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On the record ... with Laurie Emmer

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Laurie Emmer
Laurie Emmer (Curtis Clegg - cclegg@shawmedia.com)

SYCAMORE – After spending 23 years in the Army, Sgt. 1st Class Laurie Emmer retired to Sycamore in 2005. Her husband, Michael Emmer, was also in the Army at the time and was deployed in Iraq.

“I bought this house when he as gone and I just waited for him to get out so we could settle here,” she said.

Emmer was born and raised in California and her husband grew up in Virgil and Sycamore.

“I’m still getting used to the snow,” she said with a laugh.

Shortly after moving to Sycamore, the veteran of the 82nd Airborne division got involved with the local Veterans of Foreign Wars post, quickly rising in the ranks to become the post’s first female commander.

She is now seeking office in the VFW’s district leadership, and she remains active in veterans causes like coping with post-traumatic stress disorder, suicide prevention and high unemployment rates among veterans. She is also studying history at Northern Illinois University in order to make a second career of teaching.

Emmer sat down with MidWeek reporter Curtis Clegg to discuss her life in the Army and her retirement in Sycamore.

MidWeek: How were you selected to speak at the Veterans Day event at Sycamore High School?
Laurie Emmer: I missed a VFW meeting, but the DeKalb County Veterans Assistance Commission Superintendent Herb Holderman brought it up to my husband.

MW: You mentioned in your Veterans Day presentation at Sycamore High School that you are writing a paper about women in the infantry.
LE: Yes, I was fascinated because I have heard this discussion about trying to get women into the infantry and I realized that it has been 35 years since they integrated women into the all-volunteer Army. …I thought it was fascinating that we have been talking about it (the proposal to allow women into the infantry) for so long but it really hasn’t been a subject we have been writing about very much. It’s so controversial and so emotional, even now.

MW: How did you decide to join the Army?
LE: I enlisted in 1982. I was in college at the time and I was just fulfilling a family legacy. I was going to go in for three years and then go back to college.

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