Van Roekel’s typing skills allow him to enjoy wartime

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Dwain Van Roekel credits three things for keeping him alive: Becoming a good typist, attending airborne school and President Harry Truman's decision to drop the atomic bomb. (Submitted photo)

Dwain Van Roekel was 15 years old when Pearl Harbor was attacked, and he decided to act. In 1944, he graduated and attempted to join the U.S. Air Force. He failed the eye examination but was drafted by the Army.

“I almost failed the physical because of my blood pressure,” Van Roekel said. “I couldn’t get it up to 100, which was their limit. They finally said, ‘Think of anything exciting,’ and I got it up to 99. They said, ‘Close enough.’”

He spent 16 weeks in Camp Walters, Texas, for basic training. Van Roekel was able to use his love of typing to his advantage.

“I pushed for the two-year (program in high school) and came out as a really respectable typist,” Van Roekel said. “In other words, I could keep up with the girls. I spent my extra time in company headquarters typing orders.”

While typing, he discovered an order asking for volunteers for Airborne training. He put his name on top of the list and was selected. His Airborne recruitment saved him from going to the battle of Okinawa, which was the largest amphibious assault in the Pacific War during World War II. The U.S. had 62,000 casualties and more than 12,500 soldiers killed or missing.

Instead he was sent to Fort Benning in Georgia for jump school training.

“I thought I was in very good shape, and I could handle anything,” Van Roekel said. “I thought I was the king, but after my first day in training, I had to be helped out of bed.”

Back in Camp Walters, he was a work horse. During forced hikes, he often found himself carrying more items than he started out with.

After finishing jump school, he was sent to additional training in Airborne combat techniques.

He then was sent to Fort Ord in California. Van Roekel discovered that some soldiers known as “Tankers” to be in the same vicinity. His troop was relocated to Camp Anza in California because of some fights between Airborne and the “tankers.”

Van Roekel and his friends attended a ball where they ran into some trouble.

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