
BY: Maureen O'Donnell
Adolph Maestranzi was born with Down syndrome in 1951, at a time many parents were told it might be best to institutionalize a child with the condition and move on with their lives. Instead, his parents Ben and Madelyn Maestranzi raised him in a home filled with music, good food and love from his four siblings.
“My brother went on to live a rich, full life,” his sister Loretta Maestranzi said. After his father taught him to play bocce ball — and his brother Bart coached him — Mr. Maestranzi won a silver medal in the Illinois state Special Olympics.
SOURCE: https://chicago.suntimes.com/
Please join Mia Maria Order Sons of Italy in America Lodge #2813 as we host the 2015...
Annual Bocce with the Brothers fundraiser for Capuchin Ministries will be held from 6 to 1...
You can think of modern bowling as a distant cousin of bocce. In England, they have "bowls...
For Italians, and Romans in particular, the Open is not just a tennis tournament where cha...
The National Italian American Sports Hall of Fame is proud to announce its inductees and h...
Wednesday September 16 - 6 /7,30 PM - Roosevelt Branch Library - 1101 W Taylor S...
He just turned 30. He bats left-handed. He boasts a career 124 OPS+ — the same as Nolan Ar...
By Sarah Bryan Miller "Bel canto," Italian for "beautiful singing," is a phrase t...