Writer William Saroyan’s Longtime Fresno Home Opens as Museum

Fresno State Univ.
Friday 7:58 AM EST
Writer William Saroyan’s Longtime Fresno Home Opens as Museum
 
FRESNO, California
 
 
The Fresno house where famed writer William Saroyan spent the last two decades of his life will open as a museum on Aug. 31, the 110th anniversary of his birth, with a private reception. Beginning in September, the William Saroyan House-Museum will be open for tours by appointment online.
 
A grand opening celebration for the William Saroyan House-Museum will be held at Fresno State’s Satellite Student Union at 7 p.m. on Aug. 31. Doors will open at 6:30 p.m. with an exhibition devoted to Saroyan’s life. A formal program will begin at 7 p.m. with a movie about the Saroyan House-Museum project, speakers and musical performances, followed by a reception. Entrance is free, but preregistration is required.
 
In 2016, Arthur Janibekyan, founder of the Renaissance Cultural and Intellectual Foundation, purchased Saroyan’s house (2729 W. Griffith Way), saving it from foreclosure.
 
“The opening of the Saroyan House-Museum in Fresno marks an important milestone in the history of our community,” said Barlow Der Mugrdechian, coordinator of the Armenian Studies Program at Fresno State. “I am particularly happy that the main opening ceremonies will take place at Fresno State, since the Armenian Studies Program has had a long history teaching courses on Saroyan and organizing numerous conferences dedicated to him. It is the right time for the opening of the house-museum.”
 
Saroyan was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Drama in 1940, the New York Drama Critics’ Circle award and, in 1943, he won the Academy Award for Best Story for the film adaptation of his novel “The Human Comedy.”
 
The museum will be full of interactive and innovative exhibits, making it unique in the region. Technology will allow a hologram of Saroyan to greet visitors. The museum will feature a large digital archive, including exclusive photos and examples of his graphic and literary work.
 
In addition, according to Saroyan’s will, a research area will be created within the house for students, scholars and other interested individuals to benefit from the vast heritage that Saroyan left behind.

Sports: U.S. Embassy Brings Basketball Greats to Armenia for Training Camps Focused on Basketball and Leadership

The U.S. Embassy in Armenia
Friday 7:42 AM EST
U.S. Embassy Brings Basketball Greats to Armenia for Training Camps Focused on Basketball and Leadership
 
YEREVAN, Armenia
 
 
The United States and Armenia both share a love and passion for sports, and in the spirit of sports diplomacy the U.S. Embassy in Armenia brought two professional basketball legends, Ruthie Bolton and Shari Sam, to Armenia for a series of workshops and training camps to help Armenian youth and coaches improve their basketball skills and develop as leaders.
 
Both of the visiting basketball stars played for the WNBA, the women’s professional basketball league in the United States.
 
Ruthie Bolton is one of the most accomplished female athletes in the world. A two-time Olympic gold medalist, she was the star player on the WNBA team the Sacramento Monarchs from 1997 through 2004. She also served as a first lieutenant in the U.S. Army Reserves and is the author of several inspirational books in which she shares her story of empowerment.
 
Sheri Sam played for a number of WNBA teams, including the Orlando Miracle, the Miami Sol, the Minnesota Lynx, the Seattle Storm, the Charlotte Sting, the Indiana Fever, and the Detroit Shock. Her skills helped several of the teams reach the playoffs and win championships. A WNBA All-Star, she is ranked in the top 50 of all-time in several categories. Most recently, she has been an assistant coach at Eastern Illinois University.
 
While in Armenia the two are leading a series of workshops for young Armenian boys and girls from several rural communities, helping them develop their skills to become better basketball players. They will also be coaching them on how to develop their self-esteem and motivation, and encouraging them to become leaders on their teams and in their communities.
 
Along with working with young Armenians, the visiting U.S. basketball legends will also spend time leading masterclasses for Armenian coaches, sharing their experiences of using sports as a motivational force for good in the community.
 
