William Penn Life, 1987 (22. évfolyam, 1-12. szám)
1987-09-01 / 9. szám
September 1987, William Penn Life, Page 7 [ungaria ! ages came to csárdás once again after many years. Others who were fluent helped the limited speakers. We baked hazi kenyer, cooked gulyás, fried bacon sang songs and brought new life to the lodge on the hill. Hungarian craft projects included embroidery workshops, weaving, bead making, leather work and folk art design. Everyone who visited Camp Hungária had a good time. But, best of all, the children were there. The children’s program sounded so intriguing that the local television crew came up to Camp Hungária to film it. Those of you in the Steubenville, Ohio, area can catch a glimpse of Camp Hungária on WTOV-TV Channel 9. The program on the camp will be aired during the week of Sept. 1 as part of the station’s "News for Little People” segment at 4:57 p.m. In addition to our summer program, many of our branches have now been able to take advantage of the camp facility, and many have shown a new interest in trying to continue renovation work, reinstitute a camp for the underprivileged and, in general, continue the good work that began here this summer. Nagyon fázok engedy be. Erika Fodor (second from right) coaches children as they perform a Hungarian play. zabeth Szabó) dungaria. Hungarian folk dance workshop participants take a break from dance routines to pose for a group photo. The dancers came from Michigan, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania and West Virginia. National Auditor Louis Fodor ofWeirton, W.Va., entertains guests at the Kave Haz (Coffee House) at Camp Hungária ’87. rrsfrom Toledo, Ohio — from left, Lillian Keil, Phyllis Cook, Alice Horvath and Judy Balogh — discuss titches they learned at Camp Hungaria’s embroidery class. Cleveland Hungarians from St. Emrich’s parish watch folk artist Marianna Halassy as she spins thread from raw wool.