Wednesday, August 01, 2007

Happy Birthdays

The other Saturday I managed to attend four birthday parties in one day. If that seems a little excessive, I will mention that three of the birthdays were at the same address. It was my nephew's and his aunt's and uncle's birthday, so my brother was having a barbecue. Plenty of sausage in buns there.
By an amazing coincidence, my friend Howard's party was only ten minutes drive away, so as the first party was winding down, I was able to nip over to the beginning of his party, where I stayed until one o' clock.
Boy was I full.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Hi Christopher,

I was wondering if you'd be interested in posting any articles from the Nursezone.com website. There are lots of relevant articles for todays nurse. The great news is that using nursezone content on your site is no cost. We'd just like to have a link back to our site for those of your bloggers interested in finding a community of nurses, CE opportunities, travel nursing and other relevant nurse aids. A partial example of a nursing article is below:

Nursing Schools Lauded for Male Student Efforts

By Susan Kreimer, MS, contributor
Excelsior College in Albany, NewYork, has much to be proud of. It garnered the 2006 Best Nursing School or College for Men in Nursing Award.
Impressed by the caliber of entries, The American Assembly for Men in Nursing (AAMN) also bestowed the award upon the University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing in Philadelphia.
Ben Eithun, president of the Male Association of Nursing at Penn (MAN-UP), recently accepted the honor on behalf of the school at AAMN’s annual conference, held this time in Portland, Oregon.
The award recognizes the co-winners – Penn and Excelsior – for success in recruiting and retaining male nurses, providing them with a nurturing educational setting, and informing faculty, students and the community about men’s ongoing contributions to the profession.
“We received the award from AAMN in recognition of our 25 percent enrollment of men in nursing – 20 percent of whom complete the program – and for creating an environment supportive to men in nursing,” said M. Bridget Nettleton, Ph.D., RN, dean of Excelsior’s School of Nursing.
Nettleton was asked to join AAMN’s board of directors – an honor she gladly accepted. “We are committed to educating competent professional nurses who are well-prepared to enter the nursing workforce, thus responding to our critical nursing shortage,” she said.
Excelsior, formerly known as Regents College, offers associate, bachelor’s and master’s degrees in nursing. It currently has an enrollment of more than 16,000 nursing students……. (more to article)

© 2007. AMN Healthcare, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Let me know what you think.

Tracy (nursezoneportal@earthlink.net)