Page 10 THE VILLADOM TIMES I • January 23, 2013 Area Hudson City awards $10K to Children’s Aid First row: Carla Fels, Joanne Mandry, CFO of Children’s Aid and Family Services, Gerri Adboo, Charlene Thomas, Hudson City Savings Bank, Stacey Hamilton Sandler, Delia Perretta, and Trudi Dial. Second row: Victoria Williams, Richard Zaborowski, community reinvestment act officer, and Kathryn Higbee. Hudson City Savings Bank has awarded a $10,000 grant to Children’s Aid and Family Services’ Woodlea/Path I Advisory Council to help foster children living in group homes in Paramus and Ridgewood. “We are tremendously grateful to Hudson City Savings Bank for this generous donation. They have been a strong supporter of the Woodlea/Path I Advisory Council for more than a decade,” said Bob Jones, Ph.D., president & CEO of Children’s Aid and Family Services. “Their support helps us give our foster children the extras that a family would usually supply, such as outings to sporting events and plays, music and dance lessons, birthday parties, and furnishings for the homes. These experiences help our children feel valued, which contributes to their healing.” Hudson City Savings Bank is among the top 25 banks and the largest thrift in the country. Consistently recognized as (continued on page 11) Madeleine Albright, secretary of state from 1997 to 2001, whose career in public service includes positions on the National Security Council, as U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations, and on Capitol Hill, will appear at a special event at Don Bosco Prep on Tuesday, Feb. 19, at 7 p.m. to discuss her newest book, “Prague Winter, A Personal Story of Remembrance and War, 1937-1948.” Albright’s appearance at Don Bosco will be a combination of an interview and question and answer period conducted by Albert H. Wunsch III, Esq., author, trial lawyer, television/radio personality, historian and President of the Don Bosco Madeleine Albright to appear at Don Bosco Prep Alumni Association and William “Pat” Schuber, Esq., associate professor of the School of Administrative Science at Fairleigh Dickinson University and former New Jersey Assemblyman, Bergen County Executive, and Mayor of Bogota. “Prague Winter” is the personal story of Albright’s birth in 1937 and earliest years in Czechoslovakia woven within the context of her parents’ lives, the historical period of 1937-1948, and the challenges in making world decisions and policy because of varied national perspectives. Albright is the daughter of Anna and Josef Korbel, a young diplomat working for the Czechoslovakian government who moved the family in 1939 to the government-in-exile in London, while the country was occupied by the Nazis. The Korbel family was granted political asylum in the United States in 1949, and daughter Madeleine became a U.S. citizen in 1957. Josef Korbel became the dean of the University of Denver’s School of International Studies, where one of his star pupils was another future secretary of state, Condoleezza Rice. Raised as a Roman Catholic, Albright became an Episcopalian when she was married. When she was being vetted for her appointment as secretary of state, (continued on page 17) Madeleine Albright