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         Women In Military:     more books (100)
  1. WOMEN IN THE MILITARY; AN UNFINISHED REVOLUTION by HOLM MAJ.GEN. JEANNE, 1983
  2. Forum on the health of women in the military by Merrily Poth, 1996
  3. Comparison of metabolic responses of United States Military Academy men and women in military load bearing by Robert Stauffer, 1985
  4. Women in the Military by Sandra Carson Stanley, 1993
  5. Women in the military: An annotated bibliography by Edna J Hunter, 1978
  6. WOMEN IN THE MILITARY: AN UNFINISHED REVOLUTION. by Jeanne. Holm, 0000
  7. Women in the military (Editorial research reports) by Marc Leepson, 1981
  8. Women in the military (DEOMI special topics pamphlet) by Pamela Prewitt, 1995
  9. Women in the military deployment in the Persian Gulf War : report to the Secretary of Defense (SuDoc GA 1.13:NSIAD-93-93) by U.S. General Accounting Office, 1993
  10. Finding my Catholic faith: Questions I ask myself; for the men and the women in the military service of the United States of America by Jude R Senieur, 1985
  11. Women in the Military : An Unfinished Revolution by Jeanne Holm, 1992
  12. The study of women in the military as a contemporary social problem by M. C Devilbiss, 1980
  13. WOMEN IN THE MILITARY: FLIRTING WITH DISASTER. by Brian. Mitchell, 0000
  14. Commemorative coin program Women in Military Service for America Memorial Foundation, Inc (SuDoc GA 1.13:AIMD-98-38 R) by U.S. General Accounting Office, 1997

101. Women Were Vital To Military Success In War
Seattle PI Plus Magazine article.
http://www.seattle-pi.com/awards/witnesstowar/womenatwar.html
CLASSIFIEDS HOME DELIVERY MONEY TRAFFIC ... WEATHER IN THIS SECTION Introduction A personal quest No place for women Innocent illusions ... NEIGHBORS Sort: date rank Query Help
Browse by date

Home Delivery See the P-I's front page
Thursday, September 24, 1998 Women were vital to military success in war By CAROL SMITH
SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER REPORTER A small loophole in Navy regulations changed the course of history for American women. "Is there any regulation which specifies that a Navy yeoman be a man?" Secretary of the Navy Josephus Daniels asked in 1917. With that question, he solved an emerging manpower crisis as America readied itself for war, and he also made military history, said Lettie Gavin, Seattle author of "American Women in World War I: They Also Served," (University Press of Colorado, 295 pages, $29.95). Gavin, a retired former editor for the Seattle Post-Intelligencer, spent several years racing to track down stories of WWI women before they all passed away. Many of those stories are captured in her book, which is going into its third printing. The women were critical to the success of the military's operation in Europe.

102. Women Fly Military Aviators
By 1983, a mere 6 years later, women military pilots were flying reconnaissance and refueling missions, served as test pilots, were carrier qualified and were
http://www.easycart.net/WomenFlyInc./Military_Aviators.html
What's New Aviation Pioneers Aviation Adventurers Military Aviators ...
Home
Click on picture to view full-size image The Right Stuff 1973 marked the year that the armed forces began earnestly recruiting women for their new all-volunteer army, but it wasn't until 1976 that women were allowed to begin pilot training. By 1983, a mere 6 years later, women military pilots were flying reconnaissance and refueling missions, served as test pilots, were carrier qualified and were even instructor pilots. Despite the ban on women serving in combat, which was not lifted until 1993, the five women pictured in this design, Kim Corcoran, Karen Jeglum Pettyjohn, Katie Creveling, Lynn South Sherlock and Carol Timmons, were flying T-38's as instructors and student pilots. Most of these women are still on active duty or serving in the Reserves while raising families and pursuing careers with the major airlines.
Design prints on white, black or khaki 100% cotton shirts. Price Shirt Style Unisex Short Sleeve Ladies Short Sleeve Kids Short Sleeve Color White Black Khaki (Unisex sizes only) Size Small Medium Large X-Large (Unisex Style only!)

