bet is that if I don't
    mention this particular country renowned for its feta cheese and
    buxom women, he will pay me 45 minutes worth of drinking my favorite
    elixir, VO whiskey, which is blended just to my liking just up north
    a ways in Canada. Don't get me wrong, there are plenty of fine
    American distilleries. I'm just practicing for the day, if ever, that
    I can actually get all of my medications from Canada. Which will be
    never, by the way.

    If I do mention this land of olives and shouting merchants, I will
    pay him 45 minutes worth of drinking his favorite elixir, beer. He
    noted in his bet that he preferred a particular favorite brand of
    American beer. I don't like seeing people suffer, so I'm going the
    extra mile here in order to win lest he overindulge in a fluid that
    is simply not up to worldwide taste standards. I'm not an attorney,
    so I can't make out a particular clause in his betting document that
    sets the parameters of what constitutes exactly a mention of this
    particular place where many people are named George, Nick, Maria and
    Sophia.

    Assuming I may have lost already, I'll pay him off instead with what
    are now my two favorite imported beers, Kotayk and Kilikia. They're
    not brewed in the aforementioned land that is mercifully devoid of
    LaVars and Britneys, but in Armenia.

    As most American schoolchildren surely know, Armenia is the home to
    Mount Ararat, a revered holy place liberally mentioned in the Old
    Testament of the Bible, but now just an afterthought to many
    modern-day Christians who prefer the passages that reign terror on
    such groups as homosexuals. As those school kids can also attest,
    Armenia became settled by one of the hallmark cultures of early
    civilization, the Sumerians. As luck would have it, the Sumerians
    were not only good with the alphabet but with brewing beer.

    Explorers and conquerors from the land I cannot mention made it to
    Armenia a few centuries before Christ was born. Thus, they also found
    beer. Since they pretty much ruled things back then, beer found its
    way to ports all over the world. That's just one more reason people
    such as Auburn should go soft on me: If not for the people from the
    land with great ships and strong armies, we might be drinking mead
    while hoping for a Ute win this weekend.

    I had a couple of Kotayks and a Kilikia this weekend at the
    Leprechaun Inn and at Cedars of Lebanon. I've always believed the
    Irish are trendsetters. And Lord knows I like the Lebanese. I prefer
    Kotayk beer, as it is more of a lager style, but Kilikia holds its
    own, too, if you prefer Pilsners. Both beers are new to Utah. I'd
    imagine that the Bayou carries them, too. The spot where Auburn hangs
    out might not have the cooler space, so come collection time, if I
    lose, the payoff will have to take place elsewhere. Sorry, Jerz.

    While conducting my Kotayk and Kilikia research, I happened upon yet
    another aggravation of Utah liquor laws. You know those little blue
    DABC stickers that are on all the liquor sold in state liquor stores
    and clubs? Each one adds a nickel to the price of that individual
    bottle or can of beer. All it says is something like `Utah DABC' and
    is about half the size of a postage stamp. A nickel. That's a $1.20
    additional cost for each case of beer. Kotayk and Kilikia both
    already have that disclaimer printed right on their labels, yet an
    additional label with a 5-cent price tag is required for some
    reason - uh, let's milk those sinners for all they're worth perhaps?
    Happily, those funds go to our school kids so they can study their
    ABC's - Armenia, Beer and Cuneiform writing.

    As good as I think those Armenian beers are, I don't think I'm going
    to smuggle any into Rice-Eccles stadium this Saturday. Beer's a bit
    too wieldy for me. I'm going to stick with the standard 99-cent
    plastic flask. My buddy Joe Caputo buys them in bunches at Kirkham's.
    He's a former Vietnam combat Marine, and I believe he knows a thing
    or two about packing light and sneaking through enemy lines. I'm
    always grateful when he empties out his ammo canister and hands one
    over to me. I'm even more grateful because he's already filled it up,
    usually with Crown Royal, which I can't afford. That's just what the
    doctor ordered: a flask of Crown Royal and a thumping to that team
    from down south.

    I've seen too many upsets in sports to get uppity, though. However, a
    Ute win would bring unprecedented joy not only to Ute fans, but to
    everyone else getting screwed by the BCS. Another nice side effect of
    a Ute win is that all those people stuck in the woe-is-me Kerry funk,
    might actually snap out of it. To Auburn. To Armenia. To Utah by 5 - at
    least.

    Staff Box

    Bill Frost: College football is sooo cute! It's almost like real
    football. But, since I didn't attend either university, I don't
    really care - since the U probably has hotter cheerleaders, I'll go
    Red. Drink: Vodka (Grey Goose) & Gatorade (Red Punch).

    Larry Carter: Utah all the way. I will be drinking the strongest
    alcohol I can find so that I will have the pleasure of regurgitating
    all over my neighbor's BY-who banners. Do they have to hang them
    everywhere?

    Natalie May: Go Utah! It's going be sa-weeet! I'll be drinking hot
    cocoa with marshmallows ... it being a `dry' stadium and all.

    Kylene Stemmons: What game?

    Shane Johnson: BYU, just to see their headhunting boosters eat
    Crow-ton when he pulls off a Mormon Miracle. I'll wash down the
    bitter irony with an Old Milwaukee 40.

    Scott Renshaw: Utah should win in a walk, but I have a certain
    sympathy for BYU. Like my alma mater, Stanford, BYU has a coach who
    can probably only save his job by pulling off a huge upset of their
    BCS-bound arch-rival. I'll be watching with a cold, carbonated
    libation in hand.

    Haigen Pearson: I only see RED, and I will be enjoying a few Pabst
    Blue Ribbons as the Utes embarrass the `Y' and all of their poor
    fans.

    Jennifer Van Grevenhof: The Utes of course. I'll be drinking Corona
    to prepare for the warm, sunny weather at the Fiesta Bowl in Tempe.

    Brent Broadwater: The Running Utes by 21. And I will be drinking
    Coca-Cola, the nectar of the gods.

    Abbey Reynolds: Just thinking about football makes me feel like
    drinking. It doesn't matter what I drink, as long as it makes me
    forget how our culture views university sports as more important than
    education.

    Mike Varanakis: Utah! Water mostly - I will end up being the designated
    driver, I'm sure!

    Paula Saltas: Utah by 35, and drinking peppermint patties or whatever
    Charley Cayias serves at his tailgating party.

    Ben Fulton: While the sight of cultural rivalries battling it out on
    the sports field is sometimes amusing, it depresses me more with age.
    Besides, it pales next to Glasgow's raging war between the soccer
    teams of Rangers and Celtics. If I drank Scotch, I'd drink it now.
    Maybe a Bushmill's.

    Josh Wangrud: U of U (for the love!) and it's BYOB.

    Barbara Pavlinch: BY-Who? Utah, of course! I'm not quite sure yet,
    but I think I will be drinking Bloody Marys. The tomato juice has
    licopenes, and celery is good for me. Yeah, Bloody Marys it will be.
    Go Utah!

    Jerre Wroble: U of U natch, but I really don't do football. I may sip
    on a coffee and Bailey's while watching the parking gestapo issue $25
    tickets to the hapless fans who park on my `restricted' street near
    the stadium.

    Burke Johnstun: Utes! I will be drinking some caffeine-free Coke. I
    am one wild S.O.B!
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