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American Red Cross Honors Six Western PA Heroes

Fourth annual breakfast held Thursday at Consol Energy Center in Pittsburgh pays tribute to everyday people who have performed extraordinary deeds.

Swimming a woman to safety as deadly flood waters swirled on Washington Boulevard. Helping a neighbor escape from a fire. Pulling a fellow firefighter out after a floor collapses below him. Providing support for military families. Working to re-energize a school district. And dedicating more than 10 years to serving the American Red Cross in its mission to help others.

Those words describe the efforts of the six recipients honored Thursday at the American Red Cross' fourth annual Heroes Breakfast, a fundraiser held in the Lexus Club at Consol Energy Center in downtown Pittsburgh. WPXI-TV sportscaster Bill Phillips served as emcee for the program. The recipients were nominated by event committee members and selected by an independent panel of media personnel and community figures.

This year's recipients are:

  • Good Samaritan Hero, Christine Marty: Christine Marty, 22, of Sarver, was on the way home from a back-to-school shopping trip with her mother last summer when deadly flash flood waters hit Washington Boulevard. She and her mother, Marion, were able to escape their sinking car but were separated by the current. With water rising nearly nine feet in some areas, Marty heard an elderly woman calling for help. After assisting Romy Connelly out of her car window, Marty held on to her with one arm and swam through the current. When they reached a floating vehicle where another woman was on the roof, she then kept Connelly afloat, praying and talking and singing songs with her, until a rescue canoe eventually arrived.
  • Professional Responder Hero, Alex Vogel: Alex Vogel of Baldwin Borough, a volunteer firefighter with the Baldwin Independent Fire Co. No. 1, responded with his fellow firefighters to a large fire on Churchview Avenue in Baldwin Borough earlier this year. As Vogel waited for one of his colleagues to get tools, he heard firefighter Bob Wysocki call out that he had fallen through a floor inside the first-floor kitchen while battling the blaze. Before he could fall all the way through the floor to the home’s basement, Vogel caught him and pulled him to safety.
  • Military Hero, Deborah Krall – Deborah Krall of Youngwood served for more than 30 years in the Air National Guard, participating in multiple operations, including Operation Desert Storm and the Global War on Terrorism. Now, Krall serves as the Airman & Family Readiness Program manager for the 171st Air Refueling Wing in Moon Township, where she is responsible for the well-being of 1,400 military members and their families. While unit members are away, family members rely on Krall for information, referrals and moral support. She also works with Operation Military Kids, an organization committed to providing a sense of community for children in military families.
  • Lifetime Commitment to the Red Cross Hero, Grant Wilson – Grant Wilson of Mt. Lebanon has been a dedicated Red Cross volunteer for more than 10 years, responding to local home fires and other disasters, and playing a key role in government relations and disaster planning for the Red Cross. He helped to develop the local Community Evacuation Center Team program, a vital initiative that identifies community groups and trains them as Red Cross volunteers, so they can quickly and efficiently open a Red Cross shelter in their community in times of disaster. Formerly a high school math teacher and firefighter/emergency management coordinator with the Mt. Lebanon Fire Department, Wilson uses his background and expertise in emergency management and planning to teach various Red Cross disaster training classes.
  • Educator Hero, Karen Murphy – Karen Murphy of Coraopolis has been an active volunteer for the Cornell School District for more than 25 years, 12 of which were spent as a board member and 10 of which were spent as president of the Cornell School District Booster Parents. Murphy also volunteered her time to measure and make alterations for high school athletes’ uniforms and was a key participant in the Central Blood Bank Scholarship Drive benefitting Cornell High School’s senior class. She donated platelets 22 times in 2011. As a former board member, she also played a key role in helping the Cornell School District’s elementary school achieve Blue Ribbon status.
  • Youth Hero, Justin Ritchie – Justin Ritchie, a 14-year-old from New Castle, used a ladder to help save a neighbor’s life when her house caught fire. Last November, Justin woke up when he heard a woman calling for help. Upon discovering his neighbor, Charlene McMasters, hanging from an upstairs window of her burning house, Justin ran outside, grabbed a ladder and put it to her window. McMasters began to climb down, though the ladder snapped, and she fell to the ground, suffering a few injuries.  She survived the fire and is thankful to Justin for his help.

