Armenia Rated Third In Price-Fall

ARMENIA RATED THIRD IN PRICE-FALL

News.am
11:37 / 09/28/2009

As of January-August 2009, Armenia is rated number six on the
post-Soviet area in the consumer price growth, BelaPAN informs
referring to Belarus national statistics services.

In terms of consumer price growth, Belarus was in the lead in first
quarter 2009, Ukraine in April, and Russia became the number one
in June.

>From the beginning of 2009, prices jumped 8.2% in Ukraine, 8.1%
in Russia, and 7.5% in Belarus.

In terms of deflation as of August 2009, prices in Armenia registered
0.4% decrease, making the country third among the post-Soviet countries
in the price-decrease rating.

Moldova registered the largest (1.1%) decrease in the consumer
prices, whereas Latvia – 1%. As of the accounted period, inflation
was registered neither in Russia nor in Estonia.

Government Approves Draft State Budget For FY 2010

GOVERNMENT APPROVES DRAFT STATE BUDGET FOR FY 2010
Hasmik Dilanyan

"Radiolur"
28.09.2009 16:42

During today’s extraordinary sitting the Armenian Government approved
the draft state budget for Fiscal Year 2010. It’s going to be more
modest as compared to the budgets of the previous years. The social
expenditures have not been cut, but have not been increased, either.

Next year there will be a 85 million AMD decrease in the expenditure
part of the budget. According to law, the document should be submitted
to the National Assembly by October 1st.

The revenues will make 701.1 billion AMD, the expenditures part of
the budget will reach 884.7 billion AMD. The deficit will total 183.0
billion AMD.

Whether The Fining Is A Solution – Is Another Matter

WHETHER THE FINING IS A SOLUTION – IS ANOTHER MATTER

Aysor.am
September 28

Unscrupulous pedestrians will incur a fine of 3 thousand drams
since October, 1. According to Traffic Police chief Colonel Marqar
Oganyan’s recent reports violators will first be warned and then
will be picked up at the police for identification. After paying,
violator can free go.

The higgledy-piggledy road-crossing is a usual thing in our
country. Neither pedestrians, nor the drivers care for the traffic
rules.

Armenia’s Traffic Police has initiated this action to facilitate
the traffic. Note that Yerevan’s situation on roads is not fault of
only unscrupulous pedestrians. We can talk continuously about taxi’s
close parking to bus-stops, "elite"-cars’ permissiveness as well as
mere-cars’, etc.

So issue of traffic will not be resolved through fining the
pedestrians. Additionally, there are spoiled stoplights in the city;
crosswalks are not everywhere, few underground passages. It’s worth
mentioning that any job demands a sequence.

Whether burgess is ready for being disciplined or not, studied Aysor’s
correspondent.

"Well, so far, I run across the streets helter-skelter, but I’ll
cross the road only at walkcrosses since October, 1," a young man said.

"They should have done this long ago. I told my four-years-old
grandchild to wait until green lights. How people will receive this
innovation time will," Sargis S. said.

"It’s time to innovate. I am a driver and don’t like when people
violate traffic rules as well as when the drivers do. It’s worth
mentioning, that many Yerevan’s lights are broken and authorities
should pay attention to this problem," Mrs. Stella said.

Recall that in Soviet times tragic rules were thought since
kindergarten-age. Some light’s "skeletons" are still remaining in
kindergartens’ patio. Who teaches children to cross the street ourdays?

Chess: Young American expects to reign

Columbus Dispatch

Young American expects to reign

Saturday, September 26, 2009 3:02 AM
By SHELBY LYMAN
At 21, Hikaru Nakamura is the U.S. champion.

He is clearly better than his national peers, but in no way has he
achieved the dominance that Bobby Fischer demonstrated when he was
five or six years younger.

But Nakamura, ranked 16th in the world, is rapidly becoming a global
force. A high finish in a strong tournament or two, and he will enter
the elite fraternity of the top 10.

In the next five to 10 years, according to the Dutch magazine New in
Chess, Nakamura sees Magnus Carlsen of Norway and Levon Aronian of
Armenia as his main rivals for the world title.

