Calendar of Events – 07/13/2017

                        Armenian News's Calendar of events
                        (All times local to events)
                =========================================
What:           Armenian Economic Association 2017 Conference
                participation from Vahagn Hovents, Armenui Terteryan
                and Rozanna Ouliguian
***************************************************************************
Armenian News's calendar of events is collected and updated mostly from
announcements posted on this list, and submissions to Armenian [email protected].
To submit, send to Armenian [email protected], and please note the following
important points:
a) Armenian News's administrators have final say on what may be included in
        Armenian News's calendar of events.
b) Posting time will is on Thursdays, 06:00 US Pacific time, to squeeze in
        a final reminder before weekend activities kick in.
c) Calendar items are short, functional, and edited to fit a template.
d) There is no guarantee or promise that an item will be published on time.
e) Calendar information is believed to be from reliable sources. However,
        no responsibility by the List's Administation or by USC is assumed
        for inaccuracies and there is no guarantee that the information is
        up-to-date.
f) No commercial events will be accepted.
        (Dinners, dances, forget it. This is not an ad-space.)
g) Armenian News is a non-commercial, non-partisan, pan-Armenian outlet.
*******************************************************************
    The Critical Corner 
    The Literary Armenian News 
    Review & Outlook 
    World News 
    The Entertainment Wire 
    Probing 
the Photographic Record
    Armenia House 
Museums 
    ...and much more 
© Copyright 2016,  Armenian News Network / Armenian News, all rights reserved.
Regards,
--
Armenian News Network / Armenian News
Los Angeles, CA     / USA

Armenian Archbishop Delivers Opening Prayer Before U.S. House of Representatives

ARMENIAN ASSEMBLY OF AMERICA

PRESS RELEASE

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Date:

Contact: Danielle Saroyan

Telephone: (202) 393-3434

Web: www.aaainc.org

 

ARMENIAN ARCHBISHOP DELIVERS
OPENING PRAYER BEFORE U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES

 

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Today, His Eminence Archbishop
Hovnan Derderian, Primate of the Western Diocese of the Armenian Church, was
invited by House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence Ranking Member
Congressman Adam Schiff (D-CA) to deliver the opening prayer before the U.S.
House of Representatives, reported the Armenian Assembly of America (Assembly).

 

“It was an honor to welcome
Archbishop Derderian to our nation’s capital to deliver today’s opening
prayer,” Rep. Schiff said. “I am so pleased that the House of
Representatives was able to hear the inspiring words of such a distinguished and
respected spiritual leader from our community. Archbishop Derderian has had a
tremendous impact on people of all faiths and played a vital role in the
religious and civic life of millions.”

 

 

Archbishop Derderian expressed
his appreciation to Congressman Schiff and the Assembly, and wished the Members
of the House of Representatives continued success in their diplomatic
endeavors.

 

“On behalf of the Armenian
Assembly, I commend Archbishop Derderian for his leadership and commitment to
the Armenian people. It was a wonderful opportunity to welcome a good friend to
Washington D.C. and to hear in person the Archbishop’s inspirational
prayer,” stated Armenian Assembly Co-Chair and Massachusetts Council of
Churches President Anthony Barsamian.

 

Established in 1972, the Armenian
Assembly of America is the largest Washington-based nationwide organization
promoting public understanding and awareness of Armenian issues. The Assembly
is a 501(c)(3) tax-exempt membership organization.

 

###

NR#: 2017-053

 

Photo Caption: Armenian Assembly
Co-Chair Anthony Barsamian, Congressman Adam Schiff, His Eminence Archbishop
Hovnan Derderian, and Armenian Assembly Executive Director Bryan Ardouny

 

Available
online at: 


Srpazan.png

PNG image


Schiff, Archbishop 2.jpg

JPEG image

Music: First Armenia International Music Competition winners named

Panorama, Armenia

The winners of the first Armenia International Music Competition were announced on Wednesday, the State Youth Orchestra of Armenia told Panorama.am.

