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New Horizons – Part Seven

The End of Flight Training and the Start of College

As the weeks droned on after my brother’s untimely death, Kaz and I settled down in our new home.  After taking some time off on bereavement leave, I went back to work at the ATC Center and resumed logging hours for my Commercial Pilot license by flying out of Hooks airport in northwest Houston two to three times a week.

In spite of my chaotic working and flying schedule Kaz and I found ample time to begin enjoying our life together now that the pressure of ATC training was well behind us.  Since money was no longer a problem for us, we went on frequent furniture and household accessory shopping trips and on one of our excursions even bought a small upright piano.  While growing up on Okinawa Kaz had learned to play so she was anxious to refresh her musical skills.

One of the requirements needed to earn a commercial pilot rating was to fly a certain number of “round-robin” flights.  These were nothing more than one-day round trips to airports to which I had not yet flown into; a few of them were to be completed with a flight instructor on board.  It was after one of these flights, accomplished on a cold and rainy day in November of 1971, which finally forced me to make a decision that would bring my quest for a commercial rating to a screeching halt.

The flight plan for that trip called for me and my instructor to depart David Wayne Hooks (DWH) airport in northwest Houston early in the morning and fly to Oklahoma City (OKC) via a refueling stop in Dallas (DAL).  The return flight called for me to navigate to and land in Lufkin, Texas (LFK), then proceed directly to, and land at DWH.  On different legs of the flight I would be required to change altitude several times, use dead-reckoning techniques and VOR tracking alternately and practice simulated engine out procedures.

The weather on that day was marginal for VFR flight, with occasional fog and scattered rain showers, and the median temperature hovered just slightly above a chilly forty degrees.  The prevailing winds were steady out of the north blowing at a brisk eight to ten knots, and the inflight forecast for DAL, OKC and LFK showed similar conditions with no chance for improvement as the day went on.

During my exterior preflight inspection my gloves and jacket got more than a little wet as a low layer of gray and gritty clouds opened up temporarily and dumped a fair amount of rain on me and the already soaked tarmac.  Because the cramped cockpit offered very little room for extra movement, I was forced to remove my outer wear outside the plane just before climbing onto the wing and clambering over the passenger seat finally dropping into the pilot’s seat.  During my preflight outside the aircraft my head, shoulders, and upper back had gotten uncomfortably damp—and, as I settled into my seat my cold shirt stuck to my back sending a tooth chattering chill down my spine.

As I energized the engine and watched the flight instruments spool up and come to life a feeling of dread came over me, and a dark thought flashed across my mind:  I really don’t feel like doing this today.

Steeling my will against the feeling of dread that had suddenly taken control of my emotions, I distracted myself by intensely concentrating on performing all the procedures necessary to get the aircraft off the ground and into the air.

I applied power, pushed the right rudder to turn the nose wheel in the direction of the taxiway, and released the brakes.  The taxi-out, run-up and takeoff roll were uneventful, and the “fun” didn’t start until I’d climbed through a thousand feet.

Because the actual rain producing ceiling was well above eight-thousand feet and the visibility was in excess of five miles, the flying conditions were still rated as VFR.  But around twelve hundred to fifteen hundred feet above the ground there lay a thin “scud” layer of thin and wispy gray clouds that were producing atmospheric instability above it causing wind shear and light turbulence.  Since our planned cruising altitude was set at sixty-five hundred feet, we found ourselves in moderate turbulence (commonly referred to as “chop) for the entirety of the flight.

And it never got any better.

Although I considered myself a good pilot, for some reason all my flying skills seemed to abandon me that day.  For the life of me I couldn’t hold a steady altitude—often finding myself three to four hundred feet above or below my filed flight level.  My navigation was spotty, causing me to miss waypoints sometimes by two or three miles, and once I almost let the plane’s engine completely quit by failing to recognize the symptoms of severe carburetor icing before applying carburetor heat to clear the issue.

My landings at the various airports were nothing short of incompetent—either flaring the airplane too high and floating halfway down the runway before finally landing long and bumping down on the main gear, or flaring too late causing a hard neck-snapping smack nearly driving the gear all the way through each wing.  They say a successful landing is one you can walk away from, but that day I wasn’t too sure that any of mine qualified.

After a mercifully smooth landing back at DWH late that evening, and after receiving a less than glowing flight review from my instructor, I finished tying down my aircraft and dragged my sore and stiff body to the parking lot.  Sitting in my idling car trying to warm up I again forcefully swallowed the bitter bile taste that had been pushing up from the back of my throat for the entire day.

Cruising out onto the smooth black asphalt highway, I was overwhelmed by the softness of the ride and the ease with which I was able to maneuver my more than four thousand-pound sedan.  For the past twelve hours I had been struggling to maintain control of a machine weighing less than two thousand pounds as winds and turbulence had all but tried to take that control away from me and send us spiraling back down to earth.

As I drove home that dark and wet evening, I played the day over and over in my mind, and by the time I pulled into my garage I had decided on what needed to be done.

***

As I opened the door from the garage, Kaz was right there to meet me.

“Hi honey!  How was your flight?  I was starting to worry because you so late.  Everything go OK?”

“Oh, it was OK, I guess.  Actually, it could’ve gone better.  But I’m home now.”

She reached up and gave me a tight hug and a kiss.  “I really miss you today.  It was so bad weather I thought maybe you cancel flying and come home.”  She turned and hurried into the kitchen.  “Look, I made chicken soup today because it so cold,” she said, looking over her shoulder.  “You want to change clothes and come eat?  I bet you hungry.”

“Yeah, I’m a little hungry…”  I swallowed back a sudden rise of bitter bile.  “Actually, let me go take a quick shower first, then I’ll eat.”

“OK, good.  While you shower, I get table ready for you.  Isoide kudasai!”  (Hurry, please).

After my shower I did feel just a little better, but I was still shaky.  I brushed my teeth extra hard and tried to get the bitterness out of my mouth with some vile-tasting Listerine.  All the while I was trying to figure out how to break the news to Kaz about the decision that I’d reached.

It felt good to get out of my wrinkled clothes which I’d been wearing for almost fourteen hours, and the hot water helped relax the nerve-stiffened muscles in my neck and back.  Soon enough I was back in the kitchen wearing a comfy pair of sweatpants and an oversized sweatshirt.

“You want crackers too?”  Kaz asked cheerfully.

“Sure!”  I was starting to feel more human and the hot rich broth and tasty chunks of chopped chicken breast made the dark bitter taste in my mouth all but disappear.

“So,” Kaz said between heaping spoonfuls of soup, “tell me how you did today.  I think maybe a little bumpy with the wind, no?”

“That’s an understatement!  It was awful.  It was as if I had never set foot in a cockpit.  My flying was worse than when I first soloed.”

“Oh no!  That too bad.  You didn’t crash though.  I worry about that sometimes, you know.”

“Well, I think my flight training may have to end after today.”

Kaz’s spoon stopped halfway to her mouth and she set it back in the bowl while turning to look at me with questioning eyes.  “Uh, what you say?  No more training to fly?”

“Well, I don’t know if I have what it takes to continue on the path that I’ve been on.  See, don’t get me wrong—I love to fly.  But I love to fly when I want to fly and where I want to fly.  Today I would’ve chosen to stay grounded.”

“Wha…I don’t understand.  What you mean?”

“OK, so like today.  From the get-go I didn’t want to go up.  The weather sucked and I sure as hell wasn’t in the mood.  We’ve been really busy at work and I just felt that I didn’t have that edge that I need when I’m the cockpit.  So, coupled with my lack of enthusiasm and the shitty weather—plus the pressure of the long round-robin flights to large airports that I’m not familiar with—I was just not mentally or emotionally prepared to fly.

“The whole day I was way behind the airplane.  Instead of having a plan on what I needed to do I found myself reacting instead of being proactive with the airplane.  A couple of times I almost lost control on final and on my landings, and once I almost lost the engine due to carburetor icing.  I’ve never done that before.  I’ve always been able to listen to what the airplane was telling me and act before something happened.  Not today!”

“Oh…that bad.  But you made it all the way, didn’t you?  And you came home.  So, that something.”

“Yeah, well my instructor didn’t even bother debriefing me after we landed back at Hooks.  He just told me to go home and get some rest and we would talk about it tomorrow.  I know I’ll probably have to do the whole round-robin all over again.  He was just so quiet the whole trip—like he was just waiting to have to take over before I killed us both.”

“Oh…”

“So, I guess…I don’t know.  I thought about this all the way home and I think since I’m happy being a controller I should just drop the formal flight training.”

“So…what about the GI Bill.  They still paying you for your training, right?  What happen then if you quit?”

“Well, my benefits are still there.  If I drop out of flight training, I guess I could use what’s left to finance going back to college.”

“You can do that?”

“I think so.  It would work a little different though.  Instead of the VA paying the flight school directly for my flying hours they would pay me instead for the college hours.  Then I pay the school.  Anyway, I think that’s how it works but I’ll check to make sure.

“You know Frank, I want you to be happy.  And I thought you were happy flying.  But if you want to stop flying and go to college you should do.  I mean as long as you happy.”

“It’s not that I suddenly don’t like flying.  But let’s say I go all the way and get the training and flying hours necessary to become a commercial pilot.  Then do I quit the FAA?  I don’t know that I want to do that.  I love being a controller—just like I love flying.  But I don’t want to someday regret that I gave up a career that I love to work in another career that makes me do things I may not want to do.  You know what I mean?”

“I think so.”

“So again, I want to fly when and where I want to fly.  And if I don’t feel like it, then I don’t want to be told to do it.”

“OK, that make sense to me.  So, after you quit the program you gonna fly again?”

“Sure.  But it won’t be as often since we’ll have to pay for the flying hours on our own.  But I hope you understand how I feel.”

“Of course!  I rather have you home on your days off anyway.  You always gone and I miss not seeing you.  You work too hard, you know.”

So, it was decided.  The next day I called the flight school and told that I was planning on withdrawing from the program and that within the next few days I would drop in to sign the necessary paperwork.  Of course, they tried to talk me out of it, but I stood my ground as I knew that this was the right decision for me.

Within a month I had made the proper inquiries and was enrolled at Sam Houston University in Huntsville…about thirty miles north of Houston.

Guam!  A Plum Job, For Sure

A couple of months later, as I was walking up to the sign-in desk just outside the control room doors to start a 2 pm to 10 pm shift, I decided to spend a couple of minutes looking through the large black binder containing ATC job vacancies all around the country.  The binder was one of those three-ring jobs about two inches thick and it was attached by a light metal chain just to the right of each area’s sign-in log.          

I had looked through this binder before, curious to see what controller positions were open at the various facilities within the FAA, but since I was still a young and inexperienced controller and happy to be working in my hometown, I wasn’t looking to transfer anywhere. I mainly read it because I was just fascinated by the number of open FPL positions that were being advertised.

Just as I was closing the binder my eye caught sight of a word on one of the vacancy announcements that I would never have associated with any air traffic position:  Guam!  I checked my watch and saw that I still had about five minutes before I was required to check in with my floor supervisor, so I quickly thumbed the sheets until I came to that particular announcement.

Reading hurriedly, I saw that the vacancy was for a facility on Andersen Air Force Base, Guam, M.I. (Marianas Islands), called Guam CERAP.  It explained that Guam CERAP was a combined ARTCC/RAPCON (Radar Approach Control) FAA facility located on an Air Force base, and the FAA was soliciting applicants to fill a vacancy for a GS-12, ATCS (Air Traffic Control Specialist) position.  Since I was already a GS-13, and I had no idea how a Center and a RAPCON could possibly be combined, I almost quit reading.  Then some italicized print caught my eye:

“Selectees will be authorized free transportation for their immediate family, authorized free household goods transfer; authorized free shipment of one (1) automobile; receive free on-site housing for the term of the assignment; authorized per-diem at the rate of 2.5 times their salary from date of selection until established in on-site housing, and be granted a tax-free 25% post differential which will be added to their monthly salary.  The selectee must sign a contract agreeing to serve two years at this facility and will be guaranteed full return rights to his/her home region and facility with no loss of service time at the end of that period.  If the selectee, at the end of this contract agrees to sign a new two year contract, he/she, and family, will be provided with fully funded travel vouchers for common air carriers, and will be granted six weeks of leave to return to their home of record (home leave).  Per-diem, at the rate of 2.5 times their normal salary, will be paid, in addition to salary, during the six-week home leave period.  The new two-year contract will be signed prior to departing on Home Leave and will commence upon their arrival back to the Guam CERAP.”

Well—I thought—that 25% post differential pretty much maxes out what I presently make as a GS-13.  Looking at my watch again I saw that I was running a little short on time, so I closed the binder and hurried to my area to check in.  When my first break came up I returned to the binder, removed the Guam position announcement and headed for the nearest office copier.

Pulling into my driveway a few minutes before 10PM, I was hoping Kaz would still be up so I could show her what I’d found.  I entered the semi-darkened house and found her in the living room, wrapped snugly in her robe and curled up on the couch reading a book.

“Hey, I’m glad you’re awake.  I want to show you what I found at work.”  I pulled out the copy of the announcement from my jacket.

“What that?” she asked curiously, putting the book down and sitting up, suddenly interested.

“Well, it’s called a “vacancy announcement”, and it shows where ATC jobs are open.  This one says there’s a vacancy on Guam.”

“Guam?!  They have Center on Guam?  No, I don’t believe it.  Guam too small.”

“No, it’s not a center.  It’s what’s called a CERAP.  That’s a center and a radar approach control combined.  I’m not sure how that’s possible, but this announcement says there’s on there.”

“Why they have a center there anyway?  It’s small Island…smaller than Okinawa, and it’s in the middle of the ocean.  No, I don’t believe it.”

“Here, read it yourself,” I said, handing the copies of the announcement to her.

“Hmmm…” she said softly while reading it inquisitively.  “Hey, it say here it only GS-12!  That no good.  You already GS-13, right?”

“Well that’s true.  But if you look a little further down it says that they will pay an extra twenty-five percent.  Plus, free housing and transportation.  That alone will make it more than what I make now.”

“Hmmm…” she said again.  “You know, if we go to Guam it much closer to Okinawa and I can go visit my family sometime.  Living here in Houston I think we never have enough for airplane ticket to Okinawa.  Right?”

“I think so.  I’m not sure how many miles it is from Guam to Okinawa, but it has to be closer—that’s for sure.”

“So, you going to try to go?”

“At this point I have no idea what the first thing is that I need to do.  I guess I could talk to the front office tomorrow and find out what the procedure is.  They may not even want a rookie like me—maybe they’re looking for some older controllers.  But for now, I just want us to talk about this to see if we really want to try to go somewhere like that.” 

“Frank, it’s up to you.  This is your career and I don’t want you to lose what you have.  For me?  Sure, I like the idea of being closer to my home, but we don’t know anything about Guam.  Maybe you better find out more.”

“OK, I’ll do some checking tomorrow.”

***

The following day, and on my very first break, I walked up to the administrative wing to seek out some guidance.  Houston ARTCC is a large two-story building, with a deep basement floor, and the actual center control room in the rear wing and on the first floor.  Controllers, radar and radio technicians all parked in the rear parking lot where access to the control room and lower levels—where the techs worked—was fast and easy.  The second floor was used for training—classrooms, a mock control room, and instructor offices took up the majority of the space, with a few rooms set aside for storage.

The front wing, first floor only, was unmistakably the gem of the whole building.  A glass and chrome front entrance fronted onto Airport Boulevard—the main thoroughfare that terminated at the departure/arrival gates of the Houston Intercontinental Airport (now G.W. Bush International), two miles north.  Entering through the massive front glass doors, one would be presented with a mirror-like black marble-floor hallway extending right and left.  To the left was a beautifully designed, and glass encased, cafeteria; while to the right was situated the massive administrative area. 

If one were to look straight ahead once inside the doors, you would be presented with a lush view of a massively overgrown, and stunningly lush solarium.  Complete with tropical plants, a water feature, and anchored by three medium-sized pin oak trees, the solarium was bordered by the four glass-encased hallways and completely open at the top.  It was breathtakingly beautiful at first glance.

Since I hardly ever had a chance to enjoy this view—always entering and exiting the building through the rear wing doors—I paused momentarily to take in the beauty of the large solarium.  Small but numerous flights of jet-black starlings were launching themselves upwards from the pin oaks this sunny morning on their quest to feed before returning just before sunset to roost and chatter loudly among themselves in the trees’ low-hanging branches.

Returning to the task at hand, I pulled myself away and continued my search for the facility chief’s administrative assistant.  Her name was Helen.

Helen was the head of all the administrative assistants, and the chief’s right hand “man”; she had been at Houston Center since its inception in 1965.  She had transferred over, like of lot of the controllers and supervisors, from the old San Antonio Center where she’d been in the same position.  Of all the glassed-in administrative offices, Helen’s was the largest, except maybe for the chief’s—his was larger but completely walled in and windowless.  Helen’s office walls were gaily decorated with scaled-down replicas of the U.S. and Texas state flags, and on the top of the oversized oak bookcases below them were at least two dozen framed pictures of family, friends and probably a few favored retired controllers and supervisors.  The common theme for each picture was that Helen was prominently featured—usually in the center of the group.

As a now accepted member of the Houston Center controller workforce I quickly learned that although the facility chief was the leader of the center, it was Helen who wielded the real power.  Stories still circulated in the control room how several unfortunate controllers had been unduly terminated, even after the chief had assured them otherwise, after Helen had interceded and provided additional negative administrative evidence.  She was one not to be trifled with, I was told.

She was probably in her mid-fifties, slim and petite in stature, with a pair of extraordinary and piercingly perceptive clear blue eyes.  Her hair, bright blond, parted on the left, and always styled in a helmet-like bouffant accentuated with a flip just above her shoulders, framed her doll-like face perfectly.  Her makeup was always impeccable, carefully painted on, and spoke of many hours spent in front of an illuminated cosmetic mirror.

Her voice resonated in a low alto register, hinting of at least a pack-a-day habit of her favored minty Kool cigarettes, and it was heavily accented in a west Texas drawl.  Her favorite word was, “honey”—and depending on her mood, she used it as either a gracious compliment or a cutting insult.

Finding her at her desk busily shuffling through a stack of papers, I quietly walked into her office.

“Hi…uh, excuse me.  I’d like to ask a question…”  I stammered as I entered.

“Oh!” she said, and I wondered how one word could be phonetically twisted to sound so…Texan.  “Hi honey.  Come right on in!  I was just looking at something or other here.  What can I do for you?”

“Thanks.  Well…” I raised the vacancy announcement sheet to show her what I had.  “I…I was just wondering if I could ask you for some advice and maybe a little help.”

“Sure ‘nuff, honey.  What’cha got there?”

“Well, I found this position vacancy announcement in the jobs binder and was wondering what the procedure was to put my name in for the job.”

“Let’s see.  Give it here, honey.”  She squinted her eyes and scanned the sheet.  “Oh, this is a vacancy for Guam.”  She put the put the vacancy announcement down on her lap and looked up at me with a little smile on her lips.  “So, what you’re looking at here is what is referred to in the agency as a “plum” job.  You know that don’t you?”

“Uh…no ma’am.  I don’t know what that is.  All I’d like to know is how I would go about in applying for this position.  If you could help me with that.”

“Honey…it’s called ‘bidding’.  When you put in paperwork for a job vacancy it’s called ‘bidding’, not applying.”

“OK.  So, what would I need to bid on that vacancy?”  She looked at me intently, cocked her head slightly, and smiled at me sweetly. “Honey, how long you been here?  A couple of years, right?”

“Yes ma’am.”  I wondered what that had to do with anything.

“So, like I said before…this here job is a plum position.  It’s meant for controllers who’ve put in their time and paid their dues—so to speak.  You could throw all the paper you want at this vacancy and as soon as the Western-Pacific Regional office saw your lack of time in the agency all that paper would go in the trash.”

“Uh….”

“So, this is what I’m suggesting, honey.  Forget about this job in Guam and just concentrate on doing the best job you can here at Houston Center like we all do.  Besides, I don’t think you want to go through all the effort of filling out all the necessary forms you would need for them to consider you just to have them chunk it in some can somewhere.  Besides, I’m way too busy to have to do all I would have to do knowing that it would go nowhere.  Now, is there anything else I can do for you honey?”

I stood there for a few seconds not knowing what to say.  Then, a little flash of anger shot through my brain and I decided to throw all caution to the wind.  “You know what, ma’am?  If you won’t mind—and I understand what you’ve just said—I’d still like to submit my bid on this job.  I may not get it, but at least they’ll know that I’m interested in the job.  And let me apologize in advance for any extra work I may be causing you, but like you said, we’re all here to do the best job we can.”