103. Japans Comfort Women: The Military And Involuntary Prostitution During War And O
Japans Comfort women The military and Involuntary Prostitution During War and Occupation (Asias Transformations). Japans Comfort
http://www.historyofmilitary.com/Japans_Comfort_Women_The_Military_and_Involunta
Japans Comfort Women: The Military and Involuntary Prostitution During War and Occupation (Asias Transformations)
Japans Comfort Women: The Military and Involuntary Prostitution During War and Occupation (Asias Transformations)

by Authors: Yuki Tanaka
Released: 01 January, 2002
ISBN: 0415194016
Paperback
Sales Rank:
List price:
Our price: Book > Japans Comfort Women: The Military and Involuntary Prostitution During War and Occupation (Asias Transformations) > Customer Reviews: Average Customer Rating:
Japans Comfort Women: The Military and Involuntary Prostitution During War and Occupation (Asias Transformations) > Customer Review #1: Already Published

This book was already published in December last year, under the new title "Comfort Women: Sexual slavery and prostitution during World War II and the US Occupation."
The book is available both in hardcover and paperback.

104. The HSUS Offers Tips For Military Personnel On Temporary Pet Care
Press release with ideas, suggestions, and related information for those men or women facing deployment and in need of temporary care for their pets.
http://www.hsus.org/ace/16337
About Us Field Projects How You Can Help Publications ... The HSUS Offers Tips for Military Personnel on Temporary Pet Care The HSUS Offers Tips for Military Personnel on Temporary Pet Care February 5, 2003
The HSUS offers the following tips for keeping companion animals in the family: The HSUS has over seven million members and constituents. With active programs in companion animals, wildlife, animals in research and farm animals and sustainable agriculture, The HSUS works to protect all animals through legislation, litigation, investigation, education, advocacy and field work. Through its Pets for Life campaign, The HSUS seeks to keep people and their pets together.
Belinda Mager

Military Personnel: Making Arrangements for Your Pets
Checklist for the Temporary Care of Pets of Military Personnel Foster Care Agreement Between Pet Owner and Friend ... Privacy Statement

105. Women's Enews: Military Women Prevented From Having Abortions Overseas
email thisSend or printable versionPrint this page. military women Prevented from Having Abortions Overseas. July 30, 2003 By Jodi Enda, women s Enews. Rep.
http://www.now.org/eNews/july2003/073003military.html
@import url(/css/default.css); /*IE and NN6x styles*/ What's New Press Room NOW Times NOW PACs ... Search Tips Send or Print this page Military Women Prevented from Having Abortions Overseas July 30, 2003 By Jodi Enda, Women's Enews Rep. Loretta Sanchez grew more and more incensed as she read aloud from a letter sent to her by a woman serving in the U.S. Army. The soldier wrote that her birth-control failed her and she became pregnant. To preserve her military career, she decided to have an abortion. But she was stationed in Germany. And under a law passed by Congress in 1996 and reaffirmed recently, abortions cannot be performed at military hospitals, even at the expense of the patient. So, the soldier wrote, she had to take vacation time, fly back to the United States and have an abortion there. She was out $1,100, and returned to work angry at the country she was fighting to protect. "I can only remember thinking at the time how unfair it was that I had to resort to these drastic measures," the soldier wrote in September 2001. "Had I been in the states, it would have been no issue. I remember being resentful of my fellow male comrades, who are able to have vasectomies at the cost of the military in Germany. And I had to use my leave time and own funds to fly back to the U.S. for what is also a reproductive choice." Sanchez, a member of the House Armed Services Committee, said she has received a number of similar letters. "A lot of women write to me and they tell me about these humiliating things they have to deal with" because of the Pentagon's ban on abortions, she said during a recent interview in her Capitol Hill office.

