Women in the WW2 US Navy (WAVES), The Women's Army Corps (WACs) their jobs were switchboard operators, mechanics, and bakers. These were disbanded and integrated with male units.
all three were military units made up of women
The purpose of a microphone is to capture the information of modulating sound waves in order to convert the mechanical energy into electric energy for transmission or staorage, with the intent to reverse the process via speakers to reproduce the original information.
I will wave at you when I am on top of the wave.
The official definition for the word 'coherent waves' is "a superpositioned wave that does not interfere with other waves in the conductance pathway."
Waves is plural. The singular form is wave.
Women were allowed in the US military commencing with the establishment of the WACs and WAVEs in 1940/41 and ending with the Vietnam War in 1975; at which time the WACs, WAVEs, and WAFs were disbanded. WACs/WAFs/WAVES/etc. were not considered part of the US fighting forces, but rather auxiliaries.
They were the Army, Navy, and Air Force
They're all women in the military.
Women Army and Navy reservests
They served their country in the WACS, WAVES,and SPARS
all three were military units made up of women
There is no longer any 'special' name, they are named by their rank or rating as any other sailor.
WACS (Women's Army Corps) and WAVES (Women Accepted for Volunteer Emergency Service) were military personnel who served in non-combat roles during World War II. They provided crucial support in areas such as administration, communications, and logistics, freeing up male soldiers for combat duties.
WACS-TV was created on 1967-03-06.
WACs were female reseve service personnel who helped do soldiers work so they could fight also WAVEs
The duration of Francis Joins the WACS is 1.58 hours.
During the Vietnam War, WWII, etc. all US military women were either WACs, WAVES, or WAFs.