OTAN cancela ejercicios militares en =?UNKNOWN?Q?Azerbaiy=E1n?=

OTAN cancela ejercicios militares en Azerbaiyán

Xinhua News Agency – Spanish
September 13, 2004 Monday 5:02 PM EST

BRUSELAS — La Organización del Tratado del Atlántico Norte (OTAN)
anunció hoy que canceló los ejercios militares en Azerbaiyán horas
antes de que se iniciaran luego de que las autoridades en Baku dijeron
que no querían tropas armenias en su territorio.

Azerbaiyán se rehusó a que soldados armenios participaran en los
ejercicios porque muchos azerbaiyanos tienen malos recuerdos de la
guerra entre los dos países en el último siglo.

La OTAN decidió cancelar los ejercicios que se bebían iniciar martes,
dijo un vocero de la alianza en un comunicado.

“Lamentamos que el principio de inclusión no aplicara en este caso,
pues llevó a la cancelación de los ejercicios”, dijo el vocero.

“Los ejercicios son una serie importante de ejercicios en vivo en el
calendario de Asociación por la Paz. Están diseñados para proporcionar
conocimiento básico sobre Operaciones de Apoyo de Paz (PSO por siglas
en inglés) a nivel de unidades pequeñas”. agregó.

A inicios de los 1990’s, Baku y Yerevan sostuvieron una guerra de cinco
años por el enclave remoto de Nagorno-Karabakh, parte administrativa
de Azerbaiyán, pero habitada principalmente por armenios. Alrededor de
35,000 personas murieron en el combate y cerca de un millón de civiles
fueron desplazados. El territorio está ahora controlado por Armenia.

BAKU: Three Armenian officers arrive in secret in Azerbaijan,daily s

Three Armenian officers arrive in secret in Azerbaijan, daily says

Baki Xabar, Baku
13 Sep 04

September headlined “Are the Armenian officers already in Baku?”,
subheaded “They are reported to come on the night of 11 to 12
September, however this is being kept secret from the public”

It seems that the actions to protest against the visit by Armenian
officers to Baku have been fruitless. Before our newspaper was
published yesterday, we received a report that three Armenian officers
had already arrived in Baku.

The source saying this added that the Armenian officers came to
Azerbaijan on the night of 11-12 September. The fact that they came
to Azerbaijan two days ago and that the governing circles are keeping
it secret from the public enables us to say that the government is
interested in their visit to Baku and the protest actions held so far
have been just a show. We failed to get in touch with the relevant
bodies to clarify the report since we received it late and it was
Sunday yesterday [12 September].

Large group of young volunteers find faith in Armenia

PRESS OFFICE
Diocese of the Armenian Church of America (Eastern)
630 Second Avenue, New York, NY 10016
Contact: Jake Goshert, Coordinator of Information Services
Tel: (212) 686-0710 Ext. 60; Fax: (212) 779-3558
E-mail: [email protected]
Website:

September 13, 2004
___________________

ACYOA’S ASP TRIP CONNECTS YOUNG AMERICANS WITH ARMENIAN HERITAGE

While other travelers were reading magazines or watching the on-board
movie, members of one group of young passengers were practicing phrases
to help them communicate with Armenian children.

Those 26 young Armenian Americans were headed to their homeland as
participants in the Armenia Service Program (ASP), organized by the
Armenian Church Youth Organization of America (ACYOA). They traveled to
Armenia not just to see the sites, but also serve as counselors at Camp
Siranoosh, a summer camp for needy children in the Yeghegnazdor region
of Armenia.

NEW FRIENDS FOR LIFE

The ASP participants worked with 95 campers, who were divided into five
groups. Activities rotated through arts and crafts, English lessons,
sports, dancing, and religion taught by the ASP group leader Fr.
Haigazoun Najarian of the St. Sahag and St. Mesrob Church of Wynnewood,
PA.

“We were the ones who taught them English, but they taught us a million
new ways to say ‘I love you’,” said Anoush Froundjian from the Holy
Martyrs Church of Bayside, NY.

It isn’t just the kids that make Camp Siranoosh so unique. It is
situated in a remote area of Armenia, far from the nearest city and even
a distance from the nearest tiny village. It is a beautiful place that
encourages self-reflection.