That might seem presumptuous, but Nakamura is steadily improving. He
embraces repetition, with just a tweak here and a tweak there, better
openings, fewer blunders, and increasingly stronger competition.

Ex-champions meet again, but the stakes have changed

Old Kings, New Game
Ex-champions meet again, but the stakes have changed
By DAVID SZALAY

The Wall Street Journal
SEPTEMBER 26, 2009

What a piece of Cold War nostalgia! Fused together by their similar names,
through four marathon matches over four years, they were like Siamese twins.
Karpov and Kasparov. Kasparov and Karpov. So for a schoolboy of the 1980s,
to see their names paired again in Spain-where they played their final world
championship match in 1987-was a Proustian experience.

The match they played this past week to mark the 25th anniversary of their
first world-title bout was the highlight of a chess conference in the city
of Valencia. The two Russians played 12 games of speed chess over three
days. And just as he did in the ’80s, Garry Kasparov emerged victorious,
winning 9-3.

Before the match he told the Spanish newspaper El País that the quality of
the chess was unlikely to equal that of the five month, 48-game struggle of
25 years ago. "In this case," he said, "nostalgia will be a positive thing,
and the duel will serve to put a spotlight on chess again." Some things
never change, though-both players grumbled about the lighting in the hall.

Chess in the second half of the 20th century was overwhelmingly a Soviet
phenomenon. But the Soviet Union is gone, Spain far more prosperous, and
players’ fees denominated in euros. As for the players, Anatoly Karpov is
scarcely recognizable-the ax-faced and hungry master of 25 years ago is now
a well-fed elder statesman. He’s still an active pro, if in steep decline.
(He worked hard for this one, though, spending weeks training with a team of
grandmasters and a supercomputer.)

Mr. Kasparov hasn’t played professionally for years, devoting himself
instead to Russian politics. To prepare for this match he spent time with
the Norwegian wunderkind Magnus Carlsen-the next great champion of the game,
Mr. Kasparov says. (It will be at least two years before Mr. Carlsen gets
his chance to prove that.) With the Soviet monopoly ended, chess has largely
shed its political import.

Chess never mattered that much in the past. In 1809 Vienna Napoleon lost to
the "Turk"-ostensibly an early chess-playing machine but in fact a man in a
box, operating levers to move the painted effigy’s wooden hands. The emperor
swept the pieces from the board and shouted "Bagatelle!"-a trifle. Only in
exile on St. Helena did he take chess seriously.

In 1920, a more accomplished amateur-Lenin-founded the Soviet Chess School,
overruling those of his party who thought the game a luxurious and
aristocratic pastime, and started the Soviet obsession with chess. Nikolai
Krylenko, who headed the Soviet chess program, may have been odious-he’s
otherwise best known for his part in Stalin’s show trials-but he was
spectacularly successful in putting the Soviet Union at the forefront of
world chess. For 41?2 decades after World War II, with only one short
interruption, the world champion was a citizen of the Soviet Union.

Mikhail Botvinnik was the first champion, in 1948, and to a large extent he
established the nature of the modern game. Gone was the swashbuckling
improvisation of the 19th century, when men like Adolf Anderssen and Paul
Morphy took their opponents apart with dashing tactical flair applauded as
the summit of the art. Then, the game was primarily seen as an art, the
flower of effortless individual genius. Now we would say the style of
Messrs. Anderssen and Morphy lacked strategic depth.

Mr. Botvinnik, the patron saint of this view, perfected chess as science, as
tireless study and endless preparation, as an exercise in strategic
patience. His openings were designed not to spring tactical surprises that
could be used only once, but to lead to complex positions that he’d
understand better and more deeply than his opponent. He was the first
world-class player to be produced by Mr. Krylenko’s school, and he nurtured
the men who would maintain the Soviet stranglehold on the game for decades
to come-including Mr. Kasparov, of whom Mr. Botvinnik said, "The future of
chess lies in the hands of this young man." On the other hand, he said of
Mr. Karpov, "This boy doesn’t have a clue about chess." (Mr. Botvinnik
himself admitted his judgment was sometimes flawed.)

