The
Women's Army Auxiliary Corps (WAAC) was established during
World War II on May 15, 1942, "for the purpose of making available to the national defense the knowledge, skill, and special training of the women of the nation." During this period, the
Army was looking for
bilingual Hispanic women to fill assignments in fields such as cryptology, communications and interpretation. In 1942, Bozak joined the Women's Army Auxiliary Corps (WAAC) and was sent to
Fort Lee, Virginia, for training. Bozak volunteered to be part of the 149th WAAC Post Headquarters Company the first to go overseas, setting sail from New York Harbor for
Europe in January 1943. She was the first person of
Hispanic heritage and the first of approximately 200
Puerto Rican women who would serve in the Women's Army Corps during World War II. The unit arrived in Northern Africa on January 27, 1943, and rendered overseas duties in
Algiers, in General
Dwight D. Eisenhower’s theatre headquarters. The women who served abroad were not treated like the regular Army servicemen. They did not receive overseas payment nor could they receive government life insurance. These women had no protection if they became ill, wounded or captured. If captured, the women were considered as "auxiliaries" serving with the Army rather than in it, and did not have the same protections under international law as the male soldiers. These were factors which the Army took into consideration when they decided to integrate the Women's Corps into the regular Army. On July 3, 1943, the WAC bill, which established the Women's Army Corps as integral part of the Army of the United States, was signed into law (Public Law 78-110) becoming effective on September 1, 1943. Bozak was promoted to the rank of Tech 4 (Technical Sergeant) which, in today's Army, would equal the rank of
Sergeant (E-4). Her responsibilities included the transmission of encoded messages between Eisenhower's headquarters in Algiers and the battlefield in Tunisia. After returning home, she entered Valley Forge General Hospital in July 1945, for treatment of an eye infection which she had contracted in Algiers. There she met Theodore John Bozak, a recovering combat wounded patient, who would become her husband. Carmen Contreras Bozak and her husband had three children, two sons, Brian and Robert, and a daughter, Carmen. ==Later years==