Tehran: Death symphony in search of justice staged

IRNA, Iran
January 26, 2005 Wednesday 3:45 PM EST

Death symphony in search of justice staged

Tehran, January 26

On the sixth day of the 23rd International Fajr Theater Festival,
Wednesday, Antigone from the ancient Greek playwright Sophocles was
staged at Tehran Vahdat Hall.

The play was directed by Hacoup Ghazanchian from Armenia and was one
of the selected plays of the international section.

Antigone, the third part of the trilogy about Oedipus the King is the
story of the Greek monarch and the horrible destiny his family is
doomed to face.

The first part of the trilogy deals with the tenure of Oedipus, the
second one is about the ominous destiny awaiting him and the final
one relates the incidents his family are destined to face.

Besides `Oedipus at Colonus` and `Oedipus the King`, Antigone is
considered as one of the world most charming classical tragedies.

Some 2,500 years after it was created, the play still attracts the
attention of art lovers.

This time, however, the version of Antigone staged by the Armenian
theater group displays a death symphony in search of justice in a
vehemently oppressed land.

Here Antigone, gets involved in an uprising against a hypocrite
bloodthirsty monarch seated on the throne and ruling the people.

However, his efforts to seek justice in a spellbound land are in vain
and he fails to attract any assistance to the effect.

A young man in love is the only one supporting him.

But the monarch who is against modern thoughts gets into conflict
with him and eventually hangs Antigone for his quest of justice.

Finding himself single-handed, the young man puts an end to his life,
in the hope of meeting his beloved in the other world.

Given his good know-how on the basic principles of theater, the
director of Antigone has succeeded to establish a reasonable relation
with the Iranian spectators.

Making use of technical and theatrical gestures at the beginning and
end of the play marks the director`s good expertise in the field.

The play script provides the director with the opportunity to present
a successful performance played by professional actors, despite the
fact that some of the acts are quite out of rhythm and irritate the
viewers.

In spite of the minor flaws, Antigone was quite appealing to the
Iranian spectators attending Vahdat Hall on the sixth day of the 23rd
International Fajr Theater Festival.

Migrant fieldworkers are losing their traditional livelihood

San Diego Union Tribune, CA
Jan 23 2005

Migrant fieldworkers are losing their traditional livelihood to
mechanized pickers, global competition
By Diane Lindquist
UNION-TRIBUNE STAFF WRITER

PARLIER – For the past century, raisins in California’s Central
Valley have been harvested in exactly the same way: a monthlong
frenzy of hand picking that required more workers than almost any
other crop.

Last season, many raisin growers turned to machines to do the work.
Although they had long held out, they are now joining growers
nationwide in embracing mechanization to fend off global competition.

But the switch to mechanical harvesting is taking a heavy toll on the
Mexican migrants who fill most of the state’s lowest-paying farm
jobs. With machines picking more crops, the need for field hands is
falling sharply. Where 50 men once were needed to harvest a field of
raisins, five now suffice.

“I’ve been going all over the valley looking for work, but there
isn’t any. If I’m lucky, I get one or two days a week,” said Fidel
Rosales Rodrguez, who last spring paid smugglers $1,200 to sneak him
from Mexico into California.

Even legal fieldworkers say they have never experienced such a tough
year. There were more migrants, they complain, and jobs were all but
impossible to find.

Mechanization portends big problems for a region strained in the past
two decades by the arrival of impoverished rural Mexicans. They are
widely estimated to be coming to the United States at a rate of more
than a half million a year, with a quarter to a third of them
entering California.

The challenge of absorbing so many newcomers is taxing the economic
and social well-being of the valleys that produce fruits, nuts and
vegetables for markets worldwide.

“We’re adding a lot of poor people into what’s already a pretty poor
area. It’s a dangerous path,” said Philip Martin, a migration
specialist at the University of California Davis.