Her soft blue eyes suddenly turned steely.  “Well, honey!  If that’s what you want to do, then so be it.  I’m here not only to push papers but also to give advice, but if you’re not willing to take it then I guess we’ll both just have to waste our time.”

“Thank you, ma’am, I appreciate it.”  And with that, she pushed her chair back and stood up.  Smoothing her tightly fitting dark gray skirt with one hand while primping her helmet-like bouffant with the other, she turned and walked to a large black filing cabinet.  After retrieving several forms from the cabinet, she walked back and handed the pile to me.

“Fill in all these forms with the information requested and refer to the vacancy number on the bid form where that information is requested.  Return all to me as soon as you can so I can file them as necessary.  Any questions?”  She cupped her chin in the palm of her right hand while supporting her elbow with her left and stared at me intently.

“No ma’am.  Thank you for your help.”  I said humbly.

“Fine honey.  Now get along, I have work to do.”  And she turned away from me and returned to her desk.

It took me two days to fill out and sign all the forms.  Not wanting to face Helen again, I stuffed them into a manila envelope and deposited them in the Center’s internal mail chute the following day when I went to work.  I thought I’d hear something in a few weeks and kept checking my mail slot at work, but after a couple of months I came to the realization that Helen had probably been right all along, so I just put all thoughts of Guam out of my mind.

One Year Later…

I was literally minutes into my 3PM to 11PM evening shift and was busy working an extremely complex Galveston Low Altitude radar sector when I felt a tap on my right shoulder.  Thinking that my supervisor, Bob Wold, had finally seen that I was close to sinking, and that he’d thoughtfully sent a “tracker” to assist me on keeping a lid on the exploding sector, I dutifully slid my chair over a few inches to let him plug in to the radio to start helping me sort through the beehive of airplanes I was working.

When nothing happened for a few seconds I looked over my shoulder and was surprised to see Bob standing there with his hands resting on his hips.  “You got a second, DeLeon?”

“No, not really.  I’m going down the crapper.  You got a tracker coming?”

“No.  I’m getting you relieved off the sector.”

“What?!  Did I have a deal?”

“No!  You’re doing fine.  I just need to get you off the sector ‘cause the chief wants to see you.”

“The chief?!  What the hell does he want?”

“I don’t know but right now, you need to look back at your radar—you’re just about to run those two fuckers together there just east of Hitchcock.”

I looked back and saw two of my many radar targets flashing a collision alert.  They were on converging courses, both descending to seven thousand feet, and both heading to the Houston southeast arrival fix named Hitchcock.  I had been planning to vector one of them behind the other just before Bob broke my concentration.  I keyed my radio: “N7235L, turn left fifteen degrees, radar vectors behind converging traffic—a Super King Air, ten o’clock seven miles, crossing left to right, also at five thousand.

“Bonanza 35L, roger—turning left fifteen, looking for the traffic and requesting direct Hitchcock as soon as possible.”

“Roger, Houston altimeter 2997, expect direct Hitchcock as soon as practical reference that converging traffic.”

“Roger that.”

“OK,” Bob said.  “I feel much better now.”

“Yeah, me too.  Where’s my relief?”

“Right behind you getting the picture.  Give him the briefing.”

Once my relief briefing was complete, I unplugged my headset and stowed it in my assigned headset cubby hole.  I asked Bob again what the chief wanted.

“How the fuck do I know?” he said playfully.  “Maybe he wants to personally give you a big bear hug for saving those two little bastards over Hitchcock a few minutes ago.”  He smiled; his Lucky Strike cigarette glued to his lower lip spitting blackish-gray ash onto his coffee stained tie as he talked.  “Seriously, I have no idea.  But get your ass in gear and go see him now.”

“OK.”

“Oh, and if he offers you some jellybeans from the big fishbowl, he keeps on his desk, you can bet your ass is in big trouble.  He only does that when he’s getting ready to severely chew somebody out.”

“OK, I’ll keep that in mind.”

***

After checking in with Helen, who seemed to be in an unusually surly mood, she directed me to have a seat while she went into the chief’s office to announce my arrival.  Oddly, she hadn’t called me “honey” when I walked in—in fact she only made a grunting sound as she pointed to an empty chair and gestured for me to wait.

A minute or so later she emerged and curtly said, “He’ll see you now.”  I got up, walked past her and entered the chief’s office.  With no windows the large office was cloaked in semi-darkness with only a floor lamp and an oblong desk lamp to help pierce the grayness hanging over the room.  Walking in from the overly bright administrative area made the office even darker, and the lingering stench of cigar and pipe smoke added to the dankness of the stagnant air.

L.E. Andersen was a large, portly man, who somehow seemed small sitting behind his massive dark oak executive desk and was almost swallowed up by an equally massive high-backed brown leather executive chair.  Pushing himself forward off the chair he reached over the desk with his right hand extended while carefully keeping his smoking Half-bent Dublin pipe carefully shielded with his left.

“Hey Frank!” he said cheerfully, “Welcome to the bridge…”

“Thank you, sir,” I responded cautiously, trying not to notice the large goldfish bowl full of hard candy sitting prominently on the desk between us.  I took his warm smooth hand and returned the firm grip and shake.

“Hell, son have a sit down there on either one of them seats.  Paid a lot of money for them things and they hardly get any wear.”  He gestured to two large black leather wingback chairs flanking and facing each corner of his desk.

“Thank you, sir.”  I took a step to my left and eased down into the plush cool leather. 

He sat back into his chair and methodically tapped the ashes from his pipe’s bowl into an etched crystal ashtray.  “Well now…” he said, while concentrating on his pipe and watching the burnt black tobacco ashes tumble out of the pipe’s bowl.  “How you doing out there?  I hear you’re one of our best young controllers.  Least that’s what your supervisor and area manager tell me.  Also, you’re from right here in Houston, right?”

“Yes sir, I am.  Born and raised.”

“How ‘bout that.  Good man!”

“Thank you.”

“Oh,” he said suddenly.  “Where are my manners?  How about getting yourself a handful of these jellybeans here?”  He reached out and pushed the large bowl across the desk’s shiny glass top towards me.  I felt my innards tighten up a bit.

“Uh, no thank you sir.  But I appreciate it.”  I managed to say through the rapidly rising lump in my throat.

“Ah, well.  Suit yourself. Guess I’ll have some myself.”

He daintily picked out a small handful of the colorful candy and popped a few into his mouth.

“Well, I guess you’re wondering why you’re here, hmm?”

“Yes sir, I am.”

“Sure, you are.”  He sucked loudly at the candy and smacked his lips.  “Well, first off I wanted to ask you if you know a guy named Bill Hoy.”

“Bill…Hoy?”  I asked slowly while trying to remember if I’d ever run across someone by that name.  “No sir, I don’t think I know anyone by that name.”

“OK.  Well Bill and I were in the Navy together a long time ago.  Great guy!  Hell of a drinker and quite the ladies’ man.  Of course, he’s married now, and the wife clipped his wings but good.”  He chuckled and checked his pipe to make sure it was all the way out.  “Anyway, even though we haven’t laid eyes on one another in a damn coon’s age we still stay in touch you know.  Oh, ‘bout once every six months or so we call one another to shoot the shit and see what’s what in the agency.”

While he droned on about his friend, I couldn’t help but sink a little deeper into my growing discomfort and confusion.  Why the hell was I here?  Surely, I’d done something wrong—and serious enough to have him call me in and announce my punishment personally.  After all he had offered me the dreaded candy, so I was sure this was going to cost me a GS grade or two.  His voice fading further away I pushed my memory to see if I could come up with the incident that had brought me to this point in my career.  I wondered how we were going to pay off the furniture and Kaz’s new piano if I was dropped back to a GS-12, or even a GS-11.  God, what if he was getting ready to fire me?

“Well anyway…hell, I’m way off the subject!”  He said loud enough to bring me back.  “What I wanted to say was, well me and Bill were on the phone late last night talking about our facilities and your name came up.”

“My name?” I asked.  “I don’t understand…”

“Yup.  See, Bill is the chief way out there on Guam…and, of course because of the horrendous time difference we always end up talking late at night.  Anyhow, he mentioned that one of my boys had put in some paperwork some time back to transfer over to his facility.  Of course, that surprised the hell out of me so I asked him who that might be.  And guess what?  It was you!”

The word Guam, thrown out so randomly, took me completely by surprise—and I’d almost forgot that I bid on a job there.

“You bid on a controller job there…let’s see…I think he said…” he pushed some papers around on his desk.  “Oh yeah, about a year ago.  Is that right?”

Finally coming to my senses, I confessed.  “Yes sir, that’s right.  But Helen told me…”  I wanted to tell him about her saying that that job was a plum one.

“Well ain’t that something!” he said loudly, rocking back on his massive chair and popping a few more jellybeans.  “I told him he had to be mistaken, that nobody here’d want to go to Guam, but I checked this morning and found you that you in fact had thrown some paper at that job!”

“Ah, yes I did.  But that was over a year ago.  And I thought….”

“Well, that now begs the obvious question, doesn’t it?”

“I don’t know.”

“You obviously wanted to go last year, right?  So, the question is, do you still want to go?”

“I, uh…”

“Well, do you?”

My mind was spinning, and my heart was thumping.  What if I said yes, and I came across as not liking my job here?  How would that affect my future?  But then, what if I said no?  Maybe he’s testing my loyalty.  Maybe…maybe.

“Yes!  Yes, I still want to go!”  The words came spilling out as if I had no control of my own tongue. 

“Well, there you go.  What about your wife?  Do you think you may want to ask her first?”

“No.  Even without asking her, I know she’ll want to go.”

He sat there studying me for a few seconds.  Finally, he said, “OK, look I don’t know if there’s anything I can do.  After all, Bill is my friend all right but he’s the chief at Guam.  If you want, I can make a call and see what he thinks, but I doubt that I’ll have any influence on any decision he’ll want to make.”

“OK, that’s fair.”  I said.

“Fine!  All right well look, I’ve kept you away from your sector for long enough.  I just wanted to get your take on this, so the next time I talk to Bill I’ll let you know one way or the other—but I wouldn’t get my hopes up.  In fact, don’t even tell your wife we talked.  Nothing will probably come of it.”

Three Weeks Later….

I had been attending morning classes at Sam Houston University in Huntsville on Tuesday and Thursday, and since Mondays were my first day off, and Thursdays I started my shift at 2 pm, the school schedule was working out just fine.  After the first week of classes, I found out that one of my friends at the center, Jim Tharp, was also taking classes on the same days so we got together to split the fifty-mile one-way drive between us.  He had just dropped me off around noon on a Thursday when Kaz met me at the door.

“I have very two very weird phone calls today!” she announced nervously as I walked in.

“What weird calls?”

“Well, one is some ship company.  They want to know when we will have our car in California!” 

“What?! What ship company?”

“They say something about ‘bear’.  I don’t know.  But the other is some furniture moving company—Atlas, I think—and they want to know when they can come to pack our furniture!  Is this have to do with Guam?”

“Wait!” I said, putting my books down on the kitchen table.  “That can’t be right.  I don’t even know if I’ve been selected to go to Guam.  Besides, if I had been selected, I would’ve been told by the administration by now and given orders.  So, I don’t know what this is all about.  Are you sure you got the right information about what they wanted?”

“Yes!  They want to know dates!”

“Well, we don’t have any dates.  But I’ll talk to Helen when I get to work today.  I think maybe it was just some kind of wrong number.  I just talked to the chief a couple of weeks ago and if he’d heard something they would’ve told me.”

“No Frank!!  They say your name and they say my name.  Maybe your name is common American name but mine is not.”  I had to agree that she had a point.

After arriving at work later and checking in on my shift, I peeked into my work mailbox to see if there was anything that resembled travel orders, and I found nothing. Just before I plugged into my assigned sector, I asked my supervisor if he could make sure I got a break before the administrative section in the front office went home.  They usually cleared out by 4PM, so I wanted to make sure someone was still in the office so I could ask about the calls Kaz had received.  He said he’d do his best to get me off.

On my break I hurried down to the administrative wing to pay a visit to Helen.  I found her rearranging a stack of booklets as I came through her open door.

“Hi Helen.  I hope I’m not bothering you, but I have a question.”

“And what is that, honey?”

“Well, my wife told me she got a couple of calls earlier today while I was in school—one from a shipping company in California and another from a moving and storage company.  They both asked for dates on when we planned to have our car in California and the other on when they could expect to arrive at our house to pack up our furniture.”

“OK, so what’s your question?”

“Uh…well…am I going somewhere?  Because if I am, I don’t have any orders.  At least I didn’t find any in my mail slot.”

“Wasn’t that you who wanted that job in Guam?”

“Yes.  But I’ve received no notification that I’ve been accepted.”

“Didn’t you just tell me your wife got a couple of calls yesterday?”

“Sure.  But if I’ve been selected for the job in Guam shouldn’t I have orders—or at least something that tells me when I’m supposed to be going?  How do we know what to tell the moving companies?”

“Tell them whatever you want.”  I was flabbergasted with her response, so I decided to try a more forceful tack.

“Do I have orders to go to Guam or not!”  Helen, who had turned away from me to continue her paper shuffling, looked up at me angrily.

“Listen!  I don’t have time to deal with you right now.  As soon as we do get something, you’ll find it in your mail slot.  Now if you don’t mind, I’m busy with more important things, honey!”  And with that she motioned to me with a dismissive wave of her hand, stood up and walked out of her office.  I was left there alone wondering what I should do next.

As I began to turn away to follow her out, I felt a hand touch my shoulder.  A little shocked, I turned to find one of the other lower-ranked administrative assistants named Linda looking at me sympathetically.  “Listen,” she said.  “Why don’t you step into my office for just a little bit so we can speak privately?”

“OK.”  I followed her into a small office further inside the administrative area and saw that it even though it was smaller, it wasn’t walled with transparent glass walls.

“Listen, I couldn’t help but overhear what you and Helen were talking about…and promise me that you didn’t hear this from me,” she began.  “Orders for your reassignment actually came in about a week ago, and I think Helen shelved them somewhere.  I asked her yesterday if she’d notified you and she blew me off.  Told me to mind my own business.”

“What?  Why would she do that?”  I asked. 

Linda looked at me curiously and said, “I think you know the answer to that.  She never wanted you to get that job—and I’m surprised she even filed your paperwork with the Western Pacific Region.  But I guess she thought you’d never even be considered.  But look, here’s what I suggest you do.  Go back to the control room and talk to your area manager.  You work for Marshall Moyle, don’t you?”

“Yes.”

“OK perfect, tell him you talked to Helen about your orders, but she denies knowing anything about them.  I guarantee you Marshall will get to the bottom of this pretty fast.”

“OK, thanks.  Look, I don’t want to get Helen into any trouble, but I don’t understand why she would do that.”

“She does what she thinks she can get away with, and she’s really hated by all the other secretaries.  But you know, she has a lot of power with the chief, so we all keep quiet.  It’s opportunities like this that we all wait for just to try to make her look bad.  See, I was in the office when your orders came in and saw how Helen reacted.  We all know she’s angry because you forced her to submit your request last year after she tried to talk you out of it, and really pissed because L.E. arbitrated on your behalf with the chief on Guam.  She thinks you don’t have the seniority to get this kind of a job.  But please don’t say anything about this to anyone.  You got what you wanted, so let Marshall deal with it from now on.  Just let it play out.  She can’t go against an area manager…especially Marshall.”

“I really appreciate it.”

“OK, now off with you.  Go out through the side door so Helen doesn’t see that you were in my office.  I think she’s in the coffee shop, but just to make sure.  OK?”

On my way back to my sector I asked my floor supervisor if I could speak to Marshall. 

“What about?” he asked, a little suspiciously.

“Well, I just want to ask him a question.  It’s nothing about the operation here.”

“Is it personal?”

“Yes.”

“OK, as long as it’s nothing about ATC.  If it is, I need to know what it’s about.  But you’re gonna have to wait for a little while ‘cause I gotta tell him you need to talk to him.  So, for now go and relieve the Daisetta sector.  I’ll get you off when he’s ready to see you.”

I didn’t get to talk to Marshall until about an hour before my shift was over when I was told to go to his office just outside of the control room. 

Marshall was one of the more senior area managers.  He was just under six feet tall, thin and wiry and sported a perpetual tan—probably because when he was not working, he could always be found on his boat fishing on Lake Conroe.  His facial features were sharp and angular and reminded me of a dark-toned Humphrey Bogart.  He preferred to dress in dark brown or gray leisure suits, and like most men during that era, always had a lit cigarette dangling from his fingers.

I knocked quietly at the half-opened office door and he waved me in.

“Hi Frank.  What can I do for you?”

I began to explain about my submitting a bid for a job last year when he raised his hand and stopped me.

“Is this about Helen giving you a hard time today about some travel orders?”  I wondered how he’d found out.

“Well yeah, kind of.”

“I know all about it.  You’re working a day shift tomorrow, aren’t you?” he asked, taking a long drag off his cigarette.

“Yes.  I come in at seven.”

“OK, check in with the area manager when you arrive…I won’t be in until three…but the problem should be resolved by then.  Just tell him I asked you to stop by.  Anything else?”

“No.  I don’t think so.

“Fine.  Have a good evening.  Close the door when you leave.”  I had been told that Marshall was a man of few words, and that he had immense sway within the facility, but his brevity on this issue left me totally puzzled.  How could this issue be resolved overnight?

When I got back to the sector, my supervisor asked me how the meeting had gone.  I told him it was short, and he responded that I had visited with Marshall longer than he’d anticipated.  “Must’ve been a real complex problem,” he added.

The next morning before checking into my area for my sector assignment, I walked up and checked in with the area manager on duty.  Before I could say another word, he told me to go back out and check my mail slot.  I did, and in it I found a thick package containing my reassignment letter, travel orders, a welcome letter from the Western Pacific Region, and various documents that required my approval and signature.

***

Two weeks later, Kaz and I had booked air travel from Los Angeles to Guam via Hawaii, contracted our house for sale by a government agency, had our household belongings packed and shipped off by Atlas Moving and Packing, and arranged to have our car at a pier in San Pedro, California, for subsequent shipment to Guam aboard a Golden Bear Shipping Lines cargo ship. 

I was granted three weeks travel from the US, and six weeks per diem after we arrived on Guam.  With all that time, and since our 1972 Mercury Grand Marquis was still relatively new, we decided that it would be nice to drive leisurely to the West Coast and have it shipped from there, rather than having it shipped from Houston.  That decision would prove to be troublesome and cause us a not-so-small inconvenience.

But, as they say, that’s a story for another time.

NEXT:  Guam – Part One

New Horizons – Part Six

The End of Training and The End of a Life

Although I had been working on my own for several months now, on Sunday, July 9, 1972, I was promoted to a GS-13, FPL (Full Performance Level) ATCS (Air Traffic Control Specialist).  As a new journeyman I was now making a little less than $19,000 per year—quite a jump from the measly $7K that I was earning when I was first hired, and four times my salary as an Air Force Staff Sergeant and a shoe salesman.  A few days later I began my transition from crew seven to crew four.

My new supervisor was an affable gentleman named Robert (Bob) Wold.  He was a large man in his early fifties—probably six-and-a-half feet tall—and without a doubt tipped the scales at well over two-hundred and fifty pounds.  A healthy head of snow-white hair sat over a fair, freckled, and red-cheeked face—and although he strained to be soft-spoken, his deep baritone voice, scorched dry by the twenty to thirty unfiltered cigarettes he inhaled each day, tended to boom over the constant chatter of the eighteen to twenty controllers in our area.  Like Tom Moore, he’d been a long-time controller at the old San Antonio Center before being transferred and promoted to the newly-built Houston ARTCC.  Unlike Tom, he had a reputation for being fair, level-headed, and extremely competent when working the radar position to meet his monthly position currency requirements.

My first full day as a member of crew four happened to fall on a 2PM to 10PM shift, and our first hour was set aside for a weekly team briefing.  Bob took the first few minutes to introduce me to the rest of the crewmembers before he got around to briefing us on ATC matters.  Because of the way our staffing schedule ran I had worked a day or two a week with most of the guys on this crew, but since I’d been in training during that time with Hillary, no one had bothered to get to know me very well.  Now it seemed everyone wanted to know all about me—where I’d been stationed in the Air Force, if I was married, had any kids—but mostly, did I like to fish or water ski.  Since most of them lived in Conroe, about twelve miles north of the Center on Interstate 45, and had lake homes, fishing and boating were big weekend activities. 

