Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Armenian Reporter - 2/16/2008 - community section

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Armenian Reporter - 2/16/2008 - community section

    ARMENIAN REPORTER

    PO Box 129
    Paramus, New Jersey 07652
    Tel: 1-201-226-1995
    Fax: 1-201-226-1660

    3191 Casitas Ave Ste 216
    Los Angeles CA 90039
    Tel: 1-323-671-1030
    Fax: 1-323-671-1033

    1 Yeghvard Hwy Fl 5
    Yerevan 0054 Armenia
    Tel: 374-10-367-195
    Fax: 374-10-367-195 fax

    Web: http://www.reporter.am
    Email: [email protected]

    February 16, 2007 -- From the community section

    To see the printed version of the newspaper, complete with photographs
    and additional content, visit www.reporter.am and download the pdf
    files. It's free.

    1. Candidate Speier recalls surviving Jonestown (by Tania Ketenjian)

    2. Boston-area Armenians and Jews share stories of pain and survival
    (by Ara Nazarian)
    * A joint Holocaust-Armenian Genocide event held at ALMA

    3. Armenian doctor saves officer after shooting that leaves five dead
    (by Alene Tchekmedyian)
    * AGBU campus near crime scene closed for the day
    * Security measures to be bolstered

    4. Remembering Seta Sahinyan Yavru-Sakuk (by Madlen E. Setian)
    * A personal tribute

    5. Master watchmaker Garo Anserlian knows how to manipulate time (by
    Lory Tatoulian)

    6. Fresno fundraiser to help send students to the homeland (by Nyrie Karkazian)

    7. Roger Kupelian's Vartanantz epic inches closer to realization (by
    Tamar Kevonian)
    * Who you are is worth fighting for

    8. Former chief of police Bernard Melekian serves as interim City
    Manager in Pasadena (by Lory Tatoulian)

    9. Sergei Paradjanov's work to be shown at LACMA in late February (by
    Brandon Lowrey)

    10. At Lincoln Center, a restored cinematic Spartacus re-embodies Aram
    Khachaturian's famous music (by Florence Avakian)

    11. This Armenian Life: Arman the Beekeeper forced out of business (by
    Tamar Kevonian)
    * "No respect"

    12. Armenian Allied Arts Association to hold competition (by Lory Tatoulian)

    13. Crime Beat: Accused health care fraudster nabbed after traffic
    stop (by Jason Kandel)

    14. Laughter for a great cause (by Karine Chakarian)

    15. Restaurants: Que Rico Taqueria (by Lucie Davidian)

    *************************************** ************************************

    1. Candidate Speier recalls surviving Jonestown

    by Tania Ketenjian

    [Jackie Speier is expected to be elected in a special election this
    spring to complete the term of Rep. Tom Lantos, who died on February
    11. Mr. Lantos had announced in early January that he would not be
    seeking reelection, and Ms. Speier had already been campaigning to
    succeed him. What follows is the second in a four-part series about
    the American-Armenian candidate.]

    SAN FRANCISCO -- Former State Senator Jackie Speier is running for
    Congress. But this is hardly a daunting challenge for a woman who has
    been in politics for most of her life, even through the most difficult
    of times.

    Ms. Speier was in high school at the time of her first foray into
    politics, when she went to work for Rep. Leo Ryan. Throughout college
    and law school, she kept her connection to Mr. Ryan, her mentor,
    ultimately becoming his legal counsel when she was a young lawyer. Her
    association with Mr. Ryan led to their fact-finding mission to Guyana
    in 1978, a trip that would change her life forever.

    In the 1970s, Jim Jones, an ordained minister, had drawn a
    considerable congregation to his church, the People's Temple, in
    California, promising racial equality and social justice. Mr. Jones
    envisioned himself as a healer and savior. After an investigation into
    Mr. Jones' church for tax evasion had begun in 1977, he and most of
    the 900 members of the People's Temple moved to the small, Central
    American country of Guyana, where he promised to build a utopian
    community. But congregation members who had left the People's Temple
    prior to its move to Guyana told the authorities of brutal beatings
    and murders. There were also rumors of a mass suicide plan. On
    November 18, 1978, these rumors proved to be true as 913 inhabitants
    of Jonestown, including 276 children, died in a mass suicide at the
    People's Temple settlement. While most of Mr. Jones' followers
    committed suicide by drinking a cocktail of Flavor Aid, cyanide, and a
    sedative, many were killed by forced cyanide injection or shooting.

    Three days before the tragedy, Mr. Ryan led a fact-finding mission
    to the Jonestown settlement to investigate allegations of human rights
    abuses. The delegation included reporters from Time magazine and NBC
    as well as Ms. Speier, who was 28 years old at the time. She wrote a
    will before her departure to Guyana, thinking that there was a chance
    she might not come back alive.

    "The weekend before we left, I was listening to interviews of
    [People's Temple] defectors and none of it added up," Ms. Speier
    recalls. "There were many unanswered questions. I was literally in the
    process of buying my first piece of real estate at the time, a
    condominium, and I had signed all the papers. But I made [the
    purchase] contingent on my trip to Guyana, knowing full well that
    there was something very risky about this trip and, should I die, I
    didn't want my parents to be saddled with a piece of property they had
    no need for."

    Ms. Speier's precautions were well-founded. As Mr. Ryan and his
    delegation, along with 15 People's Temple defectors, were getting
    ready to board a plane to leave Jonestown, a group of Mr. Jones'
    followers opened fire, killing Mr. Ryan and five others. Ms. Speier
    was shot five times and left for dead on the tarmac.

    * The gift of a second chance

    "I was lying on this airstrip with bullet holes throughout my body and
    bones sticking out," Ms. Speier recalls. "It was a horrific moment. I
    thought, 'Oh my God, it's over.' So when people ask, 'How did you live
    through that?' I say it was a gift; I survived when I shouldn't have."

    Ms. Speier was hospitalized for two months.

    "I had lots of time to think," she says. "I had to learn how to walk
    again because the first time I got up to walk, I fainted. I had broken
    so many bones in my arm and the doctors were trying to get me to flip
    a small Styrofoam pellet across the room. I couldn't do it.... So I
    reassessed what was important to me. When I came home that first
    weekend, I realized I wasn't in pain. I mean, I was, but I discovered
    that because I was directed in other ways, I didn't feel the pain as
    much. It was like this light bulb that went off in my head: 'Here's my
    chance,' I thought. 'Do I want to be a victim, do I want to go through
    my life being the Guyana victim, or do I want to move on?' Not just
    survive but thrive. So three days after arriving home, I ran for [Mr.
    Ryan's] congressional seat. It was the very last day I could have done
    it. I chuckle about it now but I do believe there is a plan. Why did I
    get released from the hospital when I got released and come home and
    make that decision?"

    Ms. Speier lost the election for that seat -- the very one she is
    now running for. However, in 1980, as she struggled to recover from
    her injuries and tried to deal with the loss of Mr. Ryan, as well as
    her failed bid for the House of Representatives, Ms. Speier ran for
    San Mateo County Supervisor. She won, beating a 20-year incumbent.
    "Had I not run for Congress and lost, I wouldn't have been ready to
    run for the Board of Supervisors," she says. Time and time again, it
    seems like Ms. Speier sees the silver lining through all her
    challenges. "You have to be open to the path in your life, watch it
    unfold and embrace it when it does," she stresses.

    On February 11, 2008, Rep. Tom Lantos died at the age of 80. After
    being diagnosed with cancer in January, Mr. Lantos, chair of the House
    Committee on Foreign Affairs, announced that he would not seek
    reelection at the end of his term next year. Ms. Speier is running for
    his seat.

    Like Ms. Speier, Mr. Lantos was a fighter. He was the only Holocaust
    survivor to serve in Congress. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi commented,
    "Tom Lantos devoted his life to shining a bright light on dark corners
    of oppression." In a press release posted on her website, Ms. Speier
    stated: "Congressman Lantos' tireless and passionate work for human
    rights around the globe is legendary. No one was more articulate,
    persuasive, or tenacious in fighting for all people, and no adversary
    was too large for Tom. I have many fond personal memories of
    Congressman Lantos, as does anyone who was privileged to have known
    him. Of the many things we can learn from him, perhaps the most
    important is: Never give up. Fight for what is worth fighting for,
    because you don't know what life has planned for you."

    connect: www.jackieforcongress.com.

    * Next week: a look at Speier's service on the San Mateo County Board
    of Supervisors and the challenges she faced.

    ****************************************** *********************************

    2. Boston-area Armenians and Jews share stories of pain and survival

    * A joint Holocaust-Armenian Genocide event held at ALMA

    by Ara Nazarian

    WATERTOWN, Mass. -- The Armenian and Jewish communities of the Greater
    Boston area came together on January 20 to honor two of their own, and
    to share the common bond between two peoples. The event, called the
    "Joint Holocaust-Armenian Genocide Exhibit," brought together two
    genocide survivors -- one of the Holocaust and one of the Armenian
    Genocide -- in the context of a joint exhibition at Watertown's
    Armenian Library and Museum of America (ALMA).

