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Thread: Code Girls: The Women Cryptographers of WWII

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    Code Girls: The Women Cryptographers of WWII

    Code Girls: The Women Cryptographers of WWII

    While Alan Turing was decrypting Nazi communication across the Atlantic, some eleven thousand women were breaking enemy code in America.


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    During WWII, when Richard Feynman was recruited as one of the country’s most promising physicists to work on the Manhattan Project in a secret laboratory in Los Alamos, his young wife Arline was writing him love letters in code from her deathbed. While Arline was merely having fun with the challenge of bypassing the censors at the laboratory’s Intelligence Office, all across the country thousands of women were working as cryptographers for the government — women who would come to constitute more than half of America’s codebreaking force during the war. While Alan Turing was decrypting Nazi communication across the Atlantic, some eleven thousand women were breaking enemy code in America.


    Their story, as heroic as that of the women who dressed and fought as men in the Civil War, as fascinating and untold as those of the “Harvard Computers” who revolutionized astronomy in the nineteenth century and the black women mathematicians who powered space exploration in the twentieth, is what Liza Mundy tells in Code Girls: The Untold Story of the American Women Code Breakers of World War II (public library).


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    FindersKeepers (03-23-2023),RMNIXON (03-23-2023)

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    Before mechanical computers were widespread they called those who could do complicated math in their head and on paper "Computers" during the War years.
    My Revenge will be Success! - Donald J Trump

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    Quote Originally Posted by RMNIXON View Post
    Before mechanical computers were widespread they called those who could do complicated math in their head and on paper "Computers" during the War years.
    History is wonderful. The movie Hidden Figures is outstanding.
    Any time you give a man something he doesn't earn, you cheapen him. Our kids earn what they get, and that includes respect. -- Woody Hayes​

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