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    Archive for the ‘Saipan’ Category

    “They were beginning to fear they might not win”

    October 24th

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    Jim Norick remembers that everybody was surprised when they learned of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor.  He figured sooner or later the United States was going to be involved in World War II, but it still came as a shock.  Norick says he and his wife, Madalynne, were watching a movie at the Criterion Theater in downtown Oklahoma City when they stopped the movie, and announced the Japanese attack.  “I figured, well, I’m going to have to be going, I guess,” Norick said.  “Next day, at the office, everybody was talking about it.  We didn’t know what was going to happen next.”

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    (above) Jim Norick’s family business in downtown Oklahoma City.

    Norick was working at the family’s business, Norick Brothers Printing, in Oklahoma City.  He and Madalynne had a son, Ron, who was less than a year old.  But, by the summer of 1942, Norick figured he was going into the military soon.  So, with two Naval Bases in Norman, he entered the Navy on September 1, 1942 as a storekeeper, working in the pay office.  The work was similar to what he had been doing at Norick Brothers.

    “When the base first opened on the first of September,” Norick told me recently, “they didn’t have uniforms for us for a month - we just wore civilian clothes.  They didn’t have a place for us to sleep, so I rode the Interurban back and forth from Oklahoma City to Norman.  When they finally got housing down there, then of course I had to stay on-base.”

    The Naval Air Technical Training Center was built in record time - four and a half months.   It was a city of more than 19,000 with enlisted men, marines, WAVES with a ship’s company of about 2,000, and was divided into two bases, North and South.  Three separate schools fell under one command, providing training for Aviation Machinists, Metalsmiths, and Ordnancemen.  Pilots received training at the North Base.

    In addition to his work in the payroll office, Jim Norick played alto saxophone and clarinet in one of the two base bands.  He recalls that it was a special thrill to play under the base’s famous band director, Tex Beneke, saxophonist and conductor in the Glenn Miller Band.  Norick says Beneke had a hearing problem, so he stayed stateside during the war, providing entertainment for those on-base and their dates from surrrounding communities.

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    (above) Jim Norick is second from left in front row in this picture of one of the bands at the Norman Naval Air Training Technical Center.

    Norick says the bands played at the Naval hospital and, every Sunday afternoon, in Building 92, the base’s large auditorium.  “It was a morale builder,” Norick said, “yes, very much.”

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    (above)  Dancing was a popular pasttime at the Norman Naval Air Training Technical Center’s Building 92. 

    Jim Norick was at the South Base for 16 months, but left his wife and son on December 1, 1944, to go to Charleston, South Carolina for the pre-commissioning of a sea-going tug.  By April, he was aboard the tug, with floating drydock attached, heading to the South Pacific.   

    It took 18 days to go from the Panama Canal to Hawaii, then it was on to Enewitok, where they dropped off the floating drydock.  Norick and his shipmates thought they were going back to Hawaii, but instead they were sent to join the invasion forces at Guam and Saipan.  He remembers that the fighting was intense.  “They (the Japanese) were beginning to fear that they might not win,” Norick told me, “the guys having to go on the beach, you’d just pray for them, because so many of them did not come back.”

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    Norick went on to serve in the invasions of the Leyte Gulf and the Lingayen Gulf.  During invasions, he says everyone played a part.  It was during the fighting in the Leyte Gulf that he had a chance to turn hero, by shooting down a Japanese Betty bomber.  ”First, I was the loader, putting the bullets on that needed to be fired,” he said.  “But, the guy that was on the gun was a little trigger-happy, so they shifted me and put me on a gun and put him on the loader.  So, that’s how I became a shooter.”  Norick was on a 20-millimeter gun when he spotted the Japanese bomber, traced it down and blasted it from the sky.  He had never been trained on the 20-millimeter, but he knew how to shoot.  “Prior to that I had done a little shooting, hunting quail with my dad,” he said, “but that was a little different.”

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    (above) Madalynne Norick with son, Ron.