    Artifacts that once belonged to Holocaust victims in Auschwitz --
    preserved by Mr. Meyer Hack, himself a survivor of that conflagration
    who worked in the laundry at Auschwitz -- were displayed alongside the
    permanent Armenian Genocide exhibit at ALMA titled "In Memoriam."
    Additional photos from Project SAVE, the valuable Armenian
    photographic archive, juxtaposed two powerful statements from the
    recent pasts of the long-lived Armenian and Jewish communities.

    As stated by the organizers, the aim of the exhibit was to further
    enhance the bond between two peoples who have each suffered horrific
    crimes against humanity, as they continue to recognize common ground
    and share a hope for a better future.

    The event was hosted by Jordan Rich, a radio talk-show host at
    station WBZ, and began with welcoming remarks from ALMA trustee Scott
    Offen. Mr. Offen spoke about recent events, referring especially to
    the summer's controversy involving the national leadership of the
    Anti-Defamation League, which threatened to divide the two
    communities. However, he emphasized that the two communities cannot be
    divided, as they share experiences dating back thousands of years.
    Both nations, he said, have had their ancient homelands overrun; both
    have lived in diaspora; both have inherited unique religions; both
    have been characterized by a love for letters; and both have suffered
    genocide.

    Opening invocations were delivered by Rev. Gregory Haroutunian of
    the First Armenian Church of Belmont, and by Rabbi Moshe Waldoks from
    Brookline's Temple Beth Zion.

    Following the invocations, Shoshana Trump recited a poem titled "Six
    Million Souls" by Susie Davidson, and introduced Armenian Genocide
    survivor Mr. Kevork Norian as the first speaker.

    * "Friends, let's yell together"

    Kevork Norian gave a childhood reminiscence going back to the early
    years of the 20th century -- when a sense of impending chaos and fear
    gripped the lives of the Armenians in their ancestral homeland. Born
    into a world filled with uncertainty, Norian had little prospect to
    celebrate his first birthday. But his life, along with those of his
    immediate family, was initially spared due to the usefulness of his
    father to the Turkish war and genocide machine. The members of his
    extended family were not so fortunate, succumbing to brutal
    maltreatment and disease.

    Mr. Norian's life's journey began in Aintab, and continued on to
    Syria (where he eventually met his wife), and finally to America,
    which he now calls home. He spoke of his family's experiences during
    the Genocide, and described the brutalities suffered by their fellow
    Armenians.

    Most importantly, he touched on the need for the Armenian and Jewish
    communities to work together. Addressing the Jewish guests, he said:
    "Friends, we know how much you have suffered, we know the pain of
    hatred and suffering. We share your pain.... Friends, let's talk....
    Friends, let's yell together."

    At the conclusion of Mr. Norian's remarks, Sossie Beojekian recited
    a poem by Barouyr Sevag titled "Ghoghanj Yeghernayin."

    Dr. Dean Solomon, a co-congregant of Mr. Hack's and one of the
    organizers of the joint event, introduced Mr. Meyer Hack. The
    92-year-old Mr. Hack lost his beloved family during World War II, but
    not his will to live. By exercising extreme ingenuity, he survived the
    horrors of the Auschwitz, Birkenau, and Dachau concentration camps. As
    a laundry worker, Mr. Hack retrieved the pieces of his collection of
    artifacts from the removed clothing of incoming, doomed inmates. He
    miraculously hid them from the Nazis throughout his years in the
    camps, and during a 1945 "death march" to the Dachau concentration
    camp. The collection is scheduled to be installed at the Yad Vashem
    Holocaust Museum in Jerusalem in a special ceremony.

    The January 20 event at ALMA was attended by a number of elected
    public figures in the Greater Boston area, including State Senators
    Gallouccio, Tolman, Walsh, and Fargo, State Representatives
    Koutoujian, Balser, Brownsberger, Forry, Murphy, Smizik, Toomey Jr.,
    and Wolf, along with Mr. Cranston Rogers, a U.S. Army platoon sergeant
    and liberator of the Dachau concentration camp.

    This event provided and opportunity for members of the Jewish
    community to get a closer look at Armenian history and culture, as
    presented by ALMA's exhibits. It was also an important opportunity to
    exchange stories with Armenian friends and neighbors.

    The exhibit was co-sponsored by the Armenian Library and Museum of
    America, the Armenian Assembly of America, the Armenian National
    Committee, Project SAVE Armenian Photograph Archives, the Holocaust
    Center -- Boston North, the Strassler Family Center for Holocaust and
    Genocide Studies at Clark University, and Facing History and
    Ourselves.

    ********************************** *****************************************

    3. Armenian doctor saves officer after shooting that leaves five dead

    * AGBU campus near crime scene closed for the day

    * Security measures to be bolstered

    by Alene Tchekmedyian

    NORTHRIDGE, Calif. -- It was about 1:30 A.M. on February 8 when Dr.
    Gabriel Aslanian received an urgent call from the Emergency Room at
    Northridge Hospital Medical Center. He was asked to come in to
    evaluate a police officer who had just been shot in the face.

    Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) Special Weapons and Tactics
    (SWAT) officer James Veenstra was shot during a nearly 11-hour
    standoff at a West Valley house on the 19000 block of Welby Way, in
    which gunman Edwin Rivera, 20, killed three of his family members.

    After Rivera refused orders by local police officers to leave the
    house, the LAPD SWAT team arrived on the scene and an exchange of fire
    ensued. Two SWAT officers, Randal Simmons and Veenstra, were shot.
    Rivera himself was eventually shot and killed. As the injured officers
    were hurried to Northridge Hospital Medical Center, Simmons died, at
    around 1 A.M., while Veenstra was in critical condition.

    "[Veenstra] was sitting awake and alert, in a decent amount of
    pain," Dr. Aslanian said. "He had already undergone a CAT scan. The
    entire left side of his jaw was shattered by the bullet. The bullet
    also caused a lot of injury to all the soft tissues: the tongue, lip,
    cheek, and gums. Because it was an open wound, there was a good chance
    bacteria would seep into it, so I made the decision to take him to the
    operating room immediately."

    Dr. Aslanian conducted a debridement procedure -- removing from the
    wound loose fragments such as bone, bullet, tongue, and tissue -- to
    minimize the officer's chances of developing an infection.

    Next Dr. Aslanian performed intermaxillary fixation on Veenstra to
    reconstruct fractured bones so they could grow back in the correct
    position. "I did my best to put all remaining pieces back together
    again," the doctor said. "His jaw was shattered... It was like putting
    broken arm into cast."

    Later Veenstra underwent a tracheotomy, a process of making an
    incision in the windpipe to allow the patient to breathe out of the
    hole rather than the nose or mouth. The whole operation lasted
    approximately three hours.

    "Since then he has been doing very well," Dr. Aslanian said. "We
    have been able to fight off infection, which is our greatest concern."

    Born in Ethiopia, Dr. Aslanian moved to the United States in 1974.
    After graduating from the AGBU Manoogian-Demirdjian School, he
    attended California State University, Northridge. He studied dentistry
    at the University of Southern California and medicine at State
    University of Stoneybrook, New York. He received dental and surgery
    training at Long Island Jewish Medical Center.

    Dr. Aslanian's alma mater, the AGBU Manoogian-Demirdjian School,
    which he serves as a trustee and chair of the Alumni Association, was
    shut down on February 8 because of its proximity to the scene of the
    crime.

    "The roads to the school were blocked by police activity and, more
    importantly, at the time that the parents and students would arrive,
    there was a lot of tear gas in the air and the action had not yet come
    to an end," said Levon Keshishian, Director of Business Operations at
    AGBU, who arrived on the scene at 6 AM that day. "We provided the
    [school's] auditorium as a counseling center so that the city and
    county crisis counselors and police can meet. We also provided two
    classrooms for the LAPD to do investigations and interviews, and the
    parking lot was provided for access parking."

    Dr. Aslanian was thankful for the measures the school took to
    protect the students, including his own children. "The school not only
    shut down for the day, but school facilities were made available to
    local authorities," he said.

    Word of the crime traveled quickly; before school was supposed to be
    in session, all 950 students and 100 faculty members were aware of the
    situation. "We posted it on our website immediately," Keshishian said.
    "I went on live TV announcing that the school is closed. We have an
    emergency hotline where we posted a notice as well. We sent 581
    e-mails to parents who have provided their e-mail addresses. Everyone
    heard because they text and call each other."

    The tragedy has prompted AGBU officials to reevaluate the school's
    security measures. The Safety and Security Committee plans to employ
    new techniques to ensure the safety of students. "The main thing that
    we are going to look into is a text messaging system [for instantly
    notifying parents of an emergency], which would entail updating our
    records of parents' numbers," Keshishian said.

    ******************************************* ********************************

    4. Remembering Seta Sahinyan Yavru-Sakuk

    * A personal tribute

    by Madlen E. Setian

    ORANGEBURG, N.Y. -- News of the loss of Seta Sahinyan Yavru-Sakuk five
    months ago reverberated far and wide, bringing profound sadness to all
    who knew this remarkable person, and how valiantly she had fought
    against illness.

