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Primarily documents Annie Pozyck's career as a nurse and her service in the Army Nurse Corps (ANC) during WWII." Pozyck briefly describes her childhood during the Depression, her reasons for becoming a nurse, work as a nurse's assistant, and nurse training at Mercy Hospital in Charlotte, North Carolina. Nurses training topics include: work shifts, social activities, and working with nuns. She recalls meeting her husband at a GI dance in Concord. Pozyck gives her reasons for enlisting in the ANC and discusses being stationed at Camp Sutton, North Carolina, including her uniforms, nurse quarters, and performing general nursing. Of her subsequent station at Stark General Hospital, Charleston, she discusses waiting to be sent overseas and marrying her husband during his furlough. She describes taking a troop train to Seattle, where her unit treated Pacific casualties; her overseas training at Camp Stoneman, California; and the ship ride to Australia, including the cramped quarters, seasickness, and social activities. She briefly mentions being stationed at the 133rd General Hospital in Sydney; her return trip to the U.S., during which a psychiatric patient jumping overboard, and the troops being unable to save him for fear of submarines. " Of her second assignment to Camp Stoneman, she recalls treating the all black crew of an ammunition ship that exploded. She discusses being reassigned to overseas duty, and setting up the 73rd Field Hospital in Tacloban, Philippines. Topics from Tacloban include: setting up tents; malaria prevention; overseas uniforms, and the details of Victory in Japan [VJ] Day. She discusses her experience as the wife of a prisoner of war, her return to the U.S. when her husband was freed, and being discharged from the ANC. General service topics include: nurse morale, male treatment of servicewomen, food, uniform regulations, barracks life, pets, and the Red Cross. " Pozyck discusses moving to Lawrence, Massachusetts, after her husband's discharge from the service; working at Lawrence General Hospital; and the birth of her sons Michael, Alan, and Stephen. She talks about her husband's changed personality because of his POW experience, and discusses her move with her sons back to Concord. She also describes her work at the Veterans Administration Hospital in Salisbury, North Carolina.