California, the setting for John Steinbeck’s “The Grapes of Wrath”
and Cesar Chavez’s historic farmworker union movement, is
experiencing the emergence of a worrisome strain of rural poverty. It
exists alongside the relative prosperity associated with the state’s
$25.7 billion agriculture business. If, for instance, the Central
Valley were a state, it would rank first in the nation in
agricultural production but 48th in per-capita income.

“People used to think California was divided between the north and
south, but it’s really between the wealthy coastal areas and the
impoverished interior valleys,” said demographer Hans Johnson of the
Public Policy Institute of California.

The sheer magnitude of the influx of Mexican migrants is prompting
tension and resentment that mirror anti-immigrant feelings in other
parts of the United States. California’s agricultural valleys have
become Balkanized as numerous ethnic groups have reshuffled into
separate communities.

“We risk falling into warring factions,” said Assemblyman Juan
Arambula, a former Fresno County supervisor.

Parlier, a small farming town 20 miles southeast of Fresno that is in
the heart of raisin country USA, typifies the dilemma that confronts
many rural California cities.

An unceasing arrival of migrants has transformed Parlier into one of
the scores of communities known as “Mexican towns” that dot the
Central Valley. Since 1990, Parlier’s population has doubled to
12,000. Every year when field hands arrive for the harvest, the city
has 4,000 more residents for a few months.

The community also is one of California’s poorest. Unemployment
hovers year-round at 30 percent. Per-capita income averages $5,300;
family incomes are slightly more than $24,000.

Some families are struggling on less than $3,000 a year, the average
wage in Mexico.

“We’re transferring rural poverty from Mexico to rural California,”
Martin of UC Davis said, “and we don’t have a game plan to get out of
it.”

The mechanization of the raisin harvest threatens to make the
situation even worse. State officials believe two or three migrants
are currently competing for each of California’s 400,000 to 500,000
seasonal farm jobs. If machines pick the raisins, agricultural
experts say, labor demand will drop to a tenth of the 40,000 to
50,000 workers typically hired today.

“I’m reluctant to say we don’t want any more (workers),” Arambula
said. “But to the extent we have more people than work, we need to
slow it down.”

The region is looking to U.S. immigration measures to control the
flow.

President Bush has put the issue back on his agenda, vowing that
Congress this year will implement a guest worker program and some
type of provision to legalize undocumented people living in the
United States.

Also expected is legislation that would increase border enforcement
and impose enforceable sanctions on employers who hire undocumented
workers.

Any immigration reforms could greatly affect the state’s farm picture
as well as areas nationwide that have attracted large numbers of
Mexican migrants and increasingly are coming to resemble rural
California.

Still, it’s uncertain whether new measures would help.

For example, the Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986 spawned
unintended consequences that contributed to the economic and social
stress felt today. The legislation legalized 3 million undocumented
immigrants, a third of them under a special agricultural provision.
But it failed to halt illegal entries. Instead, it quickened the
flow.

Once legalized, Mexican men secretly brought their wives and children
across the border to join them. Meanwhile, fresh job seekers arrived
to replenish the ranks as the back-breaking work drove older workers
from the fields but not necessarily from California.

Such post-IRCA inflows have caused the population of farmworker
communities to grow twice as fast as populations elsewhere in
California.

Estimates of undocumented people living in the United States
generally vary from 9 million to 12 million, with Mexicans accounting
for about 5.4 million of the total.

“Every year, the numbers of undocumented immigrants flowing into the
United States is higher than the year before,” said Jeffrey Passel, a
research specialist at the Urban Institute, a nonpartisan economic
and social policy research group in Washington, D.C. “The number in
the last decade is more than any other decade, and the statistics
might be low.”

Growers in Fresno County, home of the entire U.S. raisin crop, have
long relied on workers from Mexico to collect the dried, wrinkly
fruit they sell as a baking ingredient and snack.

“We couldn’t have gotten the crop picked without them,” said grower
John Pabojian.

But Pabojian has stopped hiring from among the migrants who arrive
each season. Instead of the 100 workers he once took on for the
monthlong process, he now has six year-round workers and a machine
that finishes the harvest in half the time.