I told them that because I was still working on earning my commercial pilot license, my weekend days were usually spent at David Wayne Hooks Airport.  Also, during this time of our lives Kaz and I were still childless so when I was not busy flying, we spent our time together going to movies and restaurants, and shopping for new furniture.  We had recently moved from our apartment in Spring Branch after buying a small home much closer to the center, but well south of Conroe.  So now, instead of a forty-minute commute to work from Houston’s west side, I drove a leisurely twelve minutes to get to work.

After the team briefing broke up, and some of the controllers hurried to the cafeteria to refill their coffee cups, I strolled slowly into the control room to get my sector assignment for the evening.  My old crew was not on duty, so I took my time unraveling my headset and checking the schedule on the supervisors’ desk while waiting for my new crew mates to arrive. 

As I stood there, I thought of what Kaz might be doing back at our new house.  The last time I worked an evening shift I had gotten home at half-past eleven to find the entire front room’s furniture rearranged.  She’d even moved our recently purchased piano from one side of the room to the other.  I fondly recalled that when I opened the door that night and took a few steps in, I instantly thought I’d walked into the wrong house.

Reminiscing deeper, my mind raced back to the day we had decided that it was time to move out of our apartment and into a house.  Now that I was earning more money, we could easily afford a house payment, and with the GI Bill we didn’t have to worry about a hefty down payment.  Further, I was getting awful tired of serving as assistant manager for the apartment complex—a position which, when we first moved in, was very desirable considering the fact that it knocked fifty percent off our monthly rent.  The reduced rent was nice but getting calls from helpless tenants at all hours asking to have their sinks unstopped, doors unlocked, and heaters or air conditioners reset quickly got old.

As things turned out, we ended up not using the GI Bill to buy our little three-bedroom ranch when another source of financing was unexpectedly made available.  That source had come to us as the result of a tragic and horrific event.

My quickly-darkening thoughts were thankfully interrupted when Bob called my name and motioned me to relieve the radar controller working the Daisetta Arrival radar sector.  I pushed all non-ATC thoughts from my mind, plugged my headset into the radio plug, and prepared myself to receive the relief briefing.

***

In early February of 1970, my brother Ricky called me to proudly announce that he had just gotten married.

“What?” I asked, shocked at the news.  “What do you mean, you got married?”

“Yup, we did it yesterday.  We went to the courthouse and got it done.  Cool, huh?” he said, happily.

“Tell me you’re joking,” I said, not believing for a second what he’d just told me.  It had to be a joke because to my knowledge he didn’t have a girlfriend.

“No, really.  I’m a married man!”

“Bullshit!  You broke up with…whatever her name was, a couple of months ago, and you told me you weren’t seeing anyone.”

“Ah…you may be my smart and rich older brother, but I don’t tell you everything, you know.”

“Stop calling me that!  You’re such a bullshitter!  No way you’re married.  Who’d have your ugly ass anyway?”

“Hey honey…” he said, his voice slightly muffled as he covered the receiver.  “My brother says no one would marry me ‘cause I’m too ugly.  That ain’t the truth, is it?”

“No…” I heard a faraway female voice say.  “You’re my handsome man!”

“See?” he said loudly.  “I’m her handsome man.  So, what do you know?” he asked, laughing.

I chuckled but really didn’t know what to say.  Ricky had dated very few girls, and those that he had dated seemed to just be along for a very short ride.  Kaz and I had often discussed how Ricky didn’t seem to have much luck with the girls—often being dumped after just a few dates.  We thought that maybe he just came on too strong—desperate really—to those girls who finally accepted his offer to go to the movies or go out to eat.  It was always the same: after a couple of dates, and after he showered them with unexpected gifts and badgered them with countless phone calls, the girl would suddenly be busy, or wouldn’t answer the phone, or…use just about any excuse she could think of to never see him again.

“OK, so you say you’re married…all right I’ll play your game.  What’s her name?”

“Sylvia Reyes!  Oh, I mean, Sylvia DeLeon!”

“Sylvia?  You never mentioned anyone named Sylvia.  When did you guys meet?”

“Oh, maybe a couple of months ago.”

“A couple of months!!  That’s it?  And, you married her?  Are you kidding me?”

“Not kidding.  We knew right away that we wanted to get married!  But her mother didn’t want us to.”

“Well…no, I guess not!”

“Actually, it worked out good because she was thinking of leaving home anyway.  Her parents were giving her a lot of crap.  So, I told her that she could just come live with me.”

“So, because she and her parents were having trouble, you married her?”

“Well…no.  I mean we love each other, and all that.  But it’ll be OK.”

“So now you guys are living in that little apartment you have?” I asked incredulously.

“Hey, it’s big enough for the two of us.  We don’t need much.”

***

Ricky graduated from high school in May of 1969, while I was at the Aeronautical Academy in Oklahoma City.  Lucky for him and unlike me, my parents let him attend his graduation and actually receive his diploma.  Because he’d been held back a year in elementary school due to illness, he was just a couple of months shy of his nineteenth birthday when he graduated.  After about six months of jumping from one minimum wage job to another, he landed a fairly good job with a company named Merchants Fast Freight as a dock worker.  In short, he was part of a crew who loaded freight onto large tractor trailers from a loading dock.  It was hard work, but it paid well and had great benefits.  Because he was a new hire, he was assigned to work the four to midnight shift.

My brother had always been a big boy.  While I tipped the scales at a little over six pounds at birth, Ricky rumbled in on July 7th, 1950, at a thundering eight pounds, six ounces, complete with a full head of wavy black hair.  Because my mom had requested to have her tubes tied after losing yet another baby after my birth, she was shocked when she became pregnant seven years later.  So shocked in fact that when she stopped menstruating and began to develop a noticeable bump in her belly in late 1949, she truly believed it was a cancerous stomach tumor.  A quick trip to her doctor confirmed that she was indeed pregnant and not on the way to her death bed. 

Even so, she remained in complete denial for several months—telling anyone who would listen that the doctor misdiagnosed her condition and so she would soon be dead.  My dad’s refusal to allow her to seek a second opinion, saying that they’d already spent enough money on the first diagnosis, sent her into a deep depression and she spent a couple of months crying and staring out the window awaiting her eventual demise.  I recall her putting me on her lap, and between sobs telling me that when she died it would become my responsibility to make sure my dad didn’t drink himself to death.  Even at the clueless age of eight I knew that no one, short of God, could accomplish that enormous task.

She finally began to accept the obvious when one day she felt the baby move.  At first, she assumed that the culprit was a pocket of gas working its way around the tumor, but when my brother delivered a forceful kick, she began to suspect that maybe the growth in her belly could maybe be a viable human being instead of a lifeless cancerous mass.  Her last hint was when she felt that first spasm of what would turn out to be a long and violent labor in the maternity ward.

I was left home alone for a couple of days after my father drove my screaming mother to the hospital, but since I was on summer vacation from school I didn’t mind too much.  I basically knew how to fend for myself—scouring the cabinets for tins of Vienna sausages and potted meat to put on slightly stale white bread.  And when I decided that I should treat myself to dessert I made a trip to Henry’s store next door to buy cookies and a small bottle of milk.  Since I had no money, I just asked Henry to put it on my parents’ tab.

About a week or so later, my father drove my mother home with my brother still wrapped in blankets with “Hermann Memorial Hospital” proudly emblazoned on their borders.  She asked me to take a peek at my new brother and as I bent over the small bassinet, I saw a dark-skinned lump of a child, wildly kicking, flailing, and gurgling contentedly.  As I drew close to get a better look, Richard Marcus DeLeon, delivered a healthy right cross to my nose accompanied by a ripping and very wet sounding fart.  That event would mark the beginning of our slightly contentious and mostly distant sibling relationship.

Having been an only child for almost eight years, it was difficult for me to understand, and to have to learn to share what little I had.  No amount of complaining to my parents, or Jerry—my make-believe and invisible friend—could change the fact that the few precious toys which I had considered mine were now community property.  As the years went by, I was forced to accept that when Ricky wanted something, it was my duty to give it to him.  My immature mind could also not comprehend why Ricky was casually allowed to commit the very same transgressions for which I had been severely punished for in the past.  The eight-year age difference didn’t help, and as things worked out, the older I got, the further we grew away from each other.

It would not be until many years later that our relationship would begin to be more like what it should’ve been all along.  By then, I was a twice married adult.

***

After getting off the phone with my brother, I quickly filled Kaz in.

“Why he get married?  Is girl pregnant?” she asked innocently.

“No, I don’t think so.  They haven’t known each other that long!”

“Oh…then I don’t understand.”

“Me neither.  But I’m wondering if my parents know.  I’d better call them now.”

It turned out that Ricky had already called them and let them know.  The only reason that they hadn’t called me back was because after his call they were busy getting into a huge argument centering on whose fault it was that he had gone and gotten married.

“Mom, do you know this girl?”

“Me?  No, I don’t think so.  Well…I mean, yes I met her once, but I don’t know her.”

“Do you know how old she is?”

“Ricky said she was a year younger than him, so she must be eighteen or so.”

“All right, I’ll call him back and get a few more details.”

“Ok, mijito.  I just don’t know why he would do this without telling us.”

“Well Mom, you of all people shouldn’t be surprised.  He’s always done anything he wanted and always got away with it.”

After a few minutes I called Ricky back and we had a longer and more fruitful conversation.  He had first seen Sylvia one day while shopping at a Foley’s Department store.  She was working in the cosmetics department and her specialty was piercing ears. 

After overcoming an initial wave of fear and shyness, he walked up to her and asked her if she wanted to have lunch.  To his surprise, she accepted, and they had their first “date” eating at the Foley’s cafeteria.  The rest, as they say, was history.

A week later, we all got together at our parents’ home for a family dinner.  Thankfully, my mother didn’t cook because my father decided to make a trip to Lockwood Boulevard in the old Crisol neighborhood and bring home a load of barbecue with all the fixings. 

Sylvia turned out to be pretty much what I had expected: eighteen, Mexican-American, dark olive skin, black hair, full lips, and large expressive dark brown eyes.  About five-foot-five, she was a tad heavy in the hips but carried herself well enough.  Naturally attractive, she would’ve looked better without the heavy Foley’s cosmetics counter make-over, but I assumed her intention was to impress. 

Quiet at first, once she warmed to the group, she carried on a bit too much about how she was glad to be out of her house and on her own.  Her sisters were greedy, her mom was oppressive, and her dad was a lout.  That pretty much summed it up family-wise.  She never mentioned if she even loved Ricky.  We all parted amicably, but on the way home, both Kaz and I came away with the sense that Sylvia might be using Ricky as a means of escape.  I hoped that not to be the case, but I just couldn’t shake the feeling.

***

In early June, a month before Ricky’s twenty-first birthday, he called me.  “Hey big brother!  How’re you doing?”

“Fine Rick.  Just getting ready to go to work.  How about you?  How’s Sylvia?”

“Oh, we’re OK…you know…married life sometimes sucks.”

“Tell me about it.  Everything OK?”

“Well yeah, but you know she just wants this and that all the time.  And I keep trying to tell her I don’t make the kind of money my rich brother does.  Seems like that’s all we ever fight about—money.”

“Stop that!  I don’t make that much.  And besides, you don’t want or need the stress that goes along with being a controller.”

“Yeah, I guess that’s true.  Anyway, hey, I’m calling to ask you a favor.”

“Sure, what’s up?”

“Well, you know that little car you sold me a couple of months ago?”

“Of course, my little red Toyota Sports 800.”

“Yeah.  Well, since Sylvia’s working at Foleys, she drives it all the time and I’ve been getting rides to and from work from a guy who lives close to us and works my shift.”

“Yeah?”

“Anyway, he’s quitting next week and that means I’ll be out of a ride.  So, I checked with the credit union at my work and I can qualify for a loan to get a second vehicle, but it has to be a car.”

“OK, so what’s the problem?”

“Well, I don’t want to get a car.  I want a motorcycle.  For a motorcycle loan, they require a co-signer for the loan ‘cause I’m not twenty-one.”

“You’re thinking of getting a motorcycle?  You don’t even have a license, do you?”

“No, but I’ll get one after I get the motorcycle.  I just need to practice on it to pass the test.”

“Wait, wait.  Instead of getting a car loan you want to get a loan for a motorcycle?  Without a license?”

“Yeah, so I already checked and picked out what I want, and the dealer doesn’t care about me not having a license or me not being twenty-one.  But the credit union won’t approve a loan until I’m twenty-one.  So, I’m calling to ask if you’ll co-sign the loan for me.”

“OK Rick, wait just a minute.  Have you asked dad about this?”

“Well…yeah.”

“You talked to him about getting a bike or about co-signing for a loan?”

“Both.”

“And what did he say?”

“He won’t co-sign.  He says I shouldn’t have a bike because I’m too crazy and bound to kill myself.  He’s never liked the way I drive.”

“So, because he won’t sign you thought to ask me?”

“Yup.”

“Can’t do it Rick.  Sorry.  First off, I don’t think co-signing a loan for anyone is good business.  Too risky.  But now you’re asking me to override Dad and go against his wishes.”

“No!  I mean…you know.  He just doesn’t trust me. No one does.”

“OK, listen.  I trust you just fine.  It’s just that I won’t go over his head when he’s already refused to co-sign for you.  I just won’t do it.  Sorry.  I will help you out by lending you some money, but I won’t co-sign.”

“Fine, just forget it!” he responded angrily.  “I’ll just ride the bus for the next few weeks and wait until next month when I turn twenty-one and do this by myself!”

“Look Rick!  Don’t get all pissed about this.  It’s just not a good idea all the way around.  Won’t you just consider getting a car instead?”

“Nope!  My mind’s made up!  Thanks for nothing!”  The phone clicked off loudly and I was left staring at the receiver.

On July 8, 1971, Ricky pulled up to our apartment in a brand-new Honda six-cylinder cruiser.  He was wearing red-white and blue leathers and an American flag helmet.  I had to admit that the bike was certainly a fine piece of machinery, but I couldn’t get over the lump of dread weighing heavily in the pit of my stomach.  He offered to take me on a short ride and I hesitatingly accepted. 

Pulling back into the parking lot, I breathed a sigh of relief because the fifteen-minute drive had been terrifying.  Exceeding ninety miles per hour on Interstate 10, I couldn’t wait to get off the bike.  As we roared off earlier, I was almost thrown off the passenger seat when Ricky tried to do a wheelie with the more than eight-hundred-pound bike.  He leaned the bike sharply, cutting in and out of traffic barely missing front and rear bumpers, and finally cutting across four lanes of traffic to exit the freeway.

I asked him if this was the way he planned to drive to and from work.  He laughed and said he was only trying to scare me.  He knew how to drive safely, he said.  I insisted that he apply for his license as soon as possible, and he assured me he would.

My last view of him was as he roared away, waving to me with his left hand.  The back of his leather jacket said, “Born to Ride”.

***

November 30, 1971, 12:30AM.  I worked a four to midnight shift and got home around twelve-thirty.  Kaz was already in bed, but as per her recent habit, she was still awake, her head buried in the “Getting Your American Citizenship” booklet she’d purchased.  After I washed up and dressed in my PJs, I dropped into bed, dead tired.

“How was work?” Kaz asked softly, putting the book down.

“Oh my God, it was so busy.”

“You did OK, right?”

“Oh yeah, I did fine.  Piece of cake.”

“OK, good.  Goodnight.”  She reached for the bedside lamp and turned it off.

“Goodnight.”  I rolled over and fell instantly asleep.

At 2:30AM, we were awakened by the shrill sound of the phone ringing.

“Hello…” I struggled to mouth the word.

“Hi Frank?”

“Yes?”

“Hey, this is Sylvia.  I’m sorry to call so late, but I was wondering if you’d heard from Ricky?”

“Ricky?  No, no I haven’t.  Isn’t he home?”  I glanced at the clock, struggling to remember that he got off at midnight and should’ve been home over an hour ago.

“No, he isn’t.  I’m a little worried.”

“You mean you don’t know where he is?  He didn’t call or anything before he got off work?”

“No.”

“Well, maybe he went out with some guys for a beer or something.”

“No, he never does that.”

“Oh, OK.”  I thought for a couple of seconds, then dared to ask.

“Did you guys have a fight?  I mean like an argument or something like that before he went to work?”

“Well…”  A long pause.  “Well, yeah.  We kinda had a little argument.  You know.  But I thought we’d try to work it out when he got home tonight.  But I just haven’t heard anything.  I’m just worried.”

I sat up slowly in bed, hoping that Kaz was still sleeping.  “Look, here’s what probably happened.  He’s still pissed, and he decided to make you worry by maybe going out with a couple of guys for a couple of hours.  I’m sure he’ll be home before you know it.  Besides, there’s not much I can do anyway.  I don’t know who he hangs out with so I wouldn’t know who to call.  So, my advice is, just go back to bed and he’ll be home before you know it.”

“OK, I guess you’re right.  Sorry to bother you.”

“No problem.  If he’s not home in let’s say a couple of hours call me back.  I’ll get dressed and come over.  We’ll figure something out.  OK?”

“OK, thanks.  Bye.”

“Bye.”

Kaz softly asked, “Is Ricky not home?”

“No, but you know how they always fight.  They got into an argument before he went to work, and I’ll bet he’s still pissed.  He’s probably going to spend the night with a friend and come home when it’s light.  He’s just trying to scare her.”

“I hope so.”

“I’m sure.  Let’s go back to sleep.”

“OK, goodnight.”

November 30, 1971, 6:47AM. 

I heard the phone ringing, but it was so far away.  Ring, ring, ring.  Then an elbow in my back.  “Honey, get the phone!”  Kaz’s voice.

“Huh?  Oh, yeah.”  As I rolled to my left I reached for the phone and looked at the clock.

As I brought the receiver towards me, and before I could say a word…a loud and lingering scream cut the air.

“HE’S DEAD!  OH MY GOD FRANK, RICKY’S DEAD!”

***

At the end of his shift, and after a brief conversation with one of his co-workers, Ricky mounted his powerful new Honda cruiser and left work at 12:10AM.  He turned left onto Elysian Street and pointed the bike southbound towards his little apartment on Winkler Avenue, about nine miles away.  A mile or so down the road he’d cross Lorraine Street and quickly merge left onto Hardy Avenue—and with little or no traffic, or law enforcement to slow him down, should make it home in less than ten minutes. 

A little after 6AM, later that morning, a middle-aged black man, walking north to the bus stop at the corner of Elysian and Lorraine, looked to his left into the large open field between Elysian and Hardy Avenue, and spotted an odd and misplaced shiny piece of chrome, glistening brightly through the weeds in the early morning dawning sunshine.  His curiosity got the better of him, and since he was a few minutes early anyway, decided to turn off the sidewalk and walk into the knee-high weeds to inspect the mysterious object that he was sure hadn’t been there the day before.

As he walked slowly through the dew-laden foliage he noticed that the closer he got, the more the shimmering piece of metal seemed to resemble some kind of fender.  But, he thought, what would a chrome fender be doing out here in the middle of this field?  Moreover, his confusion was heightened when he spotted a small tree lying prone on the ground about ten feet in front of him—its slender trunk sheared off about a foot off the ground.

His preoccupation with the tree and the gleaming chrome object was suddenly interrupted as a splash of bright colors caught his eye just off to his left.  He turned his head quickly and squinted trying to make sense of what it was that had caught his attention.  As his mind struggled to comprehend the horrific carnage that his eyes were seeing, a strong odor of raw gasoline overwhelmed his senses and he fought to suppress a rapidly rising wave of nausea.

Questions and the Aftermath

Sylvia’s phone call early that morning was confusing and unsettling, and because of her hysterical mental state she was only able to answer a few of my many questions.  What she was able to tell me clearly was that she had just received a call from someone at the Houston Police Department informing her that they had received information of the discovery of a body with her husband’s driver’s license and other identifying documents.  She had also been told that there was a wrecked motorcycle near the body.

The officer also informed her that officers at the scene had found papers stored in the saddle bags of the motorcycle containing a home address and this phone number.  He had been asked by the officers at the scene to call that number to determine if a certain Richard M. DeLeon was presently at home and if he owned a motorcycle.

“Well Sylvia,” I said, trying to sound as calm as I could.  “It doesn’t mean that that’s Ricky, right?  I mean, he could’ve lent the bike to one of his friends, don’t you think?’

