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Three individuals, one holding a shirt, at the American Embassy in Baghdad.

Three individuals, one holding a shirt, at the American Embassy in Baghdad.

Tom Eichenberg '76 on Family, Service, and ROTC

鈥淪anta Clara Army ROTC is part of the Eichenberg DNA,鈥 says Tom Eichenberg 鈥76, M.S. 鈥77.

鈥淪anta Clara Army ROTC is part of the Eichenberg DNA,鈥 says Tom Eichenberg 鈥76, M.S. 鈥77. His father, William L. Eichenberg 鈥41, served as an assistant professor of military science during WWII, brothers William L. Eichenberg 鈥65 and James R. Eichenberg 鈥77, and nephew James P. Eichenberg 鈥92 have all graduated from the ROTC program, which is celebrating its 100th anniversary this year.

鈥淓very time my dad went back to campus, he would stop by the Mission Church and look over the names of all the graduates who died in WWII,鈥 says Eichenberg. 鈥淗e鈥檇 go down the list and know every soldier and where they died. He showed me that when you鈥檙e an ROTC cadet and take the oath of office, you鈥檙e truly making a solemn commitment.鈥

After graduating from the program and completing his M.S. in applied economics, Eichenberg reported for active duty at Hawaii鈥檚 famed Schofield Barracks in October 1977鈥攖he same filming location as the movie From Here To Eternity. Here he met his wife, Yvonne Kuwana, at a dinner at the Pearl Harbor Officers Club. One year later, the couple married at the post before relocating to Fort Polk, just outsideof Leesville, Louisiana.

After decades of dual civilian and military reserve careers, Eichenberg was recalled to active duty when his command came up for rotation in Iraq in 2005, requesting a job as director of the National Iraqi Assistance Center (NIAC), a walk-in humanitarian assistance facility with 鈥30 dedicated Iraqis on staff, Sunnis, Shias, and Kurds, who all got along and risked their lives every day to come to work.鈥

A group of people posing together at night.
While director, Eichenberg oversaw support staff at the NIAC in addition to Kuwait City and the American Embassy in Amman, Jordan. 鈥淎s a relatively small operation, we were at the lower end of thespectrum compared to the mega projects being run by the State Department and the United States Agency for International Development,鈥 explains Eichenberg, 鈥渟o what we did had immediate results.鈥

NIAC projects included directing the Baghdad Job Fair, locating missing persons, assisting battered women and children through safe houses and counseling, and providing sewing machines to help local women make and sell scarves at local bazars in Baghdad. The Center鈥檚 medical section assisted patients who had nowhere else to go outside of the NIAC.

鈥淲e worked with very dedicated organizations and were able to develop programs for heart surgery, plastic surgery for burn victims, and corneal transplants,鈥 Eichenberg says. 鈥淲e even had the largest prosthetics clinic in Iraq, which we ultimately turned over to the Iraqi Surgeon General.鈥

While based in Baghdad, Eichenberg got the idea to form an impromptu SCU Alumni Chapter, which included Lieutenant General Joseph Peterson 鈥72 and Special Agent Bob Gorini 鈥69, after running into the latter as he sported an SCU t-shirt during an early morning gym workout.

This year marks Eichenberg鈥檚 40th class reunion year and Santa Clara鈥檚 100th anniversary celebration of the national ROTC program, with many of his ROTC classmates who鈥檝e just wrapped up careers at the Pentagon planning to attend. 鈥淚t will be amazing to see people you lived with in the dorms 40 years ago,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 haven鈥檛 been back to campus in so long, but to me, Santa Clara has become one of the prettiest campuses in the nation.鈥

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