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  • Five Beautiful Ducklings

    FIVE BEAUTIFUL DUCKLINGS
    By Frank Nahigian

    Asbarez
    Feb 26th, 2010
    http://www.asbarez.com/77876/five-beautiful-d ucklings/

    When you and I were growing up we were always pleased and proud to see,
    hear or read about an Armenian's public achievement, so when the 1951
    Stanford football team with five Armenians playing key roles won the
    right to represent the Pacific Coast Conference in the Rose Bowl game
    the following New Year's Day, I paid close attention. I was mildly
    disappointed they lost to Illinois by a lopsided score and felt badly
    for the boys but didn't care otherwise. Hugasian had scored Stanford's
    only touchdown and Kerkorian kicked the extra point. The glass was 80%
    full. I've always wondered about who and what the five were and how
    they spent the rest of their lives. So I decided to find out.

    My first call was to Norm Manoogian, captain of the team his senior
    year and a member of the Stanford University Hall of Fame. Norm was
    raised only by his mother because his father died in an accident when
    Norm was 18 months old, his mother's entire family was killed during
    the massacres, and his father's brother met a similar fate. Norm's
    four year old mom survived only through the kindness of a Turkish
    military officer who saved her by secretly absorbing her into his own
    family. Norm became a teacher and educator his entire professional
    life. I asked him what was the most important wisdom he could pass on
    to his children. He said, "Thinking. Thinking through every problem
    before you make a decision, and to believe in yourself". Now in his
    retirement, Norm and his wife Jone remain active by supporting and
    engaging in programs implemented to improve the community environment.

    He said that the strongest message he got from his mom was the value
    of unconditional love and of being responsible for our actions. He
    recalled the closeness and warmth of the community when he was in
    college, a time when an unspoken honor system existed. Shopkeepers
    extended credit for purchases by students if they didn't have enough
    cash in their pockets to pay for goods they needed, and compared it
    to the change he saw when he returned to the same community after
    returning from military service, when the same shopkeepers required
    payment at the time of purchase. He decried the breakdown in the
    fundamental standard and the honor system. When we spoke about the
    broken economy the country faces today, I asked him what he thought
    brought us to the present condition: "Greed", which he blamed on
    the mindset of Washington politicians as well as the attitude in
    Big Business. On the other hand and closer to their hearts, Norm and
    Jone are gratified and proud of the fact that their two children are
    healthy and independent in every way.

    Next I spoke to Len Kaprielian, a classmate of Norm's and a defensive
    tackle. At 250 pounds (his teammates nicknamed him "Two And A Half"),
    he was the biggest player on the team. After working for Firestone
    Tire and Rubber Co. for a number of years, Len achieved a lifelong
    dream by buying and operating a bar and grill in San Francisco, the
    Jolly Friar English Pub, for twenty years, retired, and applied the
    teamwork skills he learned on the football field and honed during his
    business career, to community service. In 1991 he began volunteering
    for the Sausolito Arts Festival, the foremost outdoor fine arts
    festival in the country, and now runs part of the operation and serves
    on the Board of Directors. In recognition of his many contributions
    to the community, annual grants awarded to local non-profits by the
    Festival have been named the Leonard Kaprielian Grants. This project
    has become almost the joy of his life, an eternal second to his wife,
    Agnes. He's twice been named Volunteer of the Year for the city of
    Sausalito, has received the Spirit of Marin award, and he and Agnes
    have been honored by being named grand marshals of Sausalito's 4th
    of July parade. Len attributes his successes to teamwork.

    More recently, Len has been confined to bed as a result of an
    accident while visiting a long time Armenian friend in Fresno who
    was producing a custom car show. He's progressed to the point where
    he can eat regular food, starting with madzun so Agnes (Dervishian,
    Philadelphia) has made half a gallon of madzun which unquestionably
    will have him back on his feet in no time because....(you're no going
    to believe this).....Agnes has been making madzun regularly for 32
    years, continuing the same culture she got from the last batch her
    mother made before she died. (Was I right? Is that a record or what?)
    Chuck Essegian says of Len, "He's the kindest-hearted, sweetest man
    I ever met".

    Chuck Essegian, another of their classmates, another Stanford Hall
    of Famer. Chuck was a linebacker on that team. When Chuck graduated,
    he had the option of trying to play professional football or baseball
    and decided on the latter because for one, it paid better, and for
    another, the likelihood of injury was less in baseball so, if he
    failed at that game, he could still attempt football, but if he got
    hurt playing football, it would also prevent a baseball career. But
    he didn't fail. His four seasons in the minor leagues and six in the
    majors included hitting two pinch hit home runs to help the L.A.

    Dodgers beat the Chicago White Sox in the 1959 World Series. After
    his baseball career ended, Chuck went to law school and practiced
    for 30 years till he retired to Canyon Country, California.

