It
was January 1979, we had one more month before we reach US Naval
Station San Diego, California. I'm sitting at the "B" side
monitor station of our after Mark 10 Terrier Guided Missile launching
system. My arms are crossed, I'm still disgusted and yet laughing
inside as I watch the mayhem going on all around me. All of the
ship's senior officers are gathered around helpless and frustrated.
A squad of Marines have been topside for hours already. The senior
Gunners mate Missileman (GMM for short) Petty Officers are frenzied,
running around looking into cabinets, grabbing and searching a
multitude of technical manuals try to fix the launching system. We've
been on loading missiles since early this morning. It's now about
6PM, 1800, and the last two missiles are assemble but stuck on their
hosts! Both of them! The launching system has two rails (an "A"
side and a "B" side) and able to fire dual-salvos of missiles.
The system has two "rings" of missiles below deck. These rings
are like the chamber ring of a revolver. Except the launcher holds
twenty missiles in each ring. Suddenly, I feel a tap on my
shoulder,! It's my newly assigned division Officer, Lt Santana.
"You're a specialized technician on this system aren't you?"
"Yes sir!", I quipped, with my arms still folded. "Then why are
you just sitting there like this?" "You need to get over there
and give them a hand with fixing this damn system!" "But sir, I'm
just a lowly Seaman, I'll let all those Petty Officers figure it
out!" "Now listen here sailor!" "I had no part in you
getting busted to seaman." "I'm the new guy, remember?" "I
didn't get Lt Magbee in trouble!" "He did that all his own
too." First of all, he was prejudice against Mullinex and I
reported him to the Captain." "The Captain didn't do one
thing!" "All he did was tell me about how great a' wrestler
Magbee was at the academy! Crazy!" And when Lt Magbee found out
that I was going to be a witness for Mullinex at his Captain's Mast
he told me that my word wouldn't be worth a "s***" up
there!" So, when the captain asked for witnesses, they called
for me, Gunnersmate 2nd Class Petty officer Frances. The Captain then
asked, "Well, Petty Officer Frances. What do have to say in this
matter?" I replied" Well Capt'n, when I signed onto be a
witness for Mullinex, I thought that my words, as his superior, would
have a bearing in the case. However, my division officer told me that
my words, quote unquote, would not be worth a s*** up here! So, I now
do not feel that I have anything further to say!"
Then LT.
Magbee interrupts my history lesson and says, "Yes, yes I know all
that I read the transcripts of the Captain's Mast and your
subsequent bust and suspension of three months pay. However, that was
then and this is now. Will you please get over there and see if you
can assist?" "Aye Aye sir," I grumbled.
I peered over
the each of the Petty Officers shoulders that were huddled around the
main console, searching the technical manuals for answers.
I
can understand why they might be too frenzied to think straight.
After all, it has been a very long day already. Marines are topside
guarding the missile load. All the seniors officers are huddled
around the "A"side rail, helpless and dismayed at the lack of
progress. Worse yet, there are two thirty-feet long missile stuck
five feet in the air with only about six inches of brass holing each
of them on the hoist that takes them down into the missile ring. In
other words, neither of the missiles is safe and hanging securely on
a railing system. The system failed after the hoist raised up high
enough to push the missile from the rail onto the hoist. Then the
rocker arm pulled the missile backward a foot to the "notched out"
section of the railing so as the let the hoist lower the missile
safely into the ring and lock it in place. IIt is just sitting there,
on 6 inches on brass resting on a hoist! Then they tried the "B"
side the same thing happened!"
"How can two seemingly
independent railing systems fail the same way at the same time?"
The Chief frustratingly asked as I was grabbing the system's "last
to close, first to open" relay troubleshooting guide. "I have no
idea Chief," I calmly replied. In addition, I do not care; I plan
on fixing one side at a time. And if it's the same failure then
good. But if not, once I fox the "A" side, I'll troubleshoot
the "B" side. I grabbed two can relays out of the cabinet and
told the Chief that I was going below to replace the parts. I
scurried down the ladder as quickly as possible. Once replaced the
hoist on the "A" side moved down as designed to the cheers of
everyone. I smiled a bit but hurried over the "B" side in hopes
that would fix it too and yee ha! It surely did! When I made it
topside, everyone was standing in line, cheering, patting me on the
back, shaking my hand! It felt great. Chief Dezi was the last one in
line, he was bright-eyed, proud, grateful held out his right hand to
shake mine and grabbed my shoulder with the other and said, well done
sailor, well done!
"Seaman Frances reporting as ordered
sir." I announced as I stepped onto the bridge. Ok, Seaman Frances
let's step out on the bridge wing, commanded the Captain.
"That
was one hell of a job you did down there today sailor!" Thank you
sir, I replied as I waited for the "but, and then the hammer. "I
looked at you service record while we were getting underway." "You
are a complicated young man." Meritorious advancement out of boot
camp, you doubled the minimum required scores for advancing to Seamen
and 3rd class Petty Officer. Then nearly doubled the minimum score
for 2nd Class! You were 2nd in ranking in both your "A" school
and "C" Advanced missile launching school. Good s***!" Then he
became more formal saying, "Listen Frances, I've decided to
reinstate your rank back to 2nd Class Petty officer, give you all of
the pay that was taken from you. In addition, I'm going to tear up
all of this nonsense s*** with the bag of shrimp and with you and Lt
Magbee."
Still in shock I said, "Sir, you've got to be
kidding me! Right? You're just kidding me?" He sadly replied, I
figured you would say that. Anyway, I have reinstated everything. I
know you muster out in about nine months, isn't that right sailor?
Yes sir. Well, you have plenty of time to think it over. Dismissed.
And again. Thank you.
Whenever I get in a jam, or start to
think things are not working out. I go back to a time, a very brief
time; I was actually respected, appreciated and better still, like
for me just being myself.
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