“Nooooo!” she screamed back at me.  “The policeman told me that the person was wearing a red, white and blue leather jacket, and that that the helmet, or what was left of it, was in the design of the American flag.  OH MY GOD!!”  And she broke down into a series of screams and sobs.

“Sylvia, Sylvia…listen to me.  Did the officer give you a phone number for you to call back?”

“NO!!  I just hung up right away and called your mom!!”

“Oh God!  You called my mom already?”

“Yes!  But I had to hang up because I think she fainted.  I heard the phone hit the floor and she wouldn’t answer me anymore.  So, then I called you!”

“Oh Jesus!” I gasped.  “OK, let me make a few phone calls.  I need to get in touch with the police department and get to the bottom of this.  They shouldn’t have called you requesting information on somebody they found hurt.  I’ll call you back as soon as I get some more information.”  The phone went dead before I was able to finish the sentence.

I turned and saw Kaz wearing a look of terror—her hands on each side of her face.  “Is your bro…Ricky, dead?”

“Lord, I don’t know for sure.  I’ve got to call mom first and see if she’s OK.  Sylvia said she thought she fainted.”

“Oh no…”

I dialed mom’s number, but the line was busy.  “Well, she’s not answering.  I’m gonna try to call the police department.”

“OK,” Kaz said.  “Want me to get you something?”

“No…well, yes.  Do you know where the phone book is?  I need to find the number for the cops.”

“Sure, I get it for you.”  She jumped out of bed and ran into the kitchen.  Just then, the phone rang.  It was mom.

She was almost as hysterical as Sylvia, and my main concern was her present welfare.

“Mom!  First of all, we don’t know that it’s Ricky that’s been hurt, OK?  I need to call the police to get more information.  But for now, I need to know if you’re OK!  Sylvia thought you may have fainted.”

Between sobs and praying to Jesus, she told me that when she heard Sylvia telling her Ricky was dead, she’d dropped the phone.  From then on, she’d been trying to call me.  “I know mom, I was on the phone with Sylvia when you were probably trying to call.  Are you sure you’re OK?”

“Si, mijito.  Please ask God not to let it be my Ricky.  Please, please pray to Jesus.  I know He wouldn’t take my son away from me.”

“Sure mom, but for now please just try to calm yourself a little bit.  I’m calling the police right now.”

“OK, mijito.  Ay Dios mío!”

“I love you, mom.  And, as soon as I know anything, I’ll let you know.”

Within a few minutes I had called the Houston Police Department and verified that it had indeed been Ricky whose body they’d found.  I didn’t have the heart to call my mother back.  I just needed some time to gather myself.

***

Over the next thirty-six hours I had gathered all the information that I needed.  Although Sylvia had been re-contacted by the medical examiner and asked to go to the morgue to identify Ricky, I asked to accompany her.  Since she was legally Ricky’s next of kin, she was escorted into the room where his body lay.  As she entered the room, I was approached by one of the medical examiner’s assistants.

“I understand he’s your brother,” the young red-haired man in a crisp white lab coat whispered as he softly shook my hand.

“Yes,” I answered, trying to control my emotions.  “It was just us two.”

“My sincere condolences on your loss.” He said, quietly.  “If you want to go in to view the body, I can escort you in.”

Before I had a chance to answer, he quickly said, “But really, you don’t want to see your brother in that condition.  It’s bad enough that his wife has to make the ID.”

“Oh?”

“Look, we were required to do an autopsy due to the circumstances, and although I just assisted, Doctor Cullen said that he’d never seen such damage to a body.”

“Oh God.”

“Look, it might help if I tell you, he never knew what hit him.  He must’ve been going over a hundred miles an hour when he lost control of his bike—and quite frankly, it was over for him in half a second.  His chest and stomach contacted the handlebars while at the same time his head hit a metal sign pole.  Besides a fractured skull, his entire mid-section was instantly crushed.”

“Lord.  How could he lose control?  Wasn’t he going straight on the street?”

“He was in the center lane of Elysian—it’s a three-lane one-way street.  Just as he crossed Lorraine Street, Elysian makes a sharp left curve to rejoin Hardy Avenue.  He was just going too fast to make the curve and it looks like after he applied the brake the bike just slid full speed and straight into the curb.  When the bike’s front wheel hit the curb, the front section of the bike folded up as his body went forward.  At that point his head contacted a “No Parking” sign and his helmet failed.  He and the bike tumbled into a vacant lot and he came to rest after about three hundred feet.”

I felt woozy and thought I might want to throw up.

“I’m sorry…here, let me get you a chair,” he said, as he gently guided me to a small metal chair in the darkened waiting room.  “There you go.  Want some water?”

“No, I think I’m OK.  It’s just…a bit much to hear right now.”

“I’m sorry.  I just thought someone should know how he died.  We normally don’t tell the wife or mother details, and later on they usually call to ask if their loved one suffered, or things like that.  Someone from the family should know so they can share what they feel they need to at a later date.  Helps with closure.”

“I understand.”

I heard a loud scream coming from the closed door with the sign that said, “Viewing Room”, and knew Sylvia had just seen my brother.

***

My brother was buried at Forest Park Cemetery, on the second of December 1971.  The burial service was held at Iglesia Bethel, in the Magnolia Gardens neighborhood of Houston, where Ricky’s casket remained closed. 

My parents were devastated, but I was especially concerned with my mother’s mental state.  She was inconsolable and told anyone who would listen that Ricky had already appeared to her several times and told her that he was now living in Heaven and walking with Jesus.  “He told me he would be there waiting for me.  So, I know I will be dying very soon and joining my son.”  She would then swoon and go to her knees.  In my grief, I was worried sick about her and the condition she was in.

Sylvia, on the other hand—after an initial show of bitter grief at the funeral—perked up remarkably.  Within a couple of days of the burial she called me, telling me she wanted to meet and discuss the intricacies of the life insurance policy they’d taken out on each other’s lives after they were married.

“Basically, I need to know what this ‘double-indemnity’ clause is,” she asked me, over a cup of coffee at our apartment.

After reading over the document I said, “Well, the policy is written for thirty thousand dollars, but the double indemnity clause means that if death occurs due to an accident, the payout doubles.”

“That’s what my father told me too.  But I didn’t believe him because he’s not too smart.”

“Well, he was right.”

“So then, I’m gonna get sixty thousand dollars instead of thirty?”

“I would verify that with the insurance agent you bought the policy from, but usually that’s what it means.”

“Oh!  Then I can do whatever I want with the money?”

“I would assume so.  But you’ll have to pay the Crespo Funeral Home what it cost for the funeral, don’t you?  I’m assuming they extended their services pending the insurance payout.  Did they ask you about life insurance?”

“Yes, and they wanted a copy of the policy.”

“OK, so after those expenses, what’s left is yours.”

“Oh, good.”

***

Over the next few weeks Sylvia stayed in close contact with me asking advice on several issues concerning the insurance payout.  I thought her behavior was coarse and insulting but tried to give her the best advice I could.  For example, I suggested that maybe she should take the majority of the payout and invest it for the future—going so far as to make inquiries for her of several investment counselors in the area.

Mostly, she sidestepped my advice and instead peppered me with questions about what kind of car she should buy.  I told her the little Toyota I’d sold to them was still pretty good transportation, and she was quick to tell me she was planning to get rid of the car because it was too small and didn’t have enough power.  I offered to buy it back, but she insisted she was going to give it to one of her brothers instead.  I suggested that a little Volkswagen Beetle might serve her needs at this time—plus it was inexpensive to buy and operate and should last her a long time.  She huffed and said she had some other cars in mind.

Within two months she purchased a brand new 1971 Mercury Cougar and furnished her apartment with new furniture.  She invited Kaz and me to dinner one evening to show off her new purchases, and we were more shocked than impressed when we walked into the little apartment on Winkler Avenue.  The whole one-bedroom apartment was no bigger than five-hundred square feet, but into that space she had managed to stuff an inordinate amount of gaudy oversized furniture.

In the front room, not bigger than twelve by fifteen feet she had managed to shoe-horn in a gaudy purple faux leather couch and a humungous oval coffee table whose thick glass top was supported by a heavy, shiny gold-tone Arabian-themed metal base.  One had to sit sideways on the couch because of the lack of legroom between the couch and table. 

Almost completely covering the entire wall behind the couch, from the ceiling down to the backrest hung a giant brass-framed painting of a squirming Elvis Presley brush-painted on thick black velvet.  I was sure when the two gaudy black and pearl five-foot-tall floor lamps, wedged into the two available corners of the living room were turned off for night, Elvis and his white suit and silver guitar would glow on in lifelike iridescence.

The bedroom was equally terrifying: a California king-sized bed—complete with canopy and footboard—was jammed into the tiny room, leaving scant room to even walk around between it and the wall.  If one left the bathroom door open it would be most convenient to just roll off one side of the bed and sit up on the commode.

“So, what do you guys think?  I got this stuff at Finger’s Furniture Center last week.”

Luckily, Kaz managed to summon a few Oh’s and Ah’s, because all I could come up with was, “Interesting…I mean it’s nice.”

After we left, I complained to Kaz that the way things were going Sylvia would probably burn through the insurance money in less than a year.

“Yeah,” she said.  “I wish there was something we could do to help her not spend money like that.”  As we pulled into the parking area of our apartment and walked up the squeaky stairs to our door, an idea popped into my head. 

“You know, since she won’t take any advice on investing the money in stocks or bonds, maybe I can suggest a more personal way for her to invest.”

“How?” Kaz asked quizzically.

***

 It took a bit of convincing, but with the help of a real estate attorney, a title company, and a little arm-twisting, I convinced Sylvia that if she invested twenty thousand dollars of my brother’s insurance money into a twenty-thee-hundred-foot, three bedroom house, in a cozy little neighborhood just south of the Intercontinental Airport (now George Bush International), she would be guaranteed a steady monthly income for twenty years.  And who better to make sure that the investment was not only safe, but would be sure to grow in value?  None other than her brother-in-law and his wife?

So, in early 1972, Kaz and I moved into that little home secure in the thought that at least one-third of my brother’s insurance proceeds would not just disappear.

To be continued…

New Horizons – Part Five

New Horizons – Part Five

Controller Training and Return to Flying

Nineteen months.  That was how long it took me to progress from a developmental non-radar trainee to a full journeyman controller.  While in the past the process had taken a full four years or more for the ATC training process to produce a full-fledged radar controller, I had completed it in just over a year and a half—and I had the Whitten Amendment to thank.  I was now certified on sixteen low altitude and two high altitude radar and non-radar sectors in the Houston Specialty after training and certifying at an average of just over a month on each sector.

Because of the Whitten Amendment as soon as I certified on the two to four sectors that qualified me for a jump to the next GS pay level, (which in the past would’ve required me to wait for at least twelve months after certification for the jump), I was immediately promoted.  My pay scale went from GS-9 to GS-13 so rapidly, that the payroll department had great difficulty in paying me the correct amount each payday.  All during my training I had no idea how much my next paycheck was going to be—at times jumping from three-hundred to over a thousand dollars a pay period over the last paycheck, then the next check a lower amount because payroll discovered they’d grossly overpaid me.  Either way on average, I was now earning at least three times what I’d been paid while in the Air Force or at the shoe store

Remembering my painfully learned lesson in the Air Force concerning paycheck overpayments, I recommended to Kaz that we should frugally budget our normal household expenses and put the pay overages into savings.  That way when the bi-weekly paychecks ended up being less than what we thought they should be we’d have money to draw on to even things out.

Although I had seemingly breezed through training, it certainly wasn’t easy—in fact, it was grueling, and the fact that a month into my training I had decided to re-enter flight training made it even harder.  So, what made me decide to return to flight training after surviving initial ATC training and facing at least a couple of years of intense live traffic training?  Well, it had to do with my fear of failing ATC training and having nothing to fall back on.

A few weeks after I’d started my formal on-the-job training on the floor, I began to worry about my ability to withstand the extreme mental pressure that was starting to build and was sure to get worse—and with the removal of the time-in-grade requirements the push was on for me to certify.

Several old journeyman controllers had told me that without being able to season for a few months after certifying on a sector and resuming training, they would’ve never made it.

“If you consider the Whitten your good friend you’re in for a big surprise.”  I’d been told.

“You’re going to regret not being able to get to know the intricacies and recognize the traps that each sector has in store for you.  Training with an instructor only teaches you so much—you have to work each sector by yourself to learn to recognize those things.  And if you don’t recognize those things fast enough, you’re gonna quickly find yourself putting two airplanes together and not understanding what just happened to you.”

There was a lot of truth to what I was hearing because several times during training, while I had been utterly convinced that I had applied the correct rule to resolve a confliction to my sheer horror I discovered that that particular rule was successful only under certain conditions in the real world.  It was only due to divine providence that while reviewing my work I had seen the lack of separation in just enough time to apply some remedial actions before loss of separation occurred.  During our training debriefs Hillary would bring up these incidents, having documented them on the training form, and while praising me for resolving them before he had to intervene, I was heavily criticized for not having seen the confliction right away.

During my training I constantly worried that I’d screw something up and without recourse be sent down to that Flight Data purgatory to await my banishment to some Godforsaken backwater village to serve as a Flight Service Specialist.  So, I began to formulate a backup plan.

First, I did a bit of research regarding my veteran’s benefits.  Before I left the Air Force, I was briefed by a personnel specialist on the various programs available for veterans such as myself, and by far, the best was what is known as the GI Bill.

Besides offering veterans with cheap and guaranteed approval mortgage loans the GI Bill provided us funds for college tuition, and best of all (for me at least) up to four-hundred dollars a month for advanced flight training.  To qualify for the flight benefits, one had to already have a private pilot license and be enrolled in some type of advanced pilot training program at a certified flight training school.  The monthly benefits would be paid directly to the flight school and allowed the student to work towards certification in flight instructor, multi-engine, commercial, ATP (Airline Transport Pilot), and Instrument Flight Rules flight training.

The catch was that to qualify for the full four hundred dollars monthly grant the student was required to accumulate five hundred dollars a month or more, in flight training expenses.  No one was sure why this stipulation existed, but the owner of the flight school I enrolled in speculated that the government wanted the student pilot to spend some if his/her funds so that it wouldn’t look like a complete give-away program.  Whatever.  With what I was earning now I could afford to pay for the program with no problem, so now all I had to worry about was having the time to train.

I decided it was time for me to sit down and discuss these plans with Kaz, so one evening just after dinner I told her I had something to discuss.

“You not having trouble in the training, are you?” She asked worriedly as she laid her hand over mine.

“No, no, it’s nothing like that.  I think I’m doing OK…probably better than the guys on the other crews, but I’m still a little worried about something.”

“OK, what?”

“Well, even though my training seems to be going OK I still can’t get over the number of guys who’ve washed out.  I mean, some of those guys I felt were much better than me and they still didn’t make it.  So, I’d like to discuss what I will call a back-up plan.”

“Back-up plan?  What that?”

“Oh, it’s a plan that’s in place in case something goes wrong.  You know, like if I have a deal (lose separation between two aircraft) and they wash me out.”

“You never have deal!  You too good for that!  What happen to your confidence?”

“Nothing.  But I think it’s better to have something to fall back on in case something happens.”

“OK, so what you planning?”

“Well, I’m thinking of signing up at a flight training school for advanced pilot training.”

“Pilot training!?  Are you crazy?  You just got your pilot license last year—and you been flying a little after you got discharged from Air Force and before we moved to Houston.  How much more training you think you need?”

“No, this is different.  If you recall, after the Air Force I could no longer belong to the Bergstrom Flying Club, so I found that little airfield, Tims Airpark north of Austin.  I got checked out in a little Alon Air Coupe because it was cheap to fly, and I wanted to stay current.  But I’ve since lost my currency.” (To stay current a pilot has to complete three take-offs and landings every ninety days).

“So what?  You now controller…and flying in Houston is too expensive anyway!”

“Well, I’m not a controller yet, and this is what I wanted to talk to you about.  The government has a program called the GI Bill—remember, we talked about getting a mortgage loan through them after I finish the controller training program?”

 “Of course, I remember!  But what that have to do with flying?”

“The GI Bill will also pay for pilot training!  The only requirement is that the trainee has to already have a pilot license.  So, I automatically qualify.”

“That sound too easy.  Nobody give money away like that.”

“I didn’t think so either, but it’s true.  I already checked it out.  There’s a flight school near the center at a little airport named David Wayne Hooks.   I called them up the other day to ask and I was told the GI Bill will pay up to $400 a month for advanced flight training, and all I have to pay is about a hundred a month.  We can afford that!”

“But when you suppose to have time for that?  You already so busy with the training at the center.”

“I think I can make it work.  Besides, the extra time I spend training for my commercial license will help take my mind off of worrying about washing out at the center.  So, what do you think?”

“I think you crazy!  When are you planning to fly?  You work every day!”

“On my days off mostly, but I can also fit in some flying in the mornings when I don’t have to go into work until four in the afternoon.  I don’t know how much flying I have to do to get to four-hundred a month.”

“You trying to kill yourself!  Besides, when are we supposed to start a family?”

“I think we have to think about that when I either finish my controller or my flight training.”

***

In early October of 1970, I filled out all the necessary government paperwork for application into the flight training program as required by the GI Bill, and although my formal acceptance into the program would not be received for another six weeks, the director of the flight school assured me that it would be no problem.

On a sunny and cloudless Saturday, October 3rd, 1970, after successfully attending three days of Ground School at DWH (David Wayne Hooks Airport), I took off in a yellow and white Cherokee 140—tail number N5903V—for a check flight with my flight instructor to begin my advanced flight training.  I had not flown since February 23rd, 1969. 

According to my flight log for that day, I flew for nine-tenths of an hour in the local airport training area, completing several power-on and power-off stalls, some chandelles, and terminating with four touch-and-goes and a final landing.  The rest of my training flights would be done solo with an occasional flight check with an instructor.  Meanwhile, back at Houston Center, having already certified on all nine non-radar sectors, I began training on the first of nine radar sectors. 

By the end of that month not only had I successfully certified on that first radar sector, but I had also accumulated eight hours of flight time from DWH.  During those eight hours I racked up thirty-eight take-offs and landings, countless crosswind approaches, chandelles, power off and power on stalls, and had completed three cross-country (round-robin) flights to unfamiliar airports.  This frenzied pace would continue for the next eight months.

To say my life was a blur during this period of time would be a gross understatement, and I owe an enormous debt of gratitude, to a very patient and understanding Kaz.

Tom Moore

Right after having been introduced to Hillary Larkins, my OJT instructor on crew seven, I was escorted to a small office directly behind the bank of radar scopes that made up the Houston Specialty Low Altitude sectors.

Sitting cross-armed behind a gray metal desk, a smoldering cigarette stuck between his thin lips, was a stout, balding, and deeply tanned man.  Dressed in a gray-tinged white dress shirt that had certainly seen better days, and a thin dark brown tie, whose messy knot had been pulled down exposing a missing collar button over the top of a wife-beater undershirt, was crew seven’s first line supervisor.

“Frank,” Hillary said softly, “meet Tom Moore…our supervisor and the guy who’s going to be conducting all your check rides and debriefs for sector certifications.”

“Hi, Mr. Moore, glad to meet you.” I said.

Tom grunted and pulled what remained of the cigarette from his mouth with stubby nicotine-stained fingers.  With what seemed a substantial effort he rolled the office chair back and stood up exposing a sizeable pot belly around which hung a pair of dingy dark gray slacks.

“Hey there, Frank, call me Tom!”  He bellowed hoarsely while extending his free hand.  “I hear you really did well up in training.  At least that’s what Billy upstairs went and told me.  Based on his reports we oughta be expecting some great work from you.”  His handshake was soft and un-reassuring and he spoke in a heavy East Texas twang.

“Oh, well I sure hope so.” I responded timidly.  “I’ve been looking forward to working on the floor for what seems like years.”

“Yeah, well you scored big when you got ole Hillary here for an instructor.  He’s as good as they come.  Hell, he’s even better than me!”  As he chuckled at his remark a phlegmy sound rattled deep in his chest.

“Tom, no one’s better than you—at bullshitting, that is.”  Hillary said dryly.

“Eyup, that’s my boy Hillary—don’t say too much but when he does it’s a zinger!”  The chest rattle came up as a wet cough.  “Sheeeit!”  He managed to say in between coughs.

“Tom,” Hillary interjected with a bit of impatience. “I’m thinking on starting Frank on the Beaumont Low Sector (BMT) to get him broke in on those east corridor low arrivals from over Lake Charles.  What’dya think?”

