i
By JOHN HOCHMANN
Nursing, as everyone knows, is a high calling. For industrial nurse Anne
Stolfi it is exactly 847 feet high, the altitude above New York's Wall
Street where she may be summoned to treat workmen who are injured in
the construction of the world's sixth tallest skyscraper, the Chase Manhat
tan Bank Building.
Steel hats and high safety standards keep accidents to a minimum, but
among the 1,700 workmen an occasional cinder in the eye, a scratch, or a
wrenched limb is almost inevitable. Usually the worker is brought down to
the ground-floor dispensary. But if he requires first aid on the spot, nurse
Stolfi, a slim five-footer, dons coveralls and helmet, grabs a medical kit, and
takes an express elevator 60 floors to the top.
Here, walls and windows have not yet been set in place, and the wind
blows furiously, even in summer. The view of New York's sky line is inspir
ing, but the edge of an unfinished floor is no place for anyone sensitive to
heights. Quickly and with a humor that makes her popular on the job, nurse
Stolfi applies a splint or ties a bandage.
That's when she feels she has reached the top of her profession.
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Family Weekly, June S, I960