106. ROCKY Shoes And Boots, Inc. - Makers Of Legendary Outdoor Gear Since 1932.
Designs, develops, manufactures and markets quality men's and women's footwear, primarily rugged outdoor footwear, nonmilitary occupational footwear and handsewn casual footwear. (Nasdaq RCKY).
http://www.rockyboots.com/

107. Women's Enews: Military Women Prevented From Having Abortions Overseas
military women Prevented from Having Abortions Overseas. July 30, 2003 By Jodi Enda, women s Enews. Rep. Loretta Sanchez grew more
http://www.now.org/eNews/july2003/073003military.html?printable

108. Our Military Women
Dedicated to women who served bravely in the United States military.
http://home.stny.rr.com/jskelly/women.htm

109. Women In World War One
In 1901 and 1908 the establishment of the Army and Navy Nurse Corps opened the door for women in the military. These were the first women in the U.S to be admitted to some military rank and status.
http://userpages.aug.com/captbarb/femvets4.html
WWI
Thirty Thousand Women Were There
In 1901 and 1908 the establishment of the Army and Navy Nurse Corps opened the door for women in the military but ever so slightly. It wasn't until the United States got involved in World War One that some parts of the government got serious about using woman power. As the Army stumbled around bureaucratic red tape trying to figure out how to enlist women the Navy simply ignored the War Department dissenters and quickly recruited women. Nearly 13,000 women enlisted in the Navy and the Marine Corps on the same status as men and wore a uniform blouse with insignia. The Navy's policy was extended to the Coast Guard, but personnel records from World War I contain scarcely any references to the Coast Guard Yeomanettes. A handful of them apparently were employed at the diminutive Coast Guard headquarters building in Washington. Nineteen-year-old twin sisters Genevieve and Lucille Baker transferred from the Naval Coastal Defense Reserve to become the first uniformed women in the Coast Guard. With the war's end the Coast Guard Yeomanettes, along with their Navy and Marine Corps counterparts, were mustered out of the service.
These were the first women in the U.S to be admitted to some military rank and status.

110. Women Against Military Servic At The Initiative Of Colombian Women For Peace  O
women against military service at the Initiative of Colombian women for Peace OBLIGATORY military SERVICE FOR women MAKES THEM INTO AN ARMED ACTOR.
http://www.refusingtokill.net/Colombia/womenagainstmilitaryservicat.htm
Women against military service
at the Initiative of Colombian Women for Peace
OBLIGATORY MILITARY SERVICE FOR WOMEN MAKES THEM INTO AN ARMED ACTOR The proposed law that modifies the obligatory military service and that looks to incorporate women into the ranks of the army - when the circumstances of the country demand it - presented by the ministry of defense, harms the conscientious objection of women, involves them directly in armed conflict, and makes them into military targets. The Initiative of Colombian Women for Peace, expresses its disagreement with and rejection of this initiative that was presented by the minister of defense Martha Lucia Ramirez on April 24 to the Congress. This project is in violation of the liberties and international norms in the defense of peace, while it intends to require women to be part of an armed actor, through the figure of social service. The state cannot under any reason much less that of equality and equity involve the civil population in armed conflict since this leads to more victims and deaths and we support the conscientious objection of all those young people, men and women, who decide not to lend military service nor to go to war. We insist that we women do not give birth to children for war but for peace and we refuse to be recruited for war and to be actors of the conflict.

111. Soviet Women In Combat In World War II - K.J. Cottam
Introduces four books consisting of memoirs and biographies of Soviet military women, partisans and spies of World War II. Also has links to more sites related to women in the military
http://webhome.idirect.com/~kjcottam/welcome.htm
SOVIET WOMEN IN COMBAT IN WORLD WAR II Author/Translator Kazimiera J. (Jean) Cottam, PhD
"The genuine value of these books and the interest they are bound to generate among specialists and general readers alike argue for ... wider dissemination. The books should be made available to the wider audience they so richly deserve."