Also honored at the breakfast was Lucille Underwood of the Allegheny County Department of Human Services' Office of Behavioral Health, who was presented the Red Cross Humanitarian Leadership recognition.

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Johann Lynge June 13, 2013 at 03:54 am
@MCG - I appreciate how you perceived the situation and I apologize if that was in fact the case.Read More Like I said I was not privy to the exact conversation. However at the time it wasn't explained like that to me so I was unaware and handled it as I interpreted it. My apologies if I was mistaken.
Johann Lynge June 13, 2013 at 04:07 am
@Debbie L. Actually the police have not been to the pub in a long time. The last time they wereRead More there was because I called them because a man who was intoxicated (which we didn't serve because he is barred) came in and refused to leave. And I don't ever recall seeing the fire department there. But to blame it on the Pub is a misconception because even if you closed the pub there are half a dozen other bars on the blvd that everyone would then frequent. While Bob Dobbs recommendation of reinstating prohibition might sound like a good idea good luck with that. Prohibition didn't prevent drinking in the 20's and it wouldn't stop it now either. Ultimately we can not make everyone happy but we do our best to run a safe and friendly establishment. And I make it my personal mission to prevent any and all fights. Since I've been the door man (almost 6 months) we have only had 1 fight in the bar which was quickly broken up. We are not perfect. Nor is any other bar. But we constantly strive to make improvements. We are a community pub. We love our community and everyone in it.
Bob Dobbs June 13, 2013 at 01:23 pm
i should say that out of the handful of bars in the vicinity, i prefer the brookline pub if i'mRead More gonna go to a bar . i dont care for the younger kids that accumulate on saturday nights with that annoying ghetto music but the food specials are decent and they do stock a decent selection of beers . i find zippy's to be much more clique-y and narrow-minded .
Brad Birdwell June 10, 2013 at 09:18 pm
@Daria. My description is 100% accurate. Yes, the bouncer quickly handled the situation by claimingRead More he witnessed "the whole thing". And he did. He witnessed my friends and I waiting to order a drink. That's all. Nothing more. Nothing less. The description is not harsh, it's actually toned down in comparison to what actually happened. The bouncer said, "I witnessed the whole thing and you were being a ****. One customer standing in line to order. One customer flicking another customer's hood and getting in his face. Which one was wrong? Apparently me since I don't go there frequently.
Johann Lynge June 11, 2013 at 08:39 am
To everyone following this thread, I'm the doorman in question at the Brookline Pub. I've posted aRead More response to the original poster on Patch.com that can be found at the following address: http://dormont-brookline.patch.com/groups/opinion/p/in-response-to-the-post-brookline-pubhorrible-experience I implore everyone to read that response to hear my side of the story. Thank you.
Debbie L. June 12, 2013 at 09:36 pm
Brad,,i totally agree with ya 100 percent,,nothing but trouble there, when my son starts going thereRead More from time to time again, i know hes up to no good.
Erin Faulk (Editor) June 8, 2013 at 06:08 pm
Thanks for adding this, Drew! Article coming soon. If you have any photos from the games, pleaseRead More feel free to add the photos here, too.
Drew Lehman June 9, 2013 at 10:08 am
The game actually will be played at Green Twp. Park in Scotland Pa. (near Chambersburg)
JLMK June 8, 2013 at 01:36 pm
Hi there. My fiancee and i are interested. Can you inbox me? Jesskrchmar@Gmail. Com
coreylahey June 5, 2013 at 05:51 pm
But I reported on documented actions that happened within the community. Where is the violation?
Erin Faulk (Editor) June 5, 2013 at 05:54 pm
One was removed for personal attacks, another because it implied that there was corruption by aRead More specific person. Although you didn't name the person, it was implied. Since the corruption was never proven, I removed the comment. It's over. You're welcome to continue commenting as long as you follow the term of use.
coreylahey June 6, 2013 at 12:25 am
Yeah I guess the public online court records showing someone pleading guilty is not proof