|
T H E V E
T E R A N S H O U R
ArmedForcesPress.Com/ - 2008 Media Edition. |
|
NEWS & FEATURES 1
MORE NEWS
STATS & RESOURCES PHOTOS & ARCHIVES
SPECIAL SECTION LINK PAGES
|
& A C T I V E D U T Y M I L I T A R Y Photos - Information - Links Women veterans are eligible for the same VA benefits as male veterans. However, additional gender-specific services and benefits are available for women veterans, including breast and pelvic examinations and other general reproductive health-care services. VA provides preventive health care counseling, contraceptive services, menopause management, Pap smears and mammography. Referrals are made for services that VA is unable to provide. Women Veterans’ Coordinators are available in a private setting at all VA facilities to assist women veterans seeking treatment and benefits. VA health-care professionals provide counseling and treatment to help veterans overcome psychological trauma resulting from sexual trauma during active military service. Appropriate care and services are provided for any injury, illness or psychological condition resulting from such trauma.
______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Patchwork Quilt Salutes Fallen U.S. Military Women By Gerry J. Gilmore WASHINGTON, Sept. 17, 2008 – A red, white and blue patchwork quilt commemorating the 113 U.S. military women who’ve died during the global war on terrorism was unveiled for public view at the Women in Military Service for America Memorial today. The hand-sewn quilt features a stars-and-stripes motif that displays the names of the fallen within the stripes. It was crafted by 10 women from several small communities in the Pacific Northwest, with additional support provided by another 16 women, also from Oregon or the state of Washington. Story
______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Women's Equality Day FORT BRAGG, N.C. - Staff Sgt. Jacqueline L. Hunt is awarded the Department of Defense Soldier's Medal by Maj. Gen. Alan D. Bell, Deputy Commander of the U.S. Army Reserve Command, on August 22, 2008. Hunt earned the honor for saving the life of a traffic accident victim who had serious, complex, and life-threatening injuries. She is an Army Reserve Civil Affairs Soldier with the U.S. Army Civil Affairs and Psychological Operations Command (Airborne) and assigned to the 490th Civil Affairs Battalion, located in Abilene, Texas. Photo by Sgt. Sharilyn Wells. August 22, 2008. Vice President Dick Cheney awards the Silver Star Medal to Army Specialist Monica Brown of Lake Jackson, Texas Thursday, March 20, 2008, following a dinner with U.S. troops at Bagram Air Base, Afghanistan. While serving as a combat medic in April of 2007, Spc. Brown, 19, showed extraordinary heroism when she used her body to shield wounded soldiers from enemy gunfire and mortar shelling, then moving them to safety after their convoy came under attack in Afghanistan’s eastern Paktia province. She is the second woman since World War II to receive the Silver Star. White House photo by David Bohrer.
_______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ A Marine performs the grenade throw portion of the maneuver-under-fire event of the Combat Fitness Test during a trial exercise on July 8. The CFT is being implemented throughout the Marine Corps to test Marines' ability in combat related exercises. Photo ByLine: Lance Cpl. Patricia D. Lockhart. Marines perform the fireman's carry event of the Combat Fitness Test during a trial exercise on July 8. The CFT is being implemented throughout the Marine Corps to test Marines' ability in combat related exercises. Photo ByLine: Lance Cpl. Patricia D. Lockhart.
