Retraining Courses of Armenian Teachers from Diaspora in August

RETRAINING COURSES OF ARMENIAN TEACHERS FROM DIASPORA HELD IN ARMENIA
ON AUGUST 2-30

YEREVAN, August 2 (Noyan Tapan). On August 2-30, retraining courses
for the Armenian teachers from the Diaspora are organized in
Armenia. 46 Armenian teachers from a number of CIS countries, Canada,
Syria, Lebanon, Turkmenistan and Iraq have arrived in Armenia for
rising their qualification. The courses are held by the best
specialists on Western Armenian language and literature, such as
Vladimir Barkhudarian, Levon Zekiyan, academicians of the RA National
Academy of Sciences, Hilda Galfayan, a Doctor of the Sorbone
University, Karo Arakelian from Beirut, professors Vazgen
Hambartsumian and Vazgen Poghosian, Manvel Adamian, a poet from
London, and others. Sergo Yeritsian, RA Minister of Science and
Education, said that on August 27-29 the first Pan-Armenian conference
on issues of education will take place in Tsakhkadzor. More than 100
representatives from 20 countries will participate in the
conference. According to him, issues existing not only in Armenia, but
also in the educational system of the Armenian Diaspora will be
discussed at the conference.

A Just War

American Daily, OH
Aug 3 2004

A Just War
By David Huntwork (08/15/2003)

The justifications of the Iraq War should be old news by now but
still the shrill cry of `Where’s the WMD’s?’ continues to reverberate
across the political landscape. Presidential hopeful Howard Dean
threatens to lead the Democratic Party to the brink of political
oblivion by attacking the war and advocates the `cut and run’ policy
if he were to be elected.

The rest of the nine democratic lemmings, as well as many in the
media, have desperately joined the scramble to disavow the war in
spite of the fact that many supported it. While the rest of the
nation has moved on, the Democratic Party is preparing to make the
Iraq war their major issue in the coming presidential election. It is
embarrassing to watch a major political party seek the sissy vote.

In spite of the the buried centrifuges, banned missiles, mobile
biological weapons labs, the testimonies of defectors and captured
officials, captured documents and thousands of gassed Kurds and
Iranians moldering in the grave the there are still those who
question whether Saddam had Weapons of Mass Destruction in the months
and years leading up to the Coalition invasion and the inclination to
use such weapons. I suspect that most are really asking whether the
destruction of the Baath regime and the ousting of Saddam Hussein was
the right thing to do.

It is indisputable that the Iraqi’s developed, possessed, used and
coveted WMD’s , and were planning to develop the nuclear form of them
as soon as United Nations sanctions were lifted. As to whether they
were an undefinable `imminent’ threat is irrelevant and a red herring
argument at best. The real question is whether the Iraq War was a
just war. Was liberating the Iraqi people the moral and right thing
to do and will history regard this as a suitable, just and deserved
ending of the despotic Saddam regime?

History has recorded in stark black and white the tyrants and mass
murder of the last century. The slaughter of Armenians by the Turks,
the insanity of Idi Amin, the apocalyptic terror of Pol Pot, the
ethnic orgy of death in Rwanda, the horrific war against Christians
in the Sudan, and the countless lives sacrificed by Lenin, Stalin,
and Mao on the Red altar of Communism. These are just a few on the
list that reads as a nightmarish record of mans’ inhumanity to man.

Only rarely do tyrants meet the end that they deserve. The world
defeated and destroyed the triple evils of Nazism, fascism and
Japanese militarism but only after the organized slaughter of tens of
millions had run its course.

Saddam and his sons have served as just the latest Middle Eastern
incarnation of such terror, war and death. The thirty years of
Baathist rule in Iraq produced wars, invasions, and attacks on three
neighboring countries, the direct deaths of over a million people,
and ethnic and religious civil wars with the obligatory torture
chambers, execution squads, rape rooms, and chemical attacks on
civilian populations. The laundry list would not be complete without
mentioning the funding, arming and training of terrorist groups of
all political and ideological stripes and the attempted assassination
of a former president of the United States.

Perhaps the most premeditated diabolical act was what occurred after
the imposition of UN sanctions. The Saddam regime embarked upon the
deliberate starvation and medical neglect of the Iraqi people for
political purposes. Tens of billions of illegal petro dollars funded
WMD programs and was hoarded or spent on lavish lifestyles for the
elite as the children of Iraq died from neglect, malnutrition, and
lack of medicine. All played out for the eager lenses of the world
press and the benefit of the pacifists here at home.

In the end it should be a moral outrage that it took this long for a
`coalition of the willing’ to finally end the reign of yet another of
histories monstrosities. When the Iraq War first started what was
heard from the average American was not `why are we doing this?’ but
`what took us so long?’ and `we should have taken him out the first
time’. The blood soaked sand of Iraq deserves better.

The name Saddam will become just another one word term symbolizing
the utter cruelty humanity is capable of inflicting on itself. His
shadow will always be with us and be remembered for its own
particular horrors and the unique terror he brought his victims.

The members of the Axis of Evil, Al-Queda, and their allies have
shown no mercy to their victims and should be shown none in return.
With a little luck some native Kurd will mete out some true justice
and display the head of Saddam on a pole in a village square
somewhere. It would certainly simplify the worries of providing a
`proper Muslim’ burial for a mass murderer and spare the ever so
sensitive sensibilities of the Arab street.

Those that bemoan the use of force against the Saddam regime or mourn
the killing of the `Hussein boys’ share a portion of guilt for the
horrific crimes committed by such criminals. To prevent rape,
mutilation, torture and the shedding of innocent blood, to civilize a
people, to kill a sadist, to liberate a country, to bring peace to a
region wracked by war and help heal an ancient land is a cause that
is noble and worthy of respect. Civilized and free people have a duty
to do what we can to make the world a better, safer and more merciful
place. It is certainly reasonable to prevent rogue ideologies and
psychotic personalities from unleashing their holocaust of terror and
vision of destruction on the rest of us.

When you add it all together; a vicious tyrant, nuclear ambitions,
torture, genocide, sponsorship of terror, user of WMD’s, combined
with a vicious hatred of Israel, America and Western Civilization,
there can be no other conclusion than that the Iraq war was a just
war. Untold thousand of future Saddam victims have President George
Bush and the iron resolve of the American people to thank for their
lives. In the course of history few nations have destroyed tyranny
instead of imposing it and liberated nations instead of enslaving
them. A nation founded in Liberty has given that blessed gift to the
Iraqi people.