“Of all the wonderful moments I had at Camp Siranoush, breathing in the
fresh air and seeing the panoramic view of the mountains will forever be
in my mind,” said Anjelle Rudowicz, of the Sts. Joachim and Anne Church
of Palos Heights, IL.

Bonds quickly formed between the young campers and their new American
buddies. After two weeks at camp, the last day was filled with emotion
— hugs and kisses, followed by tears. E-mails and addresses were
exchanged, and promises were made to keep in touch and visit again soon.

“These kids are no longer just my friends; they are my brothers and
sisters,” said Levon Sukiasian from New York City.

Sad to see their counselors leave, the children also offered up gifts of
appreciation. And while they were small tokens, they were large in the
hearts of the children.

“The kids at camp were incredible. They had nothing and yet they wanted
to give us everything,” said Laura Kasparian from the Sts. Sahag and
Mesrob Church of Providence, RI. “I will always remember their smiles,
their energy, and their enthusiasm.”

FIRST TIME IN ARMENIA

The 2004 ASP trip was filled to capacity. Many were making their first
trip to Armenia, so for them the visit was moving enough, without all
the unique sightseeing experiences and the love of the children at the
camp.

“Who knew it was possible to fall in love with a place the second you
get off the plane? That was the case for me,” said first-time Armenia
visitor Sarine Zenian of the St. Mary Church of Washington, DC.

The participants saw historic and cultural sites throughout Armenia.
>>From ancient churches to modern theaters, they got a taste of Armenian
culture. They were touched by visiting the historic sites of their
faith. During a celebration of the Divine Liturgy at Khor Virab, they
climbed down into St. Gregory’s Pit.

“One thing I will never forget about my trip to Armenia is when I
climbed down into the pit,” said Harry Kezelian, of the St. John Church
of Southfield, MI. “Standing where St. Gregory once stood, to see with
my own eyes the place where the fate of the Armenian nation was
determined, a place without which we would not be here today as Armenian
Christians, was for me a moving experience.

“It’s strange to think that such a humble hole in the ground has so much
history. But then it’s fitting for our Christian religion, a humble
faith by nature. Just as a Jerusalem pilgrimage is important for all
Christians, a trip to Khor Virab is important for all Armenian
Christians to experience. What a strengthening of faith it is to stand
where St. Gregory lived for 13 years in order to give our people the
‘Good News’.”

Along with seeing important places in their homeland, they connected
with the people of Armenia. They had imaginary tea parties with the
young children at Yerevan’s Children’s Reception Center run by the Fund
for Armenian Relief (FAR). They joked and took pictures with waiters
while marveling at the rich taste of the fruits and vegetables of
Armenia.

“You don’t just go and visit Armenia, you go and experience Armenia,”
said Arese Soghomonian from the St. Sahag and St. Mesrob Church in
Wynnewood, PA.

MEETING WITH THE CATHOLICOS

One highly anticipated part of the trip was a visit to the Mother See of
Holy Etchmiadzin and a meeting with His Holiness Karekin II, Supreme
Patriarch and Catholicos of All Armenians. The ASP group was given a
special tour of some of the beautiful works of art and artifacts in the
collection of the Mother See, before being escorted in to meet the
Catholicos. The meeting is just one of the unique opportunities the ASP
trip provides its participants each year.

“We had several opportunities on this trip, such as working with the
kids at Camp Siranoush and meeting Vehapar, that we would not have had
on any other trip,” said Alex Sarkesian from the St. John Church of
Southfield, MI.

After introductions, the participants had an opportunity to ask
questions, covering a wide variety of topics, and discuss many issues
with the Catholicos. As they left the meeting, the participants had
smiles on their faces and memories of an intimate conversation with
their Vehapar to share with loved ones at home.

“This trip to Armenia surpassed all of my expectations. It has ignited
a spark within me that will last a lifetime,” reflected Michael
Ohanesian of New York City.

“The ASP trip was a life-changing experience. This trip is, by far, one
of the best choices I’ve ever made,” said Jonathan Banks of Southfield,
MI. “I developed a very close relationship with each participant. I
can’t imagine having this experience without them. I also look forward
to attending church and sharing my experiences with the members of my
parish.”

