BrintonCrane: The Anatomy of Revolution. New York: Vintage Books, Random House, Inc. and Alfred A. Knopf, Inc., 1965.
2.
Ibid., p. 86.
3.
BennettLelandR.: This I Believe — That Nurses May Become Extinct. Nursing Outlook18:28–32 (Jan.) 1970.
4.
WollowickAnnette: Will the Nursing Profession Become Extinct?Nursing Forum9:408–13 (No. 4) 1970.
5.
Idea suggested in letter to writer from EllaE.McNeilR.N., Ann Arbor, Michigan, March 31, 1972. See DockLavinaL.StewartIsabelM.: Short History of Nursing. New York: G. P. Putnam and Sons, 1938.
6.
Legal Responsibilities and Limitations of Nurses and Lay Personnel. Industrial Nursing3:6–7 (Nov.) 1943.
7.
SappingtonC.O.: Responsibility and Privilege. Industrial Nursing3:41–42 (Feb.) 1944.
8.
SchramC.F.N.: Letter to Editor. Industrial Nursing3:18 (Aug.) 1944.
9.
WilliamsJesseC.: In-Plant Training and Education — of the Nurse. Industrial Nursing3:37–39 (Nov.) 1944.
10.
StralkoVictoriaC.: The Opportunity Offered to the Industrial Nurse. Industrial Nursing4:35–38 (Jan.) 1945.
11.
Williams, loc. cit.
12.
McGrathBethel: In a General Way. Industrial Nursing4:44–46 (Feb.) 1945.
13.
Industrial Nurses and Wage Law. Industrial Nursing3:14,36 (Nov.) 1944.
DitchfieldAldaL.: Occupational Health in the Nursing Curriculum. Nursing Outlook4:622–624 (Nov.) 1956.
24.
Brinton, op. cit., p. 47.
25.
RogersMarthaE.: Educational Revolution in Nursing. New York: The Macmillan Company, 1961.
26.
Facts About Nursing: A Statistical Summary. 1970–71 edition. New York: American Nurses' Association, 1972, p. 95.
27.
Facts About Nursing: A Statistical Summary. 1954 edition. New York: American Nurses' Association, 1955, p. 68.
28.
MarcusKey M.: The Occupational Safety and Health Act and The Occupational Health Nurse. Occupational Health Nursing19:7–11 (Aug.) 1971.
29.
HornungGertrudeJ.: The Nursing Diagnosis — An Exercise in Judgment. Nursing Outlook4:29–30 (Jan.) 1956.
30.
The Legal Scope of Industrial Nursing Practice. Committee on Occupational Health, American Medical Association. Journal of the American Medical Association169:1072–75 (Mar. 7) 1959.
31.
A First in Houston. American Association of Industrial Nurses Journal16:22–23 (Dec.) 1968.
32.
HallahanJohnD.: The Industrial Nurse as a Medical Evaluator. American Association of Industrial Nurses Journal16:20–21 (Aug.) 1968.
33.
Letter to Editor. American Association of Industrial Nurses Journal16:36 (Sept.) 1968.
34.
FordLorettaC.: Nursing — Evolution or Revolution?The Canadian Nurse67:32–37 (Jan.) 1971.
35.
Ibid.
36.
WilsonRobertN.: The Sociology of Health: An Introduction. New York: Random House, 1970, p. 39.
37.
Ibid. p. 44.
38.
BlockDuaneL.: Current Trends in Occupational Health Nursing. Occupational Health Nursing19:7–10 (June) 1971.
39.
CipollaJosephineA.CollingsGilbeartH.Jr.: Nurse Clinicians in Industry. American Journal of Nursing71:1530–1534 (Aug.) 1971.
40.
FeltonJeanS.: Professional Relations in an Industrial Health Service with Reference to Industrial Nursing. Industrial Nursing7:18 (May) 1948.
A Nurse is a Nurse — or Is She?Nursing Outlook20:21 (Jan.) 1972.
47.
ShakespeareWilliam: Hamlet, Act III, Scene 2.
48.
Brinton, op. cit., p. 203.
49.
Napoleon I (Bonaparte) quoted in BradleyJohnP.DanielsLeoF.JonesThomasG.: Compilers, The International Dictionary of Thoughts. Chicago: J.G. Ferguson Publishing Co., 1969, p. 652.
50.
JourardSidney: The Transparent Self. Princeton: Van Nostrand Co., 1964, p. 137.
51.
BrzezinskiZbigniew: “America in the Technetronic Age” in BiermanA.K.GouldJamesA.: eds. Philosophy for a New Generation. New York: The Macmillan Company, 1970, pp. 389–395.
52.
RomanoJohnM.D. quoted in SomersAnneR.: Health Care in Transition: Directions for the Future. Chicago: Hospital Research and Education Trust, 1971, p. viii.