David Huntwork is a long time conservative activist and occasional
columnist in Ft. Collins, Colorado where he lives with his wife and
two (soon to be three) young daughters. He strongly believes in the
importance of Faith, Family, and Freedom as the formula of success
for a good life and a healthy nation.

Blasts rock churches

Sky News, UK
Aug 1 2004

BLASTS ROCK CHURCHES

At least four car bombs have exploded in quick succession outside
churches in Baghdad and the northern city of Mosul killing at least
12 people.

The attacks appear to be a targeted assault on Iraq’s influential
Christian minority, police said.

The first car was detonated by a suicide bomber near an Armenian
church in Baghdad’s upmarket district of Karada, said policeman
Haidar Abdul Hussein.

Minutes later, a second car bomb exploded near a Catholic church.

Officials at the Ibn al-Nafeez hospital said 15 people had been
admitted with injuries following the attacks.

Another police officer at the scene said there were casualties, but
was unable to specify how many.

Ambulances ferried the wounded away and firemen battled the flames
and smoke.

In Mosul, 370 kilometres (230 miles) north of the capital, two car
bombs exploded outside a church in the early evening outside the Mar
Polis church in the central Mohandessin neighbourhood, said Major
Mohammed Omar Taha.

“There are casualties, but we don’t know if anyone was killed,” he
said.

BAKU: Armenian women pleased with their life in Azerbaijan

ANS TV, Baku, in Azeri
28 Jul 04

Armenian women pleased with their life in Azerbaijan

[Presenter Natavan Babayeva] The arrest of members of the Karabakh
Liberation Organization [who protested against Armenian officers’
visit to Baku] and the fact that the Armenian officers had been
invited to Baku [to attend a NATO conference] were wrong decisions by
the Azerbaijani authorities. This is the opinion of Yevgeniya
Shagenovna Abdullayeva who thanks the government for allowing her to
live in Baku in conditions of freedom and normal ethnic relations.

[Correspondent over video of Baku] More than 20,000 Armenians live in
the Azerbaijani capital, Baku, today. We decided to knock on a number
of doors which have always been open to Armenians in Azerbaijan –
just to ask how they are doing. We failed to meet a woman called
Rimma because she was at work. But we got in touch with an Armenian
woman who introduced herself as Madina. She was guarded by her
Azerbaijani husband and sons.

[Madina] Why are you filming me? How can you do things like that
without telling me?

[Man in Russian] Don’t film.

[Correspondent] What are your relations with the government? Are they
normal?

[Madina speaking in Russian] Yes. I am not complaining. Thank God, I
never complain. Everything depends on God. What can we do?

[Correspondent] We knocked on an another door. Yevgeniya Shagenovna
Abdullayeva met us with real Azerbaijani hospitality. She said that
the Azerbaijani government does not discriminate against her. Her
Armenian background has not restricted her movements or wishes.

[Yevgeniya Abdullayeva] I can say that I am personally satisfied. If
I had not obeyed, I would have never stayed here. I have brought up
two children here over the entire period of the [Nagornyy Karabakh]
conflict since 1988. My daughter was six in 1988 and another daughter
was four. Since that time, I have brought them up, they have
graduated from school and university, my daughter is married, I
travel and talk freely. No, I have no problems.

[Correspondent] Her only problem is that she is a housewife. Although
she had worked as a language and literature teacher for 19 years, she
had to quit her favourite job. Not because of the Azerbaijanis’
attitude to her, but because she was ashamed of what the Armenians
had done to the Azerbaijanis.

[Yevgeniya Abdullayeva speaking in Azeri] When I quit my job, I was
asked why are you doing this, nobody has ever reproached you, you
have an Azerbaijani family and children. I said no, why shouldn’t I?
I thought afterwards that my decision was correct. Everything needs
to be respected. Why should I wait?

[Correspondent] The Armenian woman is pleased not only with the
principal of the school, but also with the peace policy conducted by
the state in which she lives. As for [Armenian President] Robert
Kocharyan, she condemns him for his desire to unleash a war.

[Yevgeniya Abdullayeva speaking in Azeri] Who is he? Maybe someone
knows him, why should I? I do not know him and do not want to. Why
should I? Only because I am Armenian? First, I am Armenian living
here. I have not seen him, I do not meet him and I do not want to
meet him. What kind of attitude should one have to a country that
wants a war? Any country, not only Armenia. Would you have a good
attitude to a country that wants to wage a war with you?

[Correspondent] She says that the 25 years of her free life among the
Azerbaijanis should serve as a warning to Armenia. But this Armenian
woman also spoke about our officials’ position on Karabakh.

[Yevgeniya Abdullayeva speaking in Azeri] My attitude is that it is a
difficult issue. There is a mother who has lost her three sons, God
forbid. One must cope with this, right? It is difficult, they [the
Azerbaijani authorities] probably should not have given permission
and they [Armenian officers] probably should not have come here. One
should take people’s feelings into account. This is my personal
opinion. Was there any need to touch a raw nerve? Those who suffer
suffer in any case, right? But what can we do? The government should
deal with this, right?

[Correspondent] You see, even the Baku Armenians realize this.

Zamina Aliyeva and Aytan Mammadova, ANS.

Yerevan Conference Dedicated to Monitoring Radiation at ANPP

INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE DEDICATED TO RADIATION MONITORING IN LOCATION
OF ARMENIAN NUCLEAR POWER PLANT TO BE HELD IN YEREVAN

YEREVAN, July 26 (Noyan Tapan). The international conference dedicated
to issues of unification and optimization of the radiation monitoring
in the location of the Armenian Nuclear Power Plant will be held in
Yerevan in September.

Robert Vardanian, Chairman of the steering committee of the
conference, told NT’s correspondent that main attention will be drawn
to the problems of security of nuclear power plants, nuclear waste
products, issues connected with the environment that present great
interest for the region. Representatives of the United States, Great
Britain, France, Slovenia, Russia, Hungary, Belorussia Ukraine and
Georgia will participate in the conference besides Armenia.

