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| birth_place = Fountain Hill, Pennsylvania | residence = Reston, Virginia | religion = Lutheran | education = Muhlenberg, Harvard, Wharton | known_for = | occupation = investment banker CEO of Monticello Capital novelist –''The Navigator'' | style = | spouse = Barbara Snelbaker Pocalyko | website = (Michael Pocalyko Author Website ) }} Michael Nicholas Pocalyko ((ウクライナ語:Михайло Микола Поцілуйко)) (born December 24, 1954) is an American businessman and writer. He is the managing director and chief executive officer of Monticello Capital, a boutique investment bank in Chantilly, Virginia.〔(Forbes.com Corporate Director Profile )〕 In business he specializes in corporate directorship and in high technology and green enterprises.〔(Green IT in the Public Sector with Michael Pocalyko and Tony Cicco )〕 He is a Sarbanes-Oxley public company audit committee financial expert and corporate board audit committee chairman.〔(Herley Announces Election of Michael Pocalyko to Board of Directors, January 12, 2010 )〕 He is also known as a moderate Republican politician and public official.〔Robert A. Jones, "Pocalyko Cites Need for Change, Reaches out to Moderates," ''The Reston Connection,'' October 20–26, 1999〕 His novel ''The Navigator'', a literary financial thriller, was published in 2013 by Forge Books, an imprint of Macmillan Publishers.〔(Publishers Marketplace: Dealmaker: Kathleen Murphy (Agent) )〕〔()〕 ==Early life and education== Pocalyko is from the Lehigh Valley, born in Fountain Hill, Pennsylvania. He grew up in Bethlehem Township, Northampton County, Pennsylvania, in a devout Hungarian Lutheran blue collar family.〔("Commodity trap, bad technology and greed sealed Beth Steel’s fate," Allentown ''Morning Call,'' November 8, 2001 )〕〔("Democracy in Arab world will have Islamic flavor," Allentown ''Morning Call,'' June 14, 2005 )〕 His father Walter Pocalyko was business manager of the public school districts in Bethlehem, Sharon, Antietam, and Bangor and a local Democratic political figure.〔(Nancy J. Freeman, "Business Manager Appointed," Allentown ''Morning Call,'' March 6, 1984 )〕〔''1969 Progress Report, Township of Bethlehem, Northampton County, Penna.''〕 His mother Anna M. (Pagats) Pocalyko was an office manager for the brokerage firm of Janney Montgomery Scott.〔(Anna M. Pocalyko Obituary, Allentown ''Morning Call,'' April 26, 2001 )〕 His paternal grandparents were Ukrainians who immigrated first to Canada and then to the United States; his maternal grandparents were Hungarians who arrived in the United States at Ellis Island.〔 His paternal grandmother Dora Bendera ((ウクライナ語:Дора Бандера)) was born in Galicia in the family of Ukrainian nationalist Stepan Bandera.〔(Dora B. Pocalyko Obituary, Allentown ''Morning Call,'' November 4, 1991 )〕 He began writing for newspapers at the age of sixteen when his first article was published in the Bethlehem ''Globe-Times.''〔Special Correspondent Report, "Patriot Band Pleases Deep South Audience," Bethlehem ''Globe-Times,'' December 31, 1970〕 His editor was John Strohmeyer.〔"Full Disclosure Necessary," ''The Reston Connection'' (November 10, 1999)〕 As a youth he earned the rank of Eagle Scout and received the Vigil Honor of the Order of the Arrow in the Boy Scouts of America.〔("Camp Minsi continues great traditions," Allentown ''Morning Call,'' August 1, 2008 )〕 He graduated in 1972 from Bethlehem Freedom High School. While a student at Muhlenberg College in Allentown, Pennsylvania, Pocalyko was a union steelworker in the ingot mould foundry at the Bethlehem Plant of the now-defunct Bethlehem Steel Corporation and a professional musician.〔("In Bethlehem, USWA broke its moral compact," Allentown ''Morning Call,'' January 19, 2003 )〕 He is a member of Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity.〔('' '76 'Berg Buzz & Beyond'' 1,1 (October 2011) )〕 In college he published poetry in literary magazines〔"Chain," ''Arcade'' 29,1 (Fall 1974)〕〔"Dexter," ''Fusion'' 1,2 (Spring 1977)〕 and chaired a symposium on the work of novelist John Hawkes; its proceedings became a widely cited book of literary criticism, ''A John Hawkes Symposium: Design and Debris'' that he co-edited with Anthony C. Santore for publisher James Laughlin at New Directions.〔Santore, Anthony C. and Pocalyko, Michael N., eds. () ''A John Hawkes Symposium: Design and Debris'' (New York: New Directions Pub. Corp., 1977) ISBN 9780811206716〕 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Michael Pocalyko」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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