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AGBU Press Office: AGBU Named as Beneficiary of $10 Million Trust Es

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  • AGBU Press Office: AGBU Named as Beneficiary of $10 Million Trust Es

    AGBU Press Office
    55 East 59th Street
    New York, NY 10022-1112
    Phone: 212.319.6383, x109
    Fax: 212.319.6507
    Email: [email protected]
    Website: www.agbu.org

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

    Tuesday, August 15, 2006

    AGBU NAMED AS BENEFICIARY OF $10 MILLION TRUST ESTABLISHED BY
    PIONEERING SCIENTIST AND EDUCATOR DR. JACK MUNUSHIAN

    George R. Phillips, 2005 Man of the Year of the AGBU Southern
    California District, officially announced AGBU's designation as an
    income beneficiary, along with the American University of Armenia, of
    the Jack Munushian Charitable Trust estimated at $10 million. Faithful
    to Munushian's wishes, Co-Trustees Phillips and Zouhrab Bassmajian
    will select AGBU projects that support educational and other charitable
    endeavors in Armenia and the Diaspora.

    "Generous yet firm in mind and spirit, Jack was the kind of person who
    remembered anybody that did anything nice for him and rewarded them
    in kind," said longtime associate Phillips. "His superior intellect,
    foresight, and humor, and above all, his humility, earned my respect
    and admiration from the very beginning."

    A hallmark to a legacy of intelligence, integrity and humanitarianism,
    the personal and professional achievements of the late Dr. Jack
    Munushian have long endured to outlive their maker. Innovative and
    visionary in the fields of engineering, education and computer science,
    his contributions to society engrained a lasting impression on his
    peers and for generations to come.

    Born in Rochester, NY in 1923, Munushian, a World War II veteran,
    received a B.S. in physics from the University of Rochester in 1948. He
    later went on to earn a Ph.D. in physics in 1954 from the University
    of California at Berkeley, representing one of the first servicemen
    to receive a doctoral degree on the GI Bill.

    Employed throughout the 1950's by Aerospace Corporation and Hughes
    Aircraft Company as a scientist and manager, Munushian joined the
    working world of academia in 1957 as a part-time lecturer at the
    University of Southern California's (USC) School of Engineering. Ten
    years later in the fall of 1967, USC hired Munushian as a full
    professor to develop its engineering program and, in due course,
    he became the Director of the Graduate Center of Engineering Sciences.

    Although formally trained in electrical engineering, the capable and
    talented Munushian is credited for founding the Department of Computer
    Science, now one of the USC Viterbi School of Engineering's largest
    and strongest departments. In 1972, his first year serving as the
    Department's founding Chairman, Munushian created the Instructional
    Television Network (ITV) to facilitate the higher education of
    engineers and scientists in Southern California via closed-circuit
    television from the workplace.

    "To an extent few people realize, we at the Viterbi School live in a
    house that Jack built," said USC Viterbi Dean Yannis Yortsos, referring
    to the building that Dr. Munushian acquired for the department. "Our
    eminence in computer science and distance education grows directly
    out of his hard work and foresight."

    A precursor to today's multi-billion dollar distance learning industry,
    the tuition revenue generated by Munushian's ITV enabled USC to hire
    much of the faculty that shaped the engineering school into a premier
    research institution. In 1988 when the IEEE (Institute of Electrical
    and Electronics Engineers) awarded its highly coveted Major Educational
    Innovation Award to Munushian for his creation, the USC Viterbi
    School had recorded more than 50,000 ITV enrollments. Munushian's
    ITV successor, USC's Distance Education Network, remains an important
    part of the Viterbi School of Engineering today.

    In 1994, the deserving Munushian was conferred as Emeritus Professor
    of electrical engineering, and recently in his honor, the USC Viterbi
    School of Engineering established a newly endowed chair named the
    Jack Munushian Early Career Chair.

    Near retirement, Munushian's health regrettably declined resulting
    in the unfortunate loss of his sight. With resilience and unyielding
    courage, he persevered to conduct his new life as loyally to his old
    by setting up a special audio system that allowed him to "read" books
    and newspapers, and swimming regularly using the ropes as his guide.

    "I will remember Jack in his recent years as a survivor who vanquished
    all physical handicaps and for his strong belief in the power of
    positive thinking," said Dr. Mihran Agbabian, lifetime friend,
    former AGBU Central Board Member and former President of the
    American University of Armenia. "I also will remember him for the
    many scientific and technical challenges that he faced throughout
    his career and for all the valuable contributions he made to higher
    education. But most of all, I will remember him as a person who always
    did the best he could to brighten the lives of others."

    Munushian's devotion to charitable causes was unwavering as witnessed
    by his lifetime support of the USC Swim for Mike Benefit, the Armenian
    Assembly, the Armenian Church, AGBU, the Grtasirats Armenian School in
    Aleppo, Syria, and named in memory of his friend Dr. Zohrab Kaprielian,
    he renovated the Grtasirats Cultural Association Auditorium and was
    responsible for the dedication of USC engineering building Kaprielian
    Hall.

    "I would like to express my gratitude to all donors of AGBU and, on
    this occasion, pay homage to the memory of Jack Munushian who entrusted
    the organization with such an important bequest. This bequest also
    holds a special meaning as it happened during the Centennial year of
    the organization," said AGBU President Berge Setrakian. "This is a
    tribute to all the programs that AGBU has run for over a century for
    the betterment of the lives of Armenians worldwide and the promotion
    and preservation of the Armenian identity and cultural heritage. We
    are only able to achieve our goals with such success through the
    generosity of our donors and benefactors, such as the late Munushian."
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