By Greg Paeth
Post staff reporter Attorney H. Patrick Weber took the unusual step last
December of calling his friend, Glenn Huber, chairman of Shriners Burns
Hospital in Cincinnati, late on a Friday afternoon.
Weber had some good news he wanted to share - one of his clients wanted to make a donation.
"He asked me if I knew the federal ID number for the hospital because a client wanted to make a donation," Huber said.
"I told him I couldn't remember my phone number let alone the hospital's federal ID number."
Then
Huber dropped the amount - a woman, who asked to remain anonymous - was
leaving $10 million to Shriners Hospital, known nationally for its
treatment of burn victims."He asked if I was sitting down before he
told me the amount," Huber said. "I tell you, I got chills down my
spine just thinking about what $10 million could do for all of the
children at the hospital."
Huber said he has received no explanation about why the woman decided to leave the money to the hospital.
Weber
will be on hand today for a brief ceremony to acknowledge the gift to
the 39-year-old hospital in the Cincinnati neighborhood of Avondale.
"That is an extraordinary gift," said Beth Reiter, a spokeswoman for the Greater Cincinnati Foundation.
Indeed,
it surpasses two other substantial contributions that the Shriners has
received in the past: $8 million from the family of the late Max E.
Krause, and $6.5 million from Nobel Earl Murphy, according to Pat
Harrison, a spokeswoman for the hospital.
Harrison said the gift was not designated for any specific purpose and can be used in any way the hospital chooses.
A
spokeswoman for the Greater Cincinnati Health Council said her agency,
whose members include hospitals in the region, doesn't keep track of
donations to its member institutions.
But Reiter
said the largest single gift that her foundation has received was a
$13.2 million donation from professor Richard and Lucile Durrell in
2000. Durrell taught geology at the University of Cincinnati from 1946
until 1985.
Shriners is one of 22 hospitals in the
Shriners Hospital for Children system, a network offering orthopedic,
spinal cord, and burn-injury care to children. Shriners is supported
entirely by private donations and no payment is ever sought from
families or the government.
In a separate ceremony
today, Randy Dieter of Westwood, former graphics editor of The Kentucky
Post, will be recognized for work he did 37 years ago when he was
working as a photographer in Evansville, Ind.
Dieter
took a photo of a Shriner carrying a crippled girl and her crutches
that has been used by the Shriners throughout the country as an
"editorial without words" about the charitable organization.
The
photo was published in a Sunday edition of the Evansville Courier and
Press, which, like The Post, is owned by Cincinnati-based E.W. Scripps.