BAKU:Azerbaijan to make no territorial integrity compromises -Aliyev

Azerbaijan to make no territorial integrity compromises – president

Turan news agency, Baku
21 Jul 04

Xudat, 21 July: “The Karabakh conflict remains Azerbaijan’s most
painful problem. For many years Azerbaijan has been trying to resolve
this issue peacefully. But regrettably, the talks have yield no
results,” Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev said today when
addressing the personnel of a military unit of the Xudat border
detachment on the Azerbaijani-Russian border.

According to him, the activities of the mediators have yielded no
results either. “As for various calls and proposals, they do not
reflect the reality,” Aliyev added.

“Azerbaijan’s cause is fair. Our lands are under
occupation. International legal norms, justice, economic opportunities
and potential are on our side,” he said.

Aliyev spoke about major work in the sphere of military
build-up. According to him, sufficient funds have been spent and will
be spent on this sphere in the future.

In several years Azerbaijan will turn into an economically strong
state and its military “superiority” will intensify even further. “In
these conditions, we cannot have a positive attitude to some calls,
particularly, with regard to compromises,” Aliyev said.

“Compromises are impossible on the issue of territorial integrity. I
have repeatedly said that we will not compromise on the issue of
territorial integrity. Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity will be
restored. The possibilities of achieving this peacefully have not been
exhausted yet. However, we have to be ready to liberate our lands
militarily at any moment. We have everything for this: the unity of
the Azerbaijani people, the people’s complete readiness for action, a
strong army and the will of the Azerbaijani leadership and people,” he
added.

Rusia, en busca del Arca perdida

El Mundo
July 18, 2004

Rusia, en busca del Arca perdida.
Una expedicion arqueologica emprende rumbo a Turquia para intentar
encontrar la embarcacion con la que Noe escapo al Diluvio Universal.

DANIEL UTRILLA. Corresponsal

Arqueologia. Rusia. Una expedicion emprende rumbo a Turquia para
intentar encontrar la embarcacion con la que Noe escapo al Diluvio
Universal

MOSCU.- Desde la tierra que durante 74 anos presumio de ser el
paraiso del ateismo, arranco ayer una entusiasta expedicion
arqueologica rumbo a Turquia, donde pretenden encontrar los restos
del zoologico flotante con que Noe capeo el Diluvio Universal.

Bendecidos por el patriarca ortodoxo de todas las Rusias, Alexis II,
un grupo de expedicionarios rusos partio ayer hacia el monte turco de
Ararat (en el extremo este de Turquia), en cuyas estribaciones
esperan encontrar los restos de la mitica Arca de Noe.

Guiados por el afamado orientalista y periodista Andrei Poliakov, los
arqueologos rusos emprenden estas particular travesia por el desierto
con la conviccion de que no se volveran con las manos vacias.

Para Poliakov, esta sera su segunda expedicion al Ararat, de donde el
ano pasado se trajo consigo unas fotografias de inscripciones y
dibujos sobre piedra, que hallo entre las lapidas de un cementerio
armenio abandonado en la montana, informa Novaya Gazeta. Sometidas a
la lupa de los expertos, las inscripciones se revelaron algo parecido
a instrucciones de supervivencia para Noe y sus descendientes.El
grupo ha puesto toda la fe en este hallazgo que les ha permitido
poner la equis definitiva en el mapa del tesoro biblico. Ademas de
los rusos, muchos otros aventureros parten cada ano al Ararat
creyendose en posesion de la llave del misterio. Entre ellos se
encuentra un grupo formado por turcos y estadounidenses -encabezados
por el empresario Daniel McGivern- motivados en su busqueda tras el
reciente avistamiento por satelite de un gran objeto parcialmente
descubierto por los ultimos deshielos.

Segun informo la radio Eco de Moscu, los Indiana Jones rusos fueron
bendecidos ayer por el maximo representante de la Iglesia Ortodoxa,
que les despidio con reconfortantes palabras. “La subida al Ararat en
busca del Arca es tarea dificil. Rezaremos para bendecir ese trayecto
y por su exito”, dijo Alexis II, que entrego a los componentes de la
expedicion un icono de San Jorge Victorioso.

“Esta expedicion va a dar la respuesta definitiva a todas las
preguntas que rodean al Arca”, explico Poliakov antes de emprender
una aventura que se prolongara hasta primeros de agosto.

En 1916, un grupo de expedicionarios encabezados por el teniente
Roskovitski, fue enviado a Turquia por el zar Nicolas II. Pese a que
el grupo realizo algunos hallazgos, la revolucion de 1917 hizo
naufragar la busqueda.

El milagro de la television permitira retransmitir los progresos de
los arqueologos en tiempo real por medio de conexiones en directo a
cargo de periodistas integrados en la expedicion, organizada por el
canal Rambler Teleset. Seguro que al director de cine Steven
Spielberg no le importaria sustituir, aunque solo fuera por unos
dias, al camara de esta cadena rusa.

GRAPHIC: Caption: El responsable de la financiacion del proyecto,
Daniel McGivern, con el monte Ararat de fondo. / AP

Nagorno-Karabakh’s deep divide

EurasiaNet Organization
July 16 2004

NAGORNO-KARABAKH’S DEEP DIVIDE
A EurasiaNet Photo Essay by Daniel Gerstle: 7/16/04

Nagorno-Karabakh is arguably the most intractable of all the
conflicts that accompanied the collapse of the Soviet Union. [For
background see the EurasiaNet Insight archive]. International efforts
to broker a lasting peace have focused mainly on pressing the
governments of Armenia and Azerbaijan to find a political compromise.
But another serious obstacle, one that hasn’t received much
attention, is connected with public attitudes; the lack of contact
among Armenians and Azeris. Feelings of mutual hostility have reached
a point where many on both sides believe the chances are slim that a
future settlement leads to the reintegration. The images in this
photo essay attempt to explore the popular mood in Karabakh.

The Karabakh War, which lasted from 1988-1994, left over 25,000
people dead and caused the displacement of hundreds of thousands of
Azeris and Armenians. Since the declaration of a ceasefire, there has
been virtually no inter-ethnic communication on the local level. Most
teenagers on both sides of the frontline cannot recall ever having a
conversation with a member of the opposite ethnic community. In the
words of journalist Thomas de Wall — author of Black Garden: Armenia
and Azerbaijan Through Peace and War, a history of the Karabakh
conflict – Armenians and Azeris have become “hermetically sealed off”
from each other.