______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Female leaders from Omaha, Air Force gather at Offutt Brig. Gen. Michelle D. Johnson pauses at the Ten Dinner Aug. 14 in the Patriot's Club at Offutt Air Force Base, Neb. General Johnson is the deputy director for global effects and the war on terrorism in the Strategic Plans and Policy Directorate on the Joint Staff in the Pentagon. (U.S. Air Force photo/Lance Cheung) Female leaders from Omaha, Air Force gather at OffuttMaj. Samantha Weeks poses at the Ten Dinner Aug. 14 in the Patriot's Club at Offutt Air Force Base, Neb. Major Weeks is with the Air Force Demonstration Squadron, "Thunderbirds," and flies the No. 5 jet as the lead solo pilot. (U.S. Air Force photo/Lance Cheung)
______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ The appointment of Gen. Ann E. Dunwoody to her current rank was confirmed July 23 by the U.S. Senate. Dunwoody is the first female to serve as a four-star general in the United States military. She has also been confirmed for assignment as commanding general, United States Army Materiel Command, Fort Belvoir, Va. Photo by C. Todd Lopez. Dorothy Olsen meets with Capt. Jammie Jamieson during the July 20 airshow at McChord Air Force Base, Wash. Captain Jamieson, currently stationed at Elmendorf Air Force Base, Alaska, is the mobility flight commander for the 525th Fighter Squadron. She is the first operational and combat-ready female F-22 Raptor pilot. Ms. Olsen is a former member of the a former Women Airforce Service Pilots. (U.S. Air Force photo/Staff Sgt. Oshawn Jefferson)
______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Summit Brings Renewed VA Drive for Women Veterans -------VA NEWS RELEASE------- July 11, 2008 - Peake: Reinventing to be “Women-Centric”WASHINGTON – An aggressive push to ensure women veterans receive the highest quality of care in VA medical facilities was pledged by Secretary of Veterans Affairs Dr. James B. Peake at a recent VA National Summit on Women Veterans’ Issues. Although VA already has services for women patients equal to those men receive, Peake told the audience of more than 400 women-veteran advocates, “We are reinventing ourselves by expanding our women-centric focus to initiate new programs that meet the needs of women veterans.” Citing the demographic shift that brings increasing numbers of women to VA for care and the need for changes, Peake announced formation of a work group to focus on women’s needs in prosthetics and rehabilitation, hiring women’s advocates in VA medical centers, developing quality measurements specifically for women patients, purchasing more state-of-the-art, specialized women’s health care equipment, and expanding medical education in women’s health for VA care providers. Summit attendees also learned that VA recently established a work group whose goal is to ensure every female veteran enrolled in VA care has a women’s health primary care provider, especially to meet gender-specific needs. The June 20-22 conference in Washington focused on how to ensure VA meets women-specific health needs and how to inform more women veterans of their VA benefits. It was the fourth women’s summit, which VA holds every four years. Summit co-sponsors included the American Legion Auxiliary, AMVETS, Disabled American Veterans and Veterans of Foreign Wars. Other assisting veterans groups included the Blinded Veterans Association, Military Officers Association of America, Paralyzed Veterans of America, the American Legion, Vietnam Veterans of America and TriWest.
______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ President Nominates Woman Army General for Fourth Star By John J. Kruzel WASHINGTON, June 23, 2008 – President Bush today nominated Army Lt. Gen. Ann E. Dunwoody for promotion, which, pending Senate approval, would make her the first woman to be a four-star officer in U.S. history. Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates announced the
president’s nomination of Dunwoody as the commander of Army Materiel Command
at Fort Belvoir, Va., in a news release published today by the Defense
Department.
______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Women’s Memorial Hosts Soldier, Marine Photo Exhibit
By Gerry J. Gilmore ARLINGTON, Va., May 28, 2008 – Duty, courage, camaraderie and sacrifice are on display at the Women in Military Service for America Memorial here. The public can view a collection of 115 black-and-white and color photographs that depict U.S. soldiers and Marines in action spanning from the Civil War to the present day. The photos were culled from more than 4,000 images that were reviewed by exhibit curator Cyma Rubin. The free exhibit is titled, “The American Soldier: A Photographic Tribute to Soldiers and Marines.” The traveling exhibit will be featured inside the women’s memorial building through Labor Day. Story
______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ WIMSA Memorial Day Observance, May 28, 2008 U.S. Navy Capt. Elizabeth S. Niemyer addresses the public at the annual Memorial Day observance at the Women in Military Service for America Memorial, Arlington National Cemetery, Arlington, Va., May 26, 2008. Niemyer noted that May 13, 2008, marked the 100th anniversary of the Navy Nurse Corps. Defense Dept. photo by Gerry J. Gilmore... Retired Navy Master Chief Petty Officer Anna Der-Vartanian, left, shakes hands with retired Air Force Maj. Gen. Jeanne Holm during a Memorial Day ceremony held at the Women in Military Service for America Memorial, Arlington National Cemetery, Arlington, Va., May 26, 2008. Defense Dept. photo by Gerry J. Gilmore...