In the postwar period, only one man managed briefly to wrest the title from
Soviet hands. Bobby Fischer grew up in New York’s borough of Brooklyn.
Unlike the Soviet Union, the U.S. had no state-run chess program with
priority almost equal to the space program. It didn’t give chess-players the
status of Olympic gold medalists. But with Mr. Fischer the U.S. managed to
produce probably the single most talented player of the era, if not of all
time.

The country might have hoped for someone less odd and objectionable. Mr.
Fischer was an anti-Semite who years later was to describe 9/11 as "a good
thing." Chess, it was said, was his first language. He was a grandmaster at
age 15. When Mr. Fischer took on Boris Spassky in the 1972 World
Championship match in Reykjavik, Iceland, he became the first non-Soviet
challenger in a quarter of a century.

Messrs. Spassky and Fischer were reluctant, unlikely Cold Warriors. In later
years they both rejected their unlooked-for roles as champions of their
systems. After decades of exile, Mr. Fischer died back in Reykjavik in 2008,
an Icelandic citizen and a fugitive from American justice. Mr. Spassky has
lived quietly in France since the mid-’70s.

But for a few months in the summer of 1972, the two rivals and their game
took on a strange geopolitical aura. Even Henry Kissinger pleaded with Mr.
Fischer-who at the last minute seemed reluctant to fly to Iceland-to show
the Commies what he was made of.

Things got off to a shaky start for Mr. Fischer. The sort of blunder a
half-decent club player would never make cost him the first game. And he
didn’t even show up for the second. He was erratic, petulant, unpredictable,
on a monumental scale. It drove poor Mr. Spassky up the wall.

But suddenly Mr. Fischer started playing things he had never played before,
such as Alekhine’s Defense, and playing them with devastating sharpness and
insight. He improvised and made a mockery of Mr. Spassky’s meticulous
preparation. When Mr. Fischer won the sixth game-surprising his opponent by
opening with d4, the queen pawn-Mr. Spassky stood and joined in the
applause.

There was more Cold War skulduggery, too. The Russians accused the Americans
of using electronic devices to meddle with their man’s brain. The Americans
counter-accused. The Icelandic police took the place apart and, in the
lighting fixtures, found only two dead flies.

True to form, Mr. Fischer refused in 1975 to defend his title. Young Mr.
Karpov took it by default and held it easily for another all-Soviet decade,
until Mr. Kasparov challenged him. The Soviet Union was starting to feel the
forces that would pull it apart-forces that young, abrasive Mr. Kasparov
seemed to embody, as he faced the establishment’s man. (Still, Mr. Kasparov
was a member of the Communist Party.)

The match turned into a war of attrition, producing 40 drawn games before it
was stopped like a boxing match for the well-being of the fighters. The
score then was 5-3 to Mr. Karpov. For the next three years they slugged it
out, Mr. Kasparov winning each time by small and diminishing margins. In
1987, their fourth and final match, they tied at 12-12. (They met several
times again, for example at a speed-chess match in Germany in 1999, playing
to a draw.)

Today, the top contenders are no longer predominantly Russian. While
Norway’s Mr. Carlsen waits for his shot at the championship, reigning
champion Viswanathan Anand of India and the Bulgarian Veselin Topalov,
currently No. 1 in the world rankings, will face off for the title next
year.

Meanwhile, chess has largely faded from the world’s front pages. One
exception: the matches between Mr. Kasparov and a series of computers built
by International Business Machines. In 1997 the computer Deep Blue for the
first time won a match against the incumbent world champion.

It was purely a matter of processing speed. The computer only wants to win
because we tell it to want to win. If we tell it to lose, it will-and just
as happily. What’s so fascinating about chess is the way that it combines
two human characteristics that seem so far apart-our infinite capacity for
abstraction and imagination on the one hand, and our equally infinite
competitiveness on the other.

It’s this competitiveness which gives meaning to chess; this is probably why
it’s so appealing as a proxy for political conflict. And this I think is
why, as they waited for the first game to start in Spain last week, Garry
Kasparov and Anatoly Karpov seemed-though little was now truly at stake-to
slip back into their younger, fiercer, hungrier selves.