    Seta Sahinyan Yavru-Sakuk, daughter of Arsaluys and the late Kegam
    Sahinyan, mother of Nadine Mekjian and Alex Yavru-Sakuk, and sister of
    Ani Capan, passed away after a grave illness at Pascack Valley
    Hospital, on Tuesday, September 11, 2007. She was 54 years old.

    Born in Istanbul, Turkey, Mrs. Sahinyan Yavru-Sakuk completed her
    studies at the Armenian Mekhitarian Varjaran, continued at the
    Osterreichische Schule-Austrian High School, graduating from its
    Science Division, and took private art lessons to enrich her talent
    for oil painting. She later received a certificate of proficiency in
    the French language in France, and earned a degree from Rockland
    Community College in Graphic and Interior Design in Suffern, N.Y.

    Seta grew up in a traditional Armenian home, where she learned a
    deep filial love and reverence for the Armenian Church, culture and
    heritage. Devotion to faith and to Armenian education was instilled by
    the parents in both their children. Kegam Sahinyan was a church parish
    council member, an acolyte, served on the board of directors of the
    Getronagan Alumni Association, and taught algebra voluntarily at the
    Getronagan and Esayan Armenian Schools in his spare time; the mother
    Arsaluys maintained a strong Armenian home.

    The same pride in the Armenian identity became one of Seta's core
    beliefs. Through church and Armenian elementary school she began her
    involvement with Armenian causes as a youngster. Her sister Ani Capan
    recalled how Seta gave up her summer vacations to help in a camp for
    disadvantaged children.

    Following her marriage in Istanbul and a brief stay in France, Seta
    and her family moved to the United States in 1975 and settled in the
    Fort Lee, N.J., area. Seta was tenderly devoted to her family --
    especially her two children Nadine and Alex -- and just as she was
    raised, Seta instilled her love for the Armenian Church and heritage
    into her children. She enrolled them in the Armenian School at
    Tenafly's St. Thomas Church, and became involved in the life of the
    school and parish.

    Seta demonstrated an unparalleled generosity of self and spirit to
    the St. Thomas Church and the Kirikian Armenian School. An incredibly
    hard-working person, she wholeheartedly devoted herself to making sure
    that every necessary project was undertaken and completed
    successfully. She was efficient, resourceful, and proficient in
    everything she touched. She used her intellect, her artistic
    creativity, and her ingenuity to physically and morally press on to
    see a job accomplished for the betterment of the church and school.

    Seta served for eight years on the St. Thomas parish council, and
    was its recording secretary. She served the Kirikian Armenian School
    for 26 years, and was its Executive Committee chair and a teacher. She
    was also (among other things) a choir member, vice-chair of the parish
    cultural committee, layout artist and designer for the church bulletin
    -- and was involved in nearly every single church function or project.

    Using her artistic talent, Seta designed and coordinated the
    construction of five beautiful stained glass windows at St. Thomas.
    She also designed the Kirikian Armenian School emblem, and the logo
    for the St. Thomas Church magazine, Nor Tar. For her outstanding
    services, Seta received the "St. Thomas Award" in 2000, and the
    "Kirikian Armenian School Award" in 1991.

    * Compassion and concern for others

    For over 30 years, Seta Sahinyan Yavru-Sakuk was loved by everyone at
    St. Thomas, which was her second home. During the week she would
    devotedly attend bible study classes with Fr. Papken Anoushian, the
    parish pastor, and carried out dozens of unseen church projects. On
    Saturdays she taught at the Kirikian Armenian School, and on Sundays
    she sang with the choir.

    Everyone knew Seta or had been touched by her in some way. She lived
    the life of a model Armenian Christian, helping those who were
    disadvantaged or had some special need. She would quietly reach out to
    those in anguish, and her concern was heartfelt and genuine. Those
    whose lives she touched would feel comforted and reassured. One of the
    last times she attended church, she still inquired about and showed
    compassion for others, even though she was gravely ill.

    Seta was also involved with lending her artistic talent to the
    ornamentation of publications issued by the Armenian Language Lab and
    Resource Center (ALLARC) at the Eastern Diocese. In 1984, she designed
    a pre-Kindergarten manual titled Mezi Hamar, a book which is still
    used by Armenian elementary school students throughout the Diocese. In
    2004, she designed and compiled a wonderful arts and crafts book for
    children called A Trip to My Armenian Roots, full of hands-on
    activities teaching Armenian faith, culture, and history.

    Throughout her illness, Seta's family was wholeheartedly devoted to
    her, taking care to give her as much comfort and as little pain as
    possible. Fr. Anoushian, a close family friend, visited countless
    times to give her spiritual support, while her mother, children,
    sister and brother-in-law (Dr. Capan, a medical doctor) researched and
    investigated every possible medical treatment to ameliorate her
    condition.

    Now, Seta's legacy lives on in her children, Nadine and Alex: both
    fine examples of young Armenian adults, who are involved in many
    Armenian causes and activities.

    At the funeral services for Seta at St. Thomas Church on September
    17, countless friends and relatives, some from overseas, came to pay
    their final respects. The sadness was palpable throughout the church
    -- even her young Armenian School students cried for their teacher.
    Her colleagues on the parish council stood as an honor guard
    surrounding Seta's casket. Fr. Anoushian, Fr. Suren Chinchinian, and
    Fr. Vahan Hovhanessian officiated, and the parish and cathedral choirs
    participated along with numerous deacons and altar servers.

    In his eulogy, Fr. Anoushian, remembered Seta as a woman who "deeply
    loved her church and devoutly followed all its teachings." He
    mentioned that she had wanted her coffin to bear a cross such as our
    ancestors had, and since none existed, a carver had been found to
    carry out her request.

    Seta was exceptional: Elegant, accomplished, and diligent; a
    beautiful person throughout. She is irreplaceable in the lives of her
    family members, and for those at St. Thomas. All who knew her --
    including this writer -- feel a profound sorrow at not being able to
    be with her any longer. We cannot imagine life at St. Thomas without
    her. The memory of her sweet face and graceful spirit will never fade,
    but will radiate in our hearts and minds forever.

    **************************************** ***********************************

    5. Master watchmaker Garo Anserlian knows how to manipulate time

    by Lory Tatoulian

    LOS ANGELES -- When NASA and JPL launched the rovers Spirit and
    Opportunity in the summer of 2003 to explore the topography of Mars,
    the engineers working on the mission needed special wristwatches to
    keep track of their space vehicles. Because they lived on earth and
    their project took place on the red planet, they needed a watch that
    would allow them to synchronize their work schedules with Martian
    time.

    On Mars, one solar day is 39 minutes and 25 seconds longer than our
    24-hour day. This means that a watch that runs on Mars time needs to
    run approximately 39 minutes slower than the 24 hours it takes for
    earth to revolve around its axis.

    The Mars mission's engineers and scientists have managed to send two
    rovers 48,940,000 miles into space and have them land on the Red
    Planet, but they had yet to find a watchmaker in Los Angeles who could
    construct a watch that functioned on Mars time -- until, that is, they
    came to Garo Anserlian.

    The middle-aged watchmaker is owner of Executive Jewelers, a modest
    watch and jewelry store located on a provincial-looking street in
    Montrose, California. After operating his store for more than 20
    years, Anserlian enjoys a solid reputation for his mechanical prowess
    and has built up an impressive clientele, including a large number of
    engineers and scientists who work at the NASA/JPL lab in neighboring
    La Canada.

    * A watch for the Red Planet

    Anserlian has always satisfied his clients with his ingenuity and
    top-notch workmanship. But when two engineers approached him in early
    2004 to request that he manufacture a watch that ran on Mars time, he
    was bewildered. "I thought they were joking," he recalls. "They had
    always appreciated me being precise with getting the exact 24 hours
    correct on their watches, and now they were asking for watches that
    ran 39 minutes slower."

    But when the engineers explained to Anserlian that they needed
    watches to keep track of sunrise and sundown on the Red Planet, he
    immediately got to work. He had a product ready for them within three
    months.

    "They had gone to many other jewelers, but the other jewelers said
    it couldn't be done," Anserlian says. "I gave the engineers hope that
    it could be done."

    When Anserlian embarked on his time-altering journey, he had to
    overcome many obstacles. He consulted with colleagues, who told him he
    was "wasting his time" trying to accomplish such an impossible feat.
    But Anserlian was defiant. After manipulating the oscillating hands on
    the dial, he produced the first watch that was able to tell the time
    on the fourth planet from the sun.

    Anserlian went on to make 100 time pieces for the NASA engineers.
    But when word got out to the public, science buffs, watch
    connoisseurs, and collectors wanted to own one of his custom-made
    watches.

    "I received e-mails and phone calls from all over the world,"
    Anserlian says with pride. The master craftsman decided to limit the
    number of his Mars watches to 1,000 -- a fact that instantly turned
    them into collector's items.