David M. Glantz, Editor
The Journal of Slavic
Military Studies,
March '99. PUBLISHER
New Military Publishing
83-21 Midland Crescent
Nepean, ON K2H 8P6
CANADA
Tel.:
Fax: Toll-free: FORMER DISTRIBUTOR
HUSHION HOUSE PUBLISHING LTD. 36 Northline Road Toronto, ON M4B 3E2 Fax: 800-387-0141 ON/PQ 800-387-0172 Other Prov. Available from Amazon.com ChaptersGlobe.com , Chapters, bookstores and museums. Listed on: Chapters.ca. FURTHER INFORMATION: Women in War and Resistance: Selected Biographies Consists of 100 original mini-biographies; xxviii, 451pp. Photos $34.95 CAN / $24.95 US Paper ISBN 0-9682702-2-0, 1998

112. The Feminist Road To Abu Ghraib By Angela Fiori
The amenability of women to military careers was always a myth. There s now as much sex occurring on Navy ships as in the back seats of cars.
http://www.lewrockwell.com/orig/fiori4.html

Home
About Columnists Blog ... Donate
The Feminist Road to Abu Ghraib
by Angela Fiori
by Angela Fiori
Madeline Albright, on Fox News May 7, stated that she was shocked and sickened by the U.S.-sponsored S&M show at Abu Ghraib prison. This is the same Madeline Albright who said that she thought it was "worth the price" to starve (at the time) an estimated half a million Iraqi children with U.N. sanctions. The Abu Ghraib scandal, more than any U.S. military scandal in recent memory, has exposed the utter depravity of allowing women to enter the armed services. As pictures of the tomboyish U.S. Pfc. Lynndie England made their way around the world last week, it turns out contrary to some reports that labeled her a guard at the prison, England was actually an inmate-processing clerk. In other words, the multiple photos of her dragging a man across the floor on a leash, giving the thumbs up over a pile of nude Iraqi men, and standing in front of hooded men pretending to fire rifle shots at their penises, these photos were all taken while she was visiting her boyfriend, Cpl. Charles Graner, while he was in charge of prisoners at Abu Ghraib. took the photos (note feminist Laura Berman's attempt to blame the male Graner for this), participated in torturing the hooded Iraqi seen in one photo standing on a box with wires coming from his hands, wrote "rapeist" on another prisoner's leg, and best yet, posed for a photo with a corpse, a man who had been beaten to death at the prison. While Harman's parents are claiming she took the photos to document the abuse, other evidence indicates she was an enthusiastic participant, often running and jumping on piles of stacked, nude Iraqi men to crush and hurt them.

113. H-Minerva Discussion Network
Information on the study of women and war and women in the military, worldwide and in all historical areas. Affiliated with the Minerva Center, a nonprofit educational foundation.
http://www.h-net.org/~minerva/
home news about search ...
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    Welcome to H-Minerva Minerva Center , a non-profit educational foundation. Tell me more about H-Minerva Re: Commentary: Reagan State Funeral STEAMGENE@aol.com [mailto:STEAMGENE@aol.com] Re: Commentary: Reagan State Funeral Pat (O'Brien) Holcombe [mailto:MobileBay@webtv.net] Short break from List.... J. Biddle jbiddle2@cox.net Re: Commentary: Reagan State Funeral Roger Helbig [mailto:rhelbig@california.com] Re: Commentary: Reagan State Funeral Georgia Sadler [mailto:gcsadler@comcast.net] Re: Commentary: Reagan State Funeral gwen cody [mailto:gcody2001@yahoo.com] Re: Former Iraq Prison Chief Rebels at "Scapegoat" Role Paula Lieberman [mailto:paal@gis.net]
    Reviewer: Noonie Fortin
    Author: Susan Hagen and Mary Carouba
    Title: Women at Ground Zero: Stories of Courage and Compassion Reviewer: Sarah Eppler Janda
    Author: Tammy M. Proctor
    Title: Female Intelligence: Women and Espionage in the First World War Reviewer: Francine D'Amico
    Author: Joshua S. Goldstein
    Title: War and Gender: How Gender Shapes the War System and Vice Versa
    Social Sciences Online Send comments and questions to H-Minerva Editors
  • 114. The Women's Army Corps
    amount of space to the color of WAAC underwear and the dating question, the press was usually sympathetic to the adjustments made by women to military life and
    http://www.army.mil/cmh-pg/brochures/wac/wac.htm
    THE WOMEN'S ARMY CORPS: A COMMEMORATION OF WORLD WAR II SERVICE By Judith A. Bellafaire CMH Publication 72-15 Introduction World War II was the largest and most violent armed conflict in the history of mankind. However, the half century that now separates us from that conflict has exacted its toll on our collective knowledge. While World War II continues to absorb the interest of military scholars and historians, as well as its veterans, a generation of Americans has grown to maturity largely unaware of the political, social, and military implications of a war that, more than any other, united us as a people with a common purpose. Highly relevant today, World War II has much to teach us, not only about the profession of arms, but also about military preparedness, global strategy, and combined operations in the coalition war against fascism. During the next several years, the U.S. Army will participate in the nation's 50th anniversary commemoration of World War II. The commemoration will include the publication of various materials to help educate Americans about that war. The works produced will provide great opportunities to learn about and renew pride in an Army that fought so magnificently in what has been called "the mighty endeavor." World War II was waged on land, on sea, and in the air over several diverse theaters of operation for approximately six years. The following essay on the critical support role of the Women's Army Corps supplements a series of studies on the Army's campaigns of that war.

