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my turn - California Courier’s 50th
Anniversary to Be Celebrated on May 18
By Harut Sassounian
"The Armenian Weekly", Volume 74, No.
18, May 3, 2007
The California Courier, the oldest
independent English-language Armenian newspaper in the United
States, is 50 years old this year!
In 1958, two young men in Fresno—George Mason (Elmassian) and Reese
Cleghorn—had the foresight to publish an English-language newspaper,
so that those unfamiliar with their native tongue could stay in
touch with community news.
Cleghorn went on to become Professor and Dean of the School of
Journalism at the University of Maryland. Mason continued publishing
the Courier with his popular weekly opinion column titled, “This and
That” and wrote amusing Armenian wisecracks under the rubric “Uncle
Hadji” and “Dear Dickran.”
After moving to Los. Angeles and becoming a prominent stock broker,
Mason employed a succession of part-time editors and stringers. The
most colorful personality to run the paper was a Japanese-American
by the name of Seico Hanashiro, who worked at the Fresno post office
during the day and published the Courier from his garage in his
spare time. In the process, Seico knew more about the Armenian
community than did most Armenians!
In 1983, Mason hired as full time editor of the Courier a young man
by the name of Harut Sassounian, who subsequently became the
publisher of the newspaper and moved it from Fresno to Glendale.
Mason, a seasoned writer, gave this young man a piece of good advice
on day one: No matter what’s happening in your life, you have to
write a column each week! Get yourself in the discipline of writing
regularly, even if you are ill, don’t feel like writing, or are out
of town. Never skip your weekly column, because once you stop
writing, it will be more difficult for you to start writing again!
I followed Mason’s wise counsel. I have written more than 1,200
opinion columns in the past 25 years without skipping a single week.
At the request of many readers, a selection of my columns will be
published in book form in the near future.
When I look back at the early years of my employment, I am amazed
how the newspaper was published without a computer or any other
modern equipment we now take for granted. The Courier had neither
e-mail nor even a fax machine. I used to write my columns by hand on
a piece of paper. I would then rush to the Greyhound Bus depot in
Glendale and pay $5 to put my column on the next bus to Fresno.
Seico would go and pick it up from the bus in Fresno, just in time
before the paper went to print.
At first, most subscribers who were used to reading society news in
the pages of the Courier, resented this newcomer who persisted on
writing political analysis week after week. Fortunately, the
Courier’s readers eventually developed a keen interest in his
columns. With the advent of the internet, these columns began to be
posted on scores of websites and reprinted in English and in
translation in dozens of newspapers in the U.S., and in other
countries, including Armenia.
The USC Institute of Armenian Studies will recognize the founders of
The California Courier during a gala banquet to be held at the
Hilton Universal City on May 18. Regrettably, George Mason passed
away a couple of years ago. However, his associate publisher, Reese
Cleghorn is invited to the gala banquet to reminisce the early days
of the Courier and pay special tribute to Mason.
The tribute to the Courier is part of the Armenian Institute’s
salute to “California’s Armenian community for 50 years of progress
and prosperity.” The banquet, expected to be attended by the Who’s
Who of the Armenian American community, will honor actor Mike
Connors, former Gov. George Deukmejian, former Assistant Secretary
of Defense Paul Ignatius, former basketball coach Jerry Tarkanian,
and corporate entrepreneur Ronald Tutor.
Using the newly digitized 50-year archives of The California
Courier, the USC Institute is preparing a special documentary that
will highlight the achievements of more than 50 distinguished
California Armenians who have become major stars in their respective
fields.
The banquet will also pay tribute to The Lincy Foundation for its
generous philanthropy in Armenia and the Diaspora, and will welcome
Mr. Edward Roski, Jr., the incoming Chairman of the USC Board of
Trustees.
For more information about the gala banquet of the USC Institute of
Armenian Studies, please call 213-821-3943 or e-mail: armenian@college.usc.edu.
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