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THE QUEST FOR SILVER DOLPHINS
By ROBERT A. HAMILTON
BESS--the Navy's Basic Enlisted Submarine School--makes
submariners out of mere men.
Robert A. Hamilton is the defense writer for the
New London Day.
As a young Sailor in 1976, John Carcioppolo proved to an examining board
that he knew enough about the nuclear-powered attack submarine USS Archerfish
to handle just about any emergency. Capt. Sibley L. Ward III presented
him with the pair of silver dolphins that designated him as "qualified
in submarines." The back of the pin was engraved with the name of
the boat and the date that Carcioppolo earned them.
Carcioppolo rose to become a master chief radioman before retiring after
22 years of service, after which he put the dolphins in a box for safekeeping
at his Connecticut home. Then he met Seaman Dean Adams, a student at the
Navy's Basic Enlisted Submarine School in New London, Conn., and a member
of the Silver Dolphins, the school's special color guard. Adams so impressed
Carcioppolo with his eagerness and intelligence that, when Adams qualified
on the nuclear-powered attack submarine (SSN) USS San Francisco, Carcioppolo
sent his own dolphins to the submarine to be pinned on the young machinist
mate's chest.
"Wear them with the same pride that I did, my friend," Carcioppolo
said in a letter read at the pinning ceremony. "You have followed
in the steps of thousands of men who have served the U.S. Navy and the
United States with honor. There are men ... there are Sailors ... and
then there are submariner Sailors. Submariners are the best of the best."
Immeasurable Meaning
It was in March 1924 that Acting Secretary of the Navy Theodore Roosevelt
Jr. authorized the wearing of silver dolphins by qualified submariners.
There might be only a few dollars worth of metal in the two-and-a-half-inch
pin, but the meaning the dolphins hold for the men who earn them is immeasurable.
Silver dolphins signify that the enlisted wearer has passed through rigorous
screening and arduous training--and has upheld the legacy of generations
of undersea warriors.
Submarines operate in the most unforgiving environment on the planet,
the crushing depths of the ocean, and they do it with a relatively small
number of men. There are about 130 crewmembers on board when a 9,600-ton
Seawolf-class submarine heads to sea; an Arleigh Burke-class Aegis guided-missile
destroyer of about the same displacement has a crew two-and-a-half times
larger, about 340 Sailors.
That means that the performance of each and every crewmember on a submarine
is vital. Every man must know his job--and much of everyone else's, in
case he ever has to fill in--and a host of emergency procedures. Finishing
his "quals" identifies a man as someone whom the other members
of the crew can depend on to save their lives. Electronics Technician
1st Class Robert Torresin, an instructor at the Basic Enlisted Submarine
School, or BESS, said that everyone in a submarine's crew, from the captain
to the "NUBs" (for "nonuseful body"--i.e., someone
who has not finished his "quals"), recognizes the importance
of the pinning ceremony.
"We had one guy who was getting close just a few days before we
were supposed to go through the Panama Canal, so we were really pushing
him to get everything done, and we did the pinning topside in the Canal,"
Torresin said. "Anything we can do to make it more special, we do."
The men who choose to "go subs" routinely cite the camaraderie
of the tightly knit service as their reason for joining, but the challenge
also is a key attraction.
"As soon as you have a handle on one thing, they're going to give
you more," said Electronics Technician 3rd Class Brian T. Speed,
who qualified this year aboard the USS Memphis (SSN 691). "I like
that chance to get extra responsibility as quickly as I can handle it.
It's my opportunity to shine." Speed went to college for a year out
of high school, then to a technical college for three years, earning a
degree in electrical engineering technology. After working for a few years
for a manufacturer of two-way radios, he said, he became bored.
"I picked out the toughest thing I could think of, and that was
submarines," he said. "I paid $11,000 a year," Speed said,
commenting on his three years at the technical college, " ... and
the six-month [Navy] Nuclear Power School I attended in Charleston [S.C.]
gave me the equivalent, and maybe even more, in terms of education."
A Small Crew And a Sophisticated Ship
Sailors know that on submarines they will be part of a relatively small
crew working hard to keep their sophisticated warship operationally ready,
often on missions and in areas where logistics support is not available.
Hospitalman 1st Class Thomas J. Guest, who also qualified on the Memphis
this year, started his Navy career on an aircraft carrier, one of 40 corpsmen
on the ship, and was not allowed in the engineering spaces even if someone
was injured. Aboard the Memphis he is expected to know the layout and
working intricacies of the engineering spaces as well as he knows the
tiny compartment--more closely resembling a closet--that serves as his
dispensary.