The ACYOA website has an online journal from this year’s ASP
participants. Visit it by going to

This year’s ASP trip was booked full and the Diocese provided $7,800
divided among all the participants to help cover their costs. If you
would like more information on next year’s trip, contact ACYOA Executive
Secretary Nancy Basmajian by e-mailing [email protected] or
calling (212) 686-0710.

— 9/13/04

E-mail photos available on request. Photos also viewable in the News
and Events section of the Eastern Diocese’s website,

PHOTO CAPTION (1): While serving as a counselor at Camp Siranoosh, a
participant in the 2004 Armenia Service Program (ASP), teaches a camper
how to play the guitar.

PHOTO CAPTION (2): Campers at Camp Siranoosh in Armenia show off
bookmarks they made with the help of ASP participants, who traveled to
Armenia on the ACYOA-organized trip from June 24 to July 15, 2004.

PHOTO CAPTION (3): Fr. Haigazoun Najarian of the St. Sahag and St.
Mesrob Church of Wynnewood, PA, who led the 2004 ASP trip, leads a Bible
study during the group’s two-week stay at Camp Siranoosh in the
Yeghegnazdor region of Armenia.

PHOTO CAPTION (4): Participants in the ACYOA-organized ASP trip meet
with His Holiness Karekin II, Supreme Patriarch and Catholicos of All
Armenians, one of the highlights of their stay in Armenia from June 24
to July 15, 2004.

# # #

www.armenianchurch.org
www.acyoa.org.
www.armenianchurch.org.

Power of 1 plus 200 = UVSC problem

Power of 1 plus 200 = UVSC problem
By Marion Crawford NewsNet Staff Reporter

The BYU Newsnet, UT (Brigham Young University)
Sept 10 2004

Some students at Utah Valley State College think the math department
doesn’t add up, and that could equal trouble if the petition they
have signed reaches the Legislature.

Two hundred students have signed a petition requesting the Utah
Legislature to “defend our interests as tax and tuition payers…and
to reconsider the make up of the staff of the mathematics department
at UVSC.”

The petition was initiated by Marina Nelson, pre-nursing major at UVSC
and a native Armenian, who maintains a 4.0 GPA and already carries
a bachelor’s degree from a university in Armenia. But Nelson said
she decided to take the drive to Salt Lake Community College last
semester for the state accredited Math 1050 course, college algebra,
out of fear that she could fail it at UVSC.

“A lot of kids are afraid to take Math 1050 at UVSC because of its
reputation,” Nelson said.

She liked her teacher at SLCC because he had a teaching method and
wasn’t just a mathematician.

“He explains terms in the way I understand,” she said. “If you have
a question he will go through the details and sit down with you and
help you.”

UVSC’s Math 1010, intermediate algebra, is the second most failed
class at UVSC, according to UVSC’s Institutional Research Office,
cited in UVSC’s newspaper, The College Times. Math 1050, BYU’s Math
110 college algebra equivalent, came in sixth.

“Math 1050 is a statewide issue,” Teddi Safman, Assistant Commissioner
of Academic Affairs for the State Board of Regents said. “We will be
meeting next month to discuss it.”

UVSC’s Dean of Science and Health Sam Rushforth said that he feels
the statistics reflect there is a math problem across the United
States and in no way reflect the competency of his faculty.

“Some of our students come here and haven’t had any math since they
were sophomores in high school,” he said. “You have to go back and
do a remedial course or work with a tutor before you take an upper
level math course.”

BYU students have better success rates in BYU’s Math 110 because
most have taken its equivalent in high school, said Lynn Garner,
department chair of mathematics at BYU.

“Most students who come to BYU have already had 110 and take it as
a refresher course,” Garner said. “But the rigors of the course are
definite and a student who doesn’t bring a lot of skill from high
school is going to struggle. I hope the [UVSC] students are successful
in their petition in uncovering the true cause of the problem, which
I think is a lack of student preparation more than anything else.”

Math 1050 isn’t meant to be a gatekeeper course set-up to make people
fail or weed people out, Rushforth said.