The U.S. Embassy arranged the trip through the U.S. Government’s Sports Envoy Program, administered by the U.S. State Department, which sends American athletes abroad to hold sports clinics for young people and coaches, participate in community activities, and engage youth in a dialogue on the importance of leadership and respect for diversity.
 

Music: Daron Malakian: ‘There’s always gonna be a bad guy causing some kind of ruckus’

The Independent (United Kingdom)
Friday 11:27 AM GMT
Daron Malakian: ‘There’s always gonna be a bad guy causing some kind of ruckus’
System of a Down’s guitarist, vocalist and principal songwriter on his new solo album ‘Dictator’, immigration, and the SOAD hiatus
 
by  Roisin O’Connor
 
 
Daron Malakian is a night owl. Most nights he’ll stay up to around 4am, writing music or testing out new songs.It’s 2am in LA when he picks up the phone to talk about his new solo album
 
Dictator
 
, released under the name Daron Malakian and Scars on Broadway.
 
It’s an album that he’s been sitting on since hewrote, performed and recorded it across 10 days in 2012, and finally decided enough time had passed after years of waiting to see what would happen with his other band, .
 
“I’ve been anxious to put it out,” the 43-year-oldsays. “I didn’t have a clear picture of what was going on with System of a Down so I was just waiting to see. Then enough time passed, and it just feels good to finally put it out and let people hear it.”
 
Fans would be forgiven for thinking the album was written this year, with a title like
 
Dictator
 
and tracks called”Sickening Wars” and “Assimilate”.
 
“Obviously when I wrote the song ‘Dictator’, Trump wasn’t around,” Malakian says. “But through history, if you look back through hundreds of years, and even into the future, there’s always gonna be a bad guy. There’s always gonna be a devil causing some kind of ruckus in the world. That’s why I think it’s relevant, and why it’ll still be relevant in four or five years.
 
“I don’t like to write lyrics that are dated or just about the time I’m living in at the moment. I like people to relate. Not necessarily to politics – sometimes my lyrics are just about everyday feelings, ups, downs.”
 
Read more
 
Album reviews – Daron Malakian, Popcaan, Skeletonwitch and more
 
Malakian was born to Armenian immigrants who came to the US from Iraq – his father is a renowned dancer and choreographer, while his mother is an artist. Given his family background, he offers a measured distaste for what’s been taking place on US borders where children have been separated from their parents. But he also suggests that in the current political landscape, the left side is “just as radical as the right on some issues”.
 
“Most people’s ideas are right down the middle, they’re not so far to the left or far to the right,” he says.”And because those people aren’t usually so radical about their ideas, they tend to be silent, they don’t yell as loud as the radical right or left. But we end up coming along for the ride. That to me is the reality of it.
 
” brings all that great diversity in food and music and culture to America… you can get great tacos in Los Angeles because we have a lot of Mexican people who live here.If my parents hadn’t moved from Iraq you wouldn’t have these Armenian guys in a heavy band. There would be no flavours, no colours, and I wonder if people actually take time and think about that.”
 
On the video for
 
Dictator
 
‘s first single “Lives”, Malakian took inspiration from his father’s work and released a video which celebrates traditional Armenian dance and costumes: “I wanted Armenian people to celebrate their culture and not just feel victimised,” he explains. “The dancing was inspired by my dad, who was a choreographer, and that was pretty much the exact video I wanted to put out for that song.”
 
“Angry Guru”, a juddering, frenetic metal trackwhere Malakianspits and snarls out the lyrics,there’s a particularly striking line – “silence leads to violence” – which he says refers to the consequence of not speaking up for fear of causing offence.
 
“I’m not saying we shouldn’t respect people’s cultures, but we should also be honest with each other, and sometimes political correctness feels less like I’m being honest and more like I’m just being polite,” he says. “And that politeness brews up and blows over and eventually you get something ugly.The media pushes this fear instead of calming it down, sometimes … I think when change is happening fast, a lot of people can’t take it. You have to hold their hand a little bit and slow it down for them. They’re afraid to see change because they don’t understand it. They get a little paranoid.
 
