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  • MaryAnn's music makers

    The Record (Bergen County, NJ)
    June 17, 2004 Thursday

    MaryAnn's music makers;
    Awards to honor students in memory of lover of the arts

    By MERRY FIRSCHEIN, STAFF WRITER, North Jersey Media Group

    PARAMUS

    Orthodontist Robert V. Kinoian loves music and art. He also loved his
    wife, MaryAnn, who died of breast cancer four years ago. So Kinoian,
    a classical guitarist who has played at Carnegie Recital Hall, has
    created The MaryAnn Kinoian Memorial Scholarship Fund to reward
    children in their music and art studies.

    On Monday, six children - two each from Ridge Ranch Elementary
    School, East Brook Middle School, and West Brook Middle School - will
    receive small monetary prizes meant as a pat on the back for their
    hard work.

    "The award says, 'Look, you're interested in music and this is
    something that has value. People are recognizing your ability, and
    it's worth pursuing,'-" said Kinoian. "They might say, 'Maybe I
    should keep up with this, because someone did recognize me.'-"

    MaryAnn Kinoian waged a 10-year battle with breast cancer and
    succumbed in September 2000 at age 45. Robert Kinoian is now raising
    their daughter, Lucine, who is 14..

    MaryAnn was a nurse administrator and operating room supervisor and
    instructor at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York City
    and in New Jersey at Englewood Hospital and Medical Center.

    When MaryAnn was in high school, she played the violin for the
    all-state orchestra in New York. And she was the chairwoman of the
    art exposure program at Ridge Ranch from 1995 to 1999, when Lucine
    was a student there.

    "We would have posters of pieces of fine art, either paintings or
    sculpture," Kinoian said. "We would write up the background on the
    paintings and give questions to the parents to ask the kids."

    Robert Kinoian is a classical guitarist who studied with Andres
    Segovia, an innovator of the modern classical guitar. Kinoian has
    performed at Carnegie Recital Hall and Merkin Concert Hall. By his
    late 20s, he changed careers and became a dentist. He still plays the
    guitar.

    "I started at 8 years old," he said. "I remember seeing the Beatles
    in 1964. I always wanted to play guitar. There are even photos of me
    with a toy guitar."

    When MaryAnn died, Robert Kinoian came up with a way to honor her. "I
    thought it would be nice to give a little prize to children who
    showed an interest in music and art," he said. "In the spring of
    2001, I approached [Ridge Ranch Principal] Meryl Barrett with the
    idea. She was very pleased and enthusiastic about it."

    Administrators at each school choose the children, usually graduating
    students, who will receive the award. Their names are kept secret
    until the graduation ceremony, when Kinoian presents each child with
    a plaque and a check.

    "The child must be someone who has excelled in music and someone who
    has excelled in art, and showing enthusiasm for these subjects,"
    Kinoian said. Ridge Ranch students receive $50 and the middle school
    children receive a $75 check.

    Kinoian also gives a small award to two students at the Sunday school
    of his church, St. Leon's Armenian Church in Fair Lawn.

    Kinoian's goal is to distribute prizes to children in each of the
    district's elementary schools and middle schools. Currently, he funds
    the awards himself. He hopes in the future to use money given in
    honor of his wife.

    "My main thrust is to support the younger children, to encourage them
    that this is a worthwhile pursuit even if it doesn't turn out to be
    their career," he said.

    An award like this, even such a small one, is so important, Kinoian
    said. "There seems to be so little support for the arts in financial
    support from the government," he explained. "We don't see a lot of
    art or music programs in schools. It's peripheral.

    "I always had a love for music," he said. "It's been such an integral
    and important part of my life, I want to support children who have
    those feelings, too."

    GRAPHIC: PHOTO, CARMINE GALASSO, STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER - Robert V.
    Kinoian, shown in his orthodontics office in Paramus, is honoring the
    memory of his wife by rewarding children who excel in music and the arts.
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