The first prize winner is Hripsime Ahgakaryan (Armenia), the second prize winner is Khachik Andreasyan (Armenia), the third prize winner is Dominik Wizjan (Poland), as well as the special prize winner is Seolhwa Kim (South Korea). Besides the winners, two more participants were granted vouchers of participation for Malta International Piano Competition in April 2018.

The chairman of jury Armen Babakhanyan mentioned, that their expectations were fulfilled. “I’m satisfied with the results. I was among the jurors of many competitions, but this group of jury was different: their work, their approach to every contestant was unique. Our opinions about performers coincided in 95% occasions. Our choice of the winner was consentaneous and that was a fantastic result. The jurors were the representatives of different schools. Despite this they were judging the performances according to their professionalism,” said Mr. Babakhanyan.

Kostantin Ishkhanov, the president of the European Foundation for Support of Culture, thinks that the competition was held at a very high level. “I’m very glad that such famous artists came to Armenia and performed here. The best 5 participants of the competition will have an opportunity to go to Malta and to take part in the Piano competition, in 2018. The prize fund is quite tangible – a hundred thousand Euros for the First Prize and the total prize fund is two hundred thousand Euros. I hope that the participants of Armenian competition will do their best in Malta.”

The organizers of the 1st “Armenia” International Festival and Competition are the State Youth Orchestra of Armenia and European Foundation for Support of Culture. It is held with the support of the Armenian Ministry of Culture. The event is held under the high patronage of the first lady of Armenia Rita Sargsyan.

The competition-festival will be closed by a concert of world famous violinist Maxim Vengerov and State Youth Orchestra of Armenia this evening.

Film: Turkish director’s film included in Golden Apricot’s competition program tells Armenian woman’s story

Panorama, Armenia

Mother Derdo and the Walnut Tree directed by Turkish filmmaker Serdar Önal is included in the Documentary Competition section of the 14th Golden Apricot Yerevan International Film Festival. The film won Golden Tulip Award during the 2017 Istanbul Film Festival.

The film unfolds the story of mother Derdo, a 70-year-old Armenian woman, who lives in Istanbul and Bitlis together with her children and grandchildren.

“When I visited Istanbul to shoot a film, I met with Derdo’s granddaughter Mari, who told me this story. I was surprised to find out that there are Armenians still living in the eastern Turkey, who have a story to tell,” Serdar Önal told the reporters on Wednesday at a news conference in Yerevan, Armenia.

The director met with mother Derdo and talked to her for more than three hours.

The film has been shot in Bitlis, Yerevan and Echmiadzin.

Asked what purpose does the film pursue, the Turkish director said: “This tells the story of an Armenian woman, meantime presenting the live of a mother and a woman.”

The filmmaker also added that he has come across numerous interesting stories about Armenians and Greeks, which may turn into films in the future.

About the film

Derdo Ana is a 70 year old Armenian woman who lives in Istanbul and Bitlis with her children and grandchildren. She was born in a village in the province of Bitlis, in the East of Turkey (an important Armenian city during the Ottoman Empire). Derdo’s siblings and even her father converted to Islam to after 1915, but Derdo resisted to remain as Christian. When Mother Derdo was staying with her husband and 8 children in Bitlis, living on agriculture and stock breeding, her family was continuously harassed and threatened by the village headmen. One day, her husband was murdered in the village while she was away working in the fields with her children. Nonetheless, Derdo Ana and her children kept to be threatened even after her husband’s death, and was thus forced to run away with her children: they all came to Istanbul in 1976, spending their first years living in very difficult conditions. Mother  Derdo sued the village headmen in order to get back their stolen fields: after 9 years she won her case and she returned to her home in the village. Today, even after all these sufferings and incidents, Derdo can’t give up going to her village: every summer, she goes there just for two months, picks up the walnuts from the little piece of land that is left to her, and then comes back to Istanbul.