“You could go to any college campus in the United States… [with]
a petition that says, ‘college algebra sucks’ and every other student
would sign it,” Rushforth said.

UVSC offers self-help labs, math tutorial labs and programs for
remedial math students, Rushforth said.

Rushforth also said that he is taking part in three task forces to
look specifically at Math 1050, concurrent enrollment in college
classes, and some adult education classes, which could be taught at
high school campuses.

“I would like to tell the math department at UVSC to hold the line,
hold the standard, and try to educate the high schools that they make
sure their students are better prepared when they leave,” Garner said.

Nelson said she is waiting to get an appointment time with the
Legislature between Sept. 22 to 25.

Iran’s Khatami condemns war on foreign soil as terrorism

Iran’s Khatami condemns war on foreign soil as terrorism
by AVET DEMOURIAN; Associated Press Writer

Associated Press Worldstream
September 8, 2004 Wednesday

YEREVAN, Armenia — Iranian President Mohammad Khatami suggested
Wednesday that attackers who seized a school in Russia discredited
Islam, and he added that conducting military action in a foreign
country could be a form of terrorism.

Speaking during a visit to Armenia, Khatami condemned terrorists who
use religion a pretext, saying they “commit a double crime: taking
the lives of innocent people and discrediting religions that teach
peace and humanism.”

Khatami was speaking at a new conference with Armenian President
Robert Kocharian, who condemned last week’s hostage-taking raid on
a school in Russia. Russian officials have alleged the attackers
include several Arabs and have pointed the finger at rebel leaders
from mostly Muslim Chechnya.

“Today’s realities are such that terrorist acts can be carried out
in the West and in the East, in Iran and in America,” Khatami said,
according to a translation of his comments.

“Terrorism manifests itself in various ways: from explosions on planes
and in apartment buildings to the conduct of military actions on the
territory of a foreign country,” he said. He added that “any person
who places himself above justice can be considered a terrorist.”

Khatami and Kocharian signed a treaty laying out principles for
cooperation between their countries and adopted a joint declaration
calling the Iranian leader’s visit “the beginning of a new stage”
in relations between the neighbors.

Also signed Wednesday was an agreement on financing and contracting for
a gas pipeline linking Iran and the small Caucasus Mountain nation to
its north. The two countries’ energy chiefs also signed a memorandum
on cooperation.

Kocharian said that “energy remains a very important sphere in our
bilateral relations” and said the countries intend to link their
infrastructure to bring energy cooperation “to a new regional level.”

BAKU: Azeri speaker voices strong objections to Armenian officers’vi

Azeri speaker voices strong objections to Armenian officers’ visit to Baku

Ayna, Baku
8 Sep 04

Five Armenian officers will arrive in Baku in the afternoon on
12 September. According to information that we have obtained from
military sources, a minibus has been allocated for them to move around
the city. The report says that the Azerbaijani Defence, Interior
and National Security ministries have started to carry out a plan
of measures to ensure security of foreign servicemen due to attend
the NATO [Cooperative Best Effort 2004] exercises. Special people
will accompany foreign servicemen during the exercises. No actions
of protest during the Cooperative Best Effort exercises on 13-26
September will be allowed. A source in the law-enforcement agencies
said that police officers are being seriously instructed on this.

Two high-ranking Armenian officers (a general and a colonel) are
expected to attend VIP events due at the end of the exercises. The
low-ranking officers will stay at the Qaraheybat test range, while
the high-tanking officers will be staying at Hotel Europe and the
Hyatt Regency Hotel. [Passage omitted: reported details.]

Azerbaijani official circles refuse to disclose information about the
number of Armenian officers [due to arrive in Baku]. For instance,
the head of the A zerbaijani Defence Ministry press service, Ramiz
Malikov, said in an interview with our newspaper that the number
will be known only in the run-up to the exercises. Malikov thinks
that their number will be less than the mentioned one.

Speaker Murtuz Alasgarov made a statement at the parliament’s plenary
session yesterday [7 September] denouncing the participation of
Armenian officers in the NATO exercises due in Baku. He said: “NATO
will never resolve the Karabakh problem. The alliance is trying to
establish a base for itself. NATO intends to enter the Caucasus.”

