When I  first approached Eva Mikelsons for an interview, the  first thing she said was "tell them 
            
 how much I hated it.". However, throughout the interview Eva spoke animatedly and even remembered 
            
 anecdotes with fondness. Perhaps it is because of her later experiences that she remembers her entire 
            
 	Eva was born in Latvia but shortly after her birth, her family was evacuated to Australia at the 
            
 beginning of WWII. Her family, she says, "treated her the same way as [her] brother" "the only reason 
            
 he got special treatment was because he had polio". Her mother and father both worked – a rarity in 
            
 postwar Australia – and she attended an all girls school. When questioned, Eva says that she chose 
            
 nursing because "I was sick of Uni, sick of being dependant on my family and I wanted to move out. 
            
 But I didn't have the money so I went into nursing. In those days, we got room and board as well as a 
            
 small wage." In 1963, Eva says that nurses were treated as little more than glorified maids. But unlike 
            
 the cleaners she compares herself to, the nurses did not have a union. All the young nurses were "like a 
            
 family, like sisters". They worked 6 days a week for 12 hours a shift which left little time for socializing. 
            
 They were also united in their hatred for the Ward Sister "She was the RN, she gave us the worst 
            
 schedules. She would do it to ruin our plans. Well, we did gang up on her so I suppose she gave us 
            
 terrible schedules to get back at us." As for her family, they were mortified when she quit university to 
            
 study nursing. "My family was furious. It was beneath us, what did nurses do anyway? They carried 
            
 around bedpans. They were very embarrassed." It was years later when nursing became more 
            
 acceptable that she was allowed into her mother's sorority that her family finally calmed down. 
            
 Sororities and Fraternities were and still are a large part of the Latvian tradition, to be denied en...