Film: Arclight Films sets sci-fi feature with Sarik Andreasyan to direct

Panorama, Armenia

Arclight Films film studio, which is best known for its investments in independent TV and film programs, has announced a sci-fi action film, Robots, which has Armenian filmmaker Sarik Andreasyan attached to direct, reports The Hollywood Reporter.

The movie is set on a post-apocalyptic Earth, where deadly creatures known as “Wretches” torment humans. Led by Cassius, a group of men sets out to save what is left of humanity from these Wretches.

Production will take place in both Russia and China. Arclight Films’ Gary Hamilton will produce, along with Ying Ye, Mike Gabrawy and Andreasyan. Ruzanna Kegeyan will executive produce.

Entertainment: Peter Guekguezian: Armenian Jeopardy! Champion and Champion of Languages

The Armenian Weekly

Special for the Armenian Weekly

“On June 17, 1929, this airline’s first passenger flight left Dallas, making stops at Shreveport, Monroe, and Jackson. Thirty seconds, good luck,” says Jeopardy! host, Alex Trebek. Then the music starts: that ubiquitous tune signaling impatience, waiting and mounting pressure.

(L to R) Jeopardy! host Alex Trebek and Peter Guekguezian (Photo: Jeopardy!)

Peter Guekguezian is one of the contestants on the June 19th broadcast of the popular game show. Guekguezian is a linguist from Fresno, Calif., and a defending Jeopardy! champion, having won $18,401 on the previous show. This time, he is up against a history instructor from Tucson, Ariz. and a writer from Brooklyn, N.Y., whose score going into Final Jeopardy! is almost double Guekguezian’s.

Guekguezian feels the pressure and writes, “Southwest.”

“I heard Dallas and thought Southwest, but they’re too recent,” he recalls. “Then it hit me that Monroe, Shreveport, and Jackson are all in the Mississippi Delta… Most of the time they give you clues within the Final Jeopardy! question.” With time to spare, he crossed out “Southwest” and wrote “Delta” to win the round with $7,198.

Guekguezian went on to play twice more for a total of four games—and during his three-day winning streak, he earned $44,800.

He describes the airplane carrier question as one of the most memorable of his Jeopardy! run, and speaks with excitement about the experience:

“The other contestants and the production crew are all very intelligent, really nerdy, very funny. You have a good time there, ” Guekguezian says. He had auditioned three times for the show before being placed into the contestant pool. When he was called in for the show, he had a month to prepare: practicing with quiz games and reviewing almanacs, studying how to wager, and also preparing mentally for those high-pressure moments of competition.

Also of use to Guekguezian during the game was his PhD in Linguistics from the University of Southern California; knowing a little bit about a lot of different languages and etymologies often helped in parsing the clues.

“I speak some Spanish, some Armenian, a little bit of French…and I have a working knowledge of the two languages I’ve done a lot of documentation on.”

These are Chukchansi Yokuts, a Native American language spoken in the central valley of California, and Saisiyat, a language spoken in Taiwan. Both are what linguists call endangered languages, or languages that are at risk of being lost in the near future. Languages can become endangered for different reasons, but the two Guekguezian studies are endangered because of colonization and displacement of the speakers.

In the fall, Guekguezian will head to the University of Rochester for a postdoctoral fellowship. In addition to continuing his research there, he plans to participate in a project aimed at using computational methods and natural language processing to make the collection and transcription of endangered language data more efficient.

Another endangered language Guekguezian is interested to explore at some point in his career is Armenian. He hopes to get funding to attend the Armenian Linguistics Conference in Yerevan this October to meet with other attendees about efforts to preserve varieties of Armenian that are less common.

“It’s a crisis that we don’t talk much about as a people: what’s going to happen to people who speak non-standard varieties of Armenian?” Guekguezian nasks. He says many of the languages and dialects of Western Armenia are already long-gone, while some still exist in places with enduring Armenian populations, such as Kessab, Syria. With those languages, we lose characteristics of those villages, and old-world Armenia.

