Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Pages in category "People from Monessen, Pennsylvania" The following 26 pages are in this category, out of 26 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A.
Wasicek was born in Arnold City, Pennsylvania and raised in Belle Vernon, Pennsylvania.He was the fourth of nine children of August and Justina Wasicek. [1] Wasicek quit school after attending the eighth grade and went to work for the American Window Glass Co. and the Monessen Sheet & Tinplate Co. [2] Wasicek resumed his education, studying at Belle Vernon High School, the Kiski Preparatory ...
Steve Belichick was the youngest of five children born to Marija Barković and Ivan Biličić, who immigrated to the United States in 1897 from Draganić, Karlovac, Croatia and settled in Monessen, Pennsylvania.
Monessen is a city in southwestern Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania, United States, located along the Monongahela River. The population was 6,876 at the 2020 census. The population was 6,876 at the 2020 census.
Artis Leon Ivey Jr. was born on August 1, 1963, in Monessen, Pennsylvania. [7] [8] [1] His mother was a factory worker who divorced his father, who was a carpenter, and they moved to Compton, California when Ivey was eight years old. [9] Ivey was severely asthmatic and, as a child, he was taken to the hospital several times due to asthma ...
James J. Manderino served as the 133rd Speaker of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives in 1989. He was a Democrat from Monessen, Westmoreland County.A member of the House for twenty-three years, from 1967 to 1989, he served eight years as Majority Leader and was elected Speaker in 1989 after the retirement of Rep. Leroy Irvis.
Christian Boehmer Anfinsen Jr. (March 26, 1916 – May 14, 1995) [1] was an American biochemist.He shared the 1972 Nobel Prize in Chemistry with Stanford Moore and William Howard Stein for work on ribonuclease, especially concerning the connection between the amino acid sequence and the biologically active conformation (see Anfinsen's dogma).
The Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, also known as "the Trib", is the second-largest daily newspaper serving the Greater Pittsburgh metropolitan area of Western Pennsylvania.It transitioned to an all-digital format on December 1, 2016, but remains the second-largest daily in Pennsylvania, with nearly one million unique page views monthly. [2]