The speaker said he understood people’s anxiety and added that “the
killers of our children cannot enter Azerbaijan”. Alasgarov said
that the Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry should be seriously engaged in
the issue.

“Armenians have occupied our lands. By coming to Baku, they want to
boast. Of course, every sober-minded citizen of our country cannot
reconcile to such a disgrace. I understand people’s protest, but
everything should be carried out reasonably. The talks with NATO’s
leadership are necessary. I regard the military exercises inopportune,”
Alasgarov said.

PR: A Century of Armenians in America Conference

PRESS RELEASE
The Armenian Center at Columbia University
P.O.Box 4042,
Grand Central Station,
New York, NY 10163-4042

Contact: Anny Bakalian, conference organizer

Tel: (212) 817-7570
E-mail: [email protected]
Website: web.gc.cuny.edu/memeac
September 7, 2004
______________________________________________________________________________

A Century of Armenians in America Conference

Features Seven New Scholars and Seven Pioneers

The one-day conference, “A Century of Armenians in America: Voices
from New Scholarship,” is a unique gathering of scholars who have
contributed to the birth and development of Armenian American
Studies. A major objective of this conference is to introduce
to the general public seven new scholars who wrote their doctoral
dissertations on Armenian Americans in the last decade. Seven pioneers
in the field will share the platform with them. This conference is
presented by the Armenian Center at Columbia University and hosted
by the Middle East and Middle Eastern American Center (MEMEAC),
in the Baisley Powell Elebash Recital Hall at the Graduate Center,
CUNY, on Saturday October 9, 2004, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.

Conference participants hail from Yerevan, London, California, Ohio,
New England, and New York City. Historian Robert Mirak, whose book
Torn Between Two Lands: Armenians in America 1890-World War I (Harvard
University Press, 1983) forged Armenian American studies, and Arpena
Mesrobian, Director Emerita at Syracuse University Press and author
of “Like One Family” – The Armenians of Syracuse, (Gomidas Institute,
2000), will be the honorary chairpersons of the day. The conference is
organized by sociologist Anny Bakalian, author of Armenian Americans:
>>From Being to Feeling Armenian (Transaction Publishers, 1993).
Bakalian is Associate Director of MEMEAC and serves on the Advisory
Board of the Armenian Center of her alma mater Columbia University.

The morning panel is devoted to historians. The first speaker,
Knarik Avakian, is Staff Researcher at the Institute of History,
National Academy of Sciences in Yerevan and Editor at the Armenian
Encyclopaedia. She received her doctorate in 1995 specializing in
Armenian American history. Avakian is the author of The History of
the Armenian Community of the United States of America – From the
Beginning to 1924 (published in Armenian in 2000) and over 50 articles
and book chapters.

The next presenter will be George Byron Kooshian, Jr., a native of
Pasadena, CA. His doctoral dissertation (UCLA 2002) examines the
struggles of the earliest Armenian settlers and their children’s
generation in Fresno. Since 1975, Kooshian has been a teacher in the
Los Angeles Unified School District. He is married with three children
and lives in Altadena, California.

The third historian on the morning panel will be Ben Alexander, who
is currently completing his Ph.D. at the Graduate Center, CUNY. His
dissertation focuses on the changing face of Armenian ethnic identity
in the United States from 1915 to 1955. Ben teaches U.S. history as an
adjunct at St. Francis College in Brooklyn. He is also a playwright,
whose work has been produced at Off-Off-Broadway venues.

Isabel Kaprielian-Churchill, Professor of Modern Armenian and
Immigration History at California State University, Fresno, will
critique the morning papers. She has written extensively on Armenian
immigrants in Canada and the U.S.A. Her most recent book, Like
Our Mountains: A History of Armenians in Canada, by McGill-Queen’s
University Press, will be released soon.

The afternoon session features clinical psychologist Diana Vartan
and family specialist Margaret Manoogian. Vartan emigrated from Iran
as a teenager. She earned her Ph.D. from the University of Southern
California in 1996. She has worked in a number of community mental
health settings as a clinician and training supervisor, and has
taught graduate and undergraduate psychology. Her psychodynamic,
family systems, and multiethnic focus has helped her address the needs
of many Armenian families, couples, teenagers, and children. Diana
Vartan has relocated to New York City in the last year.

