APA

Fort Worth Star-Telegram Collection, University of Texas at Arlington Libraries. Mrs. Floy Rose. (1944). Retrieved from https://library.uta.edu/digitalgallery/img/20029563

Chicago/Turabian

Fort Worth Star-Telegram Collection, University of Texas at Arlington Libraries. "Mrs. Floy Rose." UTA Libraries Digital Gallery. 1944. Accessed
April 28, 2024
. https://library.uta.edu/digitalgallery/img/20029563

MLA

Fort Worth Star-Telegram Collection, University of Texas at Arlington Libraries. Mrs. Floy Rose. 1944. UTA Libraries Digital Gallery, https://library.uta.edu/digitalgallery/img/20029563. Accessed
28 Apr 2024
.

Special Collections Reference Information

Original image part of the Fort Worth Star-Telegram Collection, University of Texas at Arlington Libraries. Identifier: AR406-6-322
Identifier: 20029563
Title: Mrs. Floy Rose
Description: Mrs. Floy Rose, nurse, holds a stainless steel needle against a whirring emery wheel. After beveling and pointing it she hands the needle to Mrs. Mildred Sellers, who slips it under a microscope to examine the point for imperfections. Needle sharpening is only one of many precautions taken to see that donating a pint of blood is a painless process. Everyday 1,500 needles, bottles and rubber tubing attachments leave the Armour laboratories for Red Cross donor centers in Fort Worth, Texas, Dallas, Texas, San Antonio, Texas, and New Orleans, Louisiana. Mrs. Rose is wearing her nurses uniform, eyeglasses and a hair-bow.
Date Created: 1944-01-17
Coverage: 1940s
Category: Daily Life, Medicine, Nature, Science and Technology
Subject Term: Rose, Floy (Mrs.), Nurses, Uniforms, Blood donations, Laboratories, Needles
Collection: Fort Worth Star-Telegram Collection
Type: Still Image
Format: JPG
Publisher: University of Texas at Arlington Libraries
Rights Holder: University of Texas at Arlington Libraries, Special Collections
Rights:
License:

Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International (CC BY-NC 4.0) http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ If used, please attribute using one of the citations provided.


Project Series: Through the Lens of the Fort Worth Star-Telegram: A Photographic View of World War II in Fort Worth

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