    In keeping with his newfound fame, Anserlian has expanded his
    exclusive watch line to 20 models, including a ladies' watch. His time
    pieces are modified versions of models by Citizen, Seiko, and Orient,
    and feature his "Mars Local Solar Time" logo. Prices range from $200
    to $500.

    Apart from his Mars line, Anserlian has been busy creating watches
    with unusual functions. The inventor just completed manufacturing
    dual-time watches for scientists working on a NASA project in the
    North Pole. Other Anserlian models offer dual and triple time-zone
    functionality for a variety of projects, be they based on earth or
    another planet.

    Anserlian's passion for watchmaking was ignited at a young age, in
    his native Lebanon. When he was 12 years old, he took his parents'
    advice to work at a watch store during his summer break.

    "My parents didn't want me just sitting around the house all summer
    doing nothing; they wanted me to make myself useful during vacation,"
    Anserlian says. "They thought, since I love to work with my hands, why
    not have me go learn about watches."

    Throughout his teens, Anserlian worked at different watch stores on
    weekends and holidays. As the Lebanese civil war raged in the 1970s,
    he moved to Washington in 1979 and eventually settled in Los Angeles,
    where the weather reminded him of Beirut, his birthplace.

    While working at a jewelry store in Burbank, Anserlian was shot
    three times during a robbery. Soon he quit his job and went to work
    for Montrose Jewelers, where he met his wife, Maral. After they were
    married, Anserlian opened his own jewelry store, in 1984, on the same
    street as Montrose Jewelers. Offering the full complement of retail
    and watch-repair services, coupled with Anserlian's uncompromising
    dedication to quality control, the business has grown exponentially.
    Anserlian has three sons: Raffi, Armen, and David. The youngest,
    David, now 18, is following in the footsteps of his father.

    Garo Anserlian continues to explore the terra incognita of
    next-generation watchmaking, as ever intent to go where no other
    watchmaker has gone before.

    "As an Armenian, I felt proud; we accomplished something important,"
    he says, referring to his work for the NASA scientists. "We did
    something good for this country we live in."

    *************************************** ************************************

    6. Fresno fundraiser to help send students to the homeland

    by Nyrie Karkazian

    FRESNO, Calif. -- The newly named Charlie Keyan Armenian Community
    School of Fresno celebrated their fifth annual Crab Feed fundraiser on
    Saturday, Feb. 9th with raffles, auctions, food and music for everyone
    to boogie back to the 70s.

    The 1970s-themed fundraiser was held at Holy Trinity Armenian Church
    and was hosted by Kopi Sotiropulos "Great Day" co-anchor for KMPH Fox
    26.

    The night was filled with disco balls and live disco music performed
    by Papa Bear and Company along with an all you can eat crab dinner.
    Students and Parents served guests family style along with special
    guest servers Jerry Tarkanian former Fresno State basketball coach,
    Tom Boyajian Fresno Mayoral candidate and Alexan Balekian KSEE 24
    sportscaster.

    "People were dancing, eating, bidding on silent auction...we had so
    much fun there were so many people trying to outbid each other during
    the live auction, it was great," said Lena Karkazian member of the
    Crab Feed Committee along with Dzovig Kutumian, Melissa Pilavian,
    Paula Sapatjian, Mary Krikorian and Hasmik Nishanian.

    Along with the live auction people spent the night bidding on items
    from the silent auction as well as on mystery boxes which contained
    gift certificates from $25 to $100 and basketballs signed by
    Tarkanian. A 50/50 cash raffle was also held where the amount of
    money the winner spent on the raffle was split evenly between the
    winner and the school.

    "It was great," Christina Karakashian, Armenian School Alumnus,
    said. "It was really cute to see the students serving because we were
    once students at the Armenian school also and it's great to see all
    the benefits go toward the school."

    Approximately 450 people attended the Crab Feed which is the biggest
    fundraiser event of the year for the school and all the money raised
    will go toward school necessities.

    The school has been working on moving into its new location on
    Herndon and Villa and is planning on being moved in completely by
    March 1st. There are about 95 students attending the school this year
    from nursery school to the 6th grade.

    "The children are getting a valuable education in both Armenian and
    English," Karkazian said.

    Among these valuable learning experiences the students are receiving
    are the trips they take every year either to Washington or Armenia.
    This year the fifth and sixth grade classes are taking a trip to
    Armenia March 7th to the 20th along with their families. They will be
    spending Palm Sunday in Armenia at Holy Etchmiadzin and will also be
    visiting different places such as the Madenataran, Garni, Geghart and
    the Museum of Children's Creative Art.

    "As a parent I am so excited to be able to go with my son who is a
    sixth grader to see our homeland and to be able to experience Armenia
    as a family," Karkazian said.

    connect:
    [email protected]
    (559) 233-1800

    **************************************** ***********************************

    7. Roger Kupelian's Vartanantz epic inches closer to realization

    * Who you are is worth fighting for

    by Tamar Kevonian

    LOS ANGELES -- The Hamazkayin Heritage Committee will host a
    fundraising event on February 24 for filmmaker Roger Kupelian's East
    of Byzantium: Fugitives and Warriors, a docudrama and feature-film
    project about the historic Vartanantz battle, fought by the Armenians
    against the Persians in 451.

    The middle of the 5th century was a pivotal time for Armenia,
    located at the junction where the East met the West, when the weakened
    kingdom was ruled by the Persian Empire. In their attempt to dilute
    the Armenian spirit, the Persians invited Armenian noblemen and
    military leaders to Ctesiphon, the Persian capital, to leave the
    Armenian people leaderless, thus making it easier for them to force
    Christian Armenia to convert to Zoroastrianism. Vartanantz is the
    celebration of the epic battle fought and lost by the Armenians under
    the leadership of General Vartan Mamigonian, but which solidified
    Armenia's adherence to Christianity. The tag line of Kupelian's film,
    "Who you are is worth fighting for," is an apt description of the
    sentiment which fueled the long-ago event.

    The popularity of recent films such as 300, Gladiator, King Arthur,
    and The Passion of the Christ have made this the perfect time for a
    film of this scope and a hero of Mamigonian's stature, considered by
    many to be the Armenian Braveheart. The producers believe that
    high-quality films such as East of Byzantium go a long way towards
    generating greater interest in Armenian culture and history in
    countries throughout the Diaspora, helping bring Armenian culture into
    the mainstream.

    East of Byzantium is the first solid step towards a fully realized
    epic retelling of Vartan and his war against the mighty Persian
    Empire. The film consists of two parts, each running two hours. The
    first will be a docudrama telling the story of the Christianization of
    Armenia while the second will be an epic feature showcasing the story
    of Vartan Mamigonian and the battle at Avarayr. Both installments were
    written by Roger Kupelian, one of the lead artists on the
    special-effects team of the Lord of the Rings trilogy. Already he has
    recruited Serj Tankian, former lead singer of System of a Down, to
    write the musical score, and is in talks with the Australian filmmaker
    Paul Currie for the director's chair.

    Kupelian conceptualized the East of Byzantium project in 2002 while
    on location in New Zealand, where he shot sample footage during a
    rainy weekend with an army of extras clad in period costumes. "It's
    the first time the Vartan story is on film," says the enthusiastic
    filmmaker. Using the latest camera technology still rarely used in
    Hollywood, he believes "This is going to shake everything." After five
    years of laying the groundwork, he describes the start of shooting the
    first trailer as "getting the first down," a football reference to
    signify his sense of achievement so far.

    * Financing will be key

    The Hamazkayin Heritage Committee, which holds an annual event
    dedicated to various aspects of Armenian culture, decided to showcase
    Kupelian's film project for 2008. "We expect 300 people to attend,"
    says Rita Demirjian, an executive member of the committee. "It's the
    first historical, non-Genocide-related, film about our identity," she
    adds, further explaining that East of Byzantium is important because
    "it tells the story that solidified our identity as a Christian
    people." The fundraiser seeks to raise $100,000 to pay for the film's
    teaser and two trailers, which are necessary for subsequently helping
    raise the $1 million needed for the docudrama. This, in turn, will
    generate interest in funding the second part of the project, a
    $75-million feature film.

    The attendees of the February 24 fundraiser will be able to meet
    some of the film's stars and view the unveiling of footage about the
    historic battle of Avarayr, followed by a Q&A session with the
    creative minds behind the upcoming docudrama. Donors are encouraged to
    send a tax-deductible contribution in advance to receive a special
    gift as well as be credited in a designated section in an art booklet,
    available only at the fundraiser, which will include more information
    on the project and new artwork of the film.

    The event will take place at 3229 Casitas Avenue, Los Angeles,
    California, 90039, at 6 PM. Tickets are $50 per person and can be
    purchased by contacting Rita Demirjian at (818) 445-6556 or Shoushig
    Arslanian at (714) 403-0875.

    *************************************** ************************************

    8. Former chief of police Bernard Melekian serves as interim City
    Manager in Pasadena

    by Lory Tatoulian

    PASADENA, Calif. -- The Pasadena City Council appointed Chief of
    Police Bernard Melekian to serve as interim City Manager. Melekian,
    who accepted the position, has served as the city's Chief of Police
    since 1996 and briefly served as acting Fire Chief in 1998.