Manoogian is Assistant Professor of Child and Family Studies at
Ohio University in Athens. She obtained her Ph.D. from Oregon State
University specializing in family gerontology. Her current research
explores family well -being after the 1996 federal welfare reform
act. Margaret’s father encouraged a strong interest and pride in
Armenian culture, a legacy she is currently sharing with her two
children.

The discussant for the psychological panel will be Aghop Der
Karabetian, Chair of the Department of Psychology at the University
of LaVerne and Associate Dean for Strategic Planning and Outcomes
Assessment. He is the author of numerous articles on Armenian
identity and creator of the much-used Armenian Ethnic Orientation
Questionnaire. Recently, he translated into English and published his
and his wife’s grandfathers’ genocide survival memoirs, “Jail to Jail,”
and “Vahan’s Triumph,” respectively.

In the last panel of the conference, two sociologists, Claudia Der
Martirosian and Matthew Jendian, will examine generational changes.
Der Martirosian escaped the Iranian Revolution with her parents at a
young age. She studied at UCLA, earning a B.A. in Applied Mathematics
and a Ph.D. in Sociology in 1996. She has co-authored chapters
discussing the Iranian and Armenian experiences in Irangeles and
Ethnic Los Angeles. She currently works as a Statistical Consultant
with UCLA Public Health Dentistry and Southern California University
of Health Sciences (SCUHS).

Matthew Ari Jendian is Assistant Professor of Sociology and Director
of the American Humanics Certificate Program in Nonprofit Management
and Leadership at California State University, Fresno. He received his
Ph.D. from the University of Southern California in 2001. Matthew is
an active member of the Armenian Church and an ordained deacon. He
is the proud father of Joshua and Nicholas, two of Fresno’s native
fourth-generation Armenian Americans.

The discussant of the last panel will be Susan Pattie who will
compare and contrast the Armenian experience in the U.S. with the
diaspora. Pattie is the author of Faith in History – Armenians
Rebuilding Community (Smithsonian Institution Press, 1997). She is
a Senior Research Fellow at University College London. Recently,
she was instrumental in the founding of the Armenian Institute in
London, which is dedicated to making Armenian culture and history a
living experience.

Concluding remarks will be offered by Khachig Tölölyan, Chair of the
English Department at Wesleyan University. Tölölyan is the founder
and editor of Diaspora: A Journal of Transnational Studies. This
award-winning publication is in its 12th year of continuous publication
by the Zoryan Institute and Toronto University Press.

Thanks to the generosity of the benefactors who established the
outreach efforts of the Armenian Center at Columbia, this conference
aims to jumpstart new research projects on Armenian immigrants and
their descendants in the United States not only by energizing the
scholars who are presenting papers on October 9, 2004, but also
inspiring graduate students to pursue studies in this area. Most
of the new scholars had to read Mirak’s or Pattie’s books for their
dissertations, some borrowed Der Karabetian’s Armenian identity scale
for their research, and probably they all aspired to emulate Tölölyan’s
academic achievements. However, few have had the opportunity to meet
the pioneers in person. It is hoped that mentoring partnerships,
scholarly networks and even friendships will result from this historic
gathering, eventually yielding a burst of new research and publications
on Armenian immigrant and their descendants in America. The day will
be structured in a way that will give the audience an opportunity to
engage conference participants on topics of their own interest.

Do not miss this unique opportunity to learn about Armenian
American history and the issues affecting this community today. The
Graduate Center, CUNY is located at 365 Fifth Avenue, between
34th and 35th Streets. For more information contact Anny Bakalian,
[email protected] or 212-817-7570. The conference program and
other information can be found on
or web.gc.cuny.edu/memeac.

www.columbiaarmeniancenter.org

BAKU: Any progress in Karabakh talks not in favour of Azerbaijan -op

Any progress in Karabakh talks not in favour of Azerbaijan – opposition leader

Azadliq, Baku
4 Sep 04

Azerbaijan’s Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov, who has met his
Armenian counterpart Vardan Oskanyan again in Prague, has said that
progress has been made in the settlement of the Karabakh conflict.