The transition many of the state’s 5,500 raisin growers are making is
considered the most significant innovation in the raisin harvest
since the industry was established in 1873. It’s also happening
faster than anyone expected. Last fall, the amount of raisin acreage
picked by machine increased by more than 30 percent.

Harvests of most crops raised in California are already mechanized,
from beans to nuts and some citrus. And experts predict that machines
will soon pick more of the fruits and vegetables now routinely picked
by hand.

By eliminating so many jobs, the raisin industry’s mechanization is
dramatically changing the overall job market.

“For a very traditional industry that always has been in the lead of
fighting for hand laborers, it’s revolutionary,” said Martin of UC
Davis.

Raisin harvesting machines were developed in the 1950s, but growers
resisted them until economics forced the issue. They had argued that
only humans were capable of the painstaking work of cutting grape
clusters from vines, laying them on the ground in paper trays to dry,
turning them once, rolling them and, once they’ve become raisins,
collecting them.

Raisin growers, like those in the sugar and tomato industries,
invested much political capital to convince lawmakers they needed a
guest worker program to ensure an adequate supply of cheap labor.

And now that President Bush is promising one will be enacted, they
are not backing off.

“We’ve got to have a guest worker program,” said Manuel Cu×ha Jr.,
president of the Nisei Farmers League. The work force is rife with
fraudulent documents, he said. With tightened homeland security laws
and stricter enforcement, “it’ll be all over” if the fields are
raided.

U.S. immigration agents, however, routinely have refrained from
pursuing undocumented workers in California’s agricultural valleys.
Last summer, the Border Patrol closed its Fresno County office.

Nevertheless, Cu×ha said, legalization would assure growers an
adequate supply of stable, skilled laborers required for
mechanization and, at the same time, offer workers the opportunity to
move on to other, better-paying jobs.

For workers, mechanization and the drop in labor demand last season
hit without warning.

“I’ve been coming here for 25 years. Back then it was the place to
find work,” said longtime field hand Simon Martnez of La Paz, in Baja
California Sur. “This year has been the most difficult ever because
there’s been more people and a lot less jobs.

“I have to come back next year. My family is counting on it. I have
10 children, and I also help support my parents,” he said.

It’s too early to know how the permanent job cuts will affect the
flow of migrants from Mexico.

“The assumption is they’ll go someplace else to where there are
jobs,” said Roberto Suro, director of the Pew Hispanic Center.

Labor issues are not driving the transition to mechanization.
Globalization is. Producers in Chile and Turkey are sending cheaper
raisins into an already saturated U.S. market. As a result, growers
in Fresno County are being forced to cut costs.

“The cause has been the basic economics of the industry,” said Bert
Mason, an agricultural economist at Fresno State University. “And
because of that we’ve seen a rapid change in attitude toward
mechanization.”

Competition has forced daunting decisions on California’s raisin
farmers, most of whom are Armenian or Japanese immigrants or
descendants of immigrants. Many are in their 60s and 70s.

While they once were able to make a decent living on less than 50
acres, foreign competition and four straight years of poor crops and
low prices have made such operations big money losers.

Some growers have put their grapes into table wine. Others are
shutting down. In the past two years, the amount of acreage devoted
to raisins shrunk to 200,000 acres from 250,000. The remaining
farmers have little choice but to mechanize.

“I’m going to switch over,” Garvin Lane said. “You’ve got to convert
or get out.”

Easing the transition has been the development of harvesting
machines, new grape varieties and planting systems. Professional
harvesters, with their own equipment and crews, have materialized.

Although methods vary, all allow the fruit to dry on the vine, rather
than on trays laid out on the ground. Machines fitted with big
brushes then advance along the rows, gently knocking the raisins into
bins. Because the fruit never touches the ground, the quality is
higher.

“It’s a huge challenge to learn how to do it,” Mason of Fresno State
said.

The shift is expensive.

