THIS SUNDAY: JUDGE ARMAND ARABIAN TO PRESENT HIS NEW BOOK "FROM GRAVEL TO GAVEL" AT ARARAT-ESKIJIAN MUSEUM
http://www.armenianlife.com/2012/01/11/from-the-gravel-to-the-gavel/
January 11, 2012
Judge Armand Arabian is scheduled to speak on his new book "From
the Gravel to the Gavel" Judge Armand Arabian is scheduled to speak
on his new book "From Gravel to Gavel" at Ararat-Eskijian Museum,
Sunday January 15th 2012, at 4pm "From "Gravel to Gavel" chronicles
Judge Arabian's life and his Armenian background.
Justice Arabian was raised in New York; he was the first born son of
Armenian immigrants who came to America after surviving the Armenian
Genocide of 1915. He received a Juris Doctor Degree in 1961 from Boston
University's School of Law and became a deputy district attorney of
Los Angeles County. In 1972, Governor Ronald Reagan appointed him
judge of the Municipal Court, and then in 1973, he was appointed to
the Superior Court. In 1983 he was appointed as an Associate justice
of the Court of Appeal, and in 1990, Judge Arabian was appointed as
the 105th associate Justice of the Supreme Court. He authored 104
majority opinions and retired in 1996.
After his career on the bench, Judge Arabian became president of ARMS
Providers, Inc., which is engaged in alternative dispute resolution
such as arbitration and mediation in all areas of law.
His honors are extensive. He received the St. Gregory the Illuminator
Medal of Honor in 2004 by His Holiness Karekin II, Supreme Patriarch
and Catholics of all Armenians, and the Albert Einstein Gold Medal
of Honor and the Russian Academy of Natural Sciences award in 2003.
In 2005, the Justice Armand Arabian Judicial Reception Hall was
dedicated at the Constitutional Court in Yerevan, Armenia, and in
2006, the County Board of Supervisors dedicated the Justice Armand
Arabian Reception Hall at the Chatsworth Superior Court Building.
"From the Gravel to the Gavel" will be on sale and available for
signing by the author after the event.
For more information about Judge Arabian's book presentation,
please contact the Ararat-Eskijian Museum at 818-838-4862 or
[email protected]
From: Baghdasarian
http://www.armenianlife.com/2012/01/11/from-the-gravel-to-the-gavel/
January 11, 2012
Judge Armand Arabian is scheduled to speak on his new book "From
the Gravel to the Gavel" Judge Armand Arabian is scheduled to speak
on his new book "From Gravel to Gavel" at Ararat-Eskijian Museum,
Sunday January 15th 2012, at 4pm "From "Gravel to Gavel" chronicles
Judge Arabian's life and his Armenian background.
Justice Arabian was raised in New York; he was the first born son of
Armenian immigrants who came to America after surviving the Armenian
Genocide of 1915. He received a Juris Doctor Degree in 1961 from Boston
University's School of Law and became a deputy district attorney of
Los Angeles County. In 1972, Governor Ronald Reagan appointed him
judge of the Municipal Court, and then in 1973, he was appointed to
the Superior Court. In 1983 he was appointed as an Associate justice
of the Court of Appeal, and in 1990, Judge Arabian was appointed as
the 105th associate Justice of the Supreme Court. He authored 104
majority opinions and retired in 1996.
After his career on the bench, Judge Arabian became president of ARMS
Providers, Inc., which is engaged in alternative dispute resolution
such as arbitration and mediation in all areas of law.
His honors are extensive. He received the St. Gregory the Illuminator
Medal of Honor in 2004 by His Holiness Karekin II, Supreme Patriarch
and Catholics of all Armenians, and the Albert Einstein Gold Medal
of Honor and the Russian Academy of Natural Sciences award in 2003.
In 2005, the Justice Armand Arabian Judicial Reception Hall was
dedicated at the Constitutional Court in Yerevan, Armenia, and in
2006, the County Board of Supervisors dedicated the Justice Armand
Arabian Reception Hall at the Chatsworth Superior Court Building.
"From the Gravel to the Gavel" will be on sale and available for
signing by the author after the event.
For more information about Judge Arabian's book presentation,
please contact the Ararat-Eskijian Museum at 818-838-4862 or
[email protected]
From: Baghdasarian