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Justice Armand Arabian Receives 2006 Fernando Award

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  • Justice Armand Arabian Receives 2006 Fernando Award

    JUSTICE ARMAND ARABIAN RECEIVES 2006 FERNANDO AWARD
    By TINA BAY, Staff Writer

    Metropolitan News-Enterprise, CA
    Nov 15 2006

    Former California Supreme Court Justice Armand Arabian has been named
    recipient of the 2006 Fernando Award, given annually to a San Fernando
    Valley resident for volunteer efforts on behalf of the community.

    Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa announced Arabian's selection
    at the 48th Annual Fernando Award Finalists' Recognition Dinner last
    Friday, after secret ballots cast by members of the Fernando Award
    Foundation placed him above four other finalists.

    Arabian, 71, told The MetNews yesterday receiving the recognition was a
    "very touching experience."

    He explained:

    "You do things from the heart and most of the time there's no
    acknowledgement of it, and it's not expected. This [honor] is very
    meaningful to me because most of my adult life has been centered
    around the Van Nuys Civic Center."

    Upon his admission to the State Bar in 1962, he worked for a year
    as a deputy district attorney in Van Nuys and then entered private
    practice in that city until then-Gov. Ronald Reagan appointed him to
    the Municipal Court there in 1972. He was later elevated by Reagan to
    the Superior Court and remained in Van Nuys for 10 years, including
    service as supervising judge before then-Gov. George Dukemejian
    appointed him to the Second District Court of Appeal in 1983.

    After six years as an associate justice on the Supreme Court from
    1990 to1996, Arabian set up an office across from the Van Nuys Civic
    Center, where he works as a private judge for ADR Services, Inc.

    In keeping with Fernando Award tradition, Arabian will have his name
    inscribed on two statues commemorating the honor, a decades-old bronze
    monument located in the Valley Civic Center in Van Nuys and another,
    installed in 1996, that stands at Warner Park in Woodland Hills.

    A formal celebration dinner will be held sometime in February, the
    justice said.

    The award does not include a cash prize, but award foundation president
    Brad Rosenheim said Arabian will be asked to designate a high school
    in the San Fernando Valley to which the foundation will award a $2,000
    scholarship for one of its graduating students.

    The annual Fernando Award honors an individual from the San Fernando
    Valley who, "through a life of volunteerism encompassing personal
    commitment and involvement, has worked to improve the quality of life
    in the San Fernando Valley."

    Fourteen individuals were nominated this year by community
    organizations and leaders. A screening committee narrowed the field
    to five finalists.

    At the award ceremony Friday, Arabian was recognized for being a
    national leader in the reform of rape laws, specifically for his work
    in bringing about recognition of the sexual assault counselor-victim
    privilege.

    The justice said his work in rape reform sparked his desire to be
    involved in the community:

    "I was somewhat isolated in my 24 years of service on the court, but
    the work that I did in rape reform which was outside my judicial duties
    took me into a world of seeing pain and need," he said. "After I left
    the court, I've been gone for 10 years, I've become far more involved."

    He is involved in the presentation of various awards and scholarships
    that encourage community service, such as the "Armand Arabian Leaders
    in Public Service" awards and scholarships presented annually by the
    Encino Chamber of Commerce.

    In 1999, he donated funds to create Lawyers Resource Centers in the
    Van Nuys and San Fernando superior courthouses.

    Last December, the Justice Armand Arabian Reception Hall was dedicated
    in his honor at the Chatsworth Superior Courthouse.

    A New York native and the son of Armenian immigrants who survived the
    Turkish Genocide, Arabian graduated from Boston University and Boston
    University School of Law. He also holds a master of laws degree from
    the University of Southern California.

    He said his legacy is demonstrating that "there's always something
    to be done if you have the heart and soul to accomplish it."

    "There is no such thing as 'I didn't know where to put myself,'"
    he said. "I always summarize it by the phrase, 'Make a difference.'
    Everyone can make a difference if they choose to."

    http://www.metnews.com/articles/2006/ar ab111406.htm

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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