    115. U.S. Navy Women In Vietnam
    A list of books and public documents.
    http://metalab.unc.edu/pub/academic/history/marshall/military/vietnam/navy_bibli
    NAVY WOMEN Books and Public Documents Freedman, Dan, ed. [Nurses in Vietnam: The Forgotten Veterans]. Austin: Texas Monthly Press, 1987. Marolda, Edward J. [By Sea, Air, and Land: An Illustrated History of the U.S. Navy and the War in Southeast Asia]. Washington: Naval Historical Center, 1992. Marolda, Edward J. and Oscar P. Fitzgerald. [The United States Navy and the Vietnam Conflict]. Vol. 2, [From Military Assistance to Combat, 1959-1965]. Washington: Naval Historical Center, 1986. Marolda, Edward, J. and Pryce G. Wesley III. A Short History of the United States Navy and the Southeast Asian Conflict, 1950-1975]. Washington: Naval Historical Center, 1984. Marshall, Kathryn. [In the Combat Zone: An Oral History of American Women in Vietnam, 1966-1975]. Boston: Little, Brown and Co., 1987. Norman, Elizabeth. [Women at War: The Story of Fifty Military Nurses Who Served in Vietnam]. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1990. Summers, Harry G., Jr. [Vietnam War Almanac]. New York: Facts on File Publications, 1985. Uhlig, Frank Jr., ed. [Vietnam: The Naval Story]. Annapolis: Naval Institute Press, 1986. U.S. Department of the Navy, Bureau of Medicine and Surgery. [History of the Medical Department of the United States Navy, 1945-1955]. Washington: GPO, 1958. Walker, Keith. [A Piece of My Heart: The Stories of 26 American Women Who Served in Vietnam]. Novato, CA: Presidio Press, 1986. 80 Articles Alkana, Linda Kelly. "Women Warriors, Women Healers: American Women Military Nurses in Vietnam." [The Valley Forge Journal] 4 (December 1989): 352ff. Boling, Gerald R. "Navy Nurses, Male and Female, Tell About Their Profession." [Navy] 10 (August 1967): 21ff. Chapman, George. "Navy Corpsmen, Doctors, Nurses Set Record for Valor, Troop Survival in Viet Nam." [Navy] l3 (November 1970): 26ff. Fisichella, R.A. "Navy Hospital, Saigon." [Military Medicine]. (February 1966): 145ff. Graves, William S. "Its War No. 3 for 'the Angel of the Orient.'" [Navy] 9 (July 1966): 6ff. Kalisch, Philip A. and Margaret Scobey. "Female Nurses in American Wars: Helplessness Suspended for the Duration." [Armed Forces and Society] 9 (Winter 1983): 215ff. Kirk, Donald. "It Was 2:00 A.M. Saigon Time." [American Journal of Nursing] 65 (December 1965): 77ff. McClendon, Frank O., Jr. "Doctors and Dentists, Nurses and Corpsmen in Vietnam." U.S. Naval Institute [Proceedings] (Naval Review Issue) 96 (May 1970): 276ff. "Navy Nurseon Vietnam Duty." [RN]. (November 1968): 46ff. "Samaritans On Wings: Black Nurses in Vietnam." [Ebony] 25 (May 1970): 60ff. 81

