Orders 22 Sept 1943

WAVES Orders, found in communication from the NCML to Op-20-G-4

This document is from the National Archives at College Park, College Park, Maryland
Record Group 38, Box 180

See transcript below this image

22sept43

FROM NCML
FOR COMDR ENGSTROM
ENLISTED WAVES WHOSE ORDERS ARE TO BE EXTENDED UNTIL APPROX DECEMBER 10 1943
ANDERSON JUNELLA E
BANNETT FRANCES E
BENTON DOROTHY M
BISHOP CHRISTINE R
BISSIS ELIZABETH J
BROWN HAZEL
BUCKLEY BARBARA I
BURKE EILEEN
CANEDY MARGARET B
CAVANAUGH HELEN P
COX MARGARET L
DOLLNER NELIA N
FLASPOLLER IRIS B
GOUGH MARY A
HERBERT ELDIVA P
JACKSON GLADYS I
KADING MARGARET V
LAFFERTY JANE E
MILLER HARRIET E
MORRIS ADELINE E
MUMM ALMA M
MUTCHIE URSULA G
MC KENZIE SHIRLEY
NICKLEL EVELYN L
REICHEL JEWELL L
ROBERTS FRANCES M
SCHROEDER HULDA M
STRATHERN MARY ANN
WARNER MABEL C
WHITCOMB VELMA R
WIECKE ADELAIDE E
ZYBURT ESTHER E
RAPER (handwritten)
WEATHERLY (handwritten)

ENLISTED WAVES TO BE TRANSFERRED TO NINTH NAVAL DISTRICT

ALLISON JULIA B
ALLBRITTON WILMA P
BEMIS ELIZABETH A
BLANN KATIE L
BUCK DOROTHY H
BUSSELLE MARY H
CLEMENTS GLADYS P
CORBETT ANN M
CORSETTI ADELE C
COULTER ELIZABETH A
DODGE MYRTLE M
DORSEY CATHERINE R
FARR CATHERINE E
FREDERICK CATHERINE
HAIST GLADYS
HALL MARY L (“MARY” crossed out –handwritten E.C. see No 300 of 232010)
HAWKINS EDITH O
HINES EDITH M
HUTCHISON JIMMIE L
IRWIN EMMA REBECCA
JACOBS ANNE B
KLINE RUTH A
KOSLEY AGNESS M
KURTZ VISIAN M
LASLEY ARLINE L
LILLIE EVELYN R
LUBKE ROSEMARIE A
LOVELL ESTELLE L
MACE LORAINE
MADDUX ALICE
MC CABE RUTH M
MC COWN MARJORIE E
MC QUATTERS LAURA S
NEIBERT DOROTHY E
NEWING HELEN J
OWEN WILLIE A
PARKE MARGUERITE L
PEEBLES VERA L
PITZ HELEN M
ROSE MABEL PATRICIA
SEXTON GERALDINE
SHERRY MARGARET L
SINGLAUB ANITA M
SKOLIG PATRICIA T
SPENCER ETHEL I H
SPENCER MARY M
STORMENT DOROTHY J
STREB? JOYCE A
SUTHERLIN GENEVIEVE L
TISDALE ANN T
TREADWAY RETHA L
URICH EVELYN B
WILLIAMS EMILY J
WILSON MARJORIE J

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    • Stray Thoughts in the Information Age

      General George S. Patton, the legendary commander of World War II, became an astute consumer of communications intelligence (COMINT); he learned its worth in the drive across Western Europe after D-Day and used it well. For example, in mid-August 1944, while Patton’s Third Army was located near the French city of Le Mans, the general and about 40 of his officers attended daily intelligence briefings. Here they would hear regular briefings by the G-2 (Intelligence) and G-3 (Operations), situation reports, and a news report from radio broadcasts. Following each meeting, all but seven officers were dismissed, and the rest stayed for a briefing on the enemy situation as seen in COMINT. This source proved valuable for the Third Army: ULTRA (the codeword assigned to COMINT derived from decryption of high-level German ciphers) material alone predicted a drive by five German Panzer divisions against the Third Army at Avaranches. In another instance, when Third Army headquarters moved near Chalons, an ULTRA message arrived at 0100 hours showing the German order for an attack at 0300. Patton had described the U.S. troops in the attack areas as spread out as “thin as the skin on an egg.” He found means to alert the defending divisions without jeopardizing the security of ULTRA, and the German attack was repulsed.

      One member of Patton’s staff wrote about the value of ULTRA to Patton’s army stating that, “An army has never moved as fast and as far as the Third Army in its drive across France, and ULTRA was invaluable every mile of the way.”

      NSA, Center for Cryptologic History, from 50th Anniversary Brochure, p. 10. URL frequently change but currently this can be found at nsa.gov > History > Cryptologic History > Publications > NSA/CSS. /p>

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