A machine typically costs about $150,000. Even if growers hire a
professional harvester, the expense of preparing for mechanization –
planting vines, trellising and installing subsurface drip irrigation
– can run initial costs to about $4,500 per acre, or $2,500 more per
acre than conventional planting.

But yields more than double, boosting returns quickly enough to repay
the investment.

The biggest saving is in labor costs. Field hands are paid by the
tray, averaging 15 to 17 cents each, with workers picking an average
of 300 trays a day. Machines can cut that expenditure by 80 percent.

“Everybody was looking for ways to survive and cut costs, and that’s
the way they found to cut costs,” said grower Sohan Samran. “Even
though we’re mechanized, labor still is our biggest expense.”

Summing Up 2004

SUMMING UP 2004

Azat Artsakh – Nagorno Karabakh Republic (NKR)
22 Jan 05

The NKR government implements program for encouraging birthrate in the
republic. According to the information provided by the NKR Ministry of
Social Security, within the framework of this program 493 bank
accounts were opened in the NKR branches of `Artsakhbank’ of which 301
accounts were opened on the name of the third child of the family, 118
accounts were opened on the name of the fourth child, 33 on the name
of the fifth child, 18 accounts were opened onthe name of the sixth
child, 12 accounts were opened for the seventh, 4 for eighth, 4 for
ninth and one on the name of a tenth, an eleventh and a twelfth
child. The total sum on the bank accounts opened in 2004 is 462.700 US
dollars. In the framework of this program 1446 children of 259
families received allowances for electricity. The total sum of
allowances for electricity is 15359.3 thousand drams. For families
having more than six children under 18 recorded in 2004 houses were
built all over the republic (before no houses had been built in the
capital. They had been built in the regions for families having more
than 7 children under 18). The building of 20 houses was finished, the
other 10 will be completed in 2005. According to the head of the
department for family and children of the NKR Ministry of Social
Security Samvel Dadayan, in 2005 it is planned to build houses for five
families in Stepanakert. The children of families where the fourth and
the following children were born after the year 2000 received
allowances for renting textbooks (except for children at elementary
school). 975 children of 492 families received allowances for the
school year 2004-2005. The sum of allowances totals 3067.7 thousand
drams. Financial aid was provided to the family of Tamara Sarghissian,
village of Vazgenashen, Martouni region and Gayaneh Simonian, village
of Nor Verin Shen, Shahoumian region after the birth of their 11th and
10th child respectively. 5000 US dollars was transferred into the bank
accounts opened on their names. In 2005 the NKR state budget provides
618466.8 thousand drams for the program of increasing birthrate. In
the current year the NKR Ministry of Social Security togetherwith `
Karabakh Telecom’ CJSC will implement a program of financial aid
tosocially insecure families having children from 4 to 18 years old,
living in Stepanakert and the regional centers. The department for
family and children of the NKR Ministry of Social Security informed
that the program is financed by `Karabakh Telecom’ CJSC providing 6500
drams monthly for each child. The program existed in 2004 too but the
sum was 5000 drams. By another program implemented again by the
Ministry of Social Security and `Karabakh Telecom’ parentless children
under 18 receive 10 thousand drams every three months. Bank accounts
are opened in `Artsakhbank’ on the name of the guardians of parentless
children to which the transfers are made.

SRBUHI VANIAN.
22-01-2005

Turkish Community Revises History of Its Country

TURKISH COMMUNITY REVISES HISTORY OF ITS COUNTRY

YEREVAN, JANUARY 21. ARMINFO. Turkey begins self reflection over
Armenia. While an exhibition in Istanbul devoted to the daily life of
the Armenians in Anatolia at the start of the 20th century is breaking
attendance records, Turkish society is beginning to reflect on the
Armenian question, erased from official history for the past 90 years
The exhibition “my dear brother”, which opened on January 8, has
attracted 6,000 visitors in 12 days according to organizers, a record
for local galleries. AFP Office in Istanbul reports.