    116. Chapter I: The Women's Army Corps, 1942-1945
    In a surprise move, she added an amendment that would give women military status and the right to be enlisted and appointed in the Army on the same basis as men
    http://www.army.mil/cmh-pg/books/wac/chapter1.htm
    Chapter I The Women's Army Corps, 1942-1945 Women in the Army? Never! In early 1941, "Never!" was a typical reaction to the idea of women serving in the U.S. Army. The subject conjured up pictures of women wearing helmets, carrying rifles, and attacking an enemy in a war zone. But after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, these ideas and images did seem somewhat less outrageous. With new demands on labor-for war plants, for the Army, for the Navy-Americans began to face the reality that manpower shortages would occur in the near future. Enormous numbers of guns and planes had to be produced for the increasing numbers of American soldiers and sailors. The crisis changed the nature of the questions about women in the Army: What could women do in the Army? Would they ever be in combat? What weapons would they fire? Would they be giving orders to men? How would the Army, a traditional male society, accept women into its midst? Some interest in the subject had developed in 1941, before the Japanese attack. Congresswoman Edith Nourse Rogers had introduced a bill in the House of Representatives to establish a Women's Army Auxiliary Corps. She proposed a quasi-military organization of 25,000 women to fill clerical jobs that the Army would otherwise give to enlisted men. Army Chief of Staff George C. Marshall approved the idea. He envisioned such a corps as a conduit for enrolling thousands of women during wartime, thus releasing men from administrative jobs and making them available for combat duty. However, Mrs. Rogers' bill languished during 1941 because Congress was preoccupied with more pressing issues-the lend-lease bill, price controls, war plant production, and labor problems.

    117. Military Women In Advertisements
    A history of women in the military from the Revolutionary War to present day. Information about sexual harassment issues, current women veterans issues, and extensive information for military women, past and present.
    http://userpages.aug.com/captbarb/advertising.html
    Military Women Depicted in Advertising
    Women in the military, women in uniform, or actresses and models posing as military women appeared in advertising primarily during WWII. Here are a few advertisements by major companies that portrayed military women or women in uniform in their ads.
    Whitman's Chocolates , Saturday Evening Post,
    full page ad, 1943.
    Camel cigarettes, inside back cover,
    1940s, several different blocks with servicewomen.
    Maxwell House Coffee,
    Saturday Evening Post,
    full page ad, 1945
    Full page ad using stars from the film "So Proudly We Hail"
    to recruit for nurses and sell cigarettes at the same time.
    The line across the top reads "America Needs Nurses - Enlist now." Coca Cola 1942 Woman Marine and British servicewoman in Coca Cola ad - 1944 WAVE in Coca Cola ad - 1952 - Thanks to David Henderson, Vintage Advertising Coca Cola 1953 "Situation well in hand" Coca Cola 1942 Coca Cola 1946 Please note: In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. section 107, this material is displayed without profit or payment for those who have expressed an interest in receiving this information for non-profit research and educational purposes only. Nothing on this site is for sale nor is it a commercial venture of any kind - it is a one person page for, and about military women - by one retired military woman. captbarb@aug.com