-David Szalay is the author of two novels: "London and the South-East" and,
most recently, "The Innocent," which is set in the USSR in 1972 and includes
an account of the great Fischer-Spassky match of that year from a Soviet
perspective.

Kasparov beats Karpov in rerun of 1984 chess clash

Kasparov beats Karpov in rerun of 1984 chess clash

Reuters
Fri Sep 25, 2009 10:16am EDT

MADRID (Reuters Life!) – Russian chess legend Gary Kasparov has won a
re-match of his classic 1984 world championship contest with compatriot
Anatoly Karpov, ending a 12-match clash in the Spanish city of Valencia 9-3.

In relaxed surroundings worlds away from the original clash — played out
amid Cold War tension which had converted Kasparov into a western favorite
— Kasparov won five speed matches in the final eight-match clash late on
Thursday.

The players plan to play again in Paris in December, a spokeswoman for the
Valencia regional government said.

In 1984 Kasparov, now 46 and a leading opponent of Russian Prime Minister
Vladimimir Putin, waged an epic battle with then reigning champion Karpov,
now 58, which was called off after 48 matches because of concern over the
players’ health.

Kasparov said the 1984 match was called off to save Karpov from defeat —
and a nervous breakdown — as the match had come to symbolize the competing
forces then at play in the Soviet Union. Karpov was a darling of the Soviet
establishment.

By the time the 1984 match was halted, Karpov had won five games and
Kasparov three, with 40 draws. Both said they wanted to play on.

(Reporting by Jason Webb, editing by Tim Pearce)

Iranian president criticizes Israel and the U.S.

Iranian president criticizes Israel and the U.S.
24.09.2009 19:15 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ President of the Islamic Republic of Iran, Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad made his usual criticism of the existing world order and
international political institutions. Addressing the general debate in
the framework of the 64th session of UN General Assembly, the Iranian
leader said that "political and economic structures created after the
World War II and based on the desire to dominate the world, failed to
ensure justice and lasting security."

He described as "unacceptable" the situation when the UN and the
Security Council, whose decisions must represent all the countries and
governments through the most democratic methods of decision-making,
are subordinate to several governments and serve their interests".

Iran’s president criticized Israeli and the U.S. policies. In
particular, Ahmadinejad accused the "Zionist regime" in "inhumane
policies in Palestine," in usage of "force and coercion," in denial of
Palestinians’ legitimate right to self-defense. "

Ahmadinejad accused the U.S. in military intervention in the affairs
of other states under the pretext of combating terrorism or drug
trafficking, citing as an example the situation in Iraq and
Afghanistan.
According to him, these actions resulted in "abounding the illegal
manufacture of drugs, increased terrorism, thousands of people killed,
infrastructure destroyed, severely affected regional security." "Those
who created the current disastrous situation, continue to blame
others," he said, the press service of the UN reports.

G-20 Will Replace G-8

G-20 WILL REPLACE G-8

01.html
11:43:51 – 25/09/2009

The G-20 Summit held in the city of Pittsburg of the U.S. issued a
statement according to which the G-20 will become the leading economic
forum replacing the G-8 format. This was explained by the fact that
the G-20 format will enable to build a more equal and stable global
economy, to hold financial reforms and to enhance the life level of
developing countries. AFP informs.

http://www.lragir.am/engsrc/economy-lrahos153

Armenian single skater fails Nebelhorn Trophy 2009 short program

Armenian single skater fails Nebelhorn Trophy 2009 short program
25.09.2009 10:08 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Armenian single skater Pierre Balian failed his
short program at Nebelhorn Trophy 2009 in Oberstdorf, Germany.

Garnering 35,68 points, single skater Pierre Balian is the 30th in the
32-position chart.

On September 25, Balian will show his free skating, without any chance
to break through to top six.

Nebelhorn Trophy is an International Competition to fill the remaining
open entries for the XXI Olympic Winter Games in Vancouver, Canada,
for Men, Ladies, Pairs and Ice Dance.