+ About
+ Service Commitment

If the hospital is unable to satisfy any concern about patient care and safety, the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations may be contacted at 1-800-994-6610 or complaint@jcaho.org.

Medicaid/Medicare recipients: Mountain-Pacific Quality Health Foundation may be contacted at
1-800-497-8232 or
3404 Cooney Dr., Helena, MT 59602



Emma Kathleen

Amanda and Brandon have chosen the name Emma Kathleen for their beautiful new girl born at Community Medical Center

Weight: 6 pounds, 9 ounces
Length: 19 inches
Time:   8:16 a.m.
Date:  Friday, October 23, 2009

Sign my babybook
View my babybook
Email the news
Reminder

Origin of the name Emma

English, Old German - "All embracing."

Friday, October 23, 2009 - a day to remember

The Weather

The sun rose over Missoula at 8:06 a.m. and set at 6:34 p.m.
 Missoula High: 45
 Missoula Low: 29

Population

Missoula: 66,000
U.S. population: 306,520,259

In the financial world

The Dow Jones closed at 10,081.31
Montana's minimum wage was $6.90

Your dollar's worth

Loaf of bread: $2.49
Gallon of milk: $3.85
Gallon of gasoline: $2.60
First Class stamp: $0.44
New home: $201,000.00

Other interesting people
born on this date:

1942 - Michael Crichton - American author whose books translated into some of the biggest movies of all time including "Jurassic Park", "Twister", "Rising Sun" and others.
1906 - Gertrude Ederle - American Olympic gold medalist and the first woman to successfully swim across the English Channel.
1869 - John Heisman - football coach and innovator credited with legalizing the forward pass. The trophy awarded annually the to the best collegiate player is named for him.
1835 - Adlai Ewing Stevenson - Vice President of the United States in the administration of Grover Cleveland.

Other notable events
on this day in history:

1962 - Following the discovery of Soviet nuclear missiles in Cuba, the United States quarantined the Island nation to prevent a buildup of offensive weapons. So began the "Cuban Missile Crisis."
1885 - Bryn Mawr College in Pennsylvania opened its doors becoming the first college in the United States to offer graduate level courses for women.
1855 - Kansas became the only state to have two governments as anti-slavery forces swore in a governor and legislature in competition to the fraudulently elected pro-slavery group.