    His father was a mailman; his mom was orphaned at eight and came to
    this country at sixteen years. What he was taught by his parents was
    to respect and love his family, and the value of Perseverance. He
    learned at home as well as through sports competition that you're
    going to lose from time to time, everyone does, but the winners are
    those who persevere, who get back up after they've been knocked down.

    We're accustomed to hearing people rave about their grandchildren,
    how remarkably good looking and intelligent they are, and we tolerate
    it because we understand it, right? Chuck surprised me; he said his
    mom is the greatest person he ever knew in his life, and I believe him
    because of one of several stories he told me. In his words: "She just
    was so full of wisdom for someone who didn't have a formal education,
    never got beyond sixth grade. I'll tell you a funny story that I laugh
    at to this day. I came hope one day after my fourth or fifth season in
    the big leagues, and had been in a World Series and had hit some home
    runs so I thought I knew a little bit about hitting. She only saw me
    play in one football game and in maybe two baseball games, during the
    World Series. When I came home after maybe my fifth season in the big
    leagues she came to me one day and said would you get a bat and come
    outside, I want to show you something? I said "What do you want to
    show me, Mom?" She said, "I just want to talk to you about something.

    You know sometimes you walk up to the plate like the pitcher's already
    going to get you out before you even get there. You drag the bat behind
    you, and I want to show you how I want you to walk up to that plate
    and take your stance and swing the bat." "I thought, God bless you,
    Mom, you never give up. I never forgot that. Even when I was fifty,
    she was giving me advice all the time but I never forgot that.

    "She thought that your mind and your attitude could govern what your
    body did. She absolutely had that understanding." (I say, that poor,
    uneducated woman may have known more about the power of positive
    thinking than Dale Carnegie did.)

    Two of the most prominent players on that team were Gary Kerkorian,
    the quarterback, and Harry Hugasian, the feature running back, who
    were Stanford 1952, one year in college ahead of the other three.

    Local sportswriters labeled them "The Shish Kebab Twins" and they're
    still referred to as such to this day. Ironically, in the mid-forties
    Harry's parents moved his family from Wisconsin to Pasadena to start
    a new life. They opened an eatery, "The House of Shish Kebab" and as
    Harry tells it, "In 1947 Los Angeles, nobody ate shish kebab, so we
    went broke". A local friend, Sam Salesian, a Stanford alum, found jobs
    for Harry's parents and helped Harry get a football scholarship to
    attend his alma mater. Harry went into the Air Force after graduation
    and, when he returned from the service, played professional football
    for two of the most storied coaches in NFL history, the Baltimore
    Colts coached by Weeb Ewbank and the Chicago Bears coached by George
    Halas. Kerkorian was a quarterback on the Colts at that time and of
    course he favored Harry whenever he had the opportunity to do so. For
    those of you who are interested, the two highest paid players at that
    time were Frankie Albert and Otto Graham who were making $25,000 per
    year. Harry was getting $6000. After football, Harry went into the
    bowling alley business, one in Long Beach and one in L.A. Eventually
    he sold the alleys and went into the corrugated box business and paper
    pad manufacturing business for six or seven years until he retired.

    Harry resides in a retirement home in Arcadia owned by Armenians
    where he's very pleased with the lifestyle.

    Gary Kerkorian was a three year starter, was named first team
    All-American by United Press Intl., and a Stanford Hall of Fame
    inductee. He was selected by the Pittsburgh Steelers in the 1952
    draft and played for them for one season before signing on with
    the Baltimore Colts where he was their starting quarterback for the
    1954 season. He played for two more years and then left to get a law
    degree at Georgetown, but rejoined the Colts as a backup quarterback
    for their last two regular season games and the 1958 NFL Championship
    game won by the Colts over the New York Giants in "the greatest game
    ever played". Gary practiced law until he became a superior court
    judge in Fresno in 1990 and retired in January 2000. Gary and Harry
    remained such close friends after college that Harry was the best man
    at his wedding and godfather to four of Gary's six children. Harry
    said when they played together for the Colts, Gary mentored him. When
    Gary became a judge in the Fresno federal court, Harry called Gary to
    congratulate him and asked him, tongue in cheek, whether if he got a
    parking ticket, Gary could fix it for him. Gary's response was, "No,
    that's minor league stuff, but if you murder someone or rob a bank,
    now I can help you" J.

    As outstanding an athlete as Gary was, his track record indicates
    he was an even more meritorious human being. When I asked Joyce,
    his widow, about his Armenian background, she said he was very proud
    of his ethnicity and culture. When I asked her what Gary felt was
    his most outstanding life achievement, Joyce repeated a story told
    by another judge who had attended a law symposium with Gary where,
    in response to a question asking what he considered his greatest
    accomplishment in life, Gary answered, "My six children". She said
    some constant, consistent messages he repeated to his kids over the
    years were, "Study hard, get good grades, don't outsmart yourself by
    overanalyzing problems and most important of all, do what your heart
    tells you to do". All his life, the main principle by which he lived
    was to be fair and honest in every situation. Gary died of lung cancer
    on May 22, 2000. I wish I could have spoken with him.
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