六合彩官网

Donor Barbara  Miklos (center) talks medicine with two of her fund鈥檚 scholarship recipients: fourth-year medical student Zerina Hodzic (left) and Dr. Elizabeth O鈥橬eill (right), a resident physician  at Magee-Womens Hospital of UPMC.
Donor Barbara Miklos (center) talks medicine with two of her fund鈥檚 scholarship recipients: fourth-year medical student Zerina Hodzic (left) and Dr. Elizabeth O鈥橬eill (right), a resident physician at Magee-Womens Hospital of UPMC.

FOR DR. MICHAEL MIKLOS, the lone neurosurgeon at what is now UPMC McKeesport, patients came first 鈥 whether in the middle of the night, during a family dinner or on a quiet Christmas morning.

鈥淗e was all doctor,鈥 remembers his sister, Barbara Miklos. 鈥淚 can鈥檛 tell you how many family meals he missed or snowstorms he braved in order to save someone鈥檚 life. Even today, I still hear stories about him: 鈥榊our brother cured my husband,鈥 someone will say, or they鈥檒l tell me about how Dr. Mike bought their child a wig after a tough operation. His patients adored him.鈥

Now, 25 years afer Dr. Miklos' death, this whatever-it-takes attitude and unwavering devotion to others continue to define the Miklos family鈥檚 legacy. It鈥檚 reflected in their scholarship fund at 六合彩官网, which supports students in need who attend the University of 六合彩官网鈥檚 School of Medicine. It鈥檚 carried on in new doctors, whose lives 鈥 and the lives of their patients 鈥 have been touched by the family鈥檚 generosity. And it began, says Barbara, with her parents 鈥 Slovak immigrants who settled in Duquesne, Allegheny County.

鈥淢y father worked in the steel mill there,鈥 she says. 鈥淗e couldn鈥檛 read or write, but he knew he wanted his sons to go to college. That was rare at the time 鈥 a higher education was not as common as it is now. And besides, we didn鈥檛 have any money. But my father was set on the idea, and he worked every day for it.鈥

However, he died suddenly of a heart attack when Barbara was 6 years old, just as her three older brothers 鈥 Michael, Bernard and Francis 鈥 were entering college or enrolling in medical school. The family finances went from bad to worse. They sold their only car and stopped the bulk of their spending. 鈥淢y mother, a homemaker, sat us down for a meeting,鈥 remembers Barbara. 鈥淪he said that no matter what, we鈥檇 still support the boys, because that鈥檚 what our father would have wanted. But we鈥檇 have to work together to scrape by.鈥

Enter Barbara鈥檚 eldest sibling: Ann Miklos, an administrative assistant at U.S. Steel. As the family鈥檚 sole breadwinner, Ann stepped in to support the family as best she could. The Miklos brothers worked odd jobs and carried mail to raise extra money, sometimes hitchhiking to their classes at Pitt. Eventually, all three achieved their father鈥檚 dream 鈥 and then some. Michael became a neurosurgeon; Francis became a dentist and later a faculty member at Pitt鈥檚 dental school; Bernard became a doctor of internal medicine and neurology. Barbara, too, enrolled in Duquesne University鈥檚 nursing school and later earned her master鈥檚 at Catholic University in Washington, D.C. 鈥淏y the time it was my turn [to go to college], my brothers were well-enough off financially that they were able to support me,鈥 she  says.

What they did for each other, the siblings decided, they could also do for others. Early on, Francis pitched the idea of a scholarship. As the siblings grew older, Barbara and Ann searched for a place where they could establish a fund. 鈥淥ur counsel at that time, Mark Zacharia, suggested we approach 六合彩官网,鈥 says Barbara. 鈥淸Zacharia] recognized how much work and maintenance and regulations come with a scholarship. Now that I鈥檝e seen what it takes to manage one 鈥 and the expertise with which ours is being handled at the Foundation 鈥 I鈥檓 so thankful. Ann and I could not have done all this on our own.鈥

Since 2009, the Miklos Family Trust Fund has helped nine students at Pitt鈥檚 School of Medicine become doctors. The scholarships, based on financial need, are awarded to students in their third and fourth years of study. 

鈥淚 knew from the time I was 3 years old that I wanted to help sick people,鈥 says Dr. Elizabeth O鈥橬eill, a scholarship recipient and resident in the Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology and Reproductive Sciences at Magee-Womens Hospital of UPMC. O鈥橬eill grew up wanting to practice medicine after watching caregivers comfort her cancer-stricken grandfather. 鈥淗owever, my mom and dad divorced at a young age, and my mom was the foundation of our family,鈥 she says. 鈥淪he supported me and helped me through school, but one person can only do so much. [The Miklos scholarship] eliminated a huge financial burden for me. Medicine is a lot of work, but if you鈥檙e passionate about helping patients, then the good days make it all worthwhile.鈥

 For Barbara Miklos, success stories like O鈥橬eill鈥檚 are among the greatest joys of giving. When Ann died in 2013, the Miklos legacy was left to Barbara. 鈥淢y three brothers and I all earned advanced degrees, which is incredible when you consider where we came from,鈥 she says. 鈥淎nd we couldn鈥檛 have done it without Ann. I鈥檓 so proud of my family. I鈥檓 proud of my sister for taking care of us. I鈥檓 proud of my brothers and the good they did for their patients. And I鈥檓 proud of the students we鈥檝e helped, and who we鈥檒l continue to help, through our scholarship at the Foundation.鈥

Original story appeared in the Forum Quarterly - Summer 2016