    118. VISN 2: Women Veterans Military Sexual Trauma
    possible treatment benefits, the number of veterans who report military sexual trauma with your care provider, MST Coordinator, or the women Veterans Program
    http://www.appc1.va.gov/visns/visn02/vet/women/mst.html
    Veterans Who Have Experienced Sexual Trauma While in the Military
    In compliance with Congress Millennium Act of 2000 and VHA Directives, the Department of Veterans Affairs is seeking to identify those veterans who have suffered sexual trauma while serving in the military.
    Those veterans with a history of sexual trauma suffered while in the military (MST) MAY be eligible for treatment without charge for conditions related to that trauma whether or not they are service connected for that trauma. Military related sexual trauma includes rape, attempted rape and sexual harassment.
    In the coming months, when you visit your regular provider, you may be asked if you experienced sexual trauma while in the military. We understand that this information is extremely sensitive and personal, while it is hoped that you will answer this question honestly, you do not have to answer this question if you do not want to. If you wish to change your answer at a later time, you may. This information is confidential, as is the rest of your patient record. We will make every effort to protect your privacy and be as sensitive as possible when asking you these questions. In addition to possible treatment benefits, the number of veterans who report military sexual trauma will be reported to Congress. Expanded treatment programs for these veterans may result.
    VISN 2 is complying with national mandates to provide care for those veterans with a history of MST and to inform Congress of the number of patients we see with this history. While we recognize the benefits of this program, we also realize that some patients may experience discomfort at being asked such sensitive and personal questions. If you have any concerns you wish to share, please feel free to discuss it with your care provider, MST Coordinator, or the Women Veterans Program Managers.

    119. GG - American Women And The Military - Page 6
    Discusses nurses, POWs, volunteers, and drafting women nurses.
    http://www.gendergap.com/military/usmil6.htm#ww2
    World War II At the end of WW II there were approximately 12 million people in the U.S. armed forces including 280,000 women. By the summer of 1945 there were nearly 100,000 WACs, 86,000 WAVES, 18,000 women Marines, 11,000 SPARS, 57,000 Army nurses and 11,000 Navy nurses on active duty. More than 350,000 women had served in the military during the war. Nurses In June 1940 there were only 942 women in the U.S. Army Nurse Corps. The following month a conference on the military's need for nurses led to the creation of the Nursing Council for National Defense which surveyed the number of nurses available for military duty and emphasized the need to train additional nurses. On October 8, 1940 Agnes Rosele became the first of the 4,019 Red Cross nurses who would be sworn into the ANC by the end of World War II. Her oath was administered by Capt. James Murchison the adjutant at Walter Reed Hospital in Washington D.C. and the ceremony was photgraphed by the Associated Press. In April 1941 agressive recruiting resulted in a pre-war monthly high of 689 nurses joining the ANC. At the beginning of the war Army and Navy nurses held no rank within the U.S. military, although Army Nurses held "relative rank" within their own corps. On March 13, 1942, Major Julia Flikke, Superintendent of the Army Nurse Corps was given a temporary rank of Colonel in the Army of the United States. Her assistant, Florence Blanchfield, received the temporary rank of Lt. Colonel AUS. Although both were allowed to wear the insignia of their rank they were denied the pay and benefits which accompanied it, an action justified by the Comptroller General on the basis that "women were

    120. WASP, Women Pilots Of WWII Home Page
    A Tribute to women Airforce Service Pilots of WWII, first women in history to fly American military aircraft!
    http://www.WASP-WWII.org/
    ...to honor the WOMEN PILOTS of WWII and to shine a light on their contributions to the history of United States military aviation: .Hear the songs, see the planes, check out the documents and photographs...and don't forget to check out the PAPER DOLLS PAGE! LEARN ABOUT THE
    WASP WWII

    MUSEUM
    ...
    CHARTER MEMBER!
    LEARN ABOUT THE WASP!

    Find out about the WOMEN PILOTS in WWII! H op in the plane!
    LEARN ABOUT THE PROJECT
    WINGS ACROSS AMERICA
    LEARN ABOUT THE PROJECT! H ... elp us preserve the history of the WASP for future generations!
    We're proud to be part of the
    Veteran's History Project!
    Click to read more about it!
    pages best viewed with java enabled browser: and graphics turned ON. Yes, it loads a little slowerBUT IT'S WORTH IT!

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