Trojans recall victory
Richard Sprinkel walked into a banquet room at Big Canyon Country
Club on Thursday wearing two watches on one wrist.
One showed the time in Newport Beach, where dozens of World War II
veterans were gathered to celebrate the 60th anniversary of V-J Day
-- Sept. 2, 1945 -- the day of victory for Allied forces over Japan.
The other watch kept the time in Tokyo Bay, the place where the
formal Japanese surrender took place aboard the U.S. battleship
Missouri.
Sprinkel wasn’t suffering from time-zone paranoia. He was showing
his support for war veterans like himself, who played a role in the
momentous United States victory.
“This is so dear to my heart,” said Sprinkel, a former Naval
navigator who lives in Newport Beach. “We all went through this
together, and it’s the friendships that keep us coming back.”
The members of this group had one thing in common. They are all
part of the USC Naval Reserve Officer Training Corps Alumni League,
an organization comprising Trojan graduates, many of whom were in the
Navy ROTC program during wartime.
On Friday, about 20 group members were scheduled for a cruise
aboard William B., a tugboat named for a deceased USC classmate and
World War II veteran named William Barker.
Sprinkel, who helped organize Thursday and Friday’s activities,
said he planned to dress the boat with a row of American flags.
William B. was slated to cruise Newport Bay and be escorted about a
half-mile outside the bay by the U.S. Coast Guard.
Once stationary, Sprinkel said he planned to cast a red, white and
blue wreath overboard to honor the troops who gave their lives in
World War II.
“I want to record this moment in history,” Sprinkel said.
At Thursday’s luncheon, the members of the group saw war footage
and reminisced about their time in the service. Clad in an assortment
of USC paraphernalia, the veterans thought back even further, to the
time in the early 1940s when many lived together in college dorms.
Some were part of the first Navy ROTC class at USC that began
their service in 1940. Many of the attendees received their Naval
commissions from USC in 1945, a few months before V-J Day.
“Some of us met 63 years ago at a drill field at USC,” said
Brownlee “Hub” Hubble, a Newport Beach resident, who graduated from
USC in 1945. “We joked that this was really our fraternity.... It’s
an emotional thing we went through.”
Black-and-white pictures brought by alumni league members to
Thursday’s event showed photos of the Pearl Harbor attack, President
Harry Truman’s victory announcement and Sprinkel leading Navy ROTC
midshipmen through a marching ceremony on campus.
Sprinkel was battalion commander in charge of overseeing about 250
NROTC members in the early 1940s.
He said about 2,200 people have graduated from the USC Navy ROTC
program. About 1,150 of the graduates are on the league’s mailing
list.
The group’s main role is to support the current Midshipmen at USC
through scholarship funds, computer donations and a Navy sword gift
presented to the battalion commander, Sprinkel said.
The group has a history of celebrating important dates in war
history. They have congregated for Pearl Harbor memorials and, in
1995, some gathered at the USC campus to celebrate the 50th
anniversary of V-J Day.
Many members, like Sprinkel and Hubble, were motivated by Pearl
Harbor to join the USC NROTC program. After receiving their
commissions, the graduates dispersed throughout the Pacific.
On V-J Day, Oceanside resident Al Theal was aboard USS Schuylkill,
a ship anchored in Tokyo Bay that provided fuel to the Allied fleets.
Bob Brockmeier, the league’s current president, has heard stories
from Theal and other World War II veterans. He was only 4 years old
on V-J Day and comes to these events to learn more about the early
days of the USC Naval ROTC program.
“This group is unique,” Brockmeier said. “They participated in one
of the most interesting times in our history. Their episodes
shouldn’t fade into oblivion.”
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