Through 500 postcards from the period, the exhibition endeavours to
show, city by city and with supporting figures, how omnipresent
Armenian communities were across the Ottoman territory and their role
in society. “In Turkey, history has always been taught about one
people — the Turks, as if there had never been any other people on
the territory. When we speak of Armenians, they are not described as
an integral group of society but as a source of problems,” explained
Osman Koker, exhibition director.

“It’s to fill this void, because I have an 11-year-old daughter who is
getting this kind of education at school, that I have decided to
publish a book and put on this exhibition,” said Koker, an historian
turned editor. “Without this realization, it will remain impossible to
discuss the events of 1915,” he said, referring to the Armenian
massacres committed between 1915 and 1917 by the Ottoman
armies. Convinced of Turkish society’s growing curiosity about its
past, Koker, nonetheless acknowledges that any change in mentality
will take time. “A majority of the public, especially in the country
areas, consider the simple word ‘Armenian’ an insult,” he said.

Even if a handful of academics and amateur historians have attempted
to re-examine Turkish history, it is not easy to break the deep taboo
which has been deeply ingrained in the general consciousness by
official history. “Until 1980, Turkish school textbooks quite simply
didn’t mention the Armenian massacre,” explained Fabio Salomoni,
author of a book on the Turkish education system.

“With the first acknowledgments of ‘genocide’ by Western governments
and the increasing number of attacks by Asala (an Armenian activist
organization), a paragraph was then added excluding all Turkish
responsibility for the deaths of Armenians, explaining in the context
of a war…” he said. Even if Turkey acknowledges the massacres, it
objects to the term ‘genocide’ and the figures of 1.2 to 1.3 million
killed, as claimed by the Armenians, estimating the number of victims
at between 250,000 to 300,000. Even though Turkish Prime Minister
Recep Tayyip Erdogan recently opened an Armenian museum in Istanbul –
just before the European summit in Brussels which gave a date to
Ankara to start negotiations for joining the European Union (news –
web sites) – there is no question of overturning the existing
orthodoxy concerning the Armenians.

Several state-subsidized organizations continue to conduct research
aimed at showing that if there was a genocide, it was more likely
committed by Armenians against the Turks. The Turkish population has
still not fully acknowledged the problem; in this context, imposing a
solution can only provoke hostile reactions,” said Etyen Mahcupyan, an
Armenian from Istanbul and writer for the daily newspaper Zaman.

El Papa bendice la nueva estatua de San Gregorio en San Pedro

Agence France Presse — Espanol
1/20/2005

El Papa bendice la nueva estatua de San Gregorio en San Pedro

CIUDAD DEL VATICANO Ene 19

El Papa Juan Pablo II bendijo este miércoles la nueva estatua de San
Gregorio, apóstol de los Armenios, la cual fue instalada en uno de
los nichos exteriores de la basílica de San Pedro.

La statua, de mármol de Carrara, de 5,64 metros de altura y que pesa
20 toneladas, fue realizada por el escultor armeno Kazan Khatechik a
pedido del colegio eclesiástico armenio de Roma.

Nacido en el año 260 y fallecido en el 328 en Armenia, San Gregorio
fue el impulsor de la conversión al cristianismo de su país en el año
301.

Se trata de la octava estatua de santo instalada en los nichos
exteriores de la basílica, que en su interior tiene numerosas obras
de arte antiguas, la mayoría del Renacimiento.

Después de haber bendecido la estatua, el Papa recibió a cerca de
7.000 peregrinos para la tradicional audiencia general de los
miércoles y los invitó a participar espiritualmente, como hace él
mismo, en la semana de oraciones por la unidad de los cristianos que
comenzó el martes en todo el mundo.

Isn’t the situation in Baku worth mentioning?

Isn’t the situation in Baku worth mentioning?