    The Pasadena City Council appointed Melekian when former City
    Manager Cynthia J. Kurtz announced that she was leaving her position
    for a post at a Pasadena-based consulting firm. That's when Melekian
    was asked to replace her. Meanwhile Christopher O. Vicino, a 23-year
    law-enforcement veteran, is serving as Pasadena's acting Chief of
    Police.

    "This job is much broader in scope than my previous work as Chief of
    Police," Melekian says. "As City Manager, I have to deal with the day
    to day activities of the entire city, such as creating more parks and
    open space in the community and working closely with the Pasadena
    Unified School District."

    Melekian plans on serving on this position for about six more
    months, until the Pasadena City Council appoints a new city manager.
    He is slated to resume his duties as police chief once the vacant City
    Council seats are filled.

    A native of Pasadena, Melekian is a descendent of Genocide
    survivors. He spent his formative years in Oklahoma, where his father
    was a member of the National Association for the Advancement of
    Colored People (NAACP). Through his father's involvement with the
    progressive NAACP, Melekian gained valuable insight into the racial
    divisions and injustices that afflict America's cities. Years later,
    as the Chief of Police of Pasadena, he made history by being the first
    police chief to publicly apologize to the African-American community
    for law enforcement's pattern of abuse and racism.

    "Melekian hold no prejudices and he really worked towards bringing
    equality among all the ethnic groups that live in Pasadena," says
    Setrak Kopoushian, Vice-Chairman of the Pasadena Armenian Police
    Advisory Committee. "Throughout his career, he has humbly worked to
    make Pasadena one of the safest and cleanest cities in California, and
    he does this because he loves this city."

    ************************************* **************************************

    9. Sergei Paradjanov's work to be shown at LACMA in late February

    by Brandon Lowrey

    LOS ANGELES -- Six films by acclaimed Soviet-Armenian filmmaker Sergei
    Paradjanov will be shown at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art this
    month, nearly 18 years after his death.

    The films will begin Feb. 22 and run through Feb. 29, showcasing
    Paradjanov's four best-known works will be shown, along with two
    earlier pieces.

    The films are noted for being lavishly detailed, rich in story,
    character and beautifully shot.

    "He worked in this sort of extravagance. You say, 'Jesus, how did he
    do this?'" said Professor Dickran Kouymijian, director of the Armenian
    Studies program at California State University, Fresno. "The things he
    could do on the set were unbelievable."

    Kouymijian personally knew Paradjanov, who died in 1990; he
    eventually wrote Paradjanov's obituary for a French publication. The
    professor described Paradjanov as an aesthetic-minded man who had a
    natural knack for creating beauty.

    "He was a creator. An instantaneous creator," said Kouymijian. "He
    could turn nothing into something, whether it was on film or in a
    collage or in the decoration of a room or a table, or even in the
    dressing of a woman.

    "He loved beauty. He was involved as a child, as a teenager ... in
    all the arts -- he did ballet, he did piano, theatre."

    Paradjanov's poetic style with film was a stark departure from
    socialist realism -- the only artistic style accepted in the Soviet
    Union. And like many artists under Communist rule, he was censored,
    blacklisted and spent several years in Soviet prisons.

    From 1965 to 1973, Paradjanov was banned from making movies.

    In 1973, he was arrested and imprisoned on trumped up charges of
    homosexuality, dealing in foreign currency, anti-state behavior and
    other crimes, Kouymijian said. Paradjanov was jailed until 1977.

    Shadows of Forgotten Ancestors (1964) is about star-crossed lovers
    in the Ukraine -- a man falls in love with the daughter of his
    father's murderer. When she dies in a tragic accident, he tries to
    move on. But her memory haunts him, even as he remarries in this tale
    of sorrow, humiliation and sorcery.

    "There is no modernization of any sort, no vehicles," Kouymijian
    said. Instead, Paradjanov presents his audience a "heavily overloaded,
    absolutely gorgeous (depiction of) traditional life" in the
    Carpathians. "It's absolutely extraordinary. The camera work is
    incredible. The film was not like any other Soviet film. It was
    immediately remarked upon and was a very popular cult film."

    This film was the first of Paradjanov's to flagrantly buck the
    Soviet realist style, playing with color to express moods.

    "That film was a revolution," Kouymijian said.

    The Color of Pomegranates (1969) tells the tale of 17th-century
    Armenian poet-priest Sayat Nova in an unconventional style -- as the
    famous poet's life story is related through his poetry, the camera
    rarely moves and the dialogue is extremely limited.

    "That film is something that really was unique in Armenian film
    history," Kouymijian said. "No film before or after has so well
    depicted the traditional life of Armenians, especially in the 18th and
    19th centuries. Here again, as with Shadows, Paradjanov went heavy
    into customs, traditions, church.... but he also uses just absolutely
    tons of medieval manuscripts.

    "What happened in (Pomegranates) is that Paradjanov takes his camera
    and fixes it," the professor said. "You almost think that you're
    looking at a slide show. He does everything to arrange an
    aesthetically mind-boggling scene, shoots it, and goes on to another
    one.

    "The cameraman in Soviet film making is extremely important,"
    Kouymijian said. "I'll give you a dollar if you can name the cameraman
    in any American film. You can't."

    Paradjanov's best-known films also include Ashik Kerib (1988) and
    Legend of Suram Fortress (1984). Paradjanov succumbed to cancer in
    1990. It was only a few years before his death that he was able to
    show his films at international festivals.

    But his distinct touch wasn't limited to the medium of film -- many
    of his collages, some of which he constructed in prison, are on
    display internationally. And many of his personal belongings and
    pieces of art can be found at the Paradjanov Museum in Yerevan.

    The Los Angeles County Museum of Art is located in downtown Los
    Angeles, 5905 Wilshire Boulevard.

    For more information, go to www.lacma.org.

    * * *

    Shadows of Forgotten Ancestors (1964)
    Friday, Feb. 22, 7:30 p.m.
    (97 minutes)

    Andriesh (1954)
    Friday, Feb. 22, 9:20 p.m.
    (63 minutes)

    Ashik Kerib (1988)
    Saturday, Feb. 23, 7:30 p.m.
    (74 minutes)

    The First Lad (1958)
    Saturday, Feb. 23, 9 p.m.
    (86 minutes)

    The Color of Pomegranates (1969)
    Friday, Feb. 29, 7:30 p.m.
    (73 minutes)

    The Legend of Suram Fortress (1984)
    Friday, Feb. 29, 9:20 p.m.
    (83 minutes)

    **************************************** ***********************************

    10. At Lincoln Center, a restored cinematic Spartacus re-embodies Aram
    Khachaturian's famous music

    by Florence Avakian

    NEW YORK -- The story of the legendary gladiator-slave-folk hero
    Spartacus has been embraced by people throughout history, and remains
    apropos today. It dramatically recounts the struggle of an oppressed
    people fighting for justice and freedom against the brutality of the
    state.

    Roman historians date the hero, whom ancient sources agree was a
    native of Thrace, to anywhere from 120 to 70 B.C. During this time,
    Spartacus, who had served in the Roman army, then was enslaved for
    desertion, led an unsuccessful slave uprising against the Roman
    republic.

    A newly restored version of the Soviet-era ballet film Spartacus was
    brought to life recently at Lincoln Center's Walter Reade Theatre in
    New York City, as part of its "Dance on Camera" festival. The glorious
    spectacle, originally filmed in 1975, was restored to wide-screen
    splendor in 2007.

    It stars some of the Bolshoi Ballet's greatest dancers of that era,
    including Vladimir Vasiliev, Maris Liepa, Natalya Besmertnova, and
    Nina Timofeeva. The bold, difficult, and high-energy choreography is
    by the acclaimed Yuri Grigorovich, who emphasizes the power of the
    epic adventure, rather than its subtleties.

    The composer of the music, the acclaimed Soviet-era Armenian
    composer Aram Khachaturian, also does not dwell on subtlety, except in
    the excruciatingly beautiful love theme repeated throughout -- and
    frequently played in isolation in countless dance recitals and
    concerts.

    Much of the score matches the virility, strength, dynamism, and
    flawless technique of the spectacular male dancers who dominate the
    story, and are nothing less than awesome. But at times, the music can
    be brassy and bombastic.

    * Risk to life and limb

    It is astounding to think that the story's overriding theme of
    oppression was even permissible during the period of the Soviet
    dictatorship, and it is not too much to assert that Khachaturian was
    taking an enormous risk to life and limb in pursuing this theme.

    In the film, Vladimir Vasiliev as the freedom-fighting Spartacus --
    who eventually loses his struggle -- radiates enormous power. His
    soaring leaps through the air, sometimes appearing suspended, are
    heart-stopping and don't seem humanly possible.

    Maris Liepa, as a villainous Roman, is equally unforgettable, not
    only for his fierce body language, but also for his crazed eyes
    reflecting unrelenting ruthlessness. He is truly a man possessed. The
    noiseless landings by both male dancers, and their stunning one-handed
    lifts, were truly impressive.

