USA TODAY International Edition

These nurses paved way for future generation­s,

Ceremony Monday lauded legacy, how they paved way for future generation­s

- Olga Hajishenga­llis USA TODAY Contributi­ng: Tom Vanden Brook

Diane Carlson Evans was a nursing student in Minnesota in the late 1960s when she noticed her male friends and classmates getting called up one by one to go to Vietnam.

Very much aware of the war, she visited a recruiter and asked how she could join the effort.

“I decided I needed to be there, too,” she said.

The Army needed nurses, so after graduating college and undergoing basic training, she served as a nurse in evacuation hospitals in Vung Tau and Pleiku, Vietnam, from 1968 to 1969.

Carlson Evans said she and other nurses put their youth and inexperien­ce aside to treat serious injuries and unfamiliar diseases while serving in combat zones. Beds were constantly being rotated from one set of casualties to another, she said.

“We were young taking care of the young,” she said.

The memory and legacy of the women who served in Vietnam and paved the way for future generation­s were honored at the annual Veterans Day observance Monday with a ceremony at the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington. Also, the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund celebrated the 20th anniversar­y of the Vietnam Women’s Memorial, located near the iconic Vietnam Wall.

Carlson Evans, founder and president of the Vietnam Women’s Memorial Foundation, said she initiated the effort for a women’s memorial when she found out that a statue of three men would be added to the Vietnam Memorial in the early ’ 80s.

“Every story is about the men. People don’t even know women were in Vietnam,” she recalls thinking at the time. The women’s memorial “heightens awareness that women went off to war, and this is what they did. And their contributi­ons are wor- thy of recognitio­n by the nation.”

Sculpted by Glenna Goodacre, the bronze statue depicts three uniformed women with a wounded soldier.

During her time in Vietnam, Carlson Evans said about 90% of women serving were nurses, while the rest made up the Women’s Army Corps in areas such as administra­tion, finance and bookkeepin­g. In the 1960s, wom- en made up about 1% of the total military force. Today, they make up 15%- 20%, she said.

Following Vietnam, Carlson Evans said some women would go on to serve in leadership roles, becoming “fully integrated” in the military.

Lori Perkio, assistant director of education at the American Legion national headquarte­rs in Indianapol­is, said that although women in the past were seen as individual­s needing protection, the roles have expanded significan­tly. Perkio served in the Army from 1980 to 1984 in the military police.

In January, then- Defense secretary Leon Panetta decided to open previously off- limits posts in armor, infantry and special operations to women. Later in June, the Pentagon issued its timeline for allowing women to serve in front- line combat roles by 2016.

“It’s become a reality,” Perkio said. “Slowly, women have been put into roles that were considered gender- specific for men. ... Women are wanting to participat­e side- by- side by their male counterpar­ts in combat to serve our country.”

In reality, women in combat roles are nothing new, she said. It happened in the Gulf War, including women serving as helicopter pilots.

“Women were actually gunners,” Perkio said. “Women performed many different tasks that put them in potential direct line of fire.”

Kristine Hesse, the women veterans outreach coordinato­r at the National Veterans Foundation, agrees that women are already in combat and completely integrated in the military.

“We’re pushing forward and at a faster pace in the service,” said Hesse, who served 24 years in the Air Force and retired about two years ago. “The recognitio­n is coming because we are doing these jobs now.”

When people argue that women should not serve in combat zones because men will be too busy taking care of them, Carlson Evans said she finds it laughable.

“In Vietnam, I had 45 men in beds, and, as a woman, I was protecting them,” she said.

Sen. Claire McCaskill, D- Mo., a member of the Senate Armed Services Committee for the past seven years, said she continues “to be amazed by the contributi­on women in our military have made to our national security.”

“The past 20 years have seen a dramatic increase in the overall number of women in the military, as well as women in unpreceden­ted leadership roles,” she said in an email.

“We’ve seen women step into new jobs and missions, and most dramatical­ly, the services are moving to open front- line combat positions that had previously been closed to women.”

At the invitation of Carlson Evans, retired general Colin Powell will be delivering the salute to the Vietnam Women’s Memorial.

“As chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, I spoke at the groundbrea­king of the Vietnam Women’s Memorial in 1993, so it will be especially poignant for me to speak this Veterans Day as we celebrate the 20th anniversar­y of the Women’s Memorial,” Powell, who fought in Vietnam and later served as secretary of State, said in an e- mail. “I most especially want to acknowledg­e the 11,000 women who served in Vietnam, mostly as nurses.”

Powell said the bronze statue “celebrates the hope, strength and passion that the Vietnam women brought to the struggle for life in Vietnam.”

“They paved the way for the largescale increase in the number of women in the Armed Forces serving in almost every occupation­al specialty,” he said.

For its founder, the memorial stands as a visual reminder of all the women who “exceeded expectatio­ns” and ultimately opened doors for those who followed.

“We proved our strength, our courage, our bravery,” Carlson Evans said. “We stand on the shoulders of every generation that ( stood) before us.”

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ?? H. DARR BEISER, USA TODAY ?? This year’s Veterans Day observance in Washington will celebrate the 20th anniversar­y of the Vietnam Women’s Memorial, located near the Vietnam Wall.
H. DARR BEISER, USA TODAY This year’s Veterans Day observance in Washington will celebrate the 20th anniversar­y of the Vietnam Women’s Memorial, located near the Vietnam Wall.
 ?? AP ?? A nurse comforts a wounded soldier in Nha Trang in South Vietnam in 1965.
AP A nurse comforts a wounded soldier in Nha Trang in South Vietnam in 1965.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States