Even Western Armenian is in what Guekguezian calls a “precarious position,” because there are no monolingual speakers—most speakers of Western Armenian also speak Arabic, English, French or Spanish, among others. To make sure these dialects survive, he says, we have to create spaces for the language to be spoken—and encourage its transition from generation to generation.

“It’s hard to pass on a language,” says Guekguezian, “One parent has to speak that language to the child most of the time in order for them to have a good grasp of it. They have to be able to speak to other kids their age. It has to be a functional language. Children are smart…if they can get by with a different language, they’ll learn that one.”

Guekguezian faces a similar challenge in his own life. Though he says he speaks very basic Armenian, he is working to pass the language on to his two-year-old son.

“He knows a few words. He can understand quite a bit,” says Guekguezian. “I’m giving him the foundation as best I can.”

Health: LA medical group uses telemedicine to fight child blindness in Armenia

Healthcare IT News



U.S. eye specialists reach out through a special system based in part on Skype for Business.
By Bill Siwicki

With only a 48-hour window of opportunity, how do you keep a child from going blind when there is a lack of eye surgeons with proper training? That’s where telemedicine technology and eye specialists come together.

Children’s Hospital Los Angeles is the largest pediatric multispecialty medical group in the United States. Children from around the world can receive specialized care from 564 physicians in any of 32 specialties and 31 other areas of complex conditions.

Recently, one group within Children’s Hospital Los Angeles looked at the rate of infant blindness in Armenia – which was three times the rate of the U.S. and other Western countries – and asked, “How can we help?” How could the medical group eliminate preventable blindness in Armenia and neighboring rural areas? And how could the medical group educate doctors in third-world countries about complex blinding diseases in a cost-effective manner without compromising care?

[Also: VA, Air Force forge telehealth partnership for critically ill patients]

Thomas Lee, MD, joined the Armenia EyeCare Project at Children’s Hospital Los Angeles. He and a team of doctors traveled to Armenia to provide assessment, care and programming, and the need to train remote care teams became clear: There were not enough surgeons available with the specialized knowledge required to provide life-changing eye surgeries.

Another critical issue was that some of these sight-saving surgeries for premature infants with certain retinal conditions must take place within 48 hours of birth. The lack of trained surgeons meant many infants might miss their opportunity.

So SADA Systems, a Microsoft partner, built a telemedicine system using Microsoft technology especially for Lee to reach out from L.A. to Armenia to stop infants from going blind.

“Skype for Business along with a Polycom codec allowed us to be present virtually during the operation,” Lee said. “One of the primary obstacles to training surgeons in developing countries is the difficulty in getting the expertise to the trainee to properly supervise them during their actual operations. Historically this has required the expert to travel to the remote country and then assist the doctor directly.”

These medical missions are very time-consuming, and unfortunately often need to be arranged months in advance, a period of time many patients do not have, Lee said.

“By having a remote platform available, we were able to provide the supervision needed in a timely fashion for the patient without requiring the expert to disrupt their own practice,” he explained.

Various elements of the telemedicine technology enabled Lee and team members to succeed at this medical procedure.

“Historically, we have been limited in how the video signal is transmitted and brokered,” Lee said. “Encoding and compressing the signal has often relied on software compression performed in the OR before being placed on the wire. This results in compression and motion artifacts that cause signal degradation making it unusable from a medical standpoint.”

Some of the more affordable hardware systems resulted in latency of up to 60 seconds as the streaming system would buffer the video before broadcasting to the remote expert, Lee explained. A dedicated hardware codec at both ends would solve this issue but required the remote expert to be at the hospital where the codec is present, and since Armenia was 12 time zones away, this posed a specific challenge, he added.