Recent visits with families, veterans, and soldiers on both sides
confirmed the existence of a deep public divide. People in the region
have nearly identical views about the conflict, except that the
“bad-guy” role is played by those of the opposing ethnicity. [For
background see the EurasiaNet Insight archive].

Pensioners tend to comment most on existing economic hardships,
recalling that living standards were much better during the Soviet
era. Meanwhile, those who fought in the conflict often recount war
stories – some involving survival against overwhelming odds. The
strongest opinions are, not so surprisingly, expressed by young boys
and soldiers who have few memories from before the conflict. They are
the primary consumers of more extreme views shared in political media
and teahouse conversations – that their ethnic group narrowly survived
what is perceived as an attempted genocide. They also believe that
only enforced separation from the other group can protect their
families from an on-going threat.

It is clear that for any eventual peace deal to work, far-reaching
and enduring programs to restore mutual trust between Armenians and
Azeris will be needed.

Editor’s Note: Daniel J Gerstle is a Summer Research Fellow covering
the Caucasus and Central Asia for the Harriman Institute and the
Center for International Conflict Resolution at Columbia University.

Armenian Student Donates Bone Marrow Transplant to Italian Child

ARMENIAN STUDENT DONATES BONE MARROW TRANSPLANT TO ITALIAN CHILD

YEREVAN, JULY 15, ARMENPRESS: A five-year Italian child with
leukemia was saved after her genetic make up matched with that of a 22
year old Armenian student, Vahe Vardanian, who donated a bone marrow
transplant to the child.The operation was performed on July 6 in
Italy, but the experts say the result will be evident only in a year.
Vahe joined the Armenian Bone Marrow Donor Registry last year Its
mission is to save precious Armenian lives by creating a bone marrow
donor registry which, with the volunteer recruitment of Armenian
donors worldwide, will increase the pool of existing international
donors and thus give a chance of survival to patients with leukemia or
other blood related diseases. Although Armenians are considered
Caucasian, their unique genetic make up makes it very hard for them to
find matches for transplantation.
Vahe was selected after the Italian bone marrow registry asked
their Armenian counterparts to find a suitable match. The registry has
now 8,000 members.

Was Inventor of the MRI denied Nobel Because of Creationism Beliefs?

War book: Damadian Nobel Prize 7/15/2004 SH BT CL

Was the Inventor of Magnetic Resonance Imaging not Awarded the Nobel
Prize Because of His Creationism Beliefs?

Jerry Bergman Ph.D.

Introduction

Can a personas beliefs about the role of an intelligent creator in
creating life prevent an otherwise deserving scientist from being
awarded a Nobel Prize? One of the most blatant cases occurred
recently with the awarding of the Nobel Prize in Medicine for the
discovery of magnetic resonance imaging. Instead of awarding the
prize to the actual inventor, Dr. Raymond Damadian, it was given to
Paul C. Lauterbur of the University of Illinois and Sir Peter
Mansfield of the University of Nottingham, England.

The invention of MRI was no small achievement. MRI technology is now
over a five-billion-dollar-per-year industry, and is the premiere
medical diagnostic imaging method available today. It is, in general,
able to image diseased tissue more accurately, more safely, and more
efficiently than any other medical imaging technique. Although x-ray
and computed tomography are still often used, a major reason is
because of their lower cost. So far, over a half-billion MRI scans
have been done since its invention.

The Inventor

Raymond Damadian was born in Manhattan on March 16, 1936. When
Damadian was ten years old, his grandmother died of breast cancer.
She had been in great pain, and seeing that made a lasting impression
on young Raymond. Her illness was especially hard on Raymond because
he was very close to his grandmother (Mattson and Simon, 1969,
p. 615). This event set Damadian on a course to find a way to help
treat cancer. He first got the idea for MRI while working with
nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), scanning a type of Dead Sea bacteria
called halophiles that had twenty times the potassium level compared
to most other bacteria (1994, p. 55). The research with the bacteria
worked so well that Damadian then recognized that detecting tissue
abnormalities in humans was possible. As chronicled in the book A
Machine Called Indomitable, Damadian spent most of the rest of his
career developing MRI.

In 1969, he was the first to publish an article proposing the use of
magnetic resonance to scan human bodies for signs of disease (Mattson
and Simon, 1996, Appendix and Chapter 8). In 1970, he found a major
difference in the MR signals between various tissue types, a discovery
that made the MRI scanner possible. He also discovered the difference
between T1 and T2 relaxation times that allow scanning of body tissues
with enough clarity to enable MRI technology to be used for numerous
practical medical applications (Kevles, 1997). In March of 1971, his
results were published in the journal Science. As a review of the
case in Science concluded, Ă’Damadian published the first paper that
used MRI to distinguish between healthy and cancerous tissueÓ (Vogel,
2003, p. 382). DamadianÕs work was also becoming widely known: as
early as 1973, articles were appearing in popular magazines about his
work (Edelson, 1973, p. 99).

After he published his Science article, Damadian continued to improve
MRI technology. In the spring of 1971, he proposed the MR focus spot
scanning method. In March of 1972, Damadian filed for a patent for
his MR scanner based on his T1 and T2 discovery. In 1977, Damadian
and his graduate students, Michael Goldsmith and Larry Minkoff, built
the first MR scanner, which they named Indomitable. In the same year,
on July 3, they produced the first MRI human body scan. In 1980,
Dr. Damadian introduced the first commercial MRI scanner, which was
built by Fonar Corporation of New York, a company that he founded
(Damadian, 1994, p. 93). In 1983, Damadian introduced the Beta 3000,
a machine that Ă’created quite a stir,Ă“ and drew good responses from
Òdoctors who examined the imagesÓ (Kleinfield, 1985, p. 217).

Soon, several other companies also began building MRI scanners,
forcing Damadian to appeal to the courts to protect his patents.
DamadianÕs concern about how easily someoneÕs patent rights can be
infringed upon (and the harm this problem causes America and our
economy) was detailed in a Saturday Evening Post article that he wrote
(1994, p. 58+). He continued fighting for his patent rights and,
finally, in 1997, the U.S. Supreme Court enforced DamadianÕs 1972
patent, affirming his priority over Lauterbur, and asserting that all
MRI scanners that use DamadianÕs T1 and T2 method to create MRI images
are DamadianÕs property. All of his lawsuits took a full fifteen
years to resolveÑthe first lawsuit in the case was filed in 1982
against Johnson and Johnson (Damadian, 1994, p. 101). The Supreme
Court actually made a special ruling in DamadianÕs case, creating a
whole new category that gave his 1972 patent both validity and
protection.

