xt779c6s009z https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt779c6s009z/data/mets.xml The Frontier Nursing Service, Inc. 1969 bulletins  English The Frontier Nursing Service, Inc. Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. Frontier Nursing Service Quarterly Bulletins Frontier Nursing Service Quarterly Bulletin, Vol. 44, No. 4, Spring 1969 text Frontier Nursing Service Quarterly Bulletin, Vol. 44, No. 4, Spring 1969 1969 2014 true xt779c6s009z section xt779c6s009z ‘ ""“ . ’ r ··~~°.,  * 5 ` ‘@»—V " <— M ‘
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l OUR GREATEST NEED-A NEW FACILITY

  I
16 FR0NT1ER NURSING smiavxcm  
SCALE OF GIVING REQUIRED I
FOR $2,800,000 0
(Estimated by Fund Raising Counsel)  
N0 of Gifts Size of Gifts Totaling  
1 $500,000 $ 500,000 1
1 300,000 300,000
2 250,000 500,000
3 150,000 450,000
3 100,000 300,000
5 50,000 250,000
5 25,000 125,000 ·
8 10,000 80,000    
11 5,000 55,000  
40 1,000 40,000  0 0
Hundreds Under 1,000 200,000 `
Total $2,800,000  ·

  I
 ` QUARTERLY BULLE·1·1N 17
` PLEDGES RECEIVED
, (November 1967 - April 1969)
N 0 of Gifts Size of Gifts Totaling
0  0 $ 500,000 Needed
Q 0 300,000 Needed
  1 250,000 $ 250,000
1 200,000 200,000
2 150,000 300,000
2 100,000 200,000
1 75,000 75,000
3 50,000 150,000
3 35,000 105,000
U 8 25,000 200,000
3 20,000 60,000
; A 9 15,000 135,000
E 1 18 10,000 180,000
  36 5,000 - 9,999 196,600
 3 0 150 1,000 - 4,999 208,650
r 1324 Under 1,000 183,610
1 Q $2,443,860

 is Fnomwiniz Nnnsmo smnvxcn  
"PU'1"1‘ING DAD BACK ON THE THRONE . . ."  
A kind friend has given us a tear sheet from a magazine com- '
pletely unknown to us, except for its title, We, the Women. The p
article which appears on the sheet given us makes us feel that this ,
is a very fine magazine and we wish it well. We quote in part: ‘
"Homes would be happier, children would be better behaved —
and easier to live with, and fewer wives would become widows in p
their fifties or sixties, if we put Dad back at the head of the house- A,
hold—where he belongs. CK
"If Dad is head man and has the final say on important de-
cisions, isn’t a family less likely to have the ‘gimmes’ that force
Dad into debt to satisfy?
"And since women are outliving men, isn’t that an indication
that families should make a special effort to pamper Dad a bit V
more—by seeing that his rest comes before anything else, that he l
may need a vacation more than the kids, and that if there is an i
able-bodied boy in the family, Dad shouldn’t be pushing the lawn `
mower.
"Women were once smart enough to put enough value on
their husband’s health and happiness to see that family life was _
tailored to a man’s needs; but somehow, Dad got dethroned. ,
"Why not try putting Dad back as the head of the family,
and then see if the whole family isn’t better off ?" ·
The author’s name isn’t given. Obviously, it’s a woman—a ,_
woman with unusual perceptive powers and the proponent of a [7
cause which we are afraid is already and irretrievably lost! l l
—The Colomlal Crier, Sept.-Oct., 1966 li
Colonial Hospital Supply Company
Chicago, Illinois  ~

  . QUARTERLY BULLETIN is
q ‘ URGENT NEEDS
i Last year we said that the Hospital was bursting at the
V seams! It was, but we have stretched those seams a little wider!
The increased patient load, and the paper work necessitated by
, our participating in Medicare and Medicaid, have made it impera-
A tive that we change our system of accounting, which has required
A a business manager and more clerks. At the moment, the Medical
Director shares her office with the lab, with only a curtain to pro-
vide a semblance of privacy for her and her patients. Further-
P more, three clerks have their desks in the crowded and noisy
i waiting room, which is in no way conducive to efficient work. Our
V business manager has worked on the problem and found that, by
rearranging the use of rooms, he can give Dr. Wiss a small, pri-
vate office and can move the clerks out of the waiting room, where
they can work more efiicientlyg and the patients can then have
all of their waiting room, which they badly n