But Bahaddin Haziyev, deputy PFAP [Peoples Front of Azerbaijan Party
reformists’ wing] chairman, thinks that if the foreign ministers really
reached any agreement in Prague, this could be only to the detriment
of Azerbaijan’s interests. Because both countries’ positions on the
settlement of the conflict are clear and Armenian Defence Minister
Serzh Sarkisyan has recently reiterated that his country would in no
way relinquish its principles.

“Azerbaijan is ready to give the highest status to Karabakh within
its territory and secure the safety of its population. This is our
country’s principle in the conflict. But Armenia is trying to have a
Karabakh outside Azerbaijan’s b orders, make sure that Karabakh has
land borders with Armenia, and secure an international guarantee for
the safety of [Karabakh’s] Armenian community. So, it means that if
any progress was really made in Prague, one of the sides must have
given up. Armenia is saying that it has not. If the opposite side
has not given up its principles, then there can be no talk of any
progress in favour of Azerbaijan,” Haziyev said.

Haziyev added that if the alleged progress relates to Armenia’s
withdrawal from the districts around Karabakh, this does not mean that
a settlement to the conflict has been found. Armenia has repeatedly
hinted that it would pull out of the districts only in the event the
conflict is settled in accordance with its principles.

“Some people are saying that the talks are about cancellation of the
settlement process for an uncertain period in return for Armenia’s
withdrawal from the districts around Karabakh. We cannot say if it is
true or not. But ‘Nagornyy Karabakh’s chief of staff’ has recently said
that he is ready to withdraw his troops for the sake of the settlement
of the conflict. [Armenia’s] possible withdrawal from the surrounding
districts would not mean a settlement to the conflict. Armenia has
repeatedly stated that it would pull out of the districts if the
conflict is settled in accordance with its principles,” Haziyev said.

Strangers on a (Private) Plane, Agassi and Sargsian Bonded

Strangers on a (Private) Plane, Agassi and Sargsian Bonded
By SELENA ROBERTS

New York Times, NY
Sept 6 2004

David Duprey/Associated Press, left; Chang W. Lee/The New York Times
Sargis Sargsian, 31, left, will face one of his heroes, Andre Agassi,
34, Monday at the United States Open.

IT was late Saturday night, with the grandstand girders finally still
after nearly five hours of stamping, with the roars that had
sustained Sargis Sargsian over, when a Connecticut family returned to
its home near New Haven.

The Mansourians were Sargsian’s family, too, the one once found for
him through the Yale alumni directory.

The Mansourians had just watched Sargsian, a 31-year-old Armenian,
summon the spirit of youth in his legs as he finished off his second
five-set match in two rounds at the United States Open, ending more
than 10 hours of court time in three days by lying on his back across
the baseline, staring up at the sky, overjoyed with his unlikely
entrance into the fourth round.

“I can’t put into words what it was like to see it,” Catherine
Mansourian said. “I was drenched in sweat, head to toe. We drove all
the way back home, walked in the door and threw our clothes into the
wash.”

A decade later, and here the Mansourians were, a vital part of
Sargsian’s journey to providence via random acts of kindness.

In 1997, the famous Andre Agassi didn’t know Sargsian when he offered
him an impromptu ride on his private plane, wanting the two of them
to hit together in San Francisco before an event they were both
expected to play.

Suddenly, Sargsian was in a sleek jet with four captain’s chairs,
traveling with the icon to Armenians, Andre Agassi, a national hero
of Iranian descent.

“I’d heard he was a generous person,” Sargsian said in an interview
yesterday. “I was surprised how simple and normal he was.”

He also knew how Agassi’s star had plummeted into a confused funk by
1997. That fall, Sargsian faced Agassi in a satellite event in
Burbank, Calif. At the time, Agassi was ranked No. 122 in the world,
up from his low of 141. In front of 1,000 fans on three-step risers
around an inglorious court, Agassi, as Sargsian admitted, “demolished
me.”

“I was with him a lot during his slide,” Sargsian said. “I remember
his plan to come back to No. 1. And, I admit this, it was one of the
few times in my life I’ve doubted him. He didn’t only come back; he
dominated. He is a great player, a great person. He means so much to
me.”

