1. E. Gerjuoy, “On the Angular Distribution in the Reaction F19(p,α),” The Physical Review 58 (1940), 503–505.
2. E. Gerjuoy, “Interference in the Zeeman Effect of Forbidden Lines,” Phys. Rev. 60 (1941), 233–240.
3. Max Born, My Life: Recollections of a Nobel Laureate (New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1978), p. 229.
4. Leonard I. Schiff, Quantum Mechanics (New York, Toronto, London: McGraw-Hill, 1949). Prior to the war, at least four others were published: Arthur Edward Ruark and Harold Clayton Urey, Atoms, Molecules and Quanta (New York and London: McGraw Hill, 1930); Linus Pauling and Samuel Goudsmit, The Structure of Line Spectra (New York and London: McGraw Hill, 1930); Linus Pauling and E. Bright Wilson, Introduction to Quantum Mechanics With Applications to Chemistry (New York and London: McGraw Hill, 1935); and Edwin C. Kemble, The Fundamental Principles of Quantum Mechanics (New York and London: McGraw Hill, 1937).
5. Gerjuoy, “Angular Distribution” (ref. 1); Gerjuoy, “Interference” (ref. 2); Edward Gerjuoy and Julian Schwinger, “On Tensor Forces and the Theory of Light Nuclei,” Phys. Rev. 61 (1942), 138–146.