    The role of Phrygia, the lover of Spartacus, danced by the lithe and
    elegant Natalia Bessmertnova, is frail, tender and compassionate, and
    expresses the soul-searing beauty of Khachaturian's love theme. Her
    final grief scene on the death of Spartacus is intensely moving.

    Nina Timofeyeva's Aegina, the cold, calculating and deceptive
    concubine of Crassus, is sinuously lustful during the seduction
    scenes. After seducing the slave army with wine and prostitutes, she
    does a graphic pole dance, the perfect physical expression of
    Khachaturian's bump-and-grind accompaniment.

    Spartacus is memorable for the dedication and virtuosity of the
    dancers, for impetuously and majestically sweeping the viewers along,
    and for its tragic but inspirational climax, where the human spirit
    proves victorious over injustice and tyranny. Its 30-year-old ballet
    performances stay with the viewer long after the spectacle has ended;
    and in this restored film version, one of the high-water marks of the
    Russian dance tradition will be around to thrill further generations.

    Khachaturian's score for Spartacus is, of course, as close to
    immortal as anything he composed. But it's especially pleasing to see
    that music -- so often (literally) disembodied in purely instrumental
    arrangements -- brought to life in the context for which it was
    originally conceived.

    Note: A version of the Yuri Grigorovich/Vladimir Vasiliev filmed
    version of Spartacus has been released on DVD.

    ******************************************** *******************************

    11. This Armenian Life: Arman the Beekeeper forced out of business

    * "No respect"

    by Tamar Kevonian

    LOS ANGELES -- Arman the Beekeeper is a gregarious, full-bodied
    32-year-old man with an infectious sense of humor and impish twinkle
    in his eye that seems to say, "Life is a joke and I know the punch
    line." He has been on a journey of self-discovery and settled into the
    world of pest extermination for the last year. It is the latest in a
    string of half a dozen career paths he has explored in the past three
    years. His stints have included running a limousine service, towing,
    auto transportation, retail sales in the ladies' shoe industry, and
    mortgage brokering, but pest control seems like a natural evolution
    from his original occupation of beekeeper and honey producer. It is an
    odd occupation for someone who abhors sweets.

    From the outset, Arman was involved in the family honey business,
    which was started by his father in 1984 after emigrating here from
    Armenia four years prior to that. It was an usual occupation but one
    they were very good at. Although there were other similar enterprises
    at the time, theirs was the only one to be owned by an Armenian.

    "We had 2,800 colonies of bees at one point," Arman explains. "But I
    got squeezed out," he says, hinting at sinister conspiracies. His
    story includes the usual challenges faced by a business owner, along
    with politics, violence, racism, land development, and old Armenian
    men.

    "I would place my swarms all over the foothills, up Angeles Crest,
    from Los Angeles County up to San Bernardino County: Arcadia,
    Montclair, Altadena, Pomona," Arman explains. "Then they started
    building houses up there and I started getting complaints." City
    officials from Los Angeles County Public Works Department would call
    him to relay homeowner grievances and ask him to speak to them.

    He would knock on the door of these large, newly built homes and
    announce with a smile, "Hi I'm the beekeeper," and would be met with
    panic and demands for the immediate removal of his bee colonies. Arman
    rolls his eyes at this point, showing his amazement at the oblivious
    nature of the residents of those million-dollar homes with their
    elaborate landscaping. He says he tried to explain the impossibility
    of the task, the bees' harmlessness, their necessity for the existence
    of fruits, vegetables, and the flowers in their yard, but to no avail.

    "Get them out!" the homeowners would scream at him, as he waves his
    arms in the air, trying to mimic their senseless terror. Arman soon
    understood that their complaints were not about the bees themselves
    but the waste generated by them. "The poop is like a very small dot
    that turns into powder," he says, rubbing his forefingers together to
    indicate their intangibility.

    The homeowners started calling town meetings and filing complaints
    with their city council members. "I started getting calls from [Mike]
    Antonovich's office apologizing but still asking me to remove the
    bees," he shrugs. Eventually the city offered him a location deep in
    Azusa Canyon, past the San Gabriel Dam. It was a difficult location to
    access, requiring advance notice to the dam keeper before every visit.
    Bob the Dam Keeper did not appreciate being inconvenienced and
    constantly complained to his superiors, even though there were other
    beekeepers with locations in those mountains. "Apparently I was
    disturbing his peace," Arman says with sarcasm.

    The honeybee is a necessity not just in the pollination of flowers
    in our gardens, but also of fruits in the orchards and vegetables in
    the fields. One-third of all the food we consume is a result of the
    work done by this tiny pollinator. Honeybees require a mere five miles
    to gather pollen, never sting unless provoked, and multiply by the
    thousands every year when they split the existing colony and swarm to
    form a new one with the queen bee.

    * Shrewd farmers and an old nemesis

    As Arman's colony grew, he began to rent them out to farmers in
    Fresno. "Once I knocked on the door of this farm and this old man
    answered," he recalls. "'Why do I need your bees?' he said. 'All the
    farms around are paying for them so I get to use them for free.' He
    knew his stuff and he was Armenian. I couldn't argue with him," Arman
    says with a chuckle.

    During one such trip, as he was returning from Fresno, he decided to
    stop in the mountains to drop off some of his bees. He called ahead to
    inform Bob the Dam Keeper of his plans and the time of his arrival. "I
    was there loading my truck and I see these headlights coming down the
    mountain," he says. "Next thing you know, it's Bob the Dam Keeper with
    his gun drawn, so I pulled out my gun." After significant yelling and
    arguing, both men went their own way but the saga was just beginning.

    Although Arman's hives were not the only ones in the mountains, he
    seems to have been the only one targeted by Bob the Dam Keeper's
    incessant campaign to have them removed. He called the city council,
    the fire department, and every other official he could find. The
    timing of his harassment coincided with the fires in the Azusa Canyon
    that year. "The public works department called and then the fire
    marshal," Arman says. "Apparently my bees were swarming around the
    heliport and the helicopter pilots were getting scared," he adds
    incredulously. "I asked them. 'How can this tiny, one-ounce animal
    fight against the wind generated by the blades?' but it didn't
    matter."

    That incident, and almost driving off the side of the cliff on the
    way back from the mountains on a dark night, finally persuaded him to
    get out of honey producing. He sold his business and went on a search
    for a different calling, eventually settling on pest control. "I used
    to always get calls from people who had bees colonized in the walls of
    their house and I would go get them out," Arman says, describing the
    foundation for his current business idea. "After a while I realized I
    could make a living from this. Now I don't have to rip the walls out
    to get them out alive; I just spray." And so a new career was
    launched for the former beekeeper.

    ************************************** *************************************

    12. Armenian Allied Arts Association to hold competition

    by Lory Tatoulian

    LOS ANGELES -- The Armenian Allied Arts Association is gearing up for
    its 68th annual arts competition, set for the spring of 2008. Since
    1940, the organization has awarded more than $250,000 in cash prizes.
    The competition is intended to spotlight and foster the talents of
    artists who live in the Armenian community. The yearly event
    recognizes artists in a series of genres including fine art,
    literature, dance, music, voice, drama, and film. Competition winners
    are awarded cash prizes, certificates, and trophies.

    Armenian Allied Arts Association President Maurice Yotnegparian, who
    has worked with the association for more than 20 years, says that this
    is the only Armenian organization he is involved with because he is a
    big advocate of the arts. "Our competition gives many artists their
    first opportunity to expose their talents," Yotnegparian says. "I
    think it is important to give young Armenian artists the chance to get
    up on the stage and perform."

    The competition culminates in an award ceremony when artists are
    provided the chance to showcase their talents. At the Artists'
    Banquet, over $10,000 is given out to various artists.

    Since its inception, the competition has functioned as a catalyst
    for some of the most accomplished contemporary Armenian artists.
    Conductor George Pehlivanian and opera star Isabel Bayrakdarian began
    their careers as winners of the annual competition. Pianist, composer,
    and educator Vatche Mankerian, who also serves as Program Manager of
    the USC Institute of Armenian Studies, is an alumnus of the event. The
    association also organizes concerts and art exhibitions throughout the
    year.

    The Armenian Allied Arts Association was launched in 1934 by a small
    group of distinguished Armenian-American artists. They sought to start
    a cultural club so that they could stay connected with each other and
    share their interest in the art scene of Los Angeles. The founding
    members included Marshall Chashoudian, Greta M. Chashoudian, Zaruhi
    Elmassian, Hovsep Ignatius, Siroon Mangurian, and Dr. Aram Tolegian.
    The group later renamed itself the Armenian Allied Arts Association, a
    nonprofit organization dedicated to encouraging and supporting
    artistically talented individuals of Armenian descent.

