Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Rev. Paul Schenck is currently a senior chaplain in the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs medical center in Lebanon, Pennsylvania. A Certified Clinical Chaplain with the National Association of VA Chaplains (NAVAC), he is a professional member of the National Association of Catholic Chaplains, and of the National Council of Catholic VA Chaplains.
Robert Lenard Schenck and his identical twin brother, Paul, were born in 1958 in Montclair, New Jersey, to Chaim "Henry Paul" Schenck and Marjorie (née Apgar) Schenck.. Schenck was named after his father's older brother who was a decorated B-17 bomber pilot in World War II and who lost his life in an air crash while serving in the Korean
She was born in Lima, Ohio to Joan Artz Schenk and Paul Anthony Schenk, the oldest of four daughters. [3] Her father, an insurance salesman, received the Purple Heart for his service in World War II, having spent 33 months in the Southwest Pacific. [4] [5] She attended St. John School, run by Dominican sisters, for elementary school through ...
Schenck wrote in his book that former Chief Justice William Rehnquist referred to Schenck’s brother Paul Schenck as "reverend" during the opening moments of oral arguments in a 1996 case. Robert ...
Nicholas Schenck (1881–1969), American film industry executive; Norman C. Schenck, mycologist who described Glomus aggregatum; Paul Schenck (born 1958), clergyman, lecturer, and author; Paul F. Schenck (1899–1968), U.S. Representative from Ohio; Robert C. Schenck (1809–1890), American Civil War general and U.S. Congressman
Schenck v. Pro-Choice Network of Western New York, 519 U.S. 357 (1997), was a case heard before the United States Supreme Court related to legal protection of access to abortion. The question before the court was whether the First Amendment was violated by placing an injunction on protesters outside abortion clinics. The court ruled in a 6–3 ...
Former First Lady Melania Trump on Thursday remembered her mother as “a ray of light in the darkest of days” during a funeral service at a church not far from the family’s Mar-a-Lago estate.
He and his wife first became interested in the faith after the birth of their first child. A friendship with a Catholic priest later helped lead to Hank and his wife's conversion in 1959. He was known to frequently read Thomas à Kempis' 15th-century book The Imitation of Christ, which he kept in his locker. [1] [2]