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Armenian Society to Host Book Signing for '...And Then I Met The Get

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  • Armenian Society to Host Book Signing for '...And Then I Met The Get

    Armenian Society to Host Book Signing for '...And Then I Met The Getty Kouros'

    Friday, January 9th, 2015

    '... And Then I Met The Getty Kouros' by Jack Njdeh Yaghoubian

    LOS ANGELES--Engineer Jack Njdeh Yaghoubian, who recently published a
    book about his life and his engineering accomplishments called "...And
    Then I Met The Getty Kouros," will be honored by the Armenian Society
    of Los Angeles at a book signing event on Jan. 23 at 7 pm.

    Yaghoubian has made a huge impact on the field of engineering in the
    United States and around the world. The Armenian-Iranian-American
    invented and holds the patent for an ingenious earthquake base
    isolation system that enabled the Getty Museum's broken Kouros statue
    of a nude male to stand on its own two marble feet after 2,500 years.

    His memoir touches on many personal as well as professional subjects:
    growing up in the Armenian minority in Iran during the 1950s, the
    challenges of adapting to student life in America, the ways in which
    careers are shaped, playing a role in innovative engineering
    initiatives, and what it means to be an informed citizen in one's
    adopted country.

    Yaghoubian's parents met as children in an Iranian orphanage set up to
    help children whose parents died in the Armenian Genocide. Growing up
    in Tehran, he chronicles the beginning of the Armenian Youth Cultural
    Organization, later known as Ararat, being instrumental in the
    phenomenal growth of the Armenian Scout Organization.

    Arriving in the U.S. to study civil engineering at the University of
    Illinois at Urbana Champaign, Yaghoubian writes with humor and warmth
    about his early experiences, which are familiar to many immigrants:
    The shock of communal showers, amazement at the tea bag and confusion
    over the "hot dog".

    Author Jack Njdeh Yaghoubian

    Yaghoubian was, he says, born to be an engineer and his memoir
    chronicles a journey of a life fulfilled. After graduating from
    college, he went on to design engineering solutions for the largest
    geo-tech firms in the world. Closely working with giants such as Dr.
    Charles Richter, the inventor of world famous earthquake Richter
    Scale, Yaghoubian became increasingly specialized in earthquake
    engineering.

    On a visit to the Getty Museum in Malibu he saw that the antiquities
    were vulnerable to earthquakes and developed the base isolation system
    to protect them. The system made art objects behave as if suspended in
    air and remain unaffected by shaking. This pioneering method
    reverberated through museums worldwide.

    Based on the success of this new technology, Yaghoubian was asked to
    evaluate the fragmented Getty Kouros dating to 530BC - "Kouros" being
    the ancient Greek marble statues of male nudes. The earthquake base
    isolation system he had developed, combined with a mechanical joint
    system, was what made it possible for the Getty Kouros to stand
    againafter 2,500 years.

    "... And Then I Met The Getty Kouros" is a compelling and beautifully
    written memoir presented in an open and factual manner. It is not a
    typical memoir of being trapped between two countries; rather, it is a
    celebration of culture and history and moving seamlessly between two
    contrasting worlds.

    The book signing event at the Armenian Society of Los Angeles, 117
    Louise Street, Glendale, is open to the public.

    http://asbarez.com/130593/armenian-society-to-host-book-signing-for-%E2%80%98%E2%80%A6and-then-i-met-the-getty-kouros%E2%80%99/

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