Employee Bulletin Nr. 4, Volume III, published in April of 1964 |
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COLORADO NUHShS ASSOCIATION IV M£T !.'■ C',-::VEHTICH AT l-IKINGS "\ Keynote speaker at the 196h convention of bhe Colorado Nurses Association at the Broadmoor in Colorado Springs on May 11, will be Dr. iisther Lucile Frown. Dr. Brown has gained reknown for her writings in the health field, including "Nursing for the future", "Nursing as a Profession", and "Physicians and Medical Care". Attending the convention as delegates from District 2 will be Mrs. Dorothy Plott, RN, Hear* Nurse on 5 West, and Miss Barbara Cabela, RN, Head Nurse, Pediatrics. CATHOLIC NURSES TO MEET AT COMMUNION BREAKFAST / All Catholic nurses, both registered and licensed practical, are invited to the An- rual Corporate Communion breakfast to be held Kay 16. Mass will begin at 9;00 AM in the Church of the Holy Ghost, followed by breakfast at 10:00 AM in the Central City Room of the Brown Palace Hotel. Guest speaker will be / *ev. Blase Bonpane, M.M. Superior of the rfaryknoll Fathers. Cost of the breakfast is C2.50, including tax and tip. Reservations may be made by calling the following, before Kay 13: Mrs. Helen Mehoney 757-39c*> Miss M-ry Goldcamp 237-0327 Mrs. Margie Vogt 7«1-0U95 _ ( ..TJRSING SERVICE ASSIGNKEKTS BEING MADE Notices of assignments or changes in duty station of Nursing Service personnel are being posted, in preparation for our move into the hospital building. In all cases, such assignments have been made without regard to race, religion, or national origin; they HAVE been made on the basis of merit or fiUiess, the expressed personal desire of the individual, and the overall needs of the hospital. If you did not receive your preference, please give your assignment a fair chance, i until the possible confusion of moving settles down - and then discuss your wishes with your supervisor. The Hospital is confident, though, that you will do your best whereever you are. O&TTW, OU+ChfJo^V Father William Sievers M A .u., Y May is a month of warmth and color. Flowers bloom all around us. The air is huavy with their fragrance, carried on the soft, warm breezes. It is r.ost appropriate that this month be dedicated to Mary, the perfect flower of our humanity, whose help and assistance is carried tc us, daily, by the warmth of her motherly love. And even more appropriate that in this month dedicated to our Heavenly Mother we set aside one day of special honor to that very, very special person in our lives, our earthly mother. The very flowers themselves speak to us, in a sense, of motherhood. These little plants have stood beneath the sunshine and the storms, often bent but never broken, and have been strengthened by both, thus becoming able to bloom forth, under the warmth of summer breeze, that glory and beauty they had hidden to long within themselves. And so it is with notherhocd. It must for a long period of time stand firm in both easy times and hard times; growing stronger with both; revealing its true beauty only under the warm, appreciative, loving gaze of a child who is grateful for all she's done. Then her joy and the true worth of motherhood is complete. let us each, then, though presumably not for the first time, allow motherhood to blossom. That of our Heavenly Mother who will not fail to open her heart and shower abundant blessings upon her loving and appreciative children. And that of our own earthly mother, whether she still be with us or already has gained her heavenly home, whose heart will expand in even greater love when warmed by the loving gratitude of her children, for whom she has weathered many a storm.