    "I think art is just as important as politics and religion,"
    Yotnegparian says. "Sometimes it's hard to find people to be a patron
    of the arts -- they think art is just a pastime or a hobby -- but the
    Allied Arts Association really likes to help artists achieve their
    full potential."

    connect:
    www.armenianalliedarts. org

    ********************************************* ******************************

    13. Crime Beat: Accused health care fraudster nabbed after traffic stop

    by Jason Kandel

    GLENDALE, Calif. -- Sarkis "Sako" Militonyan was on his way to a
    soccer game the morning of Jan. 27 when Glendale police pulled him
    over after noticing his white Chevrolet Tahoe straddling two lanes
    near Glenoaks Boulevard and Sonora Avenue.

    He wouldn't make the game.

    The 43-year-old man was on probation for a 2005 attempted extortion
    conviction and was wanted by the federal government in a $5 million
    health care fraud case, police said.

    The former car wash owner was booked into the Los Angeles County
    Jail, turned over to the FBI and awaits an arraignment hearing Tuesday
    to answer to health care fraud charges, officials said.

    Mr. Militonyan's arrest shed light on the man's murky ties to the
    underground economy in Glendale and his current case put a spotlight
    on the nagging problem of health care fraud in Southern California.

    "Health care fraud is a massive problem across the United States,"
    said Thom Mrozek, a spokesman for the United States Attorney's Office
    in Los Angeles. "It seems to be a particularly bad problem in the Los
    Angeles metropolitan area. It's a huge amount of money."

    Mr. Militonyan's attorney, Garo Ghazarian, said his client was made
    aware of the pending health care fraud case against him when an FBI
    agent interviewed him about it in October.

    "Had my client been made aware that there was a warrant for his
    arrest, he would have self surrendered," said Mr. Ghazarian, who would
    not authorize an interview with his client due to the ongoing case.
    "In knowing that, he did not flee."

    Mr. Ghazarian said he could not comment on the merits of the
    government's case because he has not seen the investigative reports.
    He is in the process of raising $225,000 in property to secure his
    client's release from custody.

    The government's case is laid out in a six-page federal grand jury
    indictment. It alleges that between July 2001 and March 2003, the scam
    netted Mr. Militonyan and his alleged accomplice, Dr. Michael Streams,
    some $1.5 million for medical tests and services that were not
    necessary or were not provided.

    Using Mr. Streams' legitimate Medicare identity number that
    authorized him to bill the federal government for health care
    reimbursements, the men allegedly cheated the government out of $5
    million by indicating on paper they had performed the tests.

    Dr. Streams' attorney did not return a call seeking comment.

    The case is one of several local health care fraud cases in the news
    recently in the L.A. area.

    Last year, five people, including a husband and wife from Altadena,
    were convicted in what authorities said was a Russian-Armenian
    organized crime ring that took $20 million from Medicare through phony
    clinics and labs in L.A., Glendale, Van Nuys, and Pasadena.

    Last summer, a Glendale husband and wife and two accomplices were
    charged in a state Medi-Cal fraud case. In that case, the defendants
    are accused of operating an adult day health care center out of a
    church community room and filing false claims to the government for
    services performed on a day prosecutors allege the clinic was closed.

    Although there is no apparent tie with the current health care fraud
    charges he faces, Mr. Militonyan is no stranger to law enforcement.

    Los Angeles County Superior Court records show that he was convicted
    of property theft in 1998. In 2005, he was one of two defendants
    convicted in a murky extortion try.

    The case came about in 2002 after an Armenian businessperson claimed
    he had borrowed money from an accused loan shark identified in court
    documents as Grigor Tifekchian, then 70. The victim apparently could
    not afford to pay back the money he owed and eventually Mr. Tifekchian
    and Mr. Militonyan came calling.

    The victim, who himself had a prior arrest for credit card fraud --
    charges that were later dropped -- said in court testimony that Mr.
    Tifekchian threatened to kill him if he didn't pay the $3,500 he said
    the victim owed on a $7,500 loan, court papers say.

    Eventually the victim became so afraid of the men that he reported
    them to police, agreed to wear a wire and record conversations that
    would eventually lead to the convictions of Mr. Tifekchian and Mr.
    Militonyan.

    When the victim said he could only pay $1,000, Mr. Tifekchian said,
    "If you don't pay, this guy (Militonyan) knows where to find you,"
    according court records. "He'll cut your balls. He is going to
    [expletive] you in front of your wife."

    The victim testified that at one point, Mr. Militonyan claimed that
    the money the victim owed to Mr. Tifekchian was actually his money.

    The victim testified in front of a Los Angeles County grand jury
    that he became so afraid of the men that he took his children out of
    school and even traveled to Palm Springs to hide out for a few days,
    court records show.

    He also testified that during the case, "Sako," through an
    intermediary, tried to get him to drop the charges.

    He also said that the stress from testifying prompted him to break
    out with some type of rash all over his body. It was so bad that he
    checked himself into a hospital where he was prescribed allergy
    medication and steroids, he said, according to the 2005 grand jury
    transcripts.

    Mr. Militonyan pleaded guilty to one count of attempted extortion
    and was sentenced to 34 days in jail and three years probation. As
    part of the plea agreement, prosecutors dropped the threat charges.

    Daniel Behesnilian, the attorney who represented Mr. Militonyan in
    the attempted extortion case, said that Mr. Militonyan's role in the
    case was minor.

    "He was sucked into it," Mr. Behesnilian said. "He didn't repudiate
    what the old man was saying, but he never used threatening language."

    Mr. Tifekchian was sentenced to two years in state prison.

    Mr. Tifekchian's attorney, Fred Minassian, said his client has
    served his time has not ties to Mr. Militonyan nor his current case
    and is leading a law-abiding life.

    ******************************************* ********************************

    14. Laughter for a great cause

    by Karine Chakarian

    GLENDALE, Calif. -- On February 6, Phoenicia Restaurant in Glendale
    was abuzz with activity, with staff running around in fervent
    preparation. As 8 P.M. neared, tablecloths were draped over tables and
    chairs were brought in from the patio to accommodate the over 200
    guests that were about to arrive.

    The occasion was the Children's Music Fund's first annual Comedy
    Night Fundraiser, an evening devoted to raising money for a noble
    cause.

    * Standing room only

    The enthusiasm surrounding the event was fueled by the mission of the
    Children's Music Fund. The nonprofit organization, founded by Dr.
    Raffi Tachdjian, a pediatric pain specialist at Mattel Children's
    hospital at UCLA, donates musical instruments and provides music
    therapy to chronically ill children.

    Tickets sold out within weeks of the event's announcement and far
    surpassed the organizer's expectations. "The restaurant overflowed
    with so much energy, there was barely any standing room left," said
    Mariette Tachdjian, RN, one of the organizers of the event and a
    Children's Music Fund board member. "And to think we are passing on
    that positive energy in the form of music and laughter," Tachdjian
    continued. "There is no better therapy... whether you are ill or
    healthy."

    As word of mouth and enthusiasm for the event spread across the
    Armenian community, waiting lists were formed and organizers were
    contacted by enthusiastic supporters who had hopes of attending the
    event.

    Ara Kalfayan, owner of Phoenicia Restaurant, allowed the
    organization to use his Mediterranean eatery to host the event. A
    small stage was set up towards the back of the restaurant where,
    throughout the evening, an impressive lineup of comedians entertained
    the guests.

    * Serenading cows and "Dirty Dandigins"

    The program began with a skit involving a Midwest farmer called Vrad
    Khentamian, played by Raffi Rupchian, receiving the Long Lost Armenian
    Award. In an interview with a reporter, played by Mariette Tachdjian,
    Vrad discusses growing up in Missouri, where exposure to his ethnicity
    consisted of listening to his father serenade cows in Armenian.

    We learn that Vrad moonlights as a bailiff. As he reminisces, he is
    joined on stage by Raffi Tachdjian, Shant Karlubian, and Sevan
    Karagoz, in a reenactment of a trial in a Missouri state courthouse
    where Sahag Mardik Aravodian, an immigrant from Kesab, played by
    Karagoz, stands trial for accidentally shooting a bald eagle while
    hunting for turkeys. As the trial progresses, so does the confusion,
    as the translations of the court-appointed interpreter (Tachdjian),
    whose grasp of the Armenian language is limited to television and
    audiotapes, lead to the hilarious climax of the judge's (Karlubian)
    ruling.

    The skit was followed with a performance by stand-up comic Jason
    James, who will be featured on next season's Last Comic Standing.

    The highlight of the evening was Lory Tatoulian. Dressed head to toe
    in gold lame and wearing large, round, red-framed glasses, she made
    her first appearance as the "Dirty Dandigin," an overweight,
    gossip-loving, coffee cup-reading Armenian woman who flirted
    shamelessly with audience members.

    Throughout the evening, Lory transformed herself into a multitude of
    characters -- from a Russian man carrying a bottle of vodka and
    speaking in numb monotone about "existential" life in post-Soviet
    Russia to the statue of liberty lighting a cigarette off her torch and
    lamenting about returning to France. Lory's performance was
    wonderfully complemented with live musical accompaniment by composer
    and multi-instrumentalist Ara Dabandjian.

