A 101-year-old woman who enlisted during WWII still carries on the values she learned in the U.S. Army to this day. Sgt. Millie Epifanio is a New Yorker, first-generation Italian-American and one of the original Women's Army Auxiliary Corps. She still makes her bed every day and still does her Army exercises. She also still wears her dog tag.
"It says I got my tetanus shot in 1943 and gives the address of my mother in case, you know..." Epifanio said. Epifanio grew up in New York taking care of her family, making $17 per week in a greeting card factory. Her father was hurt after falling down an elevator shaft. That is when she volunteered and enlisted on her own to hopefully spare the lives of her brothers.