Object Description
Rating | |
Title | Employee Bulletin Nr. 4, Volume III, published in April of 1964 |
Subject 1 | Saint Joseph Hospital (Denver, CO) -- history |
Subject 2 | Sisters of Charity of Leavensworth (Kansas) |
Subject 3 | Periodicals -- Newsletters |
Description | Employee Bulletin Nr. 4, Volume III, published in April of 1964 |
Publisher | Saint Joseph Hospital |
Date Original | 1964-04 |
Date Digital | 2019-08-01 |
Type | Printout on plain pink paper |
Format | 8 1/2" x 11" |
Rights | In Copyright - Non-Commercial Use only (IC-NC) |
Description
Title | Employee Bulletin Nr. 4, Volume III, published in April of 1964 |
Subject 1 | Saint Joseph Hospital (Denver, CO) -- history |
Subject 2 | Sisters of Charity of Leavensworth (Kansas) |
Subject 3 | Periodicals -- Newsletters |
Description | Page 3 of Employee Bulletin Nr. 4, Volume III, published in April of 1964 |
Publisher | Saint Joseph Hospital |
Date Original | 1964-04 |
Date Digital | 2019-08-01 |
Type | Printout on plain pink paper |
Format | 8 1/2" x 11" |
Rights | In Copyright - Non-Commercial Use only (IC-NC) |
Transcript | COLORADO NUHShS ASSOCIATION IV M£T !.'■ C',-::VEHTICH AT l-IKINGS "\ Keynote speaker at the 196h convention of bhe Colorado Nurses Association at the Broadmoor in Colorado Springs on May 11, will be Dr. iisther Lucile Frown. Dr. Brown has gained reknown for her writings in the health field, including "Nursing for the future", "Nursing as a Profession", and "Physicians and Medical Care". Attending the convention as delegates from District 2 will be Mrs. Dorothy Plott, RN, Hear* Nurse on 5 West, and Miss Barbara Cabela, RN, Head Nurse, Pediatrics. CATHOLIC NURSES TO MEET AT COMMUNION BREAKFAST / All Catholic nurses, both registered and licensed practical, are invited to the An- rual Corporate Communion breakfast to be held Kay 16. Mass will begin at 9;00 AM in the Church of the Holy Ghost, followed by breakfast at 10:00 AM in the Central City Room of the Brown Palace Hotel. Guest speaker will be / *ev. Blase Bonpane, M.M. Superior of the rfaryknoll Fathers. Cost of the breakfast is C2.50, including tax and tip. Reservations may be made by calling the following, before Kay 13: Mrs. Helen Mehoney 757-39c*> Miss M-ry Goldcamp 237-0327 Mrs. Margie Vogt 7«1-0U95 _ ( ..TJRSING SERVICE ASSIGNKEKTS BEING MADE Notices of assignments or changes in duty station of Nursing Service personnel are being posted, in preparation for our move into the hospital building. In all cases, such assignments have been made without regard to race, religion, or national origin; they HAVE been made on the basis of merit or fiUiess, the expressed personal desire of the individual, and the overall needs of the hospital. If you did not receive your preference, please give your assignment a fair chance, i until the possible confusion of moving settles down - and then discuss your wishes with your supervisor. The Hospital is confident, though, that you will do your best whereever you are. O&TTW, OU+ChfJo^V Father William Sievers M A .u., Y May is a month of warmth and color. Flowers bloom all around us. The air is huavy with their fragrance, carried on the soft, warm breezes. It is r.ost appropriate that this month be dedicated to Mary, the perfect flower of our humanity, whose help and assistance is carried tc us, daily, by the warmth of her motherly love. And even more appropriate that in this month dedicated to our Heavenly Mother we set aside one day of special honor to that very, very special person in our lives, our earthly mother. The very flowers themselves speak to us, in a sense, of motherhood. These little plants have stood beneath the sunshine and the storms, often bent but never broken, and have been strengthened by both, thus becoming able to bloom forth, under the warmth of summer breeze, that glory and beauty they had hidden to long within themselves. And so it is with notherhocd. It must for a long period of time stand firm in both easy times and hard times; growing stronger with both; revealing its true beauty only under the warm, appreciative, loving gaze of a child who is grateful for all she's done. Then her joy and the true worth of motherhood is complete. let us each, then, though presumably not for the first time, allow motherhood to blossom. That of our Heavenly Mother who will not fail to open her heart and shower abundant blessings upon her loving and appreciative children. And that of our own earthly mother, whether she still be with us or already has gained her heavenly home, whose heart will expand in even greater love when warmed by the loving gratitude of her children, for whom she has weathered many a storm. |
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