Sargsian will face his hero today, at Arthur Ashe Stadium, with the
Mansourians in the stands and Agassi across the court in a moment
borne of the generosity of strangers.

No doubt Agassi will exit tennis with a legacy of giving. The lucky
superstars get to choose the circumstance of their departure. A year
ago, Pete Sampras left with his statistics to tell the story of his
career in terms of majors won, aces served, volleys struck.

Agassi’s ghost will have more layers as a man who spent his fame on
creating a charter school in Las Vegas, on raising millions for AIDS
research, on mentoring players as young and famous as Andy Roddick or
as obscure and struggling as Sargsian.

“He has always helped me, for many years,” Sargsian said of Agassi.
“He tells me everything. I haven’t asked how to beat him, but maybe I
should before we play. He is an amazing person.”

In an isolationist American star culture, Agassi reached out. In a
self-involved American society, the Mansourians answered a call in
the summer of 1993.

With a national team of Armenians on the way to Yale and nowhere to
put them, the Yale women’s coach, Becky Chase, began searching the
names of the university directory, looking for anyone with a name
ending in ian.

Mansourian, that sounded Armenian.

“I happened to be home,” Catherine Mansourian said.

The conversation began with a friendly, “Are you interested in
tennis?” and ended with Catherine explaining how her father-in-law
had been an Iranian champion in the 40’s.

A few minutes later, Catherine was zipping through a grocery store
aisle, whisking two turkeys from a cooler and preparing to receive 20
guests for dinner.

One of them was Sargsian. He had two ragged rackets and talent that
amazed the Mansourian family as they followed him to New Jersey to
see him player later that week.

“I said, ‘This kid is so talented, he can’t go back,’ ” Catherine
recalled. ” ‘Can we keep him for the winter?’ ”

Soon, Sargsian and another Armenian player moved into the
Mansourians’ home, with two of their four children still under the
roof.

“Sargis thought he was going to have to sleep on the floor,”
Catherine said. “I showed him his bedroom, and he looked at me and
said, ‘Five stars.’ He was wonderful.”

He was 18, from a country where his father was an engineer but earned
less than the equivalent of $10 a month.

Now he had American shelter with Vazrick Mansourian, a physician, and
his wife, Catherine, a physician’s assistant.

They treated Sargsian as one of their own. They gave him a 19th
birthday party by rolling up the carpet, turning on the music and
dancing all night to take part in Armenian culture.

They were there for the nine-hour drives to tennis events in Buffalo,
and for the wonder Sargsian revealed watching MTV and seeing the size
of American grocery stores.

As a teenager, Sargsian could eat through $24 in fruit a day, and 24
hard rolls, too.

“I think he knew we loved him,” Catherine said. “We told him from Day
1, we’d always look out for him.”

But why? Why didn’t Catherine Mansourian tell Becky Chase, “Sorry,
not interested” when she called? Why did Agassi take Sargsian under
his wing?

“People ask me, but I don’t know why we did it,” Catherine said. “It
was such a spontaneous thing.”

Sometimes, destiny needs allies.

Open-Marathon man Sargsian wins another thriller

Open-Marathon man Sargsian wins another thriller

Reuters
Sun 5 September, 2004 02:46

LONDON, Sept 4 (Reuters) – Sargis Sargsian starred in another
late-night drama at the U.S. Open on Saturday when he rallied from
two sets down to overcome Frenchman Paul-Henri Mathieu and move into
the fourth round.

The Florida-based Armenian ground out a 4-6 4-6 6-4 6-2 7-6 in four
hours 41 minutes on a jam-packed Grandstand Court.

On Thursday, the 31-year-old stunned Olympic gold medallist Nicolas
Massu in another five-setter that lasted five hours 9 minutes, the
second longest match in U.S. Open history.

Sargsian, who now plays close friend Andre Agassi, has been on court
more than 12 hours to reach the last 16.

“I don’t know how I did it, I just kept fighting at the end,” said
Sargsian, who saved two match points at 6-5 down in the fifth set
before winning the tiebreak 7-4.

“I felt a bit stiff before the start but I felt better than I did
against Massu.”