William Penn Life, 1985 (20. évfolyam, 1-6. szám)
1985-05-01 / 3. szám
Frank J. Radvany Board Secretary Julius Kesseru, M.D. Medical Director Barbara B. Botkin Zoltán B. Emri William J. Haberstroh Frank J. Wukovits, Jr. EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE — Members of the William Penn Association national executive committee are shown during a recent pause in business discussions. They include seated from left, Gus G. Nagy, national secretary; John Sabo, president; Stephen G. Danko, chairman of the board. Standing, from left, Albert G. Kertesz, director; William C. Kohut, director; Zoltán B. Emri, director; Stephen G. Lang, vice-president; John F. Kenawell, executive vicepresident; Gay B. Banes, general counsel and vice-president of planning; Albert J. Stelkovics, vicepresident; and John L. Lovász, treasurer. Joseph Toma Michael Hegedűs Violet B. Lenart Continued from page 1, column 5 It’s gone up and into space, spreading the first rectangular shadow of its kind across the moon’s dusty surface . . . gone down through a spreading oil slick from the U.S.S. Arizona. It fluttered, grimly, over Hickam Field on December 7,1941 . . . and at half-mast, sadly, over the White House on November 22, 1963. It’s been to the Arctic and Antarctic and most places in between; including, briefly, a chunk of wind-swept desert in Iran and the warm-breezed sands of Grenada. The list rolls on: Tripoli, The Alamo, Fort McHenry, Fort Sumter, Vera Cruz, San Juan Hill, Belleau Wood, El Álaméin, Corregidor, the 38th Parallel, Suez, The Continued on page 12, column 4 Judge Invited South Bend, Indiana Judge John S. Gonas, as former county and state judge, Chief Justice of the Indiana Appellate Court, and legislator in both houses of the Legislature, House and Senate, has been invited to participate in the Professional Consultants Seminar on the Slavic American Legal Association tour in Moscow, Russia in a one-week conference and also to visit three Russian communities, four days in Moscow, three days in Kiev, two days in Minsk, and four days in Leningrad September 1, 1985. Conferences in Moscow pertain to criminal and civil legal systems in the Slavic Union. This arrangement is in cooperation with the Slavic Legal Society. to Russia I have previously attended the United Nations Conference on Crime and Delinquency in Geneva, Switzerland and also the International Congress of Juvenile Judges in Brussels, Belgium. As Judge of Juvenile Court I attained the lowest delinquency rate in the state and nation. I received several awards and was honored by several Governors and am the author of 5 books. I was named by the International Biographical Center of Cambridge, England in Men of Achievement and also by the American Biographical Institute in Directory of Distinguished Americans. I am a graduate of law and engineering and hold four degrees and both my sons are practicing attorneys. Staffers Applauded PITTSBURGH, PA — Seven members of the sales staff of the William Penn Association have received special congratulations from National Sales Director Ron Abels because of their recognition as FIC’s. Abels is president of the Pennsylvania Chapter of FIC’s and explains, “In order to receive the FIC designation, one must complete three courses as well as passing a test in each of those courses. The various members of our sales force who have received that designation are commended for their diligence and dedication to their careers in their insurance fields. “It is my goal to have all Career Sales Representatives become Fraternal Insurance Counsellors,” Abel added. Next official due date for all material submitted July 5, 1985. ‘Miracle Surgery’ Gives New Nose Branch 8164 — Steubenville, Ohio SAN DIEGO — Dr. Thomas R. Vecchione, son of Mr. and Mrs. Michael Vecchione of 146 Brady Circle, Steubenville, is a plastic surgeon who specializes in general repair and cosmetic surgery. What he did for a Mexican girl who had her nose bit off by a rat was more than the everyday general repair and cosmetic work. Dr. Thomas Vecchione When Dolores Delgado was a baby, her mother left her in a crib while she stepped out of the room to prepare dinner. Aurora Delgado heard her 8-day-old daughter screaming and ran into the room and discovered a rat had bitten off her daughter’s nose. The mother picked the child up and a neighbor helped her take the infant to the hospital. The doctors at the hospital stopped the bleeding and bandaged the nose. It was all they could do at that point. When Mrs. Delgado took Dolores out, she covered the baby’s face with a veil because she didn’t want anyone to see what had happened to her child. When the family moved to Tijuana, Mrs. Delgado heard about Mercy Hospital in San Diego and how, through a service to the poor, it might be possible to get help for young Dolores. Mercy Hospital, where Vecchione does charity work, did help and neither the medical Continued on page 10, column 2