    While the majority of the attendees and performers were Armenian,
    the cause transcended all ethnicities. "The show was great," said
    Sovann Somreth. "I laughed my head off even though a quarter of it was
    in Armenian. There is such a great sense of community in Glendale."

    In fact, several organizations were represented in the audience
    including the UCLA Pediatric Pain Program, Armenian American Medical
    Society of California, and Arpa Foundation for Film, Music and Art.

    With the community's generous involvement, the Children's Music
    Fund's first annual fundraiser was a resounding success. And while the
    fundraiser may have been the first of the year for the fund, the
    organizers assured the audience that plans are underway for a
    succession of similar evenings devoted to raising money, in the hopes
    of bringing a smile to the faces of chronically ill children.

    connect:
    childrensmusicfund.org

    ****** ************************************************** *******************

    15. Restaurants: Que Rico Taqueria

    by Lucie Davidian

    VAN NUYS, Calif. -- Juan Mendez was a wonderful man. He was a
    resourceful man who revolutionized Mexican cuisine by introducing one
    of the greatest creations of all time - the Burrito. It sounds a bit
    crazy; but then again, throughout the years I have developed a serious
    Burrito habit. I eat one at least once a week. There are weeks that
    can go by when I try my best to fight the cravings. Sometimes it
    works; but for the most part, I end up giving in. My friends tease me
    about it often, but I can't help it. Every time I bite into a carne
    asada burrito, I get a huge smile on my face. So you can imagine how
    excited I was when I found out about a Taqueria owned by Armenians in
    Van Nuys.

    Burritos have a long history. "Burrito like" foods were eaten by the
    Aztecs, who used to wrap their food with tortillas. This is according
    to accounts by Spanish missionaries.

    Burrito in Spanish translates to "Little Donkey," and according to
    Wikipedia the name comes from the shape that the burrito takes which
    resembles the ear of a donkey. The first burrito originated from the
    city of Cuidad Juárez in the state of Chihuahua, where during the
    Mexican Revolution (1910-1921), a taco salesmen named Juan Mendez, in
    an attempt to keep his tacos warm wrapped them in a larger tortilla,
    hence creating the burrito. The name developed because Juan used his
    donkey the same way taco vendors in Los Angeles use taco trucks to
    bring food to the people.

    There are several different kinds of burritos, there is the Mexican
    burrito which varies from state to state, in Yucatan for example they
    only use meat and beans, whereas in Oaxaca they use Mole sauce to give
    it a distinct taste; however the common ingredients are refried beans,
    Spanish rice and meat consisting mainly of beef (carne) or pork
    (carnitas). In the U.S. burritos have taken on a life of their own,
    here they incorporate a lot more ingredients such as vegetables,
    cheese, guacamole, salsa and sour cream.

    The San Francisco Burrito is most famous due to its culinary and
    cultural attributes, it is distinguished for its larger size due to
    the amount of rice used and the abundance of side dishes. It also has
    a history that goes back to the Central Valley farm workers and to the
    city's Mission district, where in the Seventies, it became an
    important part of the Chicano movement. Who would have thought that a
    wrapped up tortilla filled with meat and rice would be something of
    cultural pride, but it was and still is, just like the Armenian
    inspired Lavash Wraps that have become popular in the recent years, so
    popular in fact that McDonalds in Eastern Europe has created the
    McLavash.

    The meshing of cultures through food is a part of our everyday
    lives, living in L.A. it is impossible to avoid the influence of Latin
    food, especially Mexican. It is for this reason that Danny Kovarkizi,
    an Armenian-Assyrian who moved to the U.S. from Iran, almost six years
    ago, decided to open a Mexican restaurant named Que Rico in Van Nuys.
    When I asked him why he chose Mexican food his answer was "because its
    low cost, the ingredients are simple but most importantly everyone
    eats it, I have Armenian and Latin customers coming in and out of the
    restaurant all day."

    Que Rico's location on Sherman Way is in a commercial and
    residential area, the restaurant is open six days a week and has a
    menu that serves breakfast, lunch and dinner. The whole operation is
    run by Danny and his chef who helped him create the menu. Born in
    Orumieh, Iran, Danny a tall, energetic 27 year old told me that he
    really had no idea what he was getting himself into when he decided to
    get into the restaurant business. After moving to the U.S., he worked
    several jobs before realizing that he would prefer to have his own
    business rather than work for someone else. Growing up in Post
    Revolutionary Iran, Danny explains that his drive towards self
    sufficiency stems from the work ethic his father instilled in him, as
    well as the difficult life they lead back home.

    Iran became an unpleasant place to live after the fall of the Shah,
    the religious fundamentalism had its negative effects on the Armenian
    community there. He explained that those like me, who left the country
    right after the Revolution have been lucky in that we have had it a
    lot easier than those like him who stayed behind. However that
    experience helped shape him into the driven, hard working individual
    that he is; he speaks several languages fluently including Spanish
    which he insists makes a huge difference in his daily interaction with
    his Latin patrons.

    After realizing that he wanted to focus on Mexican food, he went to
    several local Mexican restaurants and collected their menus to fully
    understand what Mexican food really is. After hiring his chef Juan
    Molina, they created a menu which has everything from Taco's,
    Quesadillas, Nacho's, Torta's, (Mexican sandwich) and of course
    burritos. The menu also has nicely constructed seafood dishes
    consisting mainly Tilapia and Camarones (shrimp) as well as breakfast
    items such as Breakfast Burritos and Huevos Rancheros, eggs served
    with corn tortillas, Ranchera sauce, rice and beans. The menu is
    simple, all the salsas and other sauces are made in house by Juan and
    Danny. They have the usual Mexican Agua's Fresca's ( Fresh Cold
    Waters) which are a combination of fruits, seeds and water and come in
    three distinct flavors, Horchata (rice and cinnamon), Tamarindo (
    Tamarind) and Jamaica ( Hibiscus).

    On my visit that day naturally I chose to get the Carne Asada
    burrito, but this one was a bit different than what I'm used to
    because it was served with a delicious, bright red Enchilada sauce
    made of Chile Arbol. This is another version of the burrito, referred
    to as the "Wet Burrito," where typically it's topped with an enchilada
    sauce and is eaten with a knife and fork. The burrito didn't
    disappoint, it was stuffed with carne asada, rice, beans, Pico de
    Gallo (tomatoes, onions and cilantro) and Monterey Jack cheese. It was
    one of the few times in my long history of burrito consumption that I
    couldn't finish the whole thing, I took the rest home and enjoyed it
    that evening.

    Que Rico opened a year ago and for Danny it has been a challenging
    and insightful experience, he's learned the importance of keeping your
    ingredients fresh by selecting the right purveyors and understanding
    how your customers' taste buds work. Given his Latino and Armenian
    clientele, he's also learned what a difference the addition of beer
    and wine makes to your menu. Most importantly he's learned to cook
    good Mexican food, because when Juan goes home, Danny is the one who
    jumps into the kitchen and makes those delicious burritos. His
    business is picking up and in the future he hopes to expand and
    possibly develop a chain of Mexican restaurants.

    The optimist in me still believes that food is the key to uniting
    people especially here in the U.S. the "melting pot" of the world, and
    particularly in cities like Los Angeles where ethnic tension is
    abundant. Watching Danny cook the Carne Asada and hearing him talk
    about how he makes the Enchilada sauce is the reason I was excited
    when I first heard about this place. He's comfortable with it because
    as he says, since his move to L.A., he has spent as much time "hanging
    out" with Latinos as he has with Armenians, so opening a Mexican
    restaurant was not as far fetched as I initially assumed.

    It hinders our growth as people and as a community when we don't
    learn to open up and tolerate others around us, even though some of it
    can be attributed to our parent's generation's fear of assimilation,
    there are ways to assimilate without loosing your identity. How many
    times have we heard our parents say they won't accept us marrying an
    "odar?"

    When I was younger I used to always tell my mom that I was either
    going to end up marrying an Indian or a Mexican because I loved their
    cuisine so much, it would be cool to have a mother-in-law who would
    pass those recipes down to me. My mother, of course would laugh it
    off, but a part of me was serious because there's such an amazing
    bonding experience that happens in the kitchen, it doesn't matter what
    culture you're from. It wasn't the chef's in my culinary school who
    taught me how to really cook, it was the Mexican's and El Salvadoran's
    standing next to me everyday in the kitchen.

    Every time I read an article in the paper of Armenian and Mexican
    kids fighting and at times killing each other in high schools, it
    saddens me that they're so focused on their differences rather than
    appreciating their similarities. Maybe these kids should get together
    and share burritos and kebab sandwiches because in reality there
    really isn't much of a difference between the two, and maybe in some
    strange way it will help them understand each other better.

    * * *
    Location
    13611 Sherman Way
    Van Nuys, CA. 91405

    Contact
    (818) 785-1002

    Hours
    Monday -- Saturday
    10:00 am -- 9:00 pm

    Average Price
    $1.99 -- $11.99

    ****************************************** *********************************

    Please send your news to [email protected] and your letters to
    [email protected]

    (c) 2008 Armenian Reporter LLC. All Rights Reserved
Working...
X