“Hell, that’s just as good a place as any.  If you can learn how to get those little itinerate bastards (ATC slang for small propeller-driven general aviation aircraft) all lined up for approach into Hobby (Houston Hobby Airport) or Galveston—well shit, you’ll have’er purty much whupped.”

“Uh, OK…” That was all I could come up with.

“OK Tom, we gotta go get plugged in ‘cause the push from Louisiana (pronounced, Lu-zee-ana) is about to start.”

“Sure thing!  Go get’m Frank!  And don’t let those little suckers get the best of you!  I’ll be interested to read Hillary’s training reports on ya.”

“Thanks, it was nice to meet you.”  I said, as Hillary pushed me out the door.

“He’s a great supervisor ‘cause he don’t know crap and he knows it.”  Hillary said, almost under his voice.  “When you get all checked out on the manual side try to never get caught working next to him when he’s on the radar.  Supervisors have to get eight hours every month of live radar traffic to stay current, but when he’s on the radar it’s a righteous disaster.  He’s smart enough to pick the times when there’s very little traffic, but we also always try to put an experienced controller on his non-radar side to keep him from killing somebody.  He goes under very easily.”

“OK, I’ll try to remember that.”

“Also, you’ll never get scheduled for a check ride with him until I’m positively sure you’re ready.  Tom’s so clueless he’d check out one of the gul-darned custodians if we told him he was ready.”

“Oh…” I didn’t know what to say to that.

“Anyway,” Hillary said as he put his headset on. “Let’s see how the good ole Beaumont sector is doing today.”

“Alright.”  I said, as I walked toward the sector, also putting my headset on and making sure the microphone was directly in front of my mouth.

“OK, looks like she’s cooking.”  Hillary remarked. 

The controller who was working seemed to be really busy—talking into his mic, writing on strips, pushing comm buttons, and pointing to different shrimp boats on the radar scope.  There seemed to be more flight strips in front of him than I’d ever seen in training and the scope was full of shrimp boats.  When a flight, represented by a flight strip, needed to have some action take on it, the strip would be slanted to the right or left.  No action required meant the strip would be lying flat.  As I scanned the board it seemed to me as if every strip was slanted.

“Get all plugged in there and get in the swing of things.  When you think you got the picture ask him for the relief briefing.”  Hillary instructed while pointing to the controller who seemed to be doing ten things at once. 

Each sector had dual radio/comm plug-ins, and as I plugged my headset into the vacant one, the radio chatter coming from the radar controller and the aircraft he was controlling was overwhelming—and I was suddenly too busy to acknowledge Hillary’s last instruction.

***

A month later I had certified on the Beaumont sector and began training on the Humble Low sector (IAH).  This particular sector was basically devoted to northbound traffic departing the Houston Metroplex area, and included Houston Hobby (HOU), Houston Intercontinental (IAH)—now called George Bush Intercontinental Airport, Galveston Airport (GLS), Ellington Field (EFD), and a dizzying myriad of small general aviation airports that dotted this congested area  This included DWH—the airport which I was now flying out of for my commercial pilot training.

Any IFR flight departing any of these airports, whose initial route of flight was northwest, north, or northeast out of the Houston area, would traverse the Houston TRACON (Terminal Radar and Approach Control) airspace worked by tower controllers, and be handed off to the IAH sector. 

If the flight requested twenty-three thousand feet or below (FL230) for a final altitude, it would remain under the control of this sector until it exited and was handed off to another low altitude sector.  However, if the flight was climbing higher than FL230, then the IAH radar controller would hand it off to the HOU HI altitude sector controller.  All coordination for altitude requests were made by the IAH sector non-radar controller by land line, and when the altitude was approved, the IAH radar controller would issue the altitude to the flight and hand off radar control to the HOU Hi radar controller.

While my training on the BMT sector had been complex and extremely busy, the majority of the flights traversing that sector consisted of mainly low altitude propeller general aviation aircraft (little itinerate bastards) whose airspeed rarely exceeded two-hundred-fifty knots.  Altitude and route coordination with other sectors was conducted at a more leisurely pace given the relatively slow speed of each flight and their usual adherence to the airway route structure.  The IAH sector was completely the opposite.

High speed aircraft, the majority of which were air carrier or corporate jets, came pouring northbound out of the TRACON airspace—and since they had only received clearance to fifteen thousand feet by the departure controllers in the tower, they were all requesting higher altitude and more direct routes to their destinations.  While the IAH radar controller was always busy accepting radar handoffs, then climbing, turning and keeping all the north departures away from each other—it was a coordination nightmare for the non-radar, or manual, controller sitting to his right.

Three weeks after I first plugged into the IAH sector to begin my nonradar training Hillary decided that I was ready for a check ride (certification).  Since check rides were conducted by the team supervisor Tom Moore was called out of the office to conduct my certification. 

“So, Hillary tells me you’re ready to get checked out, huh?”  Tom said cheerfully, trying to balance his coffee cup with one hand while strapping his headset onto his balding head.

“Yeah, I guess so…” I said, feeling my nervousness ball up in the pit of my stomach.

“Yeah, he’s as ready as he’ll ever be.” Hillary said, behind me.  “I’m starting to get bored watching him do his job on this sector, so I guess it’s time.”

“OK, well let’s go!” Tom said, plugging his headset’s plug next to mine.

Since it was just before 6AM, and very little traffic was presently departing Houston, this sector had been combined with another during the midnight shift.  Hillary plugged his headset into the radar side and began the process of breaking off and opening up the sector.  He would be working the radar and I would be his manual controller during my check ride.

Within twenty minutes the sector had exploded with departure traffic and I was getting into the rapid-fire sequence of listening to aircraft requests on the radio, jumping onto a land-line and dialing the appropriate sector, asking for and receiving approval, and quickly offsetting and making the proper notations on that flight’s flight progress strip.  When everything worked it was like dancing flawlessly with a partner who anticipated all your moves.

Suddenly I felt a tap on my wrist, and I looked away from my strips and to my left to see Hillary looking angrily behind me.

“Wake him the hell up, for crying out loud!”  Hillary spit out…as angry as I’d ever seen him, and the first time I’d ever heard him use a curse word.

My head shot over my right shoulder and I saw what Hillary was referring to.  Tom was sitting behind me and to my right a few feet away with his head lolled back and eyes closed tight.  His mouth was open and dangling precariously from his lower lip was a filter-less Lucky Strike cigarette.  It hung there with about an inch of gray ash threatening to fall onto his shirt.

I shot a look back at Hillary and waited until he had completed a radar handoff on a Continental DC-9 heading for Dallas Love.

“He’s looks like he’s asleep.” I said hesitantly, and really not knowing what to do.

“Wake him up!” Hillary hissed between his teeth.  “NOW!”

“Uh, OK.”

I turned slightly and rolled my chair back and a little to the right.  Reaching out with my right hand I grabbed Tom’s pant cuff and pulled a couple of times.  The ash on his Lucky dropped off and rolled on his shirt and off onto the floor.  “Uh, Tom…Tom.  Wake up.”  I whispered, kind of loudly.

He opened his eyes a little and squinted at me.  “What?”  He asked groggily.

“Uh…Hillary says you need to wake up.”  I said, not really knowing what else to say.

He jerked his head forward and gently pulled the cigarette off his lower lip with a pair of stubby fingers.  “Uh, fuck.”  He managed to say.  “OK, that’s it.  We’re done here.”  And then he stretched magnificently and yawned largely.

Hillary kicked my left ankle and said angrily, “Whenever you’re done there, I need you to call Houston High and get me FL280 for this Delta!”

“Oh!  Sure…I mean, affirmative.  I’ll get right on it!”  I spun back to my sector and called for the altitude—at the same time giving the radar controller the aircraft’s location.  “OK,” I said to Hillary. “FL 280 is approved, and he has radar contact!”

“Delta two-eighty-one, climb and maintain flight level two-eight-zero, and contact Houston Center on one-three-three point nine.  Good day, sir.”  Hillary smoothly spoke into his headset.

I felt something brush across my right wrist and saw that Tom was pulling out his headset plug.  “Shit boy…” He said sleepily. “You’re so good you fucking put me to sleep!  Hell, you don’t need me here!  You’re checked out!  Congratulations!”  And off he went back to his office.

I looked over to Hillary and saw him shaking his head.  “He is just a worthless…. Uh…anyway, congratulations.  Let’s get back to work.”

***

A few months later after I had successfully certified on all nonradar sectors I was sent back upstairs to the training department to complete my radar pre-training.  Before I knew it, I was back on the floor with my crew and ready to begin live radar training.  Because there were times when the traffic was so heavy or we were short-staffed because we had taken a few more sick leaves than normal, I was unable to train.  On those days I would be assigned to work the nonradar sectors that I was certified on.

One morning I walked into the specialty and was told that because we were short, I’d be working the IAH nonradar side for the majority of the day.  I didn’t mind the assignment because I really liked this sector.  It was usually very busy, very complex, and the time passed really fast—sometimes pushing right up to lunch without my even realizing it.

As I was untangling the cord on my headset wondering which radar controller I was going to be working with, I saw Tom Moore saunter up balancing a cup of coffee in one hand and holding his headset in the other.

“Hey Frank, how are you today?” He said cheerfully.

“I’m OK, how ‘bout you?”

“Good, good.  Better than most, I’d say.”

“That’s great.”  I said, plugging in the headset into the sector.  “Who’s opening up the sector?”

“I am!”  Tom said.  “Time for me to get in a couple of hours of currency.  So, I figure with a hotshot nonradar guy like you working my manual side, how can I go wrong?”

I knew better than to say anything, but I’d seen Tom work radar before, and even with my limited knowledge, I thought he was dangerous.  He was slow, tended to trip over his own tongue—often having to rescind bad clearances—and in short, ran a clumsy sector.  I would have my hands full doing my job and watching him try to do his.  Several times, on other and easier sectors, I’d seen his manual controller point out to Tom that he was about to kill two airplanes.

Tom plugged in and began to take handoffs on aircraft that were about to enter his sector, and we were off to the races.

In what seemed like minutes Tom was completely under and the sector was out of control.  He was having trouble taking all the departure handoffs from the departure controller, and because he was ignoring their altitude and routing requests once they come on frequency, he was also putting me under.  He began asking me to do a whole lot more than I was supposed to do, but to keep everyone separated I just tried to work faster.

“Hey!”  He said, suddenly as I was on a call trying to get approval on a couple of flights that had already leveled off at FL230 because Tom was so behind.  “HEY!!” he yelled again.

I turned to my left and hoped that I would be able to field his question while I was talking to two other controllers on the land line.  “Yes?”

“Hey, are you checked out on this radar position?”

“Me? No!”

“But you have worked this radar sector, right?”

“Well, yes…but just in training with Hillary monitoring me.  But I’m not checked out yet.”

“Well, I’m your supervisor so I’m going to authorize you to take this sector over.”

“Tom!  I can’t do that!  I’m not certified.  Besides, it’s too busy to “one-man” the sector. (One controller working both radar and manual side because of low traffic volume).

“I’ve seen you fucking work this radar sector and you’re good!  So, get your fucking plug out of the manual side and plug it here into the radar.  Otherwise, someone’s gonna get killed out here.”  He pounded the face of the radar scope with his finger.

I thought, “Well, maybe two of us working the radar will be able to get us out of this mess!”  So, I unplugged from the manual side and re-plugged into the radar side.

As I looked at the radar, trying to match the shrimp boats with a corresponding radar blip, Tom abruptly reached over and pulled his plug out!  Then, he stood up and walked away!!

I was so shocked that my mind literally went blank.  I remember seeing him walk slowly away, taking his headset off his head while heading for the office.  Then I heard several pilots call.

Without giving Tom another thought I pushed his chair out of the way and rolled myself in front of the radar.  Since each radar position had the identical comm panel as the non-radar side I had to not only talk to the pilots but conduct all the manual coordination.  I recall the bitter bile taste building on the back of my tongue as I scanned the radar began to issue turns (called vectors) to keep several flights from losing separation. 

Once I was satisfied that all the potential conflictions were resolved I took a little time to get off the radio frequency and complete some badly needed manual coordination on the land lines.

Suddenly I heard a familiar voice behind me say, “You’re doing fine, just keep doing what you’re doing.  Everything’s OK.”  I looked to my right and saw that Hillary had plugged into the radar with me and was standing behind me scanning the radar display.

“I’ll take care of all the coordination, you just keep working the traffic.  We got a non-radar guy coming out of the coffee shop to work the manual side in a couple of minutes.  So just hang in there while I try to get the picture.” 

I sensed someone sliding in to the manual side off to my right and quickly heard him say, “OK, come off the land lines, I got your non-radar side and I see what’s going on.”  I recoiled slightly by the sudden acrid stench of cigar smoke hitting my nostrils and instantly knew that Ray Stehling had taken over my recently abandoned manual side.  Ray was one of the most senior radar controllers on crew six and was well known for his deep affection of beer, motorcycles, and chewing moist, stubby, half-lit cigars.

And just like that, the traffic was suddenly back to manageable and I was again able to breathe.  Hillary put his hand on my shoulder and said, “We’ll talk about this as soon as we’re relieved.  But you’re legal now that I’m plugged in with you.  I’ll need you to tell me exactly how this happened so I can brief the area manager later on.  I hear he and the rest of the bosses up front are really pissed.”

“But I didn’t know what else to do!  He just got up, unplugged, and left!”

“No, no.  Not you.  They’re not pissed at you.  If anything, they’re in awe of how you handled the situation.  I hear there were deals happening all over the airspace.  Is that right?”

“Well, I remember I had to really do a lot of vectoring and issue quite a few altitude changes to keep everyone separated, but no one really came that close to losing separation.”

“OK, we’ll talk later.  For now, let’s just keep what we got.”

“Alright.”

“Good job, by the way.  If that’d been a check ride on the radar you would’ve passed with flying colors.”

“Thanks.”

I never found out what happened to Tom over this incident, and I never asked, but in my opinion what he’d done was completely illegal and close to criminal.

***

In spite of the incident that morning on the IAH sector, Tom and I always seemed to get along just fine.  He was a nice enough guy who preferred to talk about fishing on Lake Conroe or reminiscing about the good old days before Houston Center had been built in 1964 and had taken over the combined airspace from the old San Antonio and Lake Charles ATC Centers.

Those had been the days of very limited radar coverage and just about all air traffic control had been accomplished by reading flight progress strips and communicating with aircraft through even older radio equipment than we had.  As Tom would say, “That’s when we had real controllers who had to see where the airplanes were by forming the picture in their heads, not by looking for them on some radar scope.  Shit, any weak-stick can do that.”

From what I’d heard from other controllers that had worked with him, was that Tom had never been a strong controller but benefited from the “good old boy” system and had gotten promoted to supervisor right before the two smaller centers were consolidated into Houston ARTCC.  Apparently, because Houston was going to be three times larger than the two old centers there was going to be a supervisor shortage when the new center became operational.

So, having hunted and fished with all the right people and had also taken care not to step on any political toes during his controller days, Tom found himself being promoted to first line supervisor when he transferred to Houston.  However, it was a foregone conclusion that that was as far as his career was going to go.    

As a first line supervisor it was his responsibility to check out developmental controllers on his crew as they concluded training on each sector and to debrief them after the check ride.  Suffice to say that Tom had no clue whether or not the developmental was proficient enough to actually work the sector he was training on, he simply relied on the word of the OJT instructor.  If the instructor said so-and-so was ready Tom would gladly certify them.

I had gotten used to his phony perusing of my training forms and his silly questions after the various check rides as I progressed in my training, but during the check ride debrief on my last radar sector he seemed even more distracted than usual.

After going over a few points he verified that he was going to recommend me for full journeyman controller.  “No reason to not certify you,” he said as he signed the form.  “You’ve been ready for quite a while.”

“OK, thanks.” I said, gratefully.

“So now that we’re done, I have a question I’d like to ask you.”

“Sure, go ahead.”  I said, relieved and a little delirious that I’d finally made it.

“Your last name…what is that?  Italian?  Are you a daigo?”

The question took me a little by surprise. “No actually, my dad’s parents came over from France—but my mom’s parents came over from Mexico.

“So…you’re Mexican?”

“On my mother’s side, yes.”

“Well, ain’t that a kick in the ass!  I never would’ve taken you for no Mexican.  Shit, are you sure you’re Mexican?”

“Well, half Mexican on my mom’s side.  But because she was born in San Antonio, she’s an American.”

“No shit…Mexican…” 

“Um, I guess.”

“Well I’m here to tell you that you sure ain’t like any Mexican I’ve ever known.  I mean, you don’t act like one.”

I was starting to get annoyed.  “How do Mexicans act?”  I asked pointedly.

“You know…lazy, stupid, and you know, always dodging hard work.  And I’ll tell you—you ain’t nothin’ like that.  Shit, you’re smart and the best fucking controller I’ve ever seen.  Shit, you flew through the goddam training program.  Ain’t nobody ever done that!”

“So, because I don’t bring a sarape and a sombrero to work and ask for time off to take siestas after lunch, you didn’t think I was Mexican?”

He took a couple of seconds to digest what I’d just said.  “Ah hell…shit, that’s funny!  Siestas!  Ain’t that when they take naps?”

“Yes.”

“Nah, you ain’t nothin’ like that at all.”

“Gee, thanks.”

“No, that’s OK!  And, oh yeah, Hillary told me you’re also a pilot?  It that true?”

“Yes, it is.  I’m enrolled at a flight school at David Wayne Hooks working towards my commercial license.”

“Well shit, see!?  Ain’t no Mexican can do that!  Learning to be a controller—and a goddam good one too—and getting a commercial rating on the side.  Shit no!  Ain’t no way you’re Mexican!”

“OK, I guess I’m not then.”

“Exactly!  Anyhow,” He looked at his watch.  “Anyway, congratulations on getting through training and I’m just sorry to see you go.  I’d like to keep you on my crew as a journeyman.”

“I’m not staying on crew seven?”

“Oh hell no.  Crew four is short one so you’ll be transitioning over to them in the next couple of weeks.  You’ll be working for old Bob Wold.  He’s a good old boy, you’ll like him.  He came over from San Antonio Center just like me.”

He stood up and shook my hand.  “Well again, congrats on your checkout.  I’ll talk to Bob and fill him in on our little talk.  I know he’ll be happy to have you on his crew.”

I took that to mean that he would be happily informing Bob that I wasn’t a Mexican.

To be continued…

New Horizons – Part Four

New Horizons – Part Four

The Year of the Horse

It was late May of 1969, and I was ecstatic because I had just successfully completed the first phase of training to be an air traffic controller.  Just before leaving the training center for a class celebration at a nearby bar, I took some time to call Kaz to give her the good news.

That morning, as I’d left for the center for my final problem, she’d wished me good luck—but had also told me that I shouldn’t worry because “horses” were strong and would always conquer difficult situations.  Huh?  It took me a few seconds to realize that she was talking about my Chinese Zodiac birth sign.

In the western world we commonly assign the twelve Astrological signs according to birth dates during any given year.  Since I had been born between July 23rd and August 22nd, according to this chart I was born a Leo.  However, in most of the Asian world birth signs are different and are also calculated differently.

The Chinese Zodiac is based on a twelve-year cycle, with each year of the lunar calendar in the cycle associated with an animal sign. For example, 2018 is the year of Earth Dog starting from February 16, 2018 (Chinese Spring Festival) and lasting to February 04, 2019.  In 1942, when I was born, it was the Year of the Horse.  Hence, I was a horse.  Conversely, Kaz had been born in 1945, making her a chicken.  I had learned all this just prior to my meeting her parents for the first time three long years ago.

When I had proposed to Kaz back on Okinawa she suggested that we should also ask her parents for permission to marry.  I was understandably nervous but agreed that it would be proper since we would soon be leaving the island to live back in the U.S.

The meeting was arranged, and I was told that I would have to formally ask permission from, not only her parents, but also various other relatives during a dinner that had been planned precisely for this reason.  The event was held one evening at a large Okinawan restaurant and I was surprised when I saw that there were at least fifteen other people in attendance.  When Kaz and I entered the dining room everyone was already seated, and most were sipping on warm Japanese sake.  Aside from Kaz, I knew no one sitting at the large rectangular dinner table, but she pointed out that her parents were seated together at the head of the table.