The damage award from General Electric alone was a 128.7 million
dollars (Siemens, Hitachi, Philips, Shimadzu, and Toshiba all settled
out of court for undisclosed amounts). Damadian poured this money
back into research and development in order to further improve MRI
technology, developing both oblique imaging and multiangle oblique
imaging. He also pioneered what is now called the open MRI, which
does not require the patient to lie in a small confining tube but on a
large open platform. He now manufactures the only open standup MRI on
the market today that allows imaging while the patent is in a vertical
position. Among the many other innovations his company developed are
small, lighter weight, portable MRIĂ•s, and MRIs that can be safely
used in operating rooms.

In 1988, President Ronald Reagan awarded the National Medal of
Technology jointly to Damadian and Lauterbur for their magnetic
resonance technology contributions. In 1989, Damadian was inducted
into the National Inventors Hall of Fame of the U.S. Patent Office.
The first MRI scanner ever builtÑDamadianÕsÑwas placed in the
Smithsonian Institution in the same year. Damadian was also awarded
the seventh annual Lemelson-MIT Lifetime Achievement Award (worth half
a million dollars) on April 25, 2002, for pioneering magnetic
resonance scanning technology. Damadian was later awarded the coveted
Lincoln-Edison medal for his pioneering work in inventing the MRI. In
March of 2004, he was awarded the quarter-million-dollar Franklin
Institute Medal Òfor building the first MRI scannerÓ and for
Ă’achieving the first commercial machine in 1980.Ă“

The record of DamadianÕs achievements, and his priority, are well
documented and supported by these awards, plus his many patents and
dated, refereed publications. Damadian clearly originated the MRI
concept, and Lauterbur even cited DamadianÕs 1971 Science paper in his
notebook, although he did not cite Damadian in his March 1973 Nature
paper, claiming lack of room. Mansfield and his co-authorsÕ work,
which further improved on DamadianÕs and LauterburÕs work, was not
published until 1974.

Furthermore, DamadianÕs contributions in the commercial development of
the MRI machine are also widely recognized. Kean and Smith, in their
standard history of MRI text, note that the two factors that were
primarily responsible for the decision of various research centers and
commercial investments to investigate developing a technique of NMR
imaging in vivo were, first, the work of Damadian and, second, the
impact of CT on medical imaging (1986, p. 1). Lauterbur is mentioned
later, and only then as the originator of the term zeugmatography for
MRI (a term that never caught on!). This definitive history of MRI
concluded:

When a well-known company advertises ÒWe bring good things to lifeÓ
and shows a patient being scanned with MRI, television viewers might
think that magnetic resonance scanning was invented and brought to
market through the efforts of a large team of corporate scientists….
In reality, MR scanning was invented, patented and brought to market
largely through the efforts of one man, a medical doctor, Raymond
V. Damadian, who was assisted along the way by others who believed in
him and his dream. Instead of a deep-pocketed corporate R&D budget,
he had only his salary as a professor and just enough funding
scrounged up from here and there to pay the salaries of his two
graduate assistants and to buy the second-hand components and the
liquid helium used for constructing and cooling his first scanner.
…The academic laboratory in Brooklyn in which the machine was built,
personally gerrymandered with jackhammer and sledgehammer by Damadian
and his associates from quarters once relegated to laboratory rats,
possessed the qualities of a machine shop more than a university
medical lab (1996, p. 611).

The MRI invention was more difficult than it first may appear, because
many of the experts firmly believed that building a magnet large and
powerful enough to image humans was impossible (Kevles, 1997, p. 178).
Scanners today use magnetic fields as much as 80,000 times stronger
than the EarthÕs background magnetic field. A common concern by
researchers was that the MRI magnetic field would affect materials in
the body that are attracted to a magnet, such as iron, which is part
of hemoglobin, ferritin (iron oxide), and other biological
structures. Extensive research has proven this fear unfounded.

Support from Others

Many scientists who had worked with Damadian were upset at the Nobel
committeeÕs slight. One, Dr. Eugene Feigelson, Dean of the State
University New York College of Medicine on Long Island where Damadian
was on the staff, stated Ă’all of MRI rests on the fundamental work of
Dr. DamadianÓ (quoted in Reuters newsletter). Dr. Feigelson added,
Ă’we are perplexed, disappointed and angry about the incomprehensible
exclusionÓ of Dr. Damadian from the Nobel (Montgomery, 2003). Kevles,
in a study of MRI, concluded

in the summer of 1977Ă‘in the footsteps of Edison rather than
RoentgenÑDamadian preempted his scientific competitors. He called a
press conference to introduce and demonstrate a whole-body NMR imaging
machine which he called the Ă’Indomitable.Ă“ Whether or not there really
were contenders for this particular prize at this particular time is
open to discussion. What is not debated is the fact that Damadian,
with his vision of a body-size NMR machine, leaped from using magnets
only large enough to examine tissue specimens in test tubes to
building his own superconducting magnet with a bore (or opening) large
enough to encircle a grown human being. No one else had the
imagination, or hubris, to skip the in-between steps undertaken by
othersÑexamining first small mammals and then parts of the human
bodyÑand jump to the construction of a whole-body machine (1997,
p. 179).

Florida State University professor Michael Ruse concluded that
Damadian was excluded from the Nobel even though

he was the inventor of the first machine that discovers cancers
through magnetic resonance imaging, [rather] the award went to two
other and somewhat subsequent scientists, Paul Lauterbur and Peter
Mansfield. Notoriously, the Nobel committees never reveal their
deliberations (until everyone is long dead) and never change their
minds (2004).

