[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 145 (1999), Part 9] [Extensions of Remarks] [Pages 12561-12562] [From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]A TRIBUTE TO THE LATE DR. STANLEY WISSMAN ______ HON. MARK E. SOUDER of indiana in the house of representatives Thursday, June 10, 1999 Mr. SOUDER. Mr. Speaker, many members of the community in my district were saddened at the recent untimely death of Dr. Stanley Wissman of Fort Wayne. Dr. Wissman made many valuable contributions to the Northeast Indiana medical community and was particularly known for his kindness to his patients and their families. I would like to extend my condolences to his family and to include in the Record a recent editorial from the Fort Wayne Journal Gazette discussing his life and work. [The Journal Gazette, Thursday, May 27, 1999] Wissman Set Examples Both Unique and Universal Death--especially unexpected death--has a perverse ability to highlight a life, to bring its finest qualities to the surface and leave them shining in the memories of friends and loved ones. In so doing, it honors those traits in us all. Stanley Wissman's sudden death is having that affect at Parkview Hospital this week. The beloved neurologist and patient champion was only 52 when he died Monday, and the shock is still rippling across the hospital and the regional medical community. In a time of national anguish about values and character, Wissman demonstrated why people still have hope for our cantankerous species. The resume is only part of the story. Yes, Wissman was an avid medical researcher. Yes, he was a visionary administrator for the hospital's rehabilitation unit. And, yes, he was an enthusiastic educator; he and his wife, Mary Ann, worked together on a program called ``Brain Attack'' to teach medical workers and the public that damage from strokes can be reduced by quick response. But it is Stanley Wissman's easy approachability--his warm humaneness--that his colleagues recall so sadly. Rebutting all the stereotypes of aloof and busy physicians in the era of managed care, he is remembered as a gentleman who found time to really listen to patients--as well as to co-workers on any step of the hospital hierarchy. Being brilliant and accomplished and acclaimed are all quite wonderful--and rare. In the end, however, anyone can be like Stanley Wissman. All it takes is a little kindness. Stanley D. Wissman, M.D., 52, died Monday at Parkview Hospital. Born in Fort Wayne, he was a doctor with Fort Wayne Neurological Center since 1976. He was also a medical director of the rehabilitation unit and chairman of the neurology subcommittee at Parkview Hospital and associate clinical professor of Neurology at Indiana University [[Page 12562]] School of Medicine in Indianapolis. Surviving are his wife, Mary Ann; two daughters, Jennifer Rosenkranz of Reno, Nev., and Alicia Jordan of Nashville, Tenn.; a son, Stephen of Nashville; a stepdaughter, Andrea Tone of Fort Wayne; a stepson, Alex Tone of Fort Wayne; his mother, Ruth L. Wissman of Fort Wayne; two brothers, William W. of Indianapolis and Gary L. of Fort Wayne; a sister, Karen Lewis of Fort Wayne; and a grandchild. Services at 11:30 a.m. Thursday at St. Charles Borromeo Catholic Church, 4916 Trier Road, with calling an hour before services. Calling also from 2 to 8 p.m. Wednesday at D.O. McComb & sons Maplewood Park Funeral Home, 4017 Maplecrest Road. Burial in Catholic Cemetery. Memorials to Bishop Dwenger High School Tuition Assistance or Ryan Kanning Muscular Dystrophy Fund. ____________________