“Trump plays to these people,” he continues. “I’ve never seen anything like it, he’s not careful with his words, and he doesn’t seem to realise that everybody’s listening to him. And I think this is the type of candidate we’ll see from now on. In our social mediaworld where every day there’s something new.
 
“Trumpdoes things that would have got another president impeached. Because we live in the social media world our attention spans are so small and so brief. Like when there was the invention of television, and the kind of presidential candidate that came after had to be better looking, and have more of a persona.
 
“Now I think we’re seeing a new type of candidate which has an internet persona. And that’s why Trump works, because he makes himself the biggest conversation, and the biggest news, every day.”
 
‘Trump does things that would have got another president impeached’
 
One of the biggest surprises on the record is Malakian’s cover of “Gie Mou” by the Greek singer Stamatis Kokotas, which he first performed live with the original Scars lineup that featureshis SOAD bandmate John Dolmayan.
 
“When I went to record
 
Dictator
 
I felt it really fit well, and isn’t something people might have expected,” Malakian says. “I don’t hear too many people doing that instrumental thing. It’s actually the one track that gets asked about the most, I think because it’s different. You heard more of that from bands in the 70s or something.”
 
Read more
 
Interpol explore the inner Marauder on their new album – interview
 
There are also influences from classic industrial bands of the 80s,Front Line Assembly and Front 242,along with bands like Bauhaus, Sisters of Mercy and Joy Division. His cover of “Assimilate” by Canadian industrial band Skinny Puppy was another one he’d performed live with the original Scars lineup, which sounds utterly distinct from the original.
 
“It’s a really heavy track, I don’t always get a chance to scream and belt it out like that, so that was fun too,” Malakian agrees. “All in all I’m just really happy to put this albumout, I knew it was a strong record… some of these songs could have ended up as System songs, so I was waiting to see what was going to happen with that first.
 
“People have had time to live with that first Scars album, and a lot of time has passed since the last SOADalbum… I think people have realised that I’m a big part of the writing there, so now fans don’t mind so much whether it’s System or Scars,” he adds. “I was nervous too, because of not putting out music for so long.”
 
He feels people tend to attach themselves to a band name, and consequently become reluctant to listen to similar music from a different project: “I swear to god, there weren’t many changes for this record. There were so many off
 
Mezmerize
 
and
 
Hypnotize
 
[SOADalbums from 2005]that could have been Scars songs. Just enjoy them! No one cares what it’s called.”
 
Later this year there’s a brief tour with System, after that Malakian says he’ll think about touring the from Scars. And he won’t wait another six years before releasing more of his own new music.
 
“I’m going to go into the studio, figure out what songs to record, probably put out another Scars record, maybe next year,” he says. “I don’t know when that next great song is gonna come. That keeps me humble. I don’t have this perfect formula for writing. I’m always searching and keeping my eyes open and trying to find inspiration from somewhere, anywhere.”
 
He chuckles at being told it’s almost 20 years to the day since System released their acclaimed, self-titled debut album: “Is it? I had no idea. The years fly by pretty fast… 20 years, that’s crazy.
 
“I’m very proud of what the band’s achieved,” he says. “It’s cool that, while we’re not on the same page on making a new album, those albums still stand up, people still like it, and when we play live fans still show up and support the band. Those songs still mean something, and that means a lot to me, 20 years later.”
 
‘I don’t know when that next great song is going to come -that keeps me humble’
 
Confusion among fans about when – if ever – they should expect a new SOAD album is well-documented, and was recently addressed by both Malakian and vocalist , the latter of whom admitted he was solely responsible for the band’s hiatus.
 
“We enjoy playing live, but not everybody is on the same page when it comes down to the amount of touring it would take to put out a new album, or the kind of album we’d want to make,” Malakian says now.
 
“Time passes, people change. I think money and fame and success changes people. I’m sure it changed me to some degree, everyone became their own individual away from the band. And I can’t make anybody do something they don’t wanna do. If you’d left it to me, System of a Down never would have gone on hiatus.”
 
SOAD is kind of like his baby, he continues, and it was difficult to see the band stop so suddenly. He wonders if emotionally, it impacted his Scars project to the point where he called off a tour because he “wasn’t quite there… in terms of pushing a new band while I was still in mourning for my old one”.
 