    While Jim was away, Madalynne kept in touch through “V-Mails” and did her part by working in the Executive Lobby at the Douglas Aircraft Plant in Oklahoma City.  “You couldn’t survive without mail,” she said.  “You needed to know that your husband was still over there, and he was working for our country and you were trying to help the little way that you could.  It was a serious time.”  war-photos-8-058.jpg

    Norick was part of the invasion force waiting about a hundred miles away from the Japanese mainland when the war ended.  He thinks the invasion would have started within a week, had the United States not dropped the atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

    Norick returned to his family in Oklahoma in early December, 1945.  He went back to the printing business and became involved in community and public service.  He served on the City Council and was elected Oklahoma City Mayor in 1959.  He served two terms as mayor, winning a second term in 1967.   Son Ron followed him as mayor in 1987 and held the position for 11 years. 

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    (above) Madalynne and Jim Norick today.

    Jim Norick remains involved in family business and still plays the clarinet.  He plays each week in the Nichols Hills Concert Band and has a 6-piece combo that plays at nursing homes in the Oklahoma City area.

    He also tries to remain in touch with his friends who proudly stepped up and served in what he calls, WW-Deuce.  “I think the biggest majority of the American people were mad,” Norick said, “and (said) let’s get this over with, and they did what they had to do…willingly.”

    Until next time, Dick Pryor

    (Jim Norick was profiled on the Oklahoma News Report on October 24, 2007.  To see the story, click on “Videos” on this website and go to “OETA’s Dick Pryor interviews Oklahoma WWII veterans.)

    Posted in The War, OETA, Oklahoma News Report, Douglas Aircraft Plant, Hawaii, Saipan, World War II, South Pacific, Navy, The Oklahoman | 1 Comment »

    Tulsa WWII Veteran Dale Luton Dies

    October 23rd

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    When we began our Oklahoma World War II Stories project last summer we were prompted to act by Ken Burns’ documentary, The War, and the realization that veterans of the war years are dying at an alarming rate.  So, our ambitious and worthwhile project began.  We were ready to interview Oklahoma veterans and produce stories about their experiences.  What we weren’t ready for was losing one of the veterans we profiled quite so soon.

    Sad to say, Dale Luton, USMC, died early Monday morning in his hometown of Tulsa after a short illness.  He was 83.  We learned about Mr. Luton in July when his daughter, Linda Luton Jackson, contacted us about a photograph that Ken Burns was using in the promotion of his documentary.  Linda saw the picture of a solitary soldier in the promotional materials and realized she had seen it before.  More accurately, she had seen the bigger picture that showed five Americans:  one dead on a stretcher and four carrying his body.  The person in the front of picture was her father.  The photograph was in her father’s scrapbook and also in a frame at her parents’ home.  war-photos-4-059.jpg

    (above)  Dale Luton, left-foreground, carrying a stretcher with a dead American at Saipan in 1944.   Luton died on October 22, 2007.

    We arranged to meet Linda’s father, and interviewed him on August 10, 2007 at his home in south Tulsa.  Photojournalist Boots Kennedye and I spent most of the day with Mr. Luton and his wife, Betty.  He told us about his experiences at Tarawa, Guadalcanal, and Saipan, where the now-famous picture was taken.  We visited over lunch and found out that Dale Luton was quite the star in the retirement village where he lived; even more so after word got out about his new fame.war-photos-4-127.jpg

    (above) OETA photojournalist Boots Kennedye photographs Dale Luton looking through his scrapbook on August 10, 2007.

    Mr. Luton explained that he was likely the only ambulance driver depicted in the picture who survived the war.  The others, he believed, were killed in a Japanese attack soon after the picture was taken in Saipan in 1944.  Mr. Luton returned to Tulsa by the fall of 1944, got married and launched his career with the Tulsa Fire Department early in 1946.  He spent 32 years at the TFD before retiring in 1978.

    We let Ken Burns know about discovering Mr. Luton and word got back to us that Burns wanted to talk to Mr. Luton sometime.  Last week that happened.  With Mr. Luton’s health failing, time was of the essence and we let Ken Burns know.  Just a few days ago, Ken Burns reached Dale Luton, by telephone, and they visited for a few minutes.  Linda tells us they visited about Mr. Luton’s service and sacrifice, and Ken expressed his appreciation.   We were honored to get to know Mr. Luton, as well, and grateful for the opportunity to tell his story.  We will miss him.  

