Join us on Monday April 20, 2020, to call, text, email, or whatever means it takes to contact a veteran near or far and say "thank you and glad to know you are ok" Read more [...] NWVU’s Campaign Call a Veteran Day, Monday April 20th
Join us on Monday April 20, 2020, to call, text, email, or whatever means it takes to contact a veteran near or far and say "thank you and glad to know you are ok" Read more [...]
The National Women Veterans United (NWVU) is aware of the difficult times that military women veterans, service members, and other citizens are experiencing due to COVID-19. NWVU is appealing to military women veterans to contact us and we will go as far as we can to assist you. We have also asked partners to stand with us until grants and other financial avenues are in place, and even then that may not be enough.
Researchers in Belgium and the Netherlands created simulations that show even if you’re exercising outside, you could be exposed to the novel coronavirus through what’s called a slipstream.
The Road Home Program at Rush provides comprehensive, evidence-based treatment in a safe and supportive environment. Rush understands that it takes courage to seek treatment and we are committed to helping you through this difficult time. Rush takes the time to learn your unique situation and tailor their care to best serve your individual needs.
The National Women Veterans United (NWVU) is celebrating 15 years of Making a Difference, Providing Service and Preserving the legacy of military women veterans.
On behalf of the National Women Veterans United (NWVU), thank you for your support. It is with a heavy heart that (NWVU) must cancel the Campaign15 Conference for Military Women Veterans, due to the COVID-19 national and state mandates. Our heavy heart is for those that are personally affected by the virus.
The contributions women have made throughout the years is apparent in all walks of life, and the Air Force is no exception. With the observation of Women's History Month in March, visitors to the National Museum of the U.S. Air Force can view exhibits that pay tribute to the accomplishments and achievements of women who served in the Air Force. Original source:https://www.nationalmuseum.af.mil/Collections/Research/Womens-History/
Citizen-Soldier 1st Lt. Juanita "Christie" Goodrich wins the best female lifter for the second time in three years while competing in the 2019 Idaho State Weightlifting Championships in October. She serves part-time in the Idaho Army National Guard as a maintenance platoon leader for the 1st of the 183rd Aviation Assault Battalion and fulltime as the battalion's administrative assistant.
BANGOR, Maine -- The Maine Army National Guard officially welcomed its first female enlisted combat engineer, Pfc. Jordan Magiera, into the ranks on Sunday, Dec. 8, during a ceremony at the 240th Regional Training Institute. Original source: https://www.army.mil/article/231358
The first women to serve in the U.S. Navy were nurses, beginning with the “Sacred Twenty” appointed after Congress established the Navy Nurse Corps on 13 May 1908. The first large-scale enlistment of women into the Navy met clerical shortages during World War I, and the second came months before the United States entered World War II. Original source: https://www.history.navy.mil/browse-by-topic/diversity/women-in-the-navy.html