"On a carrier, the ORSE [operational reactor safeguards examination]
was just something that happened while I was on board--it never really
involved me," Guest said. "On a submarine, an ORSE is an all-hands
event, On the Memphis, there was a captain who was going through my programs
20 minutes after he got on board and, let me tell you, he looked at everything."
The submarine force seeks out Navy recruits with the highest scores on
the Armed Forces Qualification Test, and who seem the most motivated in
boot camp, because the qualification process is so rigorous. The real
journey toward qualification begins at the Naval Submarine Base in Groton,
Conn., with a six-week regimen at BESS. Starting with indoctrination in
week one, and culminating with small-arms training in week six, those
selected for submarine training spend 60 hours a week or more in classrooms
and study halls, reviewing everything from the engineering systems associated
with the sonar dome in the bow to the propulsion plant in the after part
of the ship.
Reveille is at 5:00 a.m; the Sailors muster at 6:00 a.m. and march off
to breakfast, but have to be back for room and uniform inspections at
7:00 a.m. By 7:30 a.m., they are back in the classroom, hitting the books.
Late afternoons are spent in physical training, but the emphasis is on
academics and operational training.
There are four major tests administered during the BESS regimen, and
activities are squeezed into every spare minute--from time in the "dive-and-drive"
trainer to casualty drills in the school's flooding and fire simulators,
all of which are designed to be as realistic as possible. If students
cannot quickly fix the leaks in the flooding trainer, for example, they
are soon up to their necks in cold water.
"There's a whole ocean out there that wants to get into the ship,
and it will use any hole it can find," said Machinist Mate 2nd Class
Joseph Tomasello, a BESS instructor.
"We know that, by the time they leave here, they have the capability
to earn their dolphins," he added . "If they can pass our tests,
we know they have the capability to learn and retain information."
Many of the instructors now teaching at the Submarine School learned
their trade the same way that the first Sailors to come through the school
did more than 70 years ago--with the help of crude sketches and classroom
lectures, followed by on-the-job training at sea. Today, however, classroom
instruction reflects 21st-century technology and methodology.
High-Tech Classrooms
When Sonar Technician 1st Class Warren C. Wright reported to the Submarine
School three years ago, he presented his lectures using Powerpoint viewgraphs--which,
at the time, represented the height of teaching technology. Today, in
one of the school's more than 40 all-electronic classrooms, he uses a
"smart board" that allows him to draw a diagram in front of
the class, then save it to a disk that students can call up later.
Through headsets and microphones at each student's station, Wright can
walk Sailors through a new concept simultaneously or take questions discretely
on a separate channel to provide individualized instruction. He also can
call up schematics of a submarine's most complex systems and use computer
animation to explain in clear detail how they work.
And, if he notices from his instructor monitor that students are starting
to be less attentive, he has an additional "teaching aid" at
his fingertips: the computer lockout.
"If you're teaching, and they start to drift off, you hit that lockout
and they can't do anything else with their computer," Wright said.
"That gets their attention back on the lesson!"
Leadership and supervision also have evolved at the Submarine School
through the years. Master Chief Electrician's Mate Michael W. Hurley,
who recently finished a three-year tour as the school's command master
chief, recalled that, when he was a student in 1979, the staff had a number
of helpful options available to them that since then have been overtaken
by technology. A chief petty officer who suspected a young Sailor might
get into trouble, for example, might detain the student for a uniform
inspection until his buddies left for weekend liberty and the bank had
closed. Today, students use direct deposit and automatic teller machines
to obtain ready cash, and cellular telephones to find their friends.
"They have opportunities today we didn't have, including the opportunity
to get into trouble," Hurley said with a hint of a smile. But he
prefers to focus on the positive. Only a small number of students violate
curfew too many times and/or commit other infractions that will put them
before a disciplinary board in any given week--0.2 percent of the school's
population of 1,300 students, on average.
The Training Continuum
Training and qualification continue once a Sailor graduates from Submarine
School.
Perhaps 10 or 15 students out of a class of 60 report directly to the
fleet, as a mess specialist or yeoman, for example, or as a storekeeper
or "striker"--i.e., someone who has not yet selected a rating
(occupational specialty). The rest will attend "A" schools in
various of the Navy's specialized ratings to learn how to be a sonarman,
a radioman, a machinist mate, etc.
Once they report to their first submarine, trainees are thrust quickly
into the first phase of shipboard training, which consists of learning
the emergency systems, the location of first-aid kits, and other information
that could save their lives--or their shipmates' lives. They also meet
with the chief of the boat (or "COB"), the senior enlisted person
on board, who tells them what he expects, and with the submarine's commanding
officer (CO). In these meetings, the new crewmen are introduced to the
CO's commanding philosophy and the clear expectation that there will be
steady progress expected of them in their efforts to earn the right to
wear the silver dolphins.