“What was unique and novel about this solution was that SADA Systems reconfigured a Polycom codec to log directly on to Microsoft Skype for Business,” he explained. “The hardware compression resulted in a high-definition and high-frame-rate signal with none of the artifacts we had seen previously. Because this was being brokered by Skype for Business, the remote expert could simply log onto the video conference from home using a standard web browser.”

What was even more important was that the signal could be multicast to multiple experts around the world. This was a fundamental change.

“Where historically we could only have one expert training a surgeon, either in person or remotely, Skype for Business allowed us to crowdsource the surgical training to experts all over the world,” Lee said. “This changes the rules of the game. Experience that would normally take a trainee months to acquire through different experts can now be addressed in one operation. This really alters how we can approach a global problem through a disruptive platform to benefit children all over the world.”

So how important is telemedicine technology to the future of healthcare? Very, Lee said.

“In healthcare today, we are facing a crisis not just in cost but more importantly in access,” he said. “Telemedicine will allow us to address both of these issues by allowing subspecialists to partner with other providers in an efficient manner that can both increase access and reduce costs. The challenge is how to complete the proof of concept and then roll out the larger platform.”

Twitter: @SiwickiHealthIT
Email the writer:

Azerbaijan commits Nazi-style violence against its population – Armenian parlaiemnt official

Tert, Armenia

16:07 • 12.07.17

The Nagorno-Karabakh conflict has entered into a new stage, with Azerbaijan continuing to escalate the border tension in violation of the Vienna and St Petersburg arrangements, a vice president of the Armenian National Assembly said today, condemning the Azerbaijani authorities’ policy of sacrificing their civilians in military operations.

“The Azerbaijani leadership has very well learned the Nazi German lessons, and they are using their population as a living shield,” Eduard Sharmazanov told a news conference.

Commenting on the Armenian and Azerbaijani foreign ministers’ recent meeting in Brussels,  the parliament official said he saw the co-chairs reaffirm, yet another time, the idea of reaching a negotiated settlement.

He also highlighted Armenia’s repeated calls for respecting the arrangements as an important precondition for renewing the peace talks.

“The Armenian side also said that Azerbaijan is responsible for the failure to abide by the St Petersburg and Moscow arrangements,” Sharmaznov said, calling also for active efforts by the co-chairs towards urging Azerbaijan to respect the deals reached.

Sports: Henrikh Mkhitaryan arrives in Los Angeles with Man United

A1 Plus, Armenia

  • 12:58 | July 11,2017 | Sports

The team began practicing at UCLA’s Drake Stadium Monday, warming up for its first match against the Los Angeles Galaxy, which will take place Saturday, July 15 at 7 p.m. at the StubHub Stadium in Carson, Calif. Daily Star says Manchester United manager Jose Mourinho announced frequent breaks during the training because of hot weather.

The team is scheduled to hold a number of friendly matches.

United will take on Los Angeles Galaxy at the Stubhub Centre on Saturday 15 July, followed by a match against Real Salt Lake at Rio Tinto Stadium on Monday 17 July. It will face Manchester City on 20 July, Real Madrid on 23 July and Barcelona on 26 July.

Yerevan to host seminar on sports medicine

Panorama, Armenia

Upon the initiative of the Armenian National Olympic Committee (ANOC), a seminar titled “Strengthening the knowledge of sports doctors in preventing doping use” will be held at Olimpavan Sports and Recreation Complex in Yerevan, Armenia on 19 September. The event is organized on the sidelines of the “Olympic Solidarity” program, the ANOC told Panorama.am.

The seminar is intended for sports doctors and those doctors who deal with sportsmen in Armenia. The seminar will also be attended by reporters and administrators of sports structures. A total of 90 people will take part in the event.

The seminar features three parts: use of nutritional supplements in sports, modern processes used in emergencies and treatment of injuries without forbidden substances.

A number of sports doctors, as well as a Georgian professor on sports medicine will deliver speeches during the seminar.

Such a large-scale seminar on sports medicine is held in Armenia for the first time.