Her mom, Mrs. Shinkai, probably in her early fifties and dressed in a gorgeous off-white and gold kimono, was an attractive, olive-skinned woman with piercing dark eyes, a short wide nose, and high cheekbones.  The “Asian fold” on her eyelids was not as pronounced as most, thereby giving her an almost Eurasian look.  She wore her rich black hair, with flecks of gray, in a high tight bun, topped off with a small spray of tiny white and gold flowers.  Her hands were unadorned, fingers daintily intertwined on the table before her and were set off with beautifully manicured nails.

There was no doubt that in her youth she had been a stunningly beautiful woman; even now, sitting quietly and staring straight ahead, she exuded an unmistakable air of feminine sexuality.  Kaz’s stepfather, on the other hand, was small and frail, his dark facial skin pulled tightly over his face, giving him an almost cadaver-like appearance.

Her natural father had been killed late in the war, and this man, his older brother, had stepped up and honorably married the widow to help raise Kaz and her sister.

As he sat there toying with his small pitcher of sake, he looked tiny—his traditional male dark gray kimono almost swallowing his body save for his small balding head.  He looked to be at least thirty or more years older than his wife.

As I gazed uneasily at the guests, Kaz whispered to me that she was going to introduce me to each and every person at the table and that I was to bow, in the best Japanese style, as each introduction was made.

Earlier she had coached me that when the time came, she would make each introduction.  Then that person would rise, face me, and bow.  I, on the other hand, had to ensure that my return bow was grander, lower, and lasted longer.

After taking our seats in the only two empty chairs, a waiter appeared out of nowhere to pour our serving of warm sake into the tiny saucer-like ampoules which had been placed next to the petite and gaily decorated sake containers.  Then the introductions began.

As I finally took my seat after the last introduction, as if on cue everyone stood and raised their little saucers in a toast, after which one of the guests gruffly barked out the word, “Kanpai!”  This, I had learned some time back, was the Japanese equivalent of our saying “cheers”, and literally meant, “Empty your glass.”

After tipping my head back and letting the warm sake slide down my throat, we all sat back down.  As I adjusted my chair, I sensed that every eye at the table was now on me.  Under the table Kaz gently tapped my knee with hers and softly whispered that it was time for me to address her parents.

I stood slowly and turned slightly to my left to address her mother and father.  Our eyes met, and I began my small speech.

“I’m sorry but my Japanese is not good enough for me to say what I want to say, so I will speak in English.”  I paused to let Kaz translate.  “We are here today for me to ask your permission to marry your daughter.  I have known Kazumi for many months and we have decided that we want to marry.  I know this will cause a burden for your family because in a few months we plan to return to my home in the United States to live our life together.  So, with your blessing I would like to ask your permission for me to take your daughter’s hand in marriage.  Domo arigato gozaimasu.”  I bowed long and deep and took my chair.

There was a long uncomfortable silence, then Kaz’s mother turned and spoke a few words softly to her husband.  With a short head-bob he acknowledged his wife’s words and without opening his lips made a deep grunting sound.

She then turned to face me, and her eyes locked onto mine.  “You stole my daughter!” she said loudly and forcefully.

Taken completely by surprise, because Kaz had told me that neither parent spoke nor understood any English, she had just accused me of stealing Kaz from her.  I wasn’t sure if I was supposed to respond but I thought maybe I should issue some sort of denial at the least.  Before I could say anything Kaz squeezed my arm tightly and began to address her mother in Japanese.  Although I couldn’t understand all she was saying, it didn’t sound very pleasant.

Her mom listened to Kaz for a few moments then raised her hand.  Kaz stopped talking.  She then began a slow and measured response in Japanese.  She spoke for several minutes, her face softening as she spoke, with her eyes lovingly centered on her eldest daughter.

When she finished, Kaz turned to me, her eyes beginning to fill with tears, and said, “My mom said that although she doesn’t completely agree with our getting married, she is going to give her permission anyway, and this is the reason why.

“After I told her a few days ago that we were planning to get married she decided to visit an Okinawan fortune teller.  However, before leaving she asked me if I knew when you were born.  I told her you were born on August 20, 1942.  At the time I didn’t know why she was asking.

“During the séance, and without knowing our birthdates beforehand, the fortune teller told her that as she looked into the future, she had a vision of a chicken riding a horse.  When she came out of her séance, she asked my mother what our birthdates were.

“Upon learning that I had been born in the year of the Chicken and you in the year of the Horse, the fortune teller told her there was nothing that could be done. In a vision that had come to her during the séance she’d seen a chicken sitting on top of a horse.  She interpreted that to mean that those two were meant to be together.  Further, because the chicken was riding the horse it meant that the horse was taking the chicken into the future with him.  To her, all this meant that fate had already dictated and foretold of our marriage.”

I was shocked and didn’t know what to say.

Suddenly and magically, the mood around the table instantly changed, and everyone began excitedly talking to everyone else.  A man sitting a couple of chairs to my left stood and came up to bow and shake my hand.  Confused, I stood and extended my hand as he started his bow.  I quickly pulled my hand back and began a deep bow just as he straightened up and stuck his hand out to shake my now retracted hand.  He graciously waited until I finished my bow to grab my hand and shake it vigorously.

Kaz was engaged in conversation with several ladies across the table, dabbing her eyes and nose with a small hanky she’d extracted from her purse as I sat back down.  I poured myself a little slug of sake and glanced over to Mrs. Shinkai who was in spirited conversation with a couple of ladies who had been sitting across from us earlier.  As I raised the shot of sake up to my lips, she looked over to me and smiled warmly and I managed to smile back.  I looked at her husband and was surprised to see that he seemed to be dozing off.

ATC Training

“Gentlemen: forget everything you just learned in Oklahoma City!  This is Houston Center, and you’re in the real fucking world now!  If you think OKC was tough you’re in for a big fucking surprise!”

Those were the first words our Lead Instructor, Bill (call me Billy) Mauldin, said on the first training day, to our class of fifteen who had just survived nine hellish weeks at the Aeronautical Center.  Originally, Houston had sent twenty developmental controllers (what we were called until as long as we were in the training program) for the nine-week course, but five, including Bill, had failed the program and would no longer be continuing in the program.

Having washed out of the ATC training program, they were sent to the floor (as the control room was called) and temporarily assigned to permanent crews of Flight Data Specialists (FDS).  These crews were responsible for the hand-printing and loading of machine-printed flight progress strips into metal holders, and the delivery of all these strips to active ATC sectors.

The specialists assigned to these crews were made up of ATC training program washouts who had failed that program many years ago.  In those days, instead of being fired or sent to a non-ATC facility, they were offered jobs at a GS-7 level as FDS in the enroute center to which they were originally assigned.  There they would remain for the rest of their careers with no chance for advancement or reassignment to a higher paying grade or facility.

In the radar control rooms of the 1960’s and the early 1970’s, controllers worked on large flat broadband radars and used radio communications equipment which had been salvaged from old World War II warships.  Flights displayed on the glass-topped green-tinted radar scopes appeared as bright blips and were identified by laying rectangular pieces of transparent Plexiglas, about one-and-a-half-inch long by half-inch tall with one end cut diagonally, over each blip.  Called “shrimp boats”, the aircraft’s flight data was written on them with black grease pencil, and the controller pushed them along the radar scope’s glass surface following the radar blip representing the aircraft.

Flight progress strips, displaying the flight data of a particular flight, were stacked vertically on a slanted flat shelf next to the radar where the radar and the manual controller working the sector could read them.  The data on each strip was either hand-printed or printed by old dot-matrix printers on sheets of heavy-gauge perforated paper.  The machine printed strips’ data was transmitted by airline operations personnel by feeding pre-punched IBM cards containing an air carrier’s flight plan into primitive pre-digital card readers which then fed the data to the printers.

The few hand-written strips were produced from flight plans which had been filed by pilots at an FSS and then phone-called into the ARTCC by the FSS specialists.

FDS’s were responsible for ripping the printed sheets of paper of the printers at their perforations and sliding the rectangular strips of paper containing a flight’s data into metal holders.  They had to determine to what sector out of over a hundred each strip belonged, and arrange the loaded metal holders onto a large plastic tray which they would carry to each sector in order to facilitate a logical delivery order.

Most of the permanent FDS’s were good natured and really efficient in their duties, and for the most part they seemed happy and satisfied in their jobs.  They got along well with most of the controller workforce, and because they were permanent employees, they usually didn’t have to deliver flight progress strips to sectors, but instead usually manned the phones, printers, and teletype machines to copy and “stuff” flight strips into flight strip holders.  Delivering the strips was mostly done by the temporarily-assigned ATC washouts; while delivering these strips they were referred to as “runners”.

As they made the rounds of the control room floor delivering their load of flight progress strips, the runners were usually hassled and vocally put down by some of the controllers at the sectors.  For example, in the event a runner mistakenly delivered a Houston arrival strip to a San Antonio departure sector, usually an older or senior controller at that sector would subject the runner to a barrage of verbal insults that usually culminated in having the strip thrown back at the runner’s head.

Although the paper strip itself was harmless the heavy metal holder it was stuffed into could definitely cause some damage.  Many times, these thrown strip holders would cause the runner to drop his entire load of strips on the floor as he tried to keep from getting hit in the eye, or worse.  He would then have to rearrange all the dropped strips back onto his tray to continue his deliveries.  It was a humiliating and degrading job.

Journeyman controllers, especially the older ones, seemed to pride themselves in not only never remembering, or even learning, the runners’ names, but also in making their lives a living hell.  Runners were commonly referred to as “sookies” or just plain “losers”.   When a runner arrived at a sector to deliver strips, more often than not, the veteran controllers would make insulting comments about the runner’s appearance, dress, or body size—making their already difficult work environment a little less comfortable—to say the least.

If a runner complained to a supervisor about any mistreatment the controller would usually just get a gentle talking to, and the runner would be tagged as a “rat”.  Rougher than normal treatment would usually ensue by not only the guilty controller but the rest of his crew as well.  It was not uncommon to “inadvertently” trip a rat runner as he hurried from sector to sector delivering his strips and then laugh maniacally while the runner tried to reload his tray with the strips that were now spread all over the control room’s floor.

The washouts would be required to perform this thankless job until the FAA found non-ATC jobs within the region to send them to—usually six to nine months but sometimes as long as two to three years.  The best option they could hope for was to be sent to a Flight Service Station (FSS) within the Southwest Region, where they would again enter a training program to learn how to take flight plans, give weather briefings, airport advisories, and broadcast NOTAMs (Notices to Airmen) over aeronautical radio frequencies.

These facilities were typically located in small remote towns such as Cotulla, Texas, where Bill feared he’d end up, or McAllen, Texas, near the Texas-Mexico border.  Staffing at these stations usually numbered less than ten FSS Specialists, and the GS pay level for a journeyman was GS-8 or 9, depending on the aircraft traffic density in their particular geographical area.

Enroute ATC facilities in Texas, such as Houston or Fort Worth Air Route Traffic Control Centers (ARTCCs) usually numbered three hundred controllers and supervisors, and the journeyman GS pay level was GS-13.

Because the majority of the personnel who worked at these FSS’s were ATC training washouts, they were held in very low esteem by air traffic controllers and were also commonly referred to as losers.

When I was learning to fly, I came into contact with several employees of flight service stations as I completed various stages of my pilot training.  In the air they provided me with valuable enroute and destination airport weather information and many times suggested alternative routings to make my flights easier and safer.  I thought of them as professional and had the highest regard for their expertise.  So, it was difficult for me to listen to my non-pilot controller peers and superiors degrade the work that these dedicated people performed daily just because they may have washed out of the ATC training program.

***

As badly as I felt for Bill and the rest of the runners, I didn’t have a lot of time to worry about their unfortunate situation.  I had enough to think about after Billy explained what our future training program entailed.

Having memorized the fictitious Oklahoma City Center aeronautical airway map for our course at the academy, I was told that I would now have to re-memorize both high and low altitude Houston ARTCC (ZHU) aeronautical maps of my assigned area for the rest of my training program here.  Although the academy’s maps were less congested and easy to memorize, the actual ZHU maps were extremely complex and highly congested with copious amounts of aeronautical data.  As if that weren’t enough, we were now required to memorize every Ultra-high (UHF) and Very High (VHF) radio frequency that was used in all the high and low altitude sectors in the center.

To my dismay, we were also told that because there was a controller shortage, there were going to be days when the entire training staff would be called down to the floor to augment certain crews that were short due to sick leaves, or because severe weather was impacting a number of sectors.  On those days (perish the thought), since we were not certified on anything, we were to be temporarily assigned to the floor to help out the Flight Data section.  And although we were not expected to do a lot of running, it was inevitable that the FDS supervisor would make us run strips out to the sectors anyway to take some of the heat off of the permanents.

Since we had been successful in passing our initial training at the academy the harassment (call it hazing) would not be as severe as the washouts received—but it would still be there.  Pushing that thought out of my mind as much as possible I decided to concentrate on my training.

It was also explained to us that we would soon all be promoted to GS-9s, having completed initial training.  If we were successful on completing our next phase of training, we could expect a promotion to GS-11—and so forth, until we reached journeyman level of GS-13.  We could expect to stay at each of the GS levels for at least a year before being promoted to the next level.  The whole program should take a full four years to complete, and the bad news was that anytime during those four years we could fail and be sent back to the floor, and on to an FSS for the rest of our career.

The Whitten Amendment

Briefly, the Whitten Amendment was a bill passed by Congress in 1952, allowing the suspension of time-in-grade requirements for Federal Employees in training programs that required ascension through GS (General Scale) ranks before reaching Full Performance Level (FPL) or Journeyman level status.  Usually, time in grade requirements stipulated that before an employee could be promoted to the next GS level, he/she must spend at least 12 months at their present GS level.  This 12-month waiting period was known as ‘time-in-grade’.

The Whitten amendment effectively did away with time-in-grade requirements under certain conditions.  Since this bill was not all inclusive and was meant to only be applied if/when an agency met all requirements, it was used sparingly.  The one thing that would for sure trigger its implementation would be for a governmental agency to declare a general staffing emergency.  In short, it would have to provide documentation to Congress that because of critical staffing levels within its ranks, time-in-grade requirements were hindering its ability to promote essential and otherwise qualified personnel to higher GS grades.

In early 1969, the FAA petitioned Congress to invoke the Whitten Amendment claiming that critical staffing levels existed at most FAA ARTCCs, RAPCONs, and TRACONS.  Although the agency had sufficient personnel in the training pipeline to alleviate the critical staffing shortages, time-in-grade requirements would hinder an adequate number of these developmentals to attain FPL status to fully backfill the cadre of upcoming retirements.

Early one morning, shortly before I was scheduled to take some practice problems in the training department, our lead instructor entered the room and asked for our attention.

“OK guys, this is going to be short and sweet”. He said, while flicking his lighter trying to light the first cigarette of his two-pack-a-day habit.  “Who knows what the Whitten Amendment is?”

No one raised his hand, and we all kind of looked at each other.  My immediate thought what I somehow, I had either skipped learning an ATC rule, or the FAA just invented a new one for me.  I was all ears.

“The Whitten Amendment…” He took a long drag and blew a blue-gray cloud of smoke up toward the ceiling. “…in short, eliminates time and grade requirements between GS grades at this facility.  So right now, all of you who have just been promoted to GS-9s, would normally have to wait a year before you’re eligible to be promoted to the next ATC level of GS-11, (ATCs skipped GS8 and GS 10).  So, what the Whitten does is erase that year of waiting between GS-9 and GS-11.  You’ll still have to successfully certify, but as soon as you do you will be promoted to the next level.

So, as it stands now all of you will be going down to the floor to OJT in the next few weeks to begin on the job training (OJT) as manual (D-side) non-radar controllers.  In the past, everyone before you had to wait a year after certification on all the non-complex D-side sectors before promotion to the GS-11 level.  You lucky bastards will immediately be promoted to GS-11 as soon as you certify.  So the faster you check out on a sector, the faster you’ll be promoted and making more money.  Of course, if you’re a dumb shit and take the full year to certify, the Whitten will do you no good.”

He chuckled to himself, seemingly proud of his little joke.

“Now, who doesn’t fucking understand what I just said?”

No one moved or said a word.  I had a thousand questions, but I had learned that asking “stupid fucking questions” in the FAA would immediately result in a shitstorm of insults and put-downs.  In “this man’s FAA” you either knew it all or were a total dumb-shit.  After class, and over some drinks at the nearest bar, we would normally go over all the stuff that we were sure we didn’t know and try to figure out answers.  It was a good system, as we were usually able to come to consensus on what the right answer was after about beer number three.

Basically, we all agreed the Whitten Amendment was meant to skip all time in grade requirements, usually twelve months between grades, and grant immediate promotion to the next level as long as the developmental continued successful progress.  This almost sounded too good to be true as we knew that some of the controllers on the floor had waited up to twenty-four months between grades—even after they’d been certified.  They had been told that in addition to needing a period of “seasoning” on those sectors, the FAA was experiencing “budgetary problems” that necessitated an additional period of time before being able to promote them to a more expensive grade.

What we weren’t sure of was why the government had decided to take such a radical step to alleviate some future staffing shortage.  It wasn’t long before the coffee shop gossip and after work bar meets provided us with an answer—albeit, an unofficial one.

When I was hired into the FAA in March of 1969, the agency was already experiencing a wave of employee unrest and a rash of unexpected retirements.  Since its inception way back in 1934, the FAA had never had to deal with any employee union representation—and subsequently had grown tone deaf to any issues that may have been negatively affecting its ATC workforce.

Top heavy with mostly hand-picked “good old boy” managers and supervisors, the FAA basically ignored controllers’ complaints on issues such as working conditions, schedules, time-off, and especially, pay.  When a union called PATCO originated in New York ARTCC (ZNY) in 1968, and headed up by famous attorney and pilot, F. Lee Bailey, the frustrated controller workforce suddenly found themselves with a representative voice that had never existed.  The local management staff at ATC facilities, with absolutely no type of human relations or labor/management training, tried to quell the rising unrest the best way they knew: by making threats.

With little to no subtlety, the union’s leaders tore into the FAA’s antiquated and ill-prepared cadre of directors and managers with unbridled enthusiasm and a growing pile of grievances.  With little more than bluster and the weight of the Federal Government to fight back with, the FAA put up a hard line and began to weed out some of the more vocal and radical local union leaders and supporters.

Suspensions, threatened terminations, and demotions unsettled the already riled workforce and in June of 1969, right after I’d returned from Oklahoma City, FAA facilities nationwide felt the effects of a work stoppage by PATCO-affiliated air traffic controllers, who claimed illness and did not report for work.

This “sickout,” which resulted in widespread flight delays, coincided with congressional hearings on legislation to provide higher pay, early retirement, and other benefits for controllers.  Of 477 controllers who took sick leave nationwide during the job action, the FAA suspended 80 from three to fifteen days.  On July 27, 1969, the FAA terminated its dues-withholding agreement with PATCO, stating that it was not in the public interest to assist an organization taking part in an illegal job action.  It was in this type of atmosphere that our class of fifteen was asked to receive on-the-job training from, and to eventually replace, some of the older and more radical controllers.  And it was this situation that finally invoked the Whitten Amendment.

***

In September of 1969, I successfully completed simulated non-radar training and was assigned to a crew on the floor.  Of the fifteen developmentals who had returned from Oklahoma City, there were but three of us left.  Twelve had failed the rigorous training program at our facility and one by one had been sent down to the floor to run strips and wait for their reassignment to a Flight Service Station.

When our lead instructor first told us that the training program in ZHU was going to be much harder than the one at OKC he wasn’t kidding.  In addition to having to commit to memory a pair of much more complex ATC charts, the separation problems were ten times more difficult.  Further, our instructors were less forgiving, and many times would refuse to “stop the clock” during a problem to explain why a certain rule would work better than another.  They were wise to the trick that sometimes stopping the clock worked in the student’s favor—giving him a chance to take a breath and mentally catch up with the fast-moving air traffic that was now suspended in mid-air.

Instead, the ZHU instructors made us plow through the problem, slowly burying us as more aircraft were introduced into the air traffic picture.  At times it seemed to me that there was hardly any time to even take a breath—afraid that that millisecond would cause me to get further behind.  When the instructor finally called out, “OK, stop the clock, we’re done here!”, it meant that either the problem had been completed successfully, or that the student had bombed so badly there was no use in going on.

Many times, I was shocked to realize that I had spent eighty to ninety minutes working the problem with not the slightest idea how much time had passed.  The only indication I had was that my shirt was usually soaked with sweat from my armpits to my belt.

When I received my crew assignment, I saw that I was being assigned to crew seven, and it was supervised by someone named Tom Moore.  My OJT instructor was a senior controller named Hillary Larkins—and yes, he was male.

