American Medical Association, Council on Occupational Health, Occupational Health Services for Women Employees, 1961.
2.
American Woman—The Changing Image, Ed. by CassaraBeverly Benner, Beacon Press, Boston, 1962.
3.
FriedenBetty, The Feminine Mystique, Norton, New York, 1963.
4.
GinzbergEli, Human Resources; The Wealth of a Nation. Simon and Shuster, New York, 1958.
5.
GoldbergDorothy, The Creative Woman, Robert B. Luce, Inc.1963.
6.
GrahamL.“Who's In Charge Here? Not Women!”New York Times Magazine, September 2, 1962, p. 8.
7.
HinkleLaurence E.Jr. M.D., RedmontRuthPlummerNorman M.D., and WolffHarold G. M.D., “An Examination of the Relation Between Symptoms, Disability, and Serious Illness in Two Homogenous Groups of Men and Women.”American Journal of Public Health, Vol. 50, No. 9, September 1960, p. 1327–30.
8.
NadelhofferLuella E. M.D., “Gynecological Problems—Their Effect on Working Women.”American Journal of Public Health, Vol. 50, No. 9, September 1960, p. 1337–41.
9.
PetersonEsther, “The Myth and the Realty,”Realm, October 1963, p. 28–30 (No longer in publication.)
10.
SaundersMarion K.“The Case of the Vanishing Spinster,”New York Times Magazine, September 22, 1963, p. 34.
11.
Time Magazine, November 22, 1963. p. 56.
12.
U. S. Department of Health Education and Welfare, Statistics from the U. S. National Health Survey, Currently Employed Persons—Illness and Work Loss Days, Series C. No. 4. 1960.
13.
Disability Days, United States. Series B. No. 35, 1960.
14.
United States Commission on the Status of Women, American Women, Report of the Commission. 1963.