GREELEY, Colo. (AP) - In a story May 19 about a military veteran, The Associated Press reported erroneously that Katherine Ravithis was the first woman to serve in Colorado’s Army National Guard. The Guard says at least two women served previously.
A corrected version of the story is below:
Pioneering female Colorado National Guard member honored
Weld County honored one of the first women to serve in Colorado’s Army National Guard
GREELEY, Colo. (AP) - Weld County has honored one of the first women to serve in Colorado’s Army National Guard.
The Greeley Tribune reports that the Weld County Veterans Memorial Committee recognized 86-year-old Katherine Ravithis during its Armed Forces Day in May.
Ravithis joined the Colorado Army National Guard in 1972. She is the first woman known to enlist in non-medical and non-clerical service.
She says she couldn’t attend her first training camp because there were no women’s facilities, but she always felt like an equal.
Ravithis had a 20-year military career that also included time as a communicator in the Army, a member of the Marine Corps Reserves and a member of the California National Guard.
She now lives in Greeley and has traveled across the nation to attend Women’s Army Corps Veterans’ Association Conventions.
A Guard spokesman, Maj. Darin Overstreet, says at least two women - Lts. Joan Wysoski and Joan Sullivan - served before Ravithis as nurses.
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