The second phase of shipboard training concentrates on damage-control
systems, which make up about 50 percent of the qualification process.
In phase three, Sailors learn how to stand a watch, both in port and at
sea; in phase four, they learn the layout of the ship, space by space,
in minute detail. During phase five, they complete final interviews and
"walk throughs" of the boat from stem to stern, accompanied
by senior personnel--and must to be able to identify and explain anything
they pass.
Throughout this demanding process, the object of the new Sailor's quest--shiny
silver dolphins--is on display in a case next to the galley along with
a brief report on the status of the qualifications of each trainee. Every
crewman passes this display several times a day. Anyone who falls behind
in his qualifications is told repeatedly to "Get hot, NUB!"
In today's submarine force, every member of the crew is expected to excel
in all of his tasks.
"You have to learn how to ask for help," said Speed. "If
you don't learn that, you are going to be in the 'hurt locker.' But if
you stay busy and keep yourself squared away, the other members of the
crew will line up to help you."
Every Sailor going through the qualification process is assigned a "sea
daddy," usually an experienced leading petty officer. This mentor
can provide advice on the optimum order to tackle the qualification requirements
and direct the trainee to the experts who can help him learn each in detail.
Submarines also run a weekly "School of the Boat," mandatory
for nonqualified Sailors, usually consisting of a one-hour lecture covering
two different topics.
When the submarine is at sea, the qualification process usually can move
forward more smoothly and quickly. During the limited free time not taken
up by watches, meals, and maintenance chores, there is nowhere to go,
so the NUBs tend to spend more time on their qualification tasks. In port,
the opportunity for liberty ashore competes for the trainee's time and
attention, but each nonqualified Sailor is still expected to make progress.
Woods started his qualification process aboard the nuclear-powered ballistic
missile submarine (SSBN) USS Louisiana, which was still under construction
at Electric Boat at the time.
"I remember coming in at 3 o'clock in the morning to do drills,
but the firefighting system wasn't installed yet, so we used nylon ropes
for hoses with tin cans on the end for the nozzles. We didn't have EABs
[emergency air breathers] so we put coat hangers on the bases and would
just hang them over a pipe."
Knowing What, Why, and How
Because of the technological differences, frequently slight, between
submarines, each requires its own qualification card. To complete the
qualification card for the fleet ballistic-missile submarine USS Alaska,
for example, a trainee must have his seniors "sign off" on his
qualifications in 106 different areas ranging from basic damage control
(30 points, requiring seven signatures) to knowledge of the layout of
different compartments (60 points, 15 signatures).
The word no Sailor wants to hear at any time in the qualification process
is "dink," a shortening of delinquent. Anyone who falls behind
just one week has to spend two extra hours a day, and Saturday mornings,
studying until he catches up. If the trainee falls behind for two weeks,
his sea daddy spends those extra study hours with him (and is not going
to be particularly happy about the extra work). Anyone who falls more
than three weeks behind risks a "page 13" entry--an adverse
notation in the administrative remarks page in the individual's service
record.
Sonar Technician 1st Class Mark Azarjew, responsible until last year
for the qualification process aboard the USS Dallas, said there were usually
four or five "dinks" out of 25 or so going through the qualification
process at any given time. "We'll do anything we can to get the guy
qualified, particularly if we see that he's really trying, and normally
we have a pretty good success rate," Azarjew said.
Once all signatures have been collected to certify that the trainee has
met the education goals for the submarine's different systems and a final
walk-through of the submarine has been completed with a duty chief petty
officer to demonstrate proficiency, the aspiring Sailor appears before
three of the most seasoned submariners on board to answer questions.
"You have to know not just that you turn a particular valve in a
particular situation, but why you turn that valve--and what it's going
to do," said Guest. "And they [those asking the questions] remember
that one thing that they had to go over with you six times because you
just couldn't get it. Sure enough, that's the question they're going to
ask you first."
Earning the silver dolphins typically takes eight to 10 months. Some
Sailors have been known to finish in three; others must receive special
permission from the captain to persevere longer than 12. Every year, there
are a few on each submarine who never qualify and have to be transferred
to other assignments.
But most of those who join the submarine force do qualify, and their
commanding officers proudly certify in the ship's log that another dolphin-wearer
has joined the ranks. Preparations then begin to present the undersea
badge of honor to the new submariner.
A Time-Honored Ceremony
In past years such presentation ceremonies were often raucous affairs.
The newly qualified submariners frequently were "tossed into the
drink" after being presented their dolphins. The dolphins themselves
might have been dropped into a glass of beer, which the recipient had
to toss down, catching the pin in his teeth before the insignia disappeared
down his throat.