A1+
19-01-2005

«We all will remain barbarians until the world accepts this genocide,»
said Hranush Kharatyan about the genocide which took place in Baku and
Sumgait fifteen years ago. Mr. Kharatyan, who is the consultant of
Armenia’s vice president, was in Tsitsernakaberd today to address the
crowd which had gathered for a commemorative ceremony on this
genocide’s anniversary. Zori Balayan told the man next to him, ”There
should be 500000 people here instead of 50.” Mr. Balayan had been
told that ex-inhabitants of Baku would arrive via three buses.
”Where are they?” he asked. At that moment, one of the journalists
of ”Haylur” said, ”Yes, they are not sparse. Moreover, their number
is growing,” referring to the presence of the chairman of the
writers’ union Levon Ananyan and the parishioner of Kanaker’s
St. Hakob church, Sahak Ter Sahakyan. They were the last to join the
meeting.

Zori Balayan began his speech by saying that it is not right to gather
every time, return to our duties, and gather again next year. ” I
don’t envy that the people of Azerbaijan may gather today and speak
Russian,” he added. Then he read his speech, in Russian, reminding
those present of what had happened in Soviet Azerbaijan fifteen years
ago.

Some of the young people present were participating in the meeting,
while others were smiling and laughing, standing apart from the
crowd. Also, Ina Akopova, one of the victims of the Baku genocide,
presented a statement during the meeting which said that the chief of
police of the Nasiminyan area of Baku had admitted that Akopova’s
sister had been the victim of assault of soldiers during the
emigration.

Stun shares hype

New York Post
Jan 17 2005

STUN SHARES HYPE

By CHRISTOPHER BYRON

January 17, 2005 — Two weeks ago, stock in a stun gun company was
widely viewed on Wall Street as the hottest ticket in town, with just
a handful of previously unknown penny stock outfits soaring on the
shirttails of Nasdaq-listed Taser International Inc., to a combined
market value of more than $1 billion.
Yet by the end of last week the gig seemed to be up, with pink sheets
high-flyer Stinger Systems Inc. leading the way down with a one-day
drop of more than 40%. Through it all, one could hear again that
familiar tell-tale sound of hype, hope and hot air wheezing from yet
another penny stock soufflé gone flat.

It’s a sound that investors are hearing more and more these days as
the growing workload of legislation like the Sarbanes-Oxley Act and
the Patriot Act has caused the Securities and Exchange Commission to
increasingly ignore regulation of the penny stock market. Result: a
spreading plague of financial world squeegeemen in the gutters and
alleyways of Wall Street.

Last week in this space we looked at a bungled SEC effort to take on
a gang of penny stock pump-and-dumpers behind a North Carolina outfit
named Absolute Health and Fitness Inc., which claimed to own a
regional network of fitness clubs.

Now, at least one of the players in that affair has surfaced in the
stun gun bubble. He is a Casselberry, Fla. ex-con and registered sex
offender named Orville Baldridge, who served as the promotional
muscle behind Absolute Health and Fitness Inc. at the turn of the
decade. Baldridge has now reappeared as the oomph behind the shell
for a penny stock outfit called Law Enforcement Associates Corp.
(LENF), whose stock price had soared 1,693% since last autumn on stun
gun hype from a group of paid stock promoters in Vancouver.

LENF’s SEC filings are a hodgepodge of incomplete and conflicting
information. In one bizarre case, the filings indicate that nearly 22
million shares of stock in the LENF shell – known as Academy
Resources – were issued by a boat moving company that had no apparent
power to issue them in the first place.

According to the filings, LENF began life in May of 1998 as a Ne vada
penny stock shell called Academy Resources, Inc., with 5.45 million
shares outstanding. Management consisted of a one-person board of
directors, with the seat being occupied by a man named Nolan Moss.

The filings don’t provide any additional details about Moss, but if
the SEC had wanted to check him out, they would have found Moss to be
a Vancouver-based penny stock crook who had already been fined
$30,000 by Canadian regulators in a separate stock-rigging scheme.

Want more? Well, an exhibit to one of the SEC filings shows that in
June of 2000, a mysterious Nevada outfit called “Academy Yacht
Deliveries Corporation” popped up out of nowhere and purported to
issue 21.8 million shares of “Academy” stock to acquire a
Delaware-incorporated “development stage company” called Myofis
Internet Inc.

