Paul Revere (APA 248) - Naval Cruise Book

 - Class of 1962

Page 38 of 88

 

Paul Revere (APA 248) - Naval Cruise Book online collection, 1962 Edition, Page 38 of 88
Page 38 of 88



Paul Revere (APA 248) - Naval Cruise Book online collection, 1962 Edition, Page 37
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Paul Revere (APA 248) - Naval Cruise Book online collection, 1962 Edition, Page 39
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Page 38 text:

lf DIVISIC ,if s 2 1 l E 5 I i x f 1 I I A S si I E 1 5 I, Posing in the pilot house are: Glen R. Rose QMl, Mark T. Kreitzinger SN Cresting his eyesl, .loel L. Culbreth, Earl C. Emeott QM3, and Larry R. Garis QM3 Nosing in the portholes are Sherman I. Franklin QM2, and Navigator, Ltfjgl John C. Cranath. GEORGE T. HAMILTON, JR., QM2 '3

Page 37 text:

1cift1i0N The primary duty of the Navigation Department is to guide the ship safely through the waters of the World. No one man can discharge this duty properly: for this reason the personnel of the Navigation Department are commonly referred to as the navigation team. Truly it is teamwork that gets the Paul Revere safely from one port of call to another. When navigating in restricted Waters, each member of the team has a specific task to perform, whether it be steering the ship, shooting or recording hearings or plotting bearings. He must perform his job in an accurate and timely manner. The Paul Revere is fortunate to have seven highly capable young men to guide her Wherever she is needed. LTJG JOHN C. GRANATH Navigator



Page 39 text:

The Operations Department, the nerve center of any ship, is assigned the responsibility of manning and maintaining all of the communications equipment, the radars, and the various tactical maneuvering devices of the Combat Information Center. The tasks of the Operations personnel are as interesting as they are varied. Up on the signal bridge, OS Division's signalmen transmit visually the messages of the command. Against the night a muted amber light or the yardarm blinker relays the Word. By day, coded flaghoists or the familiar waving, red-yellow semaphore flags are utilized. In- valuable methods, these - rapid, accurate, secure, and invaluable too are the men behind them. The Combat Information Center is a dark place, and to the layman a confusing maze of radar scopes, plotting tables, status boards and radio telephone systems. The radarmen of OI Division work here, compiling data on the small pips of light on the radars that indicate the presence of other ships out on the sea. A plot is drawn, courses and speeds are determined, and the necessary recom- mendation is made to the conning officer on the bridge. Added to, and in conjunction with this primary task of assisting the OOD in maneuvering the ship, the CIC team navigates by radar, controls the ship's boats in an amphibious operation, plots and evaluates aircraft contacts, and mans the voice radio tactical circuits. LCDR WILLIAM B. COBB, USN OPERATIONS OFFICER But these men, as well as the radiomen of OR Division, who communicate on the complex systems spread through Radio Central, can be effective only when their machines are Working faultlessly. The elec- tronics technicians of OE Division are bur- dened With this responsibility: to maintain in a state approaching perfection, the elec- tronic equipment employed by the other men of this department. Coordination, then, is the keyword of these four factions of the Operations De- partment, for one depends fully on the others, as the ship depends on them all.

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Paul Revere (APA 248) - Naval Cruise Book online collection, 1974 Edition, Page 1

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Paul Revere (APA 248) - Naval Cruise Book online collection, 1962 Edition, Page 87

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Paul Revere (APA 248) - Naval Cruise Book online collection, 1962 Edition, Page 80

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1985 Edition online 1970 Edition online 1972 Edition online 1965 Edition online 1983 Edition online 1983 Edition online
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