"It was said long ago by a visitor to America - Alexis de Tocqueville - that the American woman thinks for herself, speaks with freedom and acts on her own impulse. I would add that she also chooses to defend freedom - her own and that of others." ................ Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates, Nov. 3, 2007
______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ DENVER (May 8, 2008) World War II Veteran Omilio Halder Jensen reminisces about her experiences as a Navy Nurse upon the 100th anniversary of the Navy Nurse Corps. The anniversary, May 13th, coincides with Denver Navy Week. More than 20 cities throughout the United States will host Navy Weeks in 2008 in an effort to raise awareness in metropolitan areas that do not have a significant Fleet presence. U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class Janine Deneault (Released) DENVER (May 8, 2008) Scrapbook items of World War II Veteran Omilio Halder Jensen detail her experiences as a Navy Nurse upon the 100th anniversary of the Navy Nurse Corps. The anniversary, May 13th, coincides with Denver Navy Week. More than 20 cities throughout the United States will host Navy Weeks in 2008 in an effort to raise awareness in metropolitan areas that do not have a significant Fleet presence. U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class Janine Deneault.
________________________________________________________________________________________________________ ATLANTIC OCEAN (May 8, 2008) Capt. Ann Phillips, commodore of Destroyer Squadron (DESRON) 28, and Cmdr. Douglas Edson, Commanding Officer of the guided-missile destroyer USS Barry (DDG 52), welcome Her Excellency Anne-Grete Strom-Erichsen, the Norwegian Minister of Defense, aboard Barry. The visit coincided with Norwegian Liberation Day, which commemorates the end of Norway's occupation by Germany in 1945. U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 3rd Class Adrian T. White (Released) Vice President Dick Cheney awards the Silver Star Medal to Army Specialist Monica Brown of Lake Jackson, Texas Thursday, March 20, 2008, following a dinner with U.S. troops at Bagram Air Base, Afghanistan. While serving as a combat medic in April of 2007, Spc. Brown, 19, showed extraordinary heroism when she used her body to shield wounded soldiers from enemy gunfire and mortar shelling, then moving them to safety after their convoy came under attack in Afghanistan’s eastern Paktia province. She is the second woman since World War II to receive the Silver Star. White House photo by David Bohrer.
______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Defense Department Honors Female ‘Firsts,’ Role ModelsBy John J. Kruzel WASHINGTON, March 20, 2008 – The Defense Department honored Army
Col. Valerie Ratliff last night for her efforts to break down barriers for
future generations of women. But Ratliff hopes the recognition, conferred on
her and dozens of others here during the department’s 2008 Women's History
Month Outreach and Observance Reception, will soon be made obsolete by
virtue of future women’s continued success. “This is just the beginning of
the trailblazer recognition,” she told American Forces Press Service today.
“And it will be a good thing when we won’t have to recognize it in the same
manner.
______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ OTC & WOMEN OF THE AIR FORCE Basic officer trainees salute during the playing of the National Anthem as 2nd Lt. Kristin Gwitt holds a sabre at the position of attention as part of an Officer Training School graduation parade March 12 at Maxwell Air Force Base, Ala. Sixty-six Airmen completed the 12-week basic officer training course before earning their commission. (U.S. Air Force photo/Staff Sgt. Jason Lake) Senior Airmen Sherrilyn Ceja and Nicole Lundie control aircraft flying into and out of Balad Air Base, Iraq. Women in the Air Force are featured this month on Air Force Link with photos and downloadable posters. (U.S. Air Force illustration/Virginia Reyes)
Military Women's Tradition of Service Outreach to Women Veterans Web Page of Resources: PHOTOS & IMAGES Second Lieutenant Kathleen M. Sullivan treats a Vietnamese child during Operation MED CAP, a U.S. Air Force civic action program in which a team of doctors, nurses, and aides travel to Vietnamese villages, treat the sick and teach villagers the basics of sanitation and cleanliness., 1967 U.S. Army Photo - Natl. Archives... WAVES (Women Accepted for Volunteer Emergency Service) units march in precise formations during a rally at the Washington Monument grounds celebrating the second anniversary of the establishment of the corps, Washington, DC., 07/31/1944. Creating Org: Department of the Navy. Naval Photographic Center. Saigon, South Vietnam....Staff Sergeant Ermalinda Salazar, a woman Marine, has been nominated for the 1970 Unsung Heroine Award presented annually by the Ladies Auxillary to the veterans of foreign wars. Staff Sergeant Salazar, determined to help the children of the St. Vincent de Paul Orphanage in Vietnam in her off-duty hours, holds two of the youngsters., 06/1970. Department of Defense. U.S. Marine Corps. Natl. Archive Photo... Harlingen Army Air Field, Texas--Elizabeth L.