Nor does this mishmash of alleged facts explain why a company
identified only as “Carcinotek Internet, Inc.” would surface as well
in the deal as a joint signator alongside Myofis.

In fact, the appearance of Carcinotek simply underscores the
duplicitous and ragged way LENF seems to have been run from the
moment of its birth – as a toy for penny-stock promoters whose
handshakes are often worthless and whose contracts get signed in
disappearing ink.

In reality, Pasadena-based Carcinotek was not an Internet company at
all, but an Armenian-controlled cancer research outfit that got
shoehorned into the June 2000 merger of Myofis and the Academy shell
in the apparent belief that the Armenian bunch would agree to become
what amounted to financial tinsel in the deal.

Not surprisingly, the Armenians failed to play ball, leaving what had
plainly been set up as the first step in a penny stock promotional
hustle to go forward with not even a hint of a reason why the owners
of the Academy shell would give away 80% of the shell’s stock acquire
an “Internet” business having no value at all.

In any event, once the merger was consummated in June of 2000, Nolan
Moss surrendered his seat on Academy’s one-person board to a fellow
named Guy Cohen as Myofis’s designated hitter.

Documents filed with the SEC in July of 2002 try to gloss over this
entire period, stating only vaguely that by the end of 2000 the
Myofis Internet project hadn’t gotten off the ground so the
investment was “written off.”

Really? Archived Web pages obtained from a data collection research
project involving the Library of Congress and the National Science
Foundation show that a Web site called Myofis.com in fact went live
literally days after the company claims it was shut down. What’s
more, by May 2001 the site had morphed into a promotional vehicle for
penny stocks, called Streamingnews.net, with the Web site being
registered to one Guy Cohen, who promptly began using it to pump
LENF’s share price.

In January 2002, Academy Resources merged with Law Enforcement
Associates Corp., a privately-held North Carolina maker of various
sorts of policing equipment and espionage gear.

To acquire the family-owned business, which had been run by a North
Carolina State Senator named John Carrington, the shell’s owners
issued 10 million more shares of stock in the shell, complete with a
befuddling and selectively applied one-for-three reverse stock-split
designed to whittle down the holdings of the Myofis bunch while
leaving Carrington himself untouched.

So, who is John Carrington? Over the years, North Carolina newspapers
have reported on sales of paramilitary equipment by his company to
oppressive foreign regimes such as those of prewar Iraq and
Apartheid-era South Africa.

And just this last April, LENF was raided by federal agents seeking
evidence to explain how equipment manufactured by the firm had wound
up illegally in China. Yet the company has so far not issued a Form
8K to report this matter to the general public and no one at the SEC
seems to have asked that it be done either.

LENF’s newest cheerleader is a Vancouver-based stock promoter named
Dawn Van Zant, who waves her pom-poms tirelessly on behalf of LENF
and her other clients via more than three dozen different penny-stock
pumping Web sites she owns and operates.

And looming in the distance behind all of these characters are the
shadowy outlines of the penny stock world’s Mister Bigs, who are a
story for another day. But if the SEC lacks the manpower – or the
moxie – to rid Wall Street of its squeegeemen and penny stock
graffiti, why bother pointing out even bigger battles after that?

The penny stock market is a Wall Street alleyway that simply must be
hosed down, and so far no one’s doing nuttin’. Your tax dollars? Go
figure.

AYF Glendale Offers Free Tutoring for High School Students

PRESS RELEASE
Armenian Youth Federation – Western Region, USA
Glendale “Roupen” Chapter
104 N. Belmont St. #206
Glendale, CA 91206

Contact: Nairi Mirzayan
E-Mail: [email protected]
Http://

AYF Glendale Offers Free Tutoring for High School Students

Glendale, CA — The Armenian Youth Federation (AYF) Glendale “Roupen”
Chapter is kicking-off 2005 by establishing a new weekly tutoring
program for local high school students in the Glendale area. Local AYF
members who are currently college students and college graduates will
offer tutoring services in all of the primary high school subject areas
including mathematics, science, and English literature and writing.