    Mr. Luton’s death is another reminder that the men and women of the “greatest generation” will not be with us much longer.   We invite persons with a World War II story to tell to share it through this website, by phone, by mail or by e-mail.      war-photos-4-121.jpg

          Dale Luton (June 13, 1924-October 22, 2007)

    A memorial service for Dale Luton will be held on Thursday, October 25, at 1:00 p.m. at the 10th and Rockford Church of Christ in Tulsa.   

    Until next time, Dick Pryor 

    Posted in Guadalcanal, The War, OETA, Oklahoma News Report, Tarawa, Saipan, World War II, Marines, South Pacific, The Oklahoman | 3 Comments »

    War in the Pacific

    September 24th

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    “You couldn’t go anywhere without stepping over a dead man.”  That’s how Dale Luton of Tulsa remembers the battle at Tarawa (above), which is featured prominently in Ken Burns’ documentary, “The War,” airing tonight on OETA.

    Luton joined the Marines late in 1941.  He had planned on enlisting in the Navy, but his mother did not want him to be on the ocean, so he became a Marine.  Luton was one week away from completing his 7 weeks of training in San Diego when the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor.  Luton never got that seventh week of training.  He did not know much about Pearl Harbor before the attack, but he knew war was coming.  By the third week of January, 1942 he was on  a luxury liner, headed for Pacific with the 1st Marine Brigade.  He was 17 years old. 

    Luton drove trucks and hauled gasoline in Samoa, where he sustained burns when, because of a mislabeled can, he poured gasoline on the sand (instead of kerosene) and hot metal underneath ignited the gasoline, causing a flash fire.  He returned to his unit after 21 days in the hospital, and wound up on the front line at Guadalcanal.  The conditions there were awful.

    “Well, there’s mosquitoes that could lift a mosquito net off of you, and when you woke up your entire arm was a welt, so I had malaria,” said Luton.  “We were glad when the Army relieved us, because they had stacks of food and supplies.  Before then we were eating Japanese rice, C-rations, and didn’t  have much of anything.”

    On the atoll of Tarawa, Luton saw some of the fiercest fighting of the war.  “Tarawa was a 72-hour battle,” he said.  “Where the airstrip was, there was high places on this atoll, and it was two miles long and 800 yards wide, at the widest place.  It was a 72-hour battle, and when we got back on board ship there were 1,026 Marines killed and 3,000 wounded, and we had killed over 3,000 Japanese.  It was over the equivalent of one square mile, and there was that many people killed. ”

    Luton was an ambulance driver in Saipan, where he was captured in a photograph that is featured prominently in the promotion of ”The War.”  Normally, Luton carried the living to the hospital, but in that picture from 1944, he is the Marine in the foreground, carrying a dead American soldier to the cemetery.  war-photos-4-060.jpg

    Luton’s daughter, Linda Luton Jackson, saw ”The War” promo and told us about the  picture that also resides in her father’s scrapbook and in a frame on a shelf in her parent’s apartment in Tulsa.  We have now learned that Ken Burns hopes to meet with Mr. Luton, to discuss the circumstances surrounding that now well-known photograph.

    Dale Luton married Betty Ritter after he returned home to Tulsa from the south Pacific.  They celebrated their 63rd wedding anniversary on September 23, 2007.   war-photos-4-088.jpg 

    (above) Betty and Dale Luton in 1944.  (below)  Betty and Dale Luton today. 

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    Dale Luton’s story is the second of our Oklahoma World War II Stories, airing Monday, September 24th at 6:30 p.m. on the Oklahoma News Report.  

    Until next time, Dick Pryor

    (Dale Luton was profiled on the Oklahoma News Report on September 24, 2007.  To see the story, click on “Videos” on this website and go to “OETA’s Dick Pryor interviews Oklahoma WWII veterans.)

    Posted in The War, OETA, Oklahoma News Report, Guadalcanal, Tarawa, Marines, South Pacific, Saipan, World War II | No Comments »

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