Abstract

TO those who have been associated with Claribel Augusta Wheeler, it seems eminently fitting that she should be occupying the important post of executive secretary to the National League of Nursing Education. One needs only to look back to the years between 1916 and 1932-first in the state of Ohio, then in Missouri-to be conscious of her ever-guiding hand as it rested upon the welfare of nurses and upon nursing education in general. Some one aptly said that during the seven years while she was principal of Mount Sinai Hospital School of Nursing in Cleveland, there was no local or state committee pertaining to the activity of nursing in which she did not sit, nor one to which she did not give her best thought and untiring interest. During this time, she served as president of the Cleveland League of Nursing Education, of the Ohio League of Nursing Education, of the Ohio State Nurses' Associa-

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