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On the record ... with Laurie Emmer

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MW: How were women treated in the military at that time?
LE: I didn’t really notice it (discrimination) until I went to the 82nd Airborne division. I wasn’t thinking much of it when I went in, to tell you the truth.

MW: What was it like at Airborne school?
LE: There were hardly any women there and we could really feel that we were different. I didn’t go to break down barriers or to stand out, I just thought it would be cool to jump out of airplanes. We could tell we weren’t wanted; it was an infantry school. Most women did not make it through the (jump) school. I barely made it myself. When I went to the 82nd Airborne division I was told my orders were a mistake and that I did not belong there. I just recently found out that I was one of only 20 women there. I just felt great to be a part of this great, historical division.

MW: Did you enlist with the intention of being a paratrooper?
LE: No, I heard about it from somebody I had dated and I thought, “Wow, I want to jump out of airplanes,” but when I asked about it, the recruiter said, “You can’t do that.” I asked about it in training when I was in medic school, and they said, “You can’t do that.” But I was dating someone who was in Special Forces medic training at the time, and he said, “We had women in our jump school. Don’t let them tell you that. You drop our name.” So I went back and told my cadre, and then they let me put in my paperwork but they said, “Fine, but you probably won’t make it.” There were three women in our course who put in their paperwork to go but I think only two of us graduated from jump school, and I was the only one to go on to Fort Bragg to go to an airborne slot to be able to jump out of airplanes.

MW: At what point did you become a jumpmaster?
LE: It’s something that you have to start thinking about as you go through leadership – especially if you are a female – because anyone who is a jumpmaster can bounce you out of your leadership position when you are in the 82nd Airborne division. I had a hard time getting a jumpmaster slot and there was a point where I was in a leadership role and every day I was under this threat. I always wanted to be a jumpmaster anyway. …Finally I fought and kicked and I finally got to go into the course.


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