“Look man, I’m not trying to make Scars the next System of a Down,” he says decisively. “I’m just putting out music so one day when Daron Malakian is dead and gone, people will say… ‘Well that’s what Daron Malakian did’.”
 
‘Dictator’,the new album from Daron Malakianand Scars on Broadway, is out now.

Music: How one ethnomusicologist changed California through song

The Week Magazine

How one ethnomusicologist changed California through song

Marnette Federis
      
 

Sports: Arsenal name Henrikh Mkhitaryan to squad for Singapore tour

PanArmenian, Armenia

PanARMENIAN.Net – Armenian midfielder Henrikh Mkhitaryan has been included in b’s preseason tour to Singapore, while midfielder Jeff Reine-Adelaide was among the most notable exclusions from Unai Emery’s 25-man squad, ESPN reports.

Forward Lucas Perez and 17-year-old Emile Smith Rowe are also on board.

Winger Joel Campbell, defender Carl Jenkinson and Chuba Akpom were not included in the squad. All three have been widely expected to leave the club this summer.

Reine-Adelaide was a more surprising exclusion after he impressed in Arsenal’s game at Boreham Wood last weekend. However, the decision indicates that the 20-year-old French midfielder is not part of Emery’s first-team plans for next season and could be sent out for another loan stint.

A handful of youngsters will be on the plane, which takes off for Singapore on Sunday. Smith Rowe will make his first preseason trip with the first team, as will 19-year-old defender Jordi Osei-Tutu.

Fellow teenagers Reiss Nelson, Eddie Nketiah and Joe Willock are making their second Asian tour after being included last year as well.

Mesut Ozil, Alex Iwobi and Mohamed Elneny are also joining up with the team for the trip after returning from their post-World Cup holidays.

Full squad: Petr Cech, Bernd Leno, Emiliano Martinez; Hector Bellerin, Sead Kolasinac, Calum Chambers, Rob Holding, Shkodran Mustafi, Sokratis Papastathopoulos, Konstantinos Mavropanos, Jordi Osei-Tutu, Mohamed Elneny, Ainsley Maitland-Niles, Matteo Guendouzi, Reiss Nelson, Emile Smith Rowe, Joe Willock, Aaron Ramsey, Henrikh Mkhitaryan, Mesut Ozil, Alex Iwobi, Eddie Nketiah, Lucas Perez, Alexandre Lacazette, Pierre-Emerick Aubameyang.

Azerbaijani Press: Results of Ilham Aliyev’s France visit – another foreign economic victory of Azerbaijan, says MP

AzerNews, Azerbaijan

By  Trend

Numerous contracts signed during the visit of Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev to France are another victory of the foreign economic policy of the country’s leadership, member of the parliamentary committee on economic policy, industry and entrepreneurship, MP Rufat Guliyev told Trend July 21.

The MP reminded that France has one of the strongest Armenian lobbies in Europe, and against this background, the conclusion of contracts worth more than $2 billion between Azerbaijani and French companies is an absolute success.

“France is one of the three leading countries in Europe in terms of economic power. French companies are usually the most developed companies in their spheres both in Europe and in the world as a whole. Such contracts will allow the two countries to get to know each other even better and deeper. On the other hand, they will also become a kind of example for other European countries, which will strive for even deeper and closer cooperation with Baku,” Guliyev said.

The MP noted that European countries treat Azerbaijan with high confidence as the most stable state of the former Soviet Union.

“Azerbaijan always fulfills the tasks set before itself on the international arena. Baku has repeatedly proved this, especially after the implementation of its huge transport, logistics and energy projects. The world is becoming more and more convinced that Azerbaijan is a permanent and reliable partner,” the MP said.

Guliyev stressed that as a result, Azerbaijan is gaining an increasing reputation on the international arena.

“As you can see, the last meetings of the president are aimed at building the foreign economic potential of Azerbaijan. Politics is a concentrated _expression_ of the economy. With such economic success we will achieve even greater political power,” the MP concluded.