The weekly tutoring sessions will begin this Saturday morning from 11:00
AM until 1:00 PM at Saint Mary’s Armenian Apostolic Church on Central
Avenue in Glendale. All high school students who need assistance in
improving their study skills, grades, and homework are welcome to
attend. The tutoring sessions will continue every Saturday throughout
the academic year.

“The AYF’s number one goal is to educate the Armenian youth and the
establishment of this free high school tutoring program is an effort to
promote and initiate academic excellence throughout the
Armenian-American community here in Glendale” stated Razmik Libarian,
chairperson of the AYF Glendale “Roupen” Chapter.

If you or anyone you know is interested in learning more about the AYF
Tutoring Program feel free to stop by Saint Mary’s Armenian Church this
Saturday, or contact the AYF at: [email protected], or 818.500.1933.

Founded in 1933, the Armenian Youth Federation serves Armenian American
communities west of the Mississippi through activities in education,
athletics, political activism, cultural awareness and social gatherings.
Over seventy years of organizational experience brings the AYF into the
twenty-first century prepared to tackle the critical issues facing
Armenian youth today. To learn more about the AYF please log on to

Http://www.AYFWest.Org
www.AYFWest.Org
www.AYFwest.org.

NKR: Meeting of The Federation of Trade Unions

MEETING OF THE FEDERATION OF TRADE UNIONS

Azat Artsakh – Nagorno Karabakh Republic (NKR)
14 Jan 05

On January 12 the first meeting of the NKR Federation of Trade Unions
took place conducted by the chairman of the federation Ara
Ghahramanian. The meeting discussed the questions of confirming the
working plan of the NKR Council of Federation of Trade Unions for
2005, establishing the official newspaper and center for employment
security of the NKR Council of Federation of Trade Unions. The
director of the company `Agrochemlaboratory’ Benik Beglarian said it
is necessary to take practical steps for restoring the functions of
the trade unions in the Soviet period. According to the chairman of
the federation A. Ghahramanian, meetings have taken place with the
heads of corresponding bodies for introducing changes into the
articles on service record in the NKR law on pensions. The problem was
settled, and the law was enacted since January 1,2005, which testifies
to the accomplishment of trade unions in NKR. Benik Beglarian and Ara
Ghahramanian said, the center for employment security will operate as
a public organization and will collaborate with the NKR Ministry of
Social Security. After confirming the above-mentioned questions and
other questions on the agenda the participants of the meeting
discussed the question of establishing social and strike foundations
under the NKR Council of Federation of Trade Unions. The purpose is to
aid the socially insecure members of the trade unions who appear in
hard social conditions caused by emergencies. It is necessary to
maintain that the question of aiding the members of trade unions on
the means of the foundations with the accord or at the suggestion of
the corresponding trade union.

NVARD OHANJANIAN.
14-01-2005

Expelled population should be able to participate in Abkhaz polls

ITAR-TASS News Agency
TASS
January 13, 2005 Thursday 3:10 PM Eastern Time

Expelled population should be able to participate in Abkhaz polls

By Eka Mekhuzla

TBILISI

Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili said on Thursday that the
elections in Abkhazia would be considered legitimate only after all
the population that had been expelled from the autonomous province
takes part in them.

“When the Georgians, Abkhazians, Armenians, Russians, Greeks,
Estonians and many others who were forced to leave Abkhazia would
return there and take part in the elections, these polls will be
considered legitimate,” Saakashvili, who is staying at the Bakuriani
Alpine Skiing resort, said.

Asked whether he is going to congratulate Sergei Bagapsh on his
victory in the Abkhazian election, Saakashvili replied, “We are going
to congratulate ourselves when Georgia restores its territorial
integrity.”

The Georgian authorities claim that two thirds of the autonomous
republic’s population were forced to flee Abkhazia during the
1992-1993 arms conflict.