Billy Mauldin told me that I’d been assigned to this crew because of my “stellar” performance during the non-radar training phase.  Apparently, students who did well were rewarded by being put on crews that were manned with those who were considered the best controllers and the most hands-off supervisors, while those who passed by the skin of their teeth were assigned crews with less experienced controllers and higher-strung and younger supervisors.  Honestly, I thought it should be the other way around, but I sure wasn’t going to argue the point.

Just because one was assigned to a particular crew, it didn’t mean you worked with only those controllers all the time.  Each crew had nine to ten controllers, and staffing required there be at least sixteen controllers on duty during the day and evening shifts.  The midnight shift consisted of three controllers, and they were usually from the same crew.

On any given shift our crew worked with controllers from crews six and one.  Since the Houston Specialty worked a weekly schedule known as a 2-2 and 1(two evening shifts, two-day shifts, and a midnight shift), and my crew had Mondays and Tuesdays off, we were always rotating with the crews on either side of us.

As I soon found out, the hazing that was dealt out to the runners wasn’t necessarily just reserved for them.  Non-radar trainees—regardless of having survived and successfully completed the initial simulated non-radar training program—were considered by some journeyman controllers to be just a notch above washouts, and rightfully deserving of severe ostracization and loud verbal beat-downs.

I quickly learned that this type of behavior was more apt to come from younger and less experienced journeyman controllers.  I eventually figured out that since they had been on the receiving end of this type of abuse for several years, they now felt that once they had passed their final check out (routinely called check-rides), it was their “obligation” to pass that abuse on to the newbies on the crew.  Unfair as that may sound, it was considered normal behavior and completely condoned by supervisors and managers.

As it turned out, it was indeed fortunate for me to have been assigned to Hillary.  He was one of the most senior controllers in the facility and one of the very few who frowned upon and refused to berate his assigned trainee.  As he explained to me the first day we met, “If you can’t see traffic from the get-go—and from my position sitting directly behind you I will know it the first five minutes after you plug into the sector—no amount of yelling will ever get you to see it.  When you make a mistake, and you will, I will rectify it immediately and we’ll discuss it when the training session is over.”

A slightly-built gentle-looking man with light brown eyes and an easy smile, I soon discovered that he was an incredibly patient, fair, and understanding instructor.  Whenever one of his trainees committed a minor error, he addressed it by softly placing a hand on his shoulder and pointing to the erroneous flight strip.  He would point out larger and more serious errors by quietly bringing the issue to the radar controller’s attention and positively assuring the student that to succeed he would have to learn to never commit that particular error again.

Furthermore, it was well known on the floor that Hillary would not tolerate anyone else berating his trainee—quickly nipping in the bud any attempt to do so by simply casting a dark glare in the offender’s direction and pressing his index finger to his lips.

Ultimately, it may have helped that besides being a deeply religious man who detested cursing fits and tantrums, he and his wife of twelve years were very busy attending church and raising seven children.

And so, after taking a week of vacation time (called annual leave) and spending some down time with Kaz, I reported to work at Houston Center’s crew seven on my first shift as a training non-radar controller.  It was a 4PM to 12AM shift, and as I entered the four-digit code that allowed me to enter the Center’s lower floor where the control room was located, I felt a nervous rush of energy flash through my body.  If I survived the next few years of on-the-job training, I would finally realize my dream of becoming a full-fledged journeyman radar controller.  And although I had come a long way in the last six months, I knew that I still had a very long way to go.

The one thing that I had already learned from taking and passing hundreds of simulated problems was that the one trait that was absolutely essential to succeed in this job was to have complete confidence in one’s ability.  If you didn’t believe that you were God’s sole gift to the air traffic control world then no one else would, and you would soon find yourself running strips and waiting to be shipped off to some godforsaken remote-assed Flight Service Station.

As I headed to the control room for my very first live traffic training shift with Hillary, one thought kept rolling around in my head:  I will be the best God-damned air traffic controller that Houston Center has ever seen.

To be continued…

New Horizons – Part Three

New Horizons – Part Three

 

Kaz Travels North

We talked it over for a long time and it was finally decided that the best thing to do was to bring Kaz to Oklahoma City to stay with me until I graduated from the Academy.  Unfortunately, this, I thought, was almost an exact replay of what Sharon had experienced with my mom those many years ago when, as a result, I had been forced to fly my pregnant wife from Houston to Reno.

Luckily, this time around I had the money, as the FAA was paying my salary plus, I had received a healthy advance on my per diem.  So we made plans for Kaz to fly to Oklahoma City and move into my apartment.  Because she still couldn’t drive, we knew and accepted that it would be hard for her to spend all day by herself while I was in school, but with her usual “can-do” attitude she told me not to worry—she would make sure to stay busy by tidying up the apartment and making sure dinner was always on the table when I got home.  A few days later she made the short flight from Houston and we settled comfortably into the shared apartment.

I didn’t want to make Kaz more uncomfortable than she already seemed regarding her and my mom’s disagreements, but one evening while we were out to dinner, I casually prodded her on what she thought had brought on the initial discord between them.

“Well,” she said, resting her chin in the cup of her hand, “I don’t know.  But you know, I noticed she stopped being nice to me right after she got the perm.”

“Perm?  What perm?  My mom got a perm?”

In all the years I’d lived with my parents I had never seen my mom visit a hair salon, much less pay money to have a hair stylist give her a perm.  In her pre-church days I recall her giving herself what in those days was known as a “Tony”—a home-administered permanent that came in a box filled with various rollers, papers, and solutions and was usually sold in drug stores.  The brand name “Tony”, meaning “sharp” or “classy” (in the vernacular of the late 1940’s and 1950’s) was marketed to those women who couldn’t afford, or wouldn’t set foot in a hair salon.

After she became a devout Pentecostal, giving herself a Tony was entirely out of the question as it was considered vain and sinful.  Instead, she had settled for wet pin curls and creative brush-ups with lots of bobby pins.

“Yes,” Kaz replied.  “And the perm she got…well, it was very…uh, very…curly.”

When she first mentioned the perm, I had imagined my mom’s still dark brown hair in gently flowing waves, with maybe a little pompadour in the front.  But curly?

“What do you mean, curly?  You mean wavy?”  Thinking that maybe Kaz had used the wrong word.

“No!  I know wavy.  She wasn’t wavy, she was curly.  You know, like koko-gin (negro) hair.  You have English name for new style…I think maybe it’s called an “Afriko” hairstyle.”

“Afriko?  There’s no such thing, unless you mean ‘Afro’.”

“Yes! Hai!  That’s it!  Afro!!  She got Afro permanent!”

“You’ve got to be kidding!  You mean it was all kinky and round?”

“Oh yes, and very black.  She color it too.  She show me when she got home and she thought it look pretty good.  She very proud.  But not me.  I think it look awful.”

“Ahh…you didn’t say anything to her about that, did you?”

“Sure!” she said emphatically.  “I told her she look silly.  That hairstyle not for old ladies…it was for young girls and look better on koko-gin anyway.  Young koko-gin!  It’s natural for them, you know.”

“Oh my God, Kaz!  You’ve got to be kidding me!  How could you say that to her?”

“Well, so what?  It very true.  She look silly in stupid (pronounced, “stupee”) Afro.  Then she got all mad when I told her that.”

“What did you expect her to do!?”

“I don’t know.  It was truth.  All I did was tell her the truth.  I cannot lie about that.  Somebody have to tell her she look stupee.”

Now that’s one thing that Kaz had going for–and against her.  She did not believe in lying about anything; during our marriage it would prove to be both a blessing and a curse.  In her formative years she had apparently never learned the art of diplomacy, subtlety, or tact.  Her mind and her mouth had no filter when it came to expressing her opinion; when we were in mixed company I was constantly on guard hoping that she wouldn’t blurt out something insulting or insensitive when she was just trying to be truthful.

“Kaz!  I can’t believe you said that to her.”

“Well, I did.  Then she run into her room and stayed there for long time.  I thought maybe her head hurt with new curly hair, so I thought I’d do something nice for her and I went to kitchen and began to clean refrigerator and freezer.  When she finally come out she was all mad and told me she didn’t want me to touch anything in her kitchen anymore.  I don’t understand why she act so mean to me.”

“Well, you insulted her!”

“About what?  I clean her refrigerator!”

“No, not that!  You insulted her when you told her she looked stupid with an afro.”

“That not insult.  That was truth!”

“Okay, now listen.  You have to learn that sometimes people don’t want to hear the truth.  Sometimes people do silly things that deep inside they may regret and feel sorry for, but the last thing they want to hear is other people saying things to them that may reinforce that feeling of shame and regret.  Understand?”

“No.  Why they don’t want to hear the truth?  If they hear the truth maybe they don’t do those silly things again.  No, I don’t understand.  Americans are silly.  Wakara-nai, mo…” (I don’t know).

“All right, how about this?  From now on, when you feel the urge to say something to someone who you feel needs to hear the truth, try not saying anything at all.  Just keep it to yourself.  In fact, how about just holding the thought and telling me about it later when we’re alone.  Then we can talk about it and I can help you decide if it’s wise to say something.  I know you’re still trying to figure out our American culture and I think that’ll go a long way to achieving that goal.  What do you think?”

“I still think it’s silly, but I will try.  American culture is very strange.”

“I know.  Now we have to figure out how to fix this thing with mom.  Next time I call her—and for sure before we go back down to Houston—I’ll try to explain that you meant no harm.  I don’t know if that’s going to do it but I’ll do my best.  Mom is sensitive about a few things—and as most women—very sensitive about her appearance.”

“Why she so sensitive? She’s old woman!  She should accept her age and know she no look so good anymore!”

“Ah…just take my word for this, OK?  Please never mention anything about my mom’s appearance to her face anymore.  We have an old American saying that goes like this: If you can’t say anything nice, don’t say anything at all.”

“Hah…stupee American saying.”

***

As it turned out, Kaz’s arrival proved to be a bit of a boon to Bill in the beginning.  Whereas before I would have to constantly remind him to not leave his crap all over the shared living room, dining room and kitchen, Kaz would spend each morning tidying up and mostly trashing Bill’s leftover pizza boxes and empty soft drink containers.  More often than not he’d leave some article of clothing, like a Tshirt or his flip-flops on the floor and she’d push them up against his bedroom door so she could vacuum the floor.

When I found out that she was doing this I had a hard talk with Bill, reminding him that my wife had not been sent for to be his personal maid.  Afterwards he took more care and stopped leaving his stuff around but his hygiene continued to be spotty.

A couple of weeks after Kaz arrived, Bill told us that his wife would be flying in from New York to spend the last couple of weeks of our training at our apartment.  He was beyond giddy and suggested that for our first weekend together we should plan a Sunday barbecue.  We all thought that would be a great idea, and after Bill insisted that he would buy and grill the steaks, we volunteered to supply all the rest of the fixings.

Marilyn was scheduled to arrive on one Friday afternoon and Bill hurried after class to pick her up at the airport.  Since our class had planned to celebrate at a restaurant that evening anyway after having completed the next to last set of complex problems (actually they were what would be considered final examinations), Bill said he’d just meet us there after picking her up.

Kaz and I were anxious to meet Marilyn after everything Bill had told us about her.  She was a ravishing beauty, her parents were wealthy and lived in upper New York State, and supposedly had been dead set against their eldest daughter marrying Bill.  He bragged about how he’d won her over in spite of her parents’ resistance and how he’d gone out of his way to intentionally antagonize them during family visits.  I imagined that spending an evening in close proximity of Bill after he’d not showered or changed underwear for a few days would probably antagonize just about anyone.

After we’d finished our drinks and were in the process of ordering dinner, Bill showed up with Marilyn.  She was not unattractive, but definitely a letdown after all of Bill’s bragging about her ravishing beauty.  Tall, blonde, with cold blue eyes, a sharp nose, and tight thin lips, her deportment reminded me of a stern unsmiling English teacher who was about to ask for that homework assignment she knew I didn’t have completed on time.

We shook hands all around and proceeded to order our meal.  To our surprise Bill loudly instructed the waiter that the dinner and drink check should come to him, then beamed gleefully at Marilyn who seemed to ignore him while intently studying her nails.

Kaz looked at me questioningly and I, with a rapidly growing sense of apprehension, prayed that she was not getting ready to make some truthful statement about Marilyn turning out not to be as pretty as Bill had made her out to be.  Mercifully, she must’ve seen the growing sense of panic on my face and instead smiled sweetly, squeezed my hand, and took a dainty sip from her drink.

***

As promised, Bill and Marilyn left the apartment early Saturday afternoon to do the grocery shopping for our grilled steak dinner later on that afternoon.  Kaz and I had volunteered to pick up salad fixings, potatoes and corn on the cob, but Bill had insisted they’d pick up everything since they were going out, then we could prepare our part while he and his wife cooked up the steaks.

“We’re going to buy the very best and biggest steaks we can find!” Bill had promised as they walked out the door.  Meanwhile we also left the apartment to do a little shopping for ourselves and the rest of the dinner items.

As it turned out, we stayed out a little longer than what we’d planned, and by the time we got back we could already smell the charcoal grill going in the small patio just outside the kitchen door.  We walked in with bags loaded with potatoes for baking, salad for tossing, and pie and ice cream for dessert.  Bill and Marilyn were both standing in front of the sink with the water running full blast as Kaz and started emptying out the loaded grocery bags.

“Sorry we ran a bit late,” I said as I pulled out four huge baking potatoes, “but it won’t take us but a few minutes to rinse these babies off and pop them into the oven.  Let me know when you’re done with the sink.”

“We’ll be done in just a few seconds,” Marilyn said over her shoulder.  “These steaks are just about done.”

It took me a couple of beats for that to sink in.

“Uh, what’re you doing with the steaks in the sink?” I asked, almost cautiously.

“We’re rinsing them!” Bill said, as if I should’ve known.

“You’re what?”

“Rinsing them!” Marilyn repeated, a little annoyed.  “And they’re just about ready to cool off in the fridge.”

I walked over to the sink and to my sheer amazement saw them rinsing and squeezing four large slabs of meat.

“What in the hell are you guys doing to those steaks?” I asked, almost not believing what I was seeing.

Bill held one up and said, “We’re washing them off and squeezing all the nasty blood out of them.  Why?”

“Well…‘Why’ is what I should be asking you.  Are you crazy?”

“No,” Bill said, arching his eyebrows.  “We always do it this way.  You never know who had their hands on the meat, and they’re all still full of blood and stuff.  If you cook them with all that blood inside it just leaks out on your plate when you cut into it.  It’s gross, isn’t it honey?”  Marilyn nodded sagely while looking at Kaz and me as if we were savages.

“Uh Okay, I guess.”  As I stared at the meat I noticed something even stranger.  “Bill, what cut of meat is that?”

“Cut?  It’s steak!”

“What kind of steak?”

“Oh, well we just looked for the package that looked the biggest and we picked these out.  They were in the steak section of the store.  They look great, don’t they?”

“Well Bill, those are beef, but I don’t think they’re steaks for grilling.  What did the package say?”

“I don’t remember exactly, but it said, steak.”

Where’s the package they came in?”

“I don’t know!  I think we put them in the trash under the sink.”

I gently pushed him out of the way and dug out the white plastic tray with the cellophane wrapping.  I looked at the label and saw that they’d bought four round steaks.

“This cut of meat is going to be really chewy unless you marinate is for a few hours,” I said, as Bill stood there with a round steak dripping in his hand. “Worse, you’ve squeezed out and washed away all its natural juices by rinsing and wring them out.  When they come off the grill they’re bound to be as tough as shoe leather.”

They both stared at me blankly.

“Is this the way you guys grill your steaks at home?” I asked cautiously.

“Well….”  Bill stammered.  “To tell the truth, we don’t eat steak that often.  And Marilyn doesn’t cook that much.  So…..”

I instantly felt bad for the way I’d hammered them, and I just stood there holding the wrinkled piece of cellophane in my hand.  Surprisingly, it was Kaz who broke the uncomfortable silence.

“No problem!” she said, cheerfully.  “We can go out and eat big hamburgers then come home and eat pie and ice cream!  Tomorrow I can make something with the potatoes!  OK?”

Marilyn’s pointy nose began to wrinkle upwards, but Bill quickly spoke up.  “Great!  And tell you what.  Because it seems we screwed up the steaks we’ll pay for the burgers!  Won’t we honey?”

Marilyn looked like she wanted to say no, but seemed to quickly decide otherwise.  “Sure, why not.”

As we started to head out the door I suddenly remembered the grill.  “Oh hey!  We can’t leave the grill smoking like that.  Let’s at least take the cover off and let the charcoal burn itself out.”

Bill and Marilyn looked quizzically at each other.  “Grill?  What grill?

“But I thought I smelled burning charcoal when we pulled in the driveway” I said.

“No, that wasn’t us, it was the couple next door.  They’ve had their damn grill going all afternoon and the smoke is coming over the dividing fence.”

I stopped just outside the door and asked, “So you guys never lit our grill?”

“Oh, heavens no,” Marilyn said icily, “We planned to cook the steaks in the oven in the kitchen.  Cooking over charcoal is just so nasty.”

“Oh, well of course.” I said and grabbed Kaz by the arm before she decided to say something truthful.  “Let’s just help them clean up and get ready to go back out.”

In a few minutes, with very little said we all went out the door and piled into Bill’s car.

As it turned out, the burgers were great, and the pie and ice cream were fabulous. 

Finals and Fear of Failing

The last two weeks at the academy were devoted to reviewing all we’d learned the previous seven weeks of training and taking the final set of complex problems.  The bar was set extremely high—all the problems would have to be passed with absolutely no separation or confliction errors.

There were five sets of problems, each consisting of three separation scenarios of increasing complexity.  They were taken in a room resembling an actual airspace sector at an air traffic control center.  The academy had an assigned cadre of mock “pilots” whose job it was to sit in another room and request clearances, changes of altitude, permission to depart and land, and in short, respond to each student controller’s instructions as real pilots would do.  Communication between “pilot” and controller were made via a continuously open telephone line hooked up to each participant’s headset.  Although the problem consisted of many different aircraft types, the one mock pilot acted out all the parts.

Each student, while working the problem, was monitored by two instructors: one, watching the student’s strip marking techniques and phraseology (that is, correct usage of all the ATC approved writing shortcuts, and spoken language), while the other instructor carefully judged whether or not the student was employing proper separation minimums between aircraft and applying the correct rule thereof.  Each problem was approximately an hour in duration and consisted of between ten to twenty simulated aircraft.

Although each problem was designed to last an hour, many times it would last longer.  Time was determined by a clock that was started at the beginning of the problem and stopped at its termination.  However, if either of the instructors noted an issue that he/she wanted to discuss with the student during the problem, the order to “stop the clock” was immediately issued.  Time was therefore immediately suspended while the student was interrogated as to why a particular type of separation was being utilized, asked to quote the exact separation rule that was being used, or to explain why no rule of separation was needed between two seemingly conflicting aircraft.

Once his questions were answered correctly the instructor would order “start the clock” and the problem would resume.  If, however, the student was not able to provide a correct answer—or a confliction between two or more aircraft had occurred—the instructor would declare that the problem was over.  This always meant that the student had failed this particular problem—and if it was a final problem—was out of the program.  The shouted phrase “Stop the clock!” would literally make a student almost jump out of his seat.

To say the pressure to complete a problem successfully was extremely intense would be an understatement.

To prepare for this final set of problems it wasn’t enough to just put in the time in the classroom; one was required to put in countless hours after class and on weekends.  This was one of the reasons the FAA required there to be two students housed in one apartment unit.  We were given sheets of practice problems to take home and administer to one another.  The more time one devoted to studying and working these problems at home the better chance one had of passing the finals.

Unfortunately, for some of our classmates it made no difference how much time they put in studying and working practice problems.  They just didn’t get it.  I have often answered those who’ve asked me what it takes to be an air traffic controller by simply saying this:  To be a successful controller, one must not only be able to memorize and instantly recall and apply one of thousands upon thousands of rules and regulations, one must also be able to mentally visualize five, ten, fifteen or twenty aircraft at different locations and altitudes—all going in different directions at the same time.  In my opinion, this has little to do with intelligence and more to do with just having the knack, or instinctive ability, to do so.

