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Melikians Boost ASU's Global Engagement

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  • Melikians Boost ASU's Global Engagement

    MELIKIANS BOOST ASU'S GLOBAL ENGAGEMENT
    Carol Hughes

    Arizona State University, Tempe
    Feb 6 2007

    ASU's commitment to global engagement received a major boost in the
    form of a $1 million contribution by two longtime Phoenix civic
    leaders and philanthropists: Gregory Melikian and his wife, Emma
    Ordjanian Melikian.

    Gregory Melikian, left, and his wife, Emma Ordjanian Melikian, pose
    Jan. 30 with Stephen Batalden, director of the new Melikian Center,
    at the ceremony at the University Club on the Tempe campus to announce
    their $1 million contribution to the center.

    Their gift will fund the expansion of international programming at the
    university's Russian and East European Studies Center, a unit in the
    College of Liberal Arts and Sciences that will be renamed the Melikian
    Center in recognition of the university's partnership with the couple.

    The center's programming features the internationally recognized
    Critical Languages Institute, which offers intensive instruction
    every summer in less-commonly taught languages of Eastern Europe and
    Eurasia , including Armenian, Albanian, Macedonian, Tatar and Uzbek.

    The center's strategic partnerships with major universities of the
    region - notably its linkages with Yerevan State University, Moscow
    State University, the University of Sarajevo, Ss. Kiril and Metodij
    University (Macedonia) and the University of Pristina - have been
    supported by grants from the U.S. Department of State and U.S. Agency
    for International Development.

    "This major contribution from the Melikians brings the study of Eurasia
    and Eastern Europe into ASU's wider scope of global engagement that
    already includes important programming in China and Mexico," says
    ASU President Michael Crow. "Programs like these are at the heart of
    ASU's global engagement efforts."

    In 2001, an endowment from the couple led to the creation of the
    Melikian Fund, which supports the study of Armenian language and
    culture at ASU. In announcing this recent $1 million gift, center
    director and ASU professor Stephen Batalden says the Melikians'
    generosity will make a difference in the lives of students and faculty,
    a difference that often has transformative results.

    "At a time when the geopolitical significance of the Eurasian Islamic
    rim has never been greater, this gift from the Melikians will offer
    students at ASU a unique research and language training opportunity
    for the 21st century," Batalden says.

    In commenting on the growing importance to understand the history,
    language and culture of Eurasia and Eastern Europe, Gregory Melikian
    says: "What better way to communicate than to speak each other's
    language? These are critical languages, and there is a critical need
    in the world today for people who can speak these languages fluently."

    The Melikians are of Armenian descent, and between them they speak
    numerous languages, including Russian and Armenian.

    "Our world is shrinking," notes Emma Melikian. "And to understand
    all people of the world - and participate in global engagement - our
    future generation has to speak critical languages and know history
    to help America in the world arena."

    This latest gift by the Melikians follows a history of commitment
    and giving to ASU. In addition to the creation of the Melikian Fund,
    Gregory Melikian has donated to the university's Special Collections
    eight World War II dispatches, including a copy of the message sent by
    Supreme Allied Commander Eisenhower announcing the end of World War II
    in Europe . Melikian, an Army Signal Corps sergeant at the time, was
    tasked with sending the original high-speed radio transmission of the
    message, a copy of which he saved in plain text on a Signal Corps form.

    Gregory Melikian, who says with a chuckle that, as a senior citizen,
    he always has admired longevity, began his long-term relationship with
    ASU in the 1970s, while serving on the board of the Friends of Eight,
    a volunteer organization at the university's PBS-affiliated television
    station Eight.

    The Melikians are owners of the historic Hotel San Carlos in downtown
    Phoenix and have been generous supporters of education and the arts
    in Arizona . Gregory Melikian has been a board member of the Phoenix
    Symphony and served as president of the Arizona Opera Company. Emma
    Ordjanian Melikian has served on the board of the Asian Arts Council
    of the Phoenix Art Museum . She is the founding president of the Thank
    You America Foundation, an organization in support of educational
    opportunities for homeless and abused children of Arizona . For that,
    she has received the George Washington Medal of Honor from the Freedoms
    Foundation at Valley Forge in 1999, the Outstanding Achievement Award
    from the Daughters of the American Revolution and the Alpha Delta
    Kappa Woman of Distinguished Award in 2002. She also has been active
    in the National Society of Arts and Letters for more than 20 years.

    Additionally, the Melikians are among the original donors to the
    Armenian Cultural Center in Scottsdale. Their three sons and a daughter
    - Robert, Richard, James and Ramona - have attended ASU.

    More information about the Melikian Center and ASU's Russian, Eurasian
    and East European Studies program is available at (480) 965-4188 or
    online at (www.asu.edu/clas/reesc).
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