The Claims

Why was Damadian excluded from the Nobel for his many critical
contributions to MRI technology? A common claim by the researchers in
this area is that DamadianÕs technique by itself was not feasible to
produce viable, commercial, economical scanners. It is correctly
noted that DamadianÕs scan took four hours and forty-five minutes to
complete 106 data points, and its resolution was not of the quality
that enabled his system to be used as a practical scanner for pictures
(although he realized that one did not need pictures to diagnose
disease, but this could be done with data points). Lauterbur, after
seeing DamadianÕs results, came up with the idea now known as
one-dimensional imaging involving algebraic and computer algorithm
reconstruction to produce pictures (Hollis, 1987). Lauterbur
eventually submitted his idea to Nature, which rejected the paper
(Kevles, 1997, p. 181). He then revised the paper and resubmitted it.
This time Nature accepted the paper, and it was published in 1973, the
same year that Sir Peter Mansfield published his first paper on his
MRI imaging technique idea.

MansfieldÕs idea was very similar to LauterburÕs, only he described
his idea in terms of the physics of solids rather than liquids, as did
Lauterbur. LauterburÕs and, to a lesser extent, MansfieldÕs, work
produced sufficient improvement to achieve the goal of a viable MRI
scanner for medical diagnosis. Mansfield may have produced the first
MRI image of a live human body using LauterburÕs technique, but not
the first MRI image (Hollis, 1987, pp. 96-97). Damadian had made at
least six previous MRI images of cancer patients. All these facts are
not questioned.

The concern of DamadianÕs supporters is not that Mansfield and,
especially, Lauterbur did not deserve the award, but that Damadian did
the pioneering work and made many of the critical initial discoveries.
Lauterbur and Mansfield only improved upon his discoveries.
Specifically, Lauterbur discovered how radiation in an applied
magnetic field could be used to produce two-dimensional images.
Mansfield showed how the magnetic gradients could be mathematically
analyzed to improve both the speed and the efficiency of the image
generation process, allowing the unit to be even more practicable.

Dr. Damadian first conceived of using T1 and T2 measurements to scan
the body, and today more than ninety-five percent of all MRI scans use
T1 and T2 measurements (Stracher, 2002, p. 2). Furthermore, the will
of Alfred Nobel states that the prize in medicine is to be awarded to
the person that has Ă’made the most important discovery within the
realm of physiology or medicineÓ and not for techniques or inventions
that exploit that discovery, such as the work of Lauterbur and
Mansfield (Fant, 1991, p. 329). The award guidelines for medicine are
different then the chemistry and physics award criteria, which do
allow an award to be given for developing techniques that improve a
previous discovery.

Comparisons with the Wright Brothers

A parallel with the invention of the airplane is critical to
illustrate DamadianÕs case. The Wright brothers achieved the specific
discoveries that made the first heavier-than-air manned flight
possible, but their crude, rickety contraption was totally
impractical. For example, the Wright brothersÕ first successful plane
flight on December 17, 1903, required the pilot to recline on a wood
frame covered with paper and cloth, and used skis to land. The craft
flew only 852 feet, and was in the air for only twelve seconds. The
Wrights operated their plane using wing-warping controls rigged to
their hips (Scheider, 2003, p. 502). Furthermore, numerous aspects of
the Wright brothersÕ design had to be modified. For example, the tail
had to be placed near the rear rather than on the front, as it was in
the Wright brothersÕ plane, before manned flight was practical (Jakob,
1990).

Many important improvements to the plane were made by others, such as
Glenn Curtiss, who invented the hinged aileron (a development that
even the Wright brothersÕ planes later used) (Combs, 1979).
Nonetheless, no one today claims that Curtiss invented the airplane,
even though his invention is the basis of modern aviationÑcredit is
rightfully given to the Wright brothers because they were the ones who
first made the critical developments that made flight possible,
especially the wing design that created liftÑand they were the first
humans to fly in a heavier-than-air craft (Jakob, 1990). The specific
landmark steps in MRI technology made by Damadian are as follows:

1) his scientific research and theory of the cell that led him to
consider NMR as a method for detecting cancer;

2) his discovery of the cancer NMR scanning signal in animal tissue
together with the demonstration of the diversity of NMR relaxation
times among healthy tissues;

3) his building of a superconducting magnet (all of his competition
were experimenting

with permanent magnets);

4) his filing of the original (and the foremost) patent on NMR
scanning;

5) his achievement of the first whole-body NMR scan of a human and the
resultant image;

6) his development of the worldÕs first commercial NMR scanners
(Mattson and Simon, 1996, p. 613).

DamadianÕs first MRI machine used a point-by-point analysis, a very
impractical approach for scanning. Nonetheless, as noted above, his
T1 and T2 observation Ă’was an Eureka moment for Paul Lauterbur. After
seeing Dr. DamadianÕs experiment repeated by a graduate student,
Mr. Lauterbur dined at a hamburger joint, where he . . . realized he
could subject the nuclei to a second magnetic field that varied in
strength in a precise wayÓ (Stacher, 2003, p. 2). Lauterbur then
realized that he could use this technique to construct an image, a
conclusion that he recorded in a notebook and had witnessed the next
day. As Stracher notes, Ă’Over the years, Mr. Lauterbur has been less
than forthcoming about giving Dr. Damadian credit. In his notebook he
acknowledged Dr. DamadianÕs 1971 paper, but his subsequent articles
didnÕt mention it. Mr. Lauterbur explains that by the time he
published his first paper, another group had made measurements on a
tumor in a mouseÕs tail. ÒI needed to keep the list of references to
very few, so I used Ôthe later oneÕÓ (2003, p. 2). Others have
observed that LauterburÕs achievement, in essence, involved taking the
signals and drawing them on a piece of paper quickly and
efficientlyÑclearly a major improvement, but hardly the initial
discovery.

The fact is, Damadian is the pioneer of MRI, has the first patents,
and built the first MRI scanner; conversely, Lauterbur only augmented
DamadianÕs accomplished work. Although Lauterbur succeeded in getting
a much better MRI image, Damadian built the first workable unit;
Lauterbur only refined the technique. This is like crediting Curtis
for inventing the airplane, and snubbing the Wright brothers.
Although LauterburÕs technique is used with DamadianÕs equipment
today, just as all modern planes use CurtisÕs improvements, this
should not detract from the WrightsÕ, nor DamadianÕs, original
developments.

Philip Yam (2003, p. 42), noted that controversies about the Nobel
Prize award are not uncommon, but that Òthe Nobel committeeÕs decision
in this case, however, seemed to be an intentional slap in DamadianÕs
face. Award rules permit up to three winners in each category, so the
committee could have included Damadian. Curiously, the NobelÕs press
release describing the winners typically acknowledge other
contributors, but failed to mention Damadian.Ă“ In most articles about
the award, Damadian was totally ignored (e.g. The Fort Wayne, Indiana
Journal Gazette ÒMRI Pioneers Win Nobel PrizeÓ Tuesday, October 7,
2003, p. 3a).

