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Father, son get ready for president

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  • Father, son get ready for president

    The Desert Sun, CA
    June 13 2005

    Father, son get ready for president
    Immigrant and entrepreneur set to meet Bush

    Erica Solvig
    The Desert Sun
    June 13, 2005

    Steve Balian grew up in a poor section of Beirut and with just $480
    in his pocket, he came to this country in the 1970s in search of the
    American Dream.

    Thirty years later, the 58-year-old Rancho Mirage father of three has
    done enough for the Republican party to score him an invite to this
    week's 2005 President's Dinner and Salute to Freedom in Washington.

    "Since I came to this country, I supported Republican party and I had
    no money," Balian said. "The issue is standing next to the president
    and supporting his principles. That's more important than money."

    The Salute to Freedom event starts today in Washington. The National
    Republican Congressional Committee-sponsored dinner, which will honor
    President George Bush, is Tuesday night.

    Event organizers won't disclose names on the 6,000-person guest list.
    But neither Balian nor Coachella Valley Lincoln Club President Herb
    Temple knows of any other Coachella Valley residents who were invited.

    "It means the world for me," Balian said. "What a privilege to go."

    Balian won't disclose how generous he has been - "it's personal," he
    says - but he did say he was a table sponsor. The event's Web site
    says that designation comes with a $25,000 price tag and includes
    VIP reception tickets, tours of the capital and one photo with
    President Bush.

    Standing by Balian's side will be his son and "backbone," Michael
    Balian.

    "I'm excited," said Michael, president of Carpet Empire Plus in
    Cathedral City, where Steve is the marketing and sales director.
    "You're in the White House. It's seeing what America is all about."

    That's what prompted his father to come here in the first place.

    The youngest of seven boys, Steve Balian says he came from poor and
    humble beginnings.

    Growing up in Beirut, Balian met some American missionaries and had
    friends who attended the American University of Beirut.

    It was his introduction to the culture of the United States.

    "I said, if American people (are) this nice, I am definitely going
    to go to this country," Balian said.

    At age 26, he and his wife at the time came here in 1974.

    He became a citizen in 1979.

    They lived in Sherman Oaks, and Balian moved to the Coachella Valley
    in the early 1990s.

    During his time in California, he's had flooring businesses in
    Riverside and San Bernardino counties. He now works at his son's
    flooring and window furnishing store, where their office is plastered
    with enlarged photos of his family, President Bush and Air Force One.

    The Salute to Freedom event is Balian's first trip to Washington.

    The event is the annual fund-raiser hosted by the National Republican
    Congressional Committee and the National Republican Senatorial
    Committee.

    In years when a Republican is not in the White House, the event is
    known as the House-Senate dinner.

    About 6,000 people are expected for the Tuesday night dinner, but only
    1,500 of them are expected to attend the other tours, luncheon and
    nighttime cruise, according to Carl Forti, congressional committee
    communications director.

    Conference members are part of the small business council, which
    include small business owners from across the country, Forti said.

    "Most of them choose to give to the party," he said. "But you do not
    have to give to be part of it."

    Balian has been a party supporter for years. Besides giving to the
    Republican party, Balian has been involved in other fund-raising
    events, including being named a major donor for the new Kirkjan Family
    Hall at the Armenian Apostolic Church of the Desert in Rancho Mirage.

    But Balian maintains it is not about the amount of money.

    "It is more than fundraising," Balian said. "It is principle issues
    for me."
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