Nancy A

Nancy A




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Nancy A

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Former Director, Defense Information Systems Agency
Vice Adm. Nancy A. Norton is the former director of the Defense Information Systems Agency (DISA) and the commander of the Joint Force Headquarters Department of Defense Information Network (JFHQ-DODIN).
As the director of the Defense Information Systems Agency, Norton manages a global network and leads more than 8,000 military and civilian personnel who plan, develop, deliver, and operate joint, interoperable command and control capabilities and defend an enterprise infrastructure in more than 42 countries. This mission directly supports the President, Secretary of Defense, Joint Chiefs of Staff, combatant commanders, Department of Defense components, and other mission partners across the spectrum of combat and combat support operations.
As the commander of Joint Force Headquarters-Department of Defense Information Network, Norton is charged with the direction and synchronization of defensive cyberspace activities, providing unity of command and unity of effort across the Department of Defense. She is responsible for organizing, training and equipping the military and civilian staff who secure, operate and defend the DODIN.
Norton, a native of Oregon, graduated from Portland State University with a bachelor’s degree in general science. She was commissioned in 1987 through the Navy Officer Candidate School. She holds master’s degrees in computer science from the Naval Postgraduate School, and in national security and strategic studies from the Naval War College, where she was the President’s Honor Graduate. She served as a fellow on the Chief of Naval Operations Strategic Studies Group XXXII.
Norton has served in information warfare billets at all levels, afloat and ashore. Her assignments include Naval Communications Stations in Hawaii and Nevada, as well as command in Bahrain. She developed cyber security programs on the staffs of U.S. Pacific Command and Pacific Fleet. She directed communications for Cruiser Destroyer Group 12 aboard the USS Enterprise and for the U.S. 6th Fleet and Naval Forces Europe. She served as the director of Command, Control, Communications and Cyber, U.S. Pacific Command. She also served multiple tours for the Office of the Chief of Naval Operations, including as the director of Warfare Integration for Information Warfare.
Prior to her current assignment, Norton was the vice director of the Defense Information Systems Agency.
Norton’s awards and decorations include the Defense Superior Service Medal, Legion of Merit, Defense Meritorious Service Medal and Meritorious Service Medal, Navy League Award, Young AFCEAN Award, Copernicus Award, and the National Security Agency’s Frank B. Rowlett Award for Personal Achievement in Information Security.
The Department of Defense provides the military forces needed to deter war and ensure our nation's security.


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Joint Staff Director for Intelligence
Nancy Ann Norton [1] (born 1964) [2] is a retired United States Navy vice admiral who previously served as the director of the Defense Information Systems Agency . Prior to that, as a flag officer she served as vice director of the same agency. [3] [4] [5] [6] [7]

Norton is the daughter of William James Norton and Judith Bressman Norton. [8] Her step-father, Edward James Becerra, whom her mother married when she was a teen, was a U.S. Marine Corps Master gunnery sergeant who served for over 24 years including two tours in Vietnam . [9] She was raised in Coquille and Roseburg, Oregon and graduated from Roseburg High School in 1982. She earned a B.S. degree in general science from Portland State University in 1986. Norton enlisted in the Navy to earn money for further education and was commissioned in 1987. She later received an M.S. degree in computer science from the Naval Postgraduate School in 1994 and an M.A. degree in national security and strategic studies from the Naval War College in 2008. [3] [10]

Her operational tours at sea include serving as communications officer for Commander, Cruiser Destroyer Group 12 aboard USS Enterprise (CVN 65) and for Commander, Naval Forces Europe and Commander, U.S. Sixth Fleet .

Ashore, Norton commanded Naval Computer and Telecommunications Station Bahrain ; served three tours on the Office of the Chief of Naval Operations staff; the U.S. Pacific Fleet staff; U.S. Pacific Command staff; as officer-in-charge of Naval Telecommunications Center, Fallon, Nevada ; and Naval Communications Area Master Station Eastern Pacific. [3]

Norton is married to retired U.S. Navy officer Bruce Howard Hamilton and they reside in Pasadena, Maryland . [8] [11]

 This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the United States Government .
Media related to Nancy A. Norton at Wikimedia Commons

This biographical article related to the United States Navy is a stub . You can help Wikipedia by expanding it .

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The Story of the French City Nancy, a Versailles for the People
Town hall of Stanislas Square in Nancy, France | © Pecold / Shutterstock
King Stanislas had a foot in both France and Poland
Ancient fountains and gate in Stanislas Square, Nancy, France | © Claudio Giovanni Colombo / Shutterstock | © Claudio Giovanni Colombo / Shutterstock
King Stanislas set about remodelling Nancy as a Versailles for the people
Place de la Carriere, UNESCO heritage site in Nancy, France | © Leonid Andronov / Shutterstock | © Leonid Andronov / Shutterstock
The centre of Nancy is a World Heritage Site
Place d’Alliance, Lorraine, France | © Kiev.Victor / Shutterstock | © Kiev.Victor / Shutterstock
Nancy is a place where everyday people could enjoy the splendours of Versailles
Stanislas Square in Nancy, France | © Pecold / Shutterstock | © Pecold / Shutterstock
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Nancy is France’s 20th largest city and owes a lot of its beauty to one man, King Stanislas, a huge architectural buff exiled from Poland. He remodelled Nancy into a veritable architectural wonder and many of the buildings are listed as UNESCO World Heritage sites. Here’s the story of Nancy, which truly was built as a Versailles for the people.
Stanislas became King of Poland in 1705 amid huge civil unrest. After an invasion by Sweden, the Swedish King selected Stanislas to take over the rule of Poland. However, many Polish people wanted the old ruler back and when this happened, Stanislas headed to France to live between 1725 and 1733 in the rather grand Château de Chambord . His daughter became Queen of France as wife to King Louis XV and it was with his son-in-law’s help that he returned to Poland to become King again – only to once again have to abdicate three years later. It was then, in 1736, that he settled in Lunéville , and made the city of Nancy his own. Stanislas was responsible for much of its remodelling.
When he arrived in the area, he found that Nancy was divided into two clear sections separated by ramparts; a medieval Old Town with the Ducal Palace and a newer Renaissance town with straight, parallel roads. He decided to build a huge square in the centre, where the two different parts met. His architect, Emmanuel Héré, had a challenging task to bring together two architecturally different places in the same city and make them feel like one. He also had to ensure that the square could act sufficiently well as the backdrop to the large statue Stanislas wanted to erect of Louis XV.
Work began in 1752 to build the large area in the centre of Nancy that we still see today. It is actually made up of three squares. The first, Place Stanislas, is where you find the Town Hall, which faces lower buildings that could accommodate the cannons on the old ramparts. A paved avenue leads to an Arc de Triomphe and Place de la Carrière, which was the old Renaissance Square where people used to have jousts. Architect Héré had to completely remodel it so that the entire area looked as if it belonged together. At the end sits the Government Palace and Gardens, which are symmetrical to the Town Hall. Finally, the third square, Place d’Alliance celebrates the friendship between France and Austria, and is a more homely area with rings of trees. All three squares have been UNESCO-listed since 1983 .
The Palace of Versailles is one of the most recognisable castles in the world, expanded by King Louis XIV and home to the French royal family until the French Revolution. Stanislas wanted to emulate the grandeur of the architecture but for the man on the street. In Nancy, he established a learned society, the Academie of Stanislas as well as a huge library. Nancy today is one of the key places to study architecture thanks to his influence. Incidentally, Stanislas was the Polish King who lived the longest and he died of serious burns in 1766 after sitting too close to the fire. Stanislas, the Duke of Lorraine, was 88 years old.
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