Gardner of Rockford, Illinois, BVV National President ARCHIVED NEWS & PHOTOS Woven in Time: Sept. 11 Memorial By Casie Vinall, Special to American Forces Press Service WASHINGTON, July 23, 2003 - Many Americans from around the country have responded to the events of Sept. 11 with support for those who lost loved ones in the attack. For some, this support has come in the form of needle and thread. About one hundred quilts made in support of the victims now line the walls of the Women in Military Service for America Memorial at Arlington National Cemetery in Northern Virginia. A sign at the entrance of the exhibit reads: "Inspired by the events of September 11, 2001, the Pentagon quilts came from freedom-loving people in small towns and big cities across the country and around the world. They are and will remain symbols of patriotism, comfort and encouragement to the Pentagon Community forevermore." One quilt, entitled "Lest We Forget," at the start of the display has a label describing those who made it -- the Peace Makers Quilt Guild of Brandon, Fla. Guild members are wives of retired service members and Defense Department civilians out of Tampa, Fla. Tarren Barnes, assistant supervisor to the Memorial director, said the display is a temporary exhibit donated by the Pentagon. The Defense Department originally received the quilts after the events of Sept. 11. The quilts were donated from all around the country, from young and old alike. "The quilts just started filtering in," Barnes said. "Every quilt has a story as to why they came here." Barnes said her favorite quilt is "The Candy Man Quilt," which was made in honor of Pentagon victim Jim Lynch. Lynch's sister, Maureen McDonald, made the quilt out of all 60 of his ties. The quilt pictures a man with a beard and a tie. McDonald sewed pieces of candy to the quilt because, she said in the attached note, he handed out "sweet pieces of joy" to all of his coworkers. "The family actually came here about three weeks ago and wanted the whole display in commemoration of him," Barnes said. "It was just so sweet." Another, entitled "The Story Quilt," is from Marshalltown, Iowa. Donated by engineer Patience Jackson, the quilt is a timeline of events. Making the quilt was therapeutic for Jackson, the attached note stated. "Even though I live in Iowa, the tragedy felt like it hit close to home," Jackson wrote in the note. The International Friendship Quilt, from Fort Leavenworth, Kan. was created primarily by "foreign officers' wives whose husbands were attending the Army Command and General Staff Officers' Course on September 11, 2001," the attached note read. The women also quilted squares for the bachelor officers attending the class. "This hand-made quilt is our gift of love and is our attempt to strengthen the bond of love and humanity among all people," the group wrote. Another quilt, the "JoAnna Connell Elementary School Quilt," from Erie, Pa., contains hundreds of squares displaying students' photos and drawings of the events. Visitor Barbara Dean said she was impressed with the variety of quilts from all parts of the country. "I like quilts," she said "And to think that the kids have done this. That's nice." First-time visitor Air Force Reserve Master Sgt. Jodie Zollo of Tinker Air Force Base, Okla., was in town for a conference and wreath-laying ceremony at the Tomb of the Unknowns. "It's unbelievable how much support the country has," she said of the quilt display. "Just to see all this is quite emotional." Visitors Doug and Allyson German also spent time at the memorial, noting the differences in each quilt. "I think they're extremely interesting, each seems to have their own individual way of expression," Doug said. "It's very nice that people have shown their appreciation to make their quilts in their own time," Allyson said. Chris Carrigan of Utah and fellow schoolteachers visited the exhibit. "I find it very impressive and very humbling," she said. "I'm amazed at all the work and effort and time that people put into it, it's beautiful." As a quilter herself, Carrigan said she knows "how much time it takes" to complete a quilt such as these. She pointed to one particular flag she liked, stating her admiration that "so many people were so willing to express their thoughts in fabric." _______________________________________________________________________________________________________ Museum Opens Honoring Army Women
FORT LEE, Va. (Army News Service, May 15, 2001) - After more than a year of construction, the U.S. Army Women's Museum marked its grand opening and dedication with a ribbon-cutting ceremony May 11 at Fort Lee, Va. Acting Secretary of the Army Joseph Westphal welcomed visitors to the museum's opening and said service members bring honor to the Army nationwide. Formally known as the Women's Army Corps Foundation, the museum's first home was at Fort McClellan, Ala. It was there for 44 years until the post was closed in 1999. The museum was then re-established on the Quartermaster post, Fort Lee. Fort Lee was the first WAC training post from 1948 to 1954 before the training moved to Fort McClellan, officials said.
Vietnam Veterans Memorial
|