The Background of DamadianÕs Work

DamadianÕs education is important in understanding his contributions.
He was studying violin at the world famous Juilliard School of Music
when he triumphed over 10,000 other applicants and was awarded a Ford
Foundation Scholarship at age fifteen, enabling him to go to the
University of Wisconsin to complete a degree in math, and then on to
the Albert Einstein School of Medicine where he earned his M.D. He
later completed graduate work in biophysics at Harvard University.
His interest was not in clinical practice, but in research and
development. As noted above, he first became interested in medicine
at the age of ten after witnessing the pain and suffering that
resulted from his grandmotherÕs cancer. He wished to create new
methods that would aid in diagnosing disease at an earlier stageÑwhen
it was still treatable (Mattson and Simon, 1996, p. 623).

The Patents

In a review of the MRI patents, I found Lauterbur had only four that
related to MRI; Peter Mansfield had a total of seventeen; and Damadian
a total of sixty-oneÑincluding many of the most important patents, for
MRI apparatus. No MRI unit can be manufactured today without
reference to DamadianÕs patents.

In spite of his incontestable patents, Damadian faced a long struggle
to vindicate his patent claims. A 1982 jury trial found DamadianÕs
MRI patent valid and infringed upon by his competitors. Yet, six
weeks after the trial, the judge voided the juryÕs verdict and
substituted his own verdict, even though DamadianÕs company had spent
2.2 million dollars in legal fees during the lawsuit. Damadian
appealed the decision and eventually prevailed in the highest court of
the land in October 1997. The Wright brothers also spent years in
court defending their claims, and they too were finally vindicated by
the Supreme Court .

DamadianÕs Religious Beliefs Central to the Case

Damadian became a born again Christian in 1957 at a Billy Graham
Crusade in Madison Square Garden, New York (Chuvala, 1996). Extensive
reading and study on science and theology since then has put his faith
on firm footing, especially on the creation/evolution question.
Furthermore, he has been active in this controversyÑe.g. HeibertÕs
article ÒDarwin Wins Friends in RomeÓ in British Columbia Report dated
Nov. 11, 1996, pp. 30-31.

Numerous articles have commented that DamadianÕs religious beliefs
were central to why he was denied the Nobel award. For example, a
Christianity Today article suggested that the reason for the Nobel
Prize CommitteeÕs snubbing Damadian was because he is a devout
Christian and a creationist. In an excellent article about the Nobel
Prize and Damadian in Scientific American, Yam (2003, p. 42) asked,
Ă’… did his creationist viewpoint play a role? He is on the
technical advisory board of the Institute for Creation Research.Ă“
Damadian is also on the reference board for Answers in Genesis
Creation Museum. Furthermore, Damadian is Ă’identified by many
websites as a prominent creation scientistÓ and, according to Olsen,
Ă’most scientists are not creationists and [they] tend to look askance
at scientists who believe that wayÓ (2003). Vision magazineÕs Ronald
Bailey added that the Nobel committee could have been Ă’swayed by the
fact that Damadian, although a brilliant inventor, is apparently a
creation science nut. In ironic contrast, LauterburÕs current
research is on the chemical origins of lifeÓ (quoted in Olsen, 2003).

Colleagues had mentioned to Damadian many years ago that his stand on
creationism may create problems for him in earning a Nobel Prize
because of the scientific establishmentÕs clear bias against this
worldview (Richards, 2003, p. 1). Ruse concluded that perhaps
Dr. Damadian does have good reasons to believe that he was passed over
due to his beliefs. Ruse wrote that Damadian

is not just an inventor, but also a very prominent Christian. And not
just a Christian of any bland kind, but a Creation ScientistÑone of
those people who believes that the Bible, especially including
Genesis, is absolutely literally trueÑsix days of creation, Adam and
Eve the first humans, universal flood, and all of the rest. It is at
least as likely a hypothesis that Damadian was ignored by the Nobel
committee because they did not want to award a Prize to an American
fundamentalist Christian as that they did not think his work merited
the fullest accolade. In the eyes of rational EuropeansÑand Swedes are
nothing if not rational EuropeansÑit is bad enough that such people
exist, let alone give them added status and a pedestal from which to
preach their silly ideas. Especially a scientific pedestal from which
to preach their silly anti-science ideas. Is this unfair? One
certainly feels a certain sympathy for the Nobel committee. Creation
science is wrong and (if taught to young people as the truth)
dangerous. It does represent everything against which good science
stands (2004).

Ruse added that DamadianÕs situation should be looked at from an
historical perspective. For example, he notes that even the most well
respected scientists have believed in

some very strange things, and if we start judging one area of their
work in terms of other beliefs that they have, we could well do more
harm than good. Isaac Newton, the greatest scientist of them all, had
some very strange views about the proper interpretation of such
Biblical books as Daniel and Revelation, and in respects believed
things about the universeĂ‘its past and its futureĂ‘that make today’s
Creation Scientists seem comparatively mild. More recently, Alfred
Russel Wallace, the co-discoverer of natural selection along with
Charles Darwin, became an enthusiast for spiritualism, believing that
there are hidden forces controlling every aspect of life. People knew
this and were embarrassed by it, but it did not stop them from
celebrating and praising Wallace’s great scientific work. He was made
a Fellow of the Royal Society, and given Britain’s greatest award for
achievement, the Order of Merit (2004).

Ruse is not saying this because he a creationist sympathizer. He
notes that all of his life he has

fought for evolution and against CreationismÑin writings, on the
podium, and in court in 1981 as a witness in Arkansas against a law
demanding that Creation Science be taught alongside evolution in the
state supported schools. But as one who loves science above all and
thinks it the greatest triumph of the human spiritÑas one who has no
religious beliefs whatsoeverÑI cringe at the thought that Raymond
Damadian was refused his just honor because of his religious
beliefs. Having silly ideas in one field is no good reason to deny
merit for great ideas in another field. Apart from the fact that this
time the Creation Scientists will think that there is good reason to
think that they are the objects of unfair treatment at the hands of
the scientific community (2004).