Today's ceremonies provide a more appropriate recognition of the Sailor's
unique achievement. The pinning ceremony may consist of a short gathering
in the ship's galley, with the young Sailor's shipmates crowded around,
as the commanding officer reads from a book of submarine heroics--usually
a story from World War II drawn from such classic submarine books as Thunder
Below, by Rear Adm. Eugene Fluckey.
"It's a huge relief--the burden on you just got cut in half, and
everyone is looking at you and they've all been through the same thing,
so they're smiling as you're standing there," said Speed. "They
trust you now, because you're checked out to be able to save their life--in
the middle of a fire they don't want to have to worry about whether a
new watchstander is going to be able to help. Smoke builds up pretty quickly
in a submarine."
Sonar Technician 2nd Class Scott Woods still recalls his pinning ceremony
in great detail. It was his 21st birthday, he had just finished several
months of hard work aboard the SSBN USS Michigan, and was on his first
trip to Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, where the ship would embark aging crewmen
who had served on the World War II submarine USS Bowfin, a veteran of
nine war patrols with 16 Japanese vessels to its credit. A former chief
of the boat on Bowfin had brought along his own dolphins, and a former
commanding officer pinned them on Woods' chest, as the commanding officer
read aloud from a book of World War II submarine exploits.
"I bought myself a new pair for everyday use," Woods said.
"Those Bowfin dolphins are home, safely stowed away. They've come
a long way, and I don't want anything to happen to them."
But even after pinning on their dolphins, the training and qualification
process is not over for the new submariners--who must then complete division
qualifications, in-rate qualifications, department qualifications, and
other quals. "Having your dolphins frees up a little bit of time,
but they quickly fill that in," said Speed.
"Once you get your qualifications, you're part of the boat, you're
not just a guy filling up space anymore, and you start to feel comfortable
in your surroundings," said Guest. "But being on a submarine
is a constant learning process."
Pride and tradition run deep in the Silent Service. *
"Take Her Down"
Pride Runs Deep in the Submarine Force
Machinist Mate 2nd Class Frank J. Harshman Jr. spent eight years in the
Junior Reserve Officer Training Corps before he was old enough to graduate
from high school. His JROTC experience gave him valuable insights into
the merits of all branches of the U.S. armed forces. He chose to enlist
in the Navy and to work his way through the rigorous training program
required to qualify in submarines.
"You can't beat the crew on a submarine--there's none tighter,"
Harshman told Sea Power last month after Cdr. H.H. Howard III, commanding
officer of the nuclear-powered attack submarine USS Seawolf, had pinned
on him the silver dolphins of a qualified submariner. "And there's
the opportunity," Harshman continued. "It took me two years
and three months to make second class. I know a 10-year yeoman who's still
a second class."
Harshman glanced down at the gleaming metal pin that signified the completion
of his intensive efforts to learn the ship from bow to stern, and pondered
what it means. "Heritage. Commitment. Pride, definitely pride,"
he said. "A long, hard road to qualify--and the help of a lot of
shipmates."
Howard concurred: "An individual doesn't earn his dolphins alone,"
he told the other members of the crew who had assembled on the pier to
watch the presentation. "I want all of you to take great pride in
what you have done to help Petty Officer Harshman achieve his dolphins.
He had to do the lion's share of the work, but it was up to the crew to
infuse that Sailor with what he needed to get through the process--to
prepare him to enter the fraternity of submariners."
Harshman grew up in Glendal Heights, Ill., outside Chicago, and enlisted,
under the delayed-entry program, when he was 17. "Once in a while,
after I'd been up 36 or 48 hours straight, I might think, 'I really wish
I'd stayed a mechanic,' but I never wished I was anywhere else,"
Harshman said. From the day he reported to the Seawolf on 29 August of
last year, he knew he was where he wanted to be.
Harshman's "pinning" ceremony included a reading from submarine
history, the account of Cdr. Howard Gilmore, commanding officer of the
USS Growler in February 1943 when it was caught on the surface by the
Japanese. Two men were killed in the battle that ensued, and three more,
including Gilmore, were wounded. Gilmore ordered the crew to "clear
the bridge" so the Growler could dive. As the last of his men reached
the hatch, he realized he was too seriously wounded to make it below,
and that the ship probably would be sunk if the crew waited for him. He
gave his last order: "Take her down." Gilmore was posthumously
awarded the Medal of Honor for his valor and sacrifice."The history
of the submarine force is filled with stories of heroism, honor, and ingenuity,"
Howard said. "It's not hard to find a new inspirational story for
every one of these ceremonies." RAH
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