DamadianÕs position on certain issues also contradicts the direction
that many people are trying to take our country, e.g., Creation Ex
nihilo 16(3):35-37, June-August 1994, ÒSuper-scientist slams societyÕs
spiritual sicknessÓ). Damadian has often spoken openly about his
religious beliefs. For example, he did a seminar at Pittsberg State
University at Pittsberg, New York, in October of 2000 on creation
science (Richards, 2003).

No doubt the Nobel Prize committee felt that awarding Damadian the
Nobel Prize would legitimize his creation views, the same reason why
well known science writter Forrest Mims was fired as a scientific
writer for Scientific American. They told him as a writer for one of
AmericaÕs top science magazines he would give credibility to creation,
and for this reason only he was fired. Wilder-Smith documented
another case similar to DamadianÕs:

the situation is such today that any scientist expressing doubts about
evolutionary theory is rapidly silenced. Sir Fred Hoyle, the famous
astronomer, was well on his way to being nominated for the Nobel
Prize. However, after the appearance of his books expressing
mathematically based doubts as to Darwinism, he was rapidly
eliminated. His books were negatively reviewed and no more was heard
about his Nobel Prize (1987, p. iii).

Reasons Offered Not to Award Damadian

Some people believe that Damadian was not awarded the prize because he
choose to leave academia and pursue research at his own company. This
reasoning is hardly valid because many academics have left the Ivy
Tower to continue their research elsewhere. Some, such as William
Shockley, the inventor of the transistor, and the Wright brothers,
even founded companies that allowed them to profit from their
discoveries.

Others claim DamdianÕs denial was due to resentment because he
defended his patent rights in court. Damadian is often characterized
as rash and litigious for pursuing the court cases to save his company
(Stracher, 2002, p. 2). Although a number of individuals in the MRI
community have criticized him for doing this, Damadian had no choice
because fighting for his patent rights was a matter of his companyÕs
survival. It is very common for inventors to be forced to defend
their patents in courtÑEdison, Bell, Marconi, and Philo Farnsworth,
the inventor of the TV, all had to do so.

Likewise, the Wright brothers had no choice but to defend their
patents and spent many years in court, including five years in
litigation with Herring-Curtiss Company. The court also eventually
vindicated the Wrights, and ruled that they held the Òpioneer patentÓ
on manned flight (Combs, 1979, p. 357). The Wrights engaged in a
dozen lawsuits in three nations. Of those cases that went to court,
the Wrights won every one, as did Damadian (Combs, 1979, p. 357). One
difference in the WrightsÕ and DamadianÕs case is that the Smithsonian
spent almost forty years trying to discredit the Wright brothers, but
has formally acknowledged Damadian as the inventor of MRI.

Many competitors have unscrupulously attacked DamadianÕs personality,
claiming that his ÒegotismÓ and ÒmegalomaniaÓ was the issue. This is
name calling, and it is not rare to accuse potential Nobel laureates
of this fault. Another claim is that Damadian once walked out of a
professional meeting. This is hardly a reason to deny the award. No
indication was given as to why he walked out. Perhaps he went the
bathroom, had a late appointment, or did not feel well. According to
my experience and the persons I interviewed (such as Roger Richards),
Damadian is a hardworking, devoted Christian. Richards said he is
Òone of the most inspiring, humble, and intelligent menÓ he has ever
met, and furthermore, he is a very generous man. For example,
Damadian Ă’refused to accept any compensation for coming to speak at a
seminar Richards gave, and stayed for hours afterward answering
studentÕs questions. . .Ó (2003, p. 1). Richards adds (p. 3) that
Damadian is also a Ă’witty and pleasant individual who is not one to
put on airs.Ă“ Even if Damadian were egotistical and had some
personality quirks, these are not valid reasons to deny him a Nobel
Prize. Kary Mullis, the inventor of PCR, clearly had some personality
issues, yet was given the award

Kary Mullis is not likely to fit most peopleÕs profile of a serious
scientist. He is a man who quit the lab to work in a restaurant, a
man who had a midnight brawl on a beach with a fellow researcher, a
man who elicits both giggles and awe from other scientists. Yet
Mullis, 48, … is responsible for what many consider the most
important advance in genetic research since the discovery of DNAĂ•s
double helix … his inventionĂ‘the polymerase chain reaction, or
PCRĂ‘has revolutionized microbiology, medical diagnostics, criminal
investigation, even evolution (Dwyer, 1993, p. 8).

Mullis also

speaks with some bitterness about the years that followed his
discovery. He was turned down flat by prestigious journals when he
tried to publish his findings. He remembers the reception to his idea
by colleagues at Cetus as ice cold. Then, he maintains, as PCR was
taking off, they sought to attach themselves to its development (1993,
p. 10).

Nor is Damadian the only controversial case when it comes to the
awarding of a Nobel Prize. Jonas Salk, the inventor of the Salk polio
vaccine, was not awarded the prize, although Dr. Enders was (in 1954).
Frederick Banting and his boss J.J.R. McCleod (who was on vacation at
the time) were awarded the Nobel, and Charles Best (who, as is well
documented, actually discovered the use of insulin treatment for
diabetes), was not.

The attacks against Damadian began long before he was successful.
McAuliffe wrote:

When Dr. Raymond Damadian proposed in 1971 that body images more vivid
than X-rays could be produced with a machine that measures magnetic
properties of atoms, he was considered crazy. Critics called his
theory, which built upon a phenomenon known as nuclear magnetic
resonance, Ă’visionary nonsense.Ă“ Prestigious scientific journals
refused to publish his findings, and government funding bodies refused
to support his research…. This rigorous early training promoted his
mastery of science. Nothing, however, could prepare Damadian for the
hostility with which his colleagues greeted his ideas. Ă’I believe the
source of their anger,Ă“ says Damadian, Ă’was that my findings
overturned theories upon which literally thousands of scientists had
pinned their reputations (1987, p. 66).

Conclusion

In conclusion, a strong case can be made that DamadianÕs beliefs about
origins was the reason for his not receiving the award, and that he is
the legal and rightful inventor of the MRI machine. Consequently he
rightfully should have received the award.

Acknowledgments: I would like to thank Shelley Hausch and Bert
Thompson, Ph.D. for their critical review of an earlier version of
this manuscript.

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