There is no doubt that my roommate Bill, regardless of his lack of hygiene, was a highly intelligent individual.  He had graduated college with a relatively decent GPA, and been a fairly effective Naval Aviation pilot, flying one of the most complex fighter jets in the military.  Yet for all his intelligence, most times he was at a loss on how to separate two aircraft converging towards one another at the same altitude.  Perhaps if he’d been given a radar scope where he could visually see the potential confliction, he would’ve been more successful, but in our initial training the radar scope had to exist in our imagination.

During the last week of finals Bill and I spent countless hours late into the night going over practice problems in our apartment while our wives slept soundly in their respective bedrooms.  Time and time again Bill would commit the fatal error of clearing two or more imaginary aircraft into conflicted airspace without realizing he had done so.

For me, it was maddening that he couldn’t see the situation developing.  For example, he would have a flight plan for a flight on the ground requesting to depart and asking to climb to five-thousand feet.  At the same time, there would be another aircraft due to overfly that same airport at five thousand feet.  The obvious thing to do was to clear the departing aircraft to four thousand feet and wait until the conflicting aircraft was clear to climb the departure to five thousand feet.  But to Bill, that made no sense.  He would try to explain to me that there was no way the departure would conflict with the overflight because the departure would see the other plane and avoid a collision by staying at four thousand until he was clear.  He explained that when he was flying in the Navy, he’d done this many times.

He just wouldn’t listen nor, would he try to reason this out.  I just knew he was going to fail the finals.

***

I was scheduled to take my final a few hours before Bill.  If I was successful, I would have a couple of days of down time before the course was completely over and I was looking forward to having some time off—regardless of the outcome.

My test time was at 1:00 pm, right after lunch.  I was so nervous that I spent the lunch hour mentally going over every scenario that had been presented to us over the past few weeks.  Although I was confident that I could “see traffic” (the ATC term for being able to detect and project conflictions) I wasn’t so sure that I could quote each rule if made to do so.

At the appointed time I was asked to enter the one of the four mock control rooms and take my seat in front of the slanted boards—called bays—holding twenty or so flight progress strips.  The room was just big enough to allow two controllers and four instructors to sit in front of the bays.  Above the bays were aviation flight charts depicting the make-believe Oklahoma Center airspace, complete with airways and navaids.  Although they were there to provide assistance in case the controller needed confirmation regarding an airway or a navaid, during a final the maps were covered with a cloth shroud.

The two instructors already had their headsets plugged into their receptacles and as I took my seat they handed me my headset.  Once plugged in I heard the mock pilot give me a radio check.

“Oklahoma Center, this is your pilot, how do you read?”

“Pilot, loud and clear,” was my response.  My mouth was dry, and I sorely needed a drink of water.

“OK, Frank,” one of the instructors behind me said.  “Just do what you know how to do.  We’ve watched you for all these weeks and we know you are good at seeing traffic, so all you need to do now is work the board just like you have in the past.”

“OK.”

“Are you ready?”

“Yes.”

“Pilot, are you ready?”

“Affirmative!”

“OK, let’s start the clock.”

I reached up and flipped the switch, activating the clock.

“Oklahoma Center, this is N7432R checking in at seven-thousand.”  My first radio call.

“N7432R roger, this is Oklahoma Center.  Report over Ponca City, altimeter is 2980.”

“Roger altimeter, and we’ll report over Ponca City.”

The problem had begun, and for the next fifty-eight minutes I was totally immersed in the world of imaginary airplanes all trying to run into each other.

“OK!  Stop the clock!”

Those words shocked me to my core and my stomach tightened in sheer panic.

“Great job, Frank!  You’re going to make a good controller.  Congratulations!”

I sat back in my chair and slowly pulled the headset off my head feeling my heart begin to slow down.  “Is it over?” I asked tentatively.

“Yup, you’re done.”

I turned around and saw my two instructors beaming at me and each other.  I felt a trickle of sweat roll down the side of my ribcage and I stood up.

“You really did well, Frank,” one of the instructors said.  “Now clean up your board and go take a well-deserved break.”

***

There were about a half dozen students in the breakroom and the mood was jovial as all had passed their finals.  I looked for Bill but then remembered that his test time was scheduled right after mine.  He would be in one of the control rooms now taking his final.  I did not feel confident that he would pass—especially if he started arguing with one of the instructors over what he thought was or was not a confliction.

Further, as a problem got more difficult, he would begin getting so nervous that he’d start stammering and mixing up aircraft call signs.  Whereas I would hate it when during our practice problems an instructor would stop the clock to explain how perhaps a particular type of separation rule might work better than the one I’d used, Bill frequently asked the instructor to stop the clock if for nothing else but to gain time regather his thoughts.

About an hour later Bill finally walked into thea break room.  He had failed his problem.

“Oh no!” I exclaimed sympathetically.  “What’s gonna happen now?”

“They have to get approval from headquarters, but I’ll probably get to go back to Houston on a probationary basis.”

“But you’re not fired, are you?”

“No, not yet.  I was told I probably wouldn’t be fired from the FAA, but that I’d be reclassified and sent to a non-ATC facility like a flight service station.”  (This type of facility provides weather, airport, and flight information to VFR flights.)  “But all that won’t be done here…it’ll be done in Houston after I get back.”

“Oh Bill.  I’m so sorry.”

“That’s okay, I guess.  It’s just that I was never comfortable trying to do this job anyway.  But I did it for Marilyn.  I did it all for her.”

“Well, she loves you and she’ll understand what happened.  Look, it’s not the end of the world.  The FAA will get you another assignment and you’ll do just fine.”

“You don’t understand.  She told me that if I failed, she was flying back to New York.”

“No, that can’t be true!”

“Yes, it is.  You don’t know her.  If I didn’t make it as a controller, she told me she didn’t want to be with me.  She’ll never accept being married to a failure.”

“Bill!  The FAA will take care of you.”

“And what?  Get me a job at a flight service station in Cotulla, Texas?  Marilyn would never live there.  She made it perfectly clear that the only way she’d live in Texas, or the southwest, was if I was working in an air route center making good money as a controller.  Now, I’ll never get any higher than a GS-9.”

“Bill, she loves you and she’ll understand.  I know she will.”

“No, you see I’ve already called her.  She said she was flying back to New York tomorrow.  Her parents will wire her a ticket.  I’ll be coming back to Houston by myself.”

“Oh no…”  Suddenly I felt so terrible for Bill.  And although he and I had had our moments of discomfort, I truly felt bad for him.  It dawned on me that not only had he forever lost the opportunity to be an air traffic controller, it seemed that now he’d also surely lost his marriage.

Later that afternoon, while I mingled with all the other successful air traffic control trainees at a nearby bar to celebrate our fortune and bright future, I couldn’t help but wonder what Bill might be doing right then.

To be continued…

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

New Horizons-Part Two

New Horizons – Part Two

 

A Smooth Start

Things at my parents’ home started out relatively well.  Mom seemed to be impressed with Kaz, constantly praising her beauty and courteous demeanor and going out of her way to compliment her on the way she dressed—especially her minimal use of makeup.

Dad was uncommonly jovial and conveyed his pleasure with our visit by constantly telling and re-telling his token racial and oft-repeated silly jokes, and recounting stories of some of the goofy things I’d done when I was growing up.

That one week I spent with my parents prior to leaving to go to Oklahoma City for my ATC Initial Training, was probably one when I felt closest to them.  The one subject they managed to stay away from was that of Sharon and the boys.  Although I’d explained that Kaz knew all about my ex-wife and the issues that had occurred during my first year on Okinawa, it seemed that my parents were still a bit uncomfortable with the whole situation.

Before I knew it, it was time for me to depart and begin the long drive to the FAA’s Aeronautical Center (also called “the academy) at Wiley Post Airport, in Oklahoma City to begin my initial air traffic control training.   The night before I left we took Mom and Dad out to dinner at a nearby Mexican Restaurant and everyone seemed to truly enjoy the evening.  After returning back home I spent a couple of hours packing my little car with clothing and essentials that I thought I’d need for the next nine weeks I was to be assigned at the Aeronautical Center.

Very early the following morning as I pulled out of the driveway—my parents and Kaz all standing on the little porch waving goodbye—I couldn’t help but feel a twinge of anxiety as I recalled the terrible clash of personalities that had occurred between my mother and Sharon those many years ago.  On the long drive north I replayed those appalling, stress-filled moments when, while serving on my remote assignment in Alaska, I read letters from my wife complaining about my mother’s dreadful temperament towards her, right after having received similar missives from my mother severely criticizing Sharon and complaining about her laziness and disrespect towards her maternal authority.

Those unpleasant recollections were profoundly unsettling, but I held out hope that Kaz’s pleasing and forgiving personality would effectively smooth over any misunderstandings that may arise between them during my absence.  And besides, I thought, because Mom seemed so enthralled with Kaz, surely that should go a long way in maintaining a harmonious relationship—at least for the next nine weeks.

Oh, if only it had been so….

ATC Training—The Beginning

I thought learning to fly had been tough.  Turns out, it was a piece of cake compared to ATC training, and I would soon find out that this was the hardest thing I would ever do in my entire life.

I drove into Oklahoma City late Friday afternoon and decided to check into a local Holiday Inn for the weekend.  During my two-day orientation at the Houston Air Route Traffic Control Center (ZHU ARTCC) I, and the rest of the fifteen ATC candidates from Houston, had been given a couple of lists containing names and addresses of hotels, motels, FAA approved apartment complexes, recommended restaurants, and a map of the local area with the Aeronautical Center highlighted.  We had also been issued a government per-diem check supplying each of us with an appropriate amount of funds which were to be applied towards any travel and lodging expenses.  Subsequent checks would be issued monthly, in addition to our regular pay, until we concluded our training in Oklahoma.

We had been briefed that we were to report to the Aeronautical Center on Monday, and that it would be best if we checked into a local hotel over the weekend, waiting until Monday afternoon, after our orientation, to check out approved apartment complexes for more permanent lodging.  Besides, we were told, during that first day of orientation we were going to pick, or be assigned, a roommate with whom we were to share a two-bedroom apartment during our training.  I didn’t particularly like that idea as I thought I’d be living by myself for nine weeks.

Before leaving Houston, I had selected several hotels which I thought would be convenient, and the first on the list was the Holiday Inn where I was presently headed.  I checked in, unloaded what I thought I’d need for the next couple of days, and headed out to find a good steak restaurant.

After dinner I returned to my room and decided to call Kaz.  Since these were the days before cell phones, I used my room phone to call my parents’ number collect.  Before leaving I had assured my folks that I would reimburse them for any phone calls that I made since all my calls had to be made collect.

My mother answered the phone and seemed overjoyed to hear that I had arrived in good shape.  She wanted to know what Oklahoma looked like and I explained that aside from the red clay dirt that I began seeing on the sides of the highway as soon as I crossed the state line, it didn’t look a lot different from any other city that I’d been to.  Besides, I explained, I was presently in a part of the city that was predominantly full of restaurants, gas stations and hotels, so it sure didn’t look too much different from Houston.

Before I was allowed to speak to my wife my Dad took the phone from my Mom.  His interest centered mostly on how much time it took me to get from Houston to Oklahoma City (7 hours), and how many times I had to stop refill my gas tank (once, just north of Dallas—and I really didn’t need gas, just a pit stop).  Finally, after a few more questions on “…how that little buggy…” of mine drove (just fine), I got to talk to Kaz.

Since I knew that Mom and Dad were still in the room, I kept the conversation as neutral as possible—mainly telling Kaz that I was already starting to miss her.  Since our marriage this was going to be the first time we’d been apart for more than a few hours.

I told her I’d do my very best at the “academy” (commonly referred to instead of the FAA Aeronautical Center), and that I would see her in early June when I returned home.  She asked me to call her often and I promised I would.  Before I knew it we were saying our goodbyes.

After I hung up I regretted that I was not able to properly caution her about my Mom’s tendency towards territorialism—that is, her habit of wanting to be in charge and insisting that people living in her house do things her way.  I remembered how she and Sharon had butted heads on how to take care of the boys when they were babies, and how they disagreed on the manner in which certain household chores were to be performed.  As I got ready for bed I decided that as smart as Kaz was she probably would be able to work her way around my mother’s quirks.  At least I hoped so.

***

After a restful, but lonely, weekend, early Monday morning I drove to the Aeronautical Center to begin the first of three days of orientation.  As I pulled up to the guarded entrance to the Center I noticed that there was a special lane for “Visitors”, so since I had no idea what building the orientation was to be held in I thought maybe this was a good lane for me to get into.  My decision was seconded by the armed guard stationed by a guard shack who, after glancing at my front bumper and windshield and noting that I had no decal displayed, motioned me to drive into the “Visitors” lane of traffic.

The lane led to a large parking lot with a small wooden building situated on one corner on which a large sign displayed the word, “Check-In”.  I noticed a short line of people formed at the stairs leading to a lone access door, so I thought maybe I should join them.  Before I got out of the car I made sure I had my newly-issued orders from my home facility and the large envelope containing instructions and maps of the Aeronautical Center’s buildings and grounds.

As I walked to the Check-In Building, I saw a wide variety of states represented by the license plates on many of the parked cars.  From as far as California and New York, to as close as Texas, Oklahoma and Kansas, I realized for the first time that my fellow ATC students hailed from all parts of the United States.

Once inside, I was asked by an Oklahoma State Highway patrolman to show my orders and two forms of identification.  I dug out my Texas driver’s license and my old military ID card—long since expired—and a copy of my newly minted orders.  After a visual look-over by an attractive and smartly-dressed female police officer, I was asked to fill out a data card listing my personal information and the year and make of my auto.  She explained that I should leave the address section blank until I had a permanent Oklahoma City address.  After that, my fingerprints and a photo were taken, and within a few minutes I was sent back out to the parking lot armed with an ID card and a decal to place on the windshield of my auto.

Included in the package were directions to the auditorium where the orientation was to be held for the next three days and beginning at 10AM that morning.  I glanced at my watch and saw that I still had more than an hour to burn before I needed to be in place, so I pulled out the map that had been included and looked for a cafeteria.  In short order I found what I was looking for and headed for a cup of coffee.

***

The auditorium was about half full by the time I arrived—and I estimated there to be a couple of hundred, or so, prospective air traffic controllers.  As per the times, the vast majority of candidates were white males, with a sprinkling of darker skinned Hispanics and a just a few blacks.  There were no females present.

I tried to spot one of the other fourteen trainees who had been in the orientation at Houston Center, but since I’d hardly spoken to anyone on that one day, and I’d spent the whole time listening to instructions rather than looking around to memorize faces, I failed to recognize anyone.

The auditorium was roomy, easily able to hold probably around five hundred or so participants, and since this was the pre-water bottle era, there were tables along the wall holding large coffee brewers, pitchers of iced water, along with glasses, cups and napkins.  At the entrance there were two large tables on which several boxes of donuts had been placed.  Although I’d had an ample breakfast at the hotel that morning, I couldn’t pass up the chance at snagging a couple of free glazed donuts.  As I surveyed the area, looking for a good seat, hands full of coffee and donuts, I thought that maybe I was going to like this FAA.

For the next two hours I tried to stay ahead of a severe sugar-induced coma and struggled to concentrate on the various speakers up on the stage and what they were saying.  There was the director of the Aeronautical Center welcoming us to the Academy, some HR lady explaining accepted and expected student behaviors during our nine-week stay, some other lady explaining health plans, and a couple of senior FAA ATC instructors.  What those last two had to say has been forever lost due to my sugar-addled memory.

What I do remember was that after a couple of hours we were mercifully given a well-earned thirty-minute break.  While relieving myself of the morning’s orange juice, coffee and water, a guy standing at the urinal to my right decided that this would be a good time to introduce himself.

“Hey,” he said, cheerfully.  “You’re from Houston Center, right?  I remember seeing you there last week during our orientation.”  I was hoping he wasn’t planning on shaking hands.

“Yeah.”  I answered cautiously.  “I guess you’re from Houston too, right?”

“Yup!  Well, I mean I’m going to be working at the Houston Center.  I’m really from New York.  How about you?”

“Oh, I’m from Houston.  That’s my home town.”

We finished our business and headed toward the basins to wash up.  I walked a little behind and to his left, allowing me to get my first good look at him.  He was a little taller than me—maybe an inch or so over six feet, with wavy sandy blond hair piled on top of his head, and cut in an overly high and tight style on the sides.

He was wearing a light brown paisley patterned tie knotted over a pale yellow short-sleeved cotton shirt that was tucked into a pair of light olive-colored polyester slacks.  What was instantly noticeable though was that he had his pants hitched up halfway between his chest and his natural waistline, causing the inseam to fall several inches above the top of his shoes.  In Texas we call that the “high-water” look.

Worse, because his body type was a definite “apple” shape, the way he wore his pants only served to draw attention to his portly midsection.  Between the bottom of his pant cuffs and a pair of scruffy brown shoes, he sported a pair of bright green socks that had tragically fallen down to his ankles.

“I’ll bet since you’re from Houston you’ve already picked a roommate, right?” he asked.

“Huh?”  I said, quickly shooting my gaze up to his face, hoping he hadn’t noticed that I’d been giving him the once-over.

“A roommate.  You know…what the admin lady and the ATC instructors talked about a little while ago.” he said as he bent over the basin to wash his hands.

“Uh, I think I must’ve missed that.  They asked about roommates?” I asked, honestly surprised.

“Oh, well…we were asked to think about who our roommates are going to be for the next nine weeks here.  And then they asked how many had already picked their roommates.  I didn’t raise my hand because I don’t have one and I noticed you didn’t either.  I think most of the guys in our class have already paired up, so I was wondering if you’d paired up with anyone.”

“I didn’t think we would have to pick roommates so early in the process.  And to be honest with you I don’t recall that part of the briefing this morning.  Must’ve been dozing a bit, I guess.”

“No, no!” he said, emphatically.  Didn’t you hear when they briefed us that when we went to check out our FAA approved apartments we should do it with our roommates?”

“Uh…no.  I must’ve missed that.  But OK, I guess that makes sense.”

“So, who’d you pick as a roommate—or have you yet?” he asked as we made our way back to the auditorium.

“Me?”  I asked, trying to create thinking space. “Oh, no one.  I don’t know anyone.”

“At what hotel were you staying in Houston?”

“I was at my parents’ house.”

“Oh, that’s right, you’re from Houston.  So, if you don’t have a roommate picked out—and I don’t either—how ‘bout we buddy up?”

I didn’t know what to say since I didn’t know this guy.  But, then again, I didn’t know anyone.  “OK, let’s talk about it after the orientation.  Where are you sitting?”

“Right behind you.”

“Oh.  Alright, we’ll talk afterwards, OK?”

“Sure, that’ll work.  By the way, my name’s Bill.”  And he stuck out his hand.

“Frank.  Nice to meet you.”

As I gripped his hand I felt like I’d grabbed a warm, moist, and a not so recently deceased fish.

***

After the orientation I got together with Bill and we decided to find a restaurant nearby to have lunch and strategize on how and where to find a permanent living space.  During the morning orientation we had been given a more updated list of FAA approved hotels and apartment complexes.

Since we were required to have a roommate, all the apartment complexes and hotels offered two-bedroom units, but the downside was that only one bathroom to each two-bedroom unit was the norm.

After a nice comforting steak sandwich with French fries for lunch, Bill and I returned to the Aeronautical Center for the afternoon portion of the orientation.  This session was more boring than the morning one and I again fought a losing battle with trying to stay awake.

Just before we were dismissed for the day we were again asked if everyone had paired up.  If not, those stragglers were to come up to the front of the auditorium where the FAA people in charge would help pair them off.  I looked over at Bill who gave me an enthusiastic thumbs up.

Outside in the parking lot, Bill and I made arrangements to meet the following morning to begin our search for living quarters.  We had been told that we had until Wednesday to make all final living arrangements because Thursday we were to again meet in the auditorium to submit our lease agreements and the names of the employees rooming together.  Then we were to be given a tour of the classrooms at the academy and end the day with an introduction to our primary instructors.

We were further instructed that on Friday we would report to our respective training buildings to receive our classroom assignments, formally meet our individual instructors, and be given our training books and materials.

Classes would start on Monday, at 0730, sharp.

The next morning Bill and I rendezvoused in the parking lot of a restaurant which was conveniently located a similar distance from his hotel and mine.  We used our FAA Apartment Locator maps to plan out a logical route among the recommended apartment complexes to more easily find a suitable place to live.  Since he insisted on driving his car—an older four-door Volvo sedan—I left my little red Toyota sports car in the parking lot, hoping it wouldn’t garner too much attention and would still be there when I got back.

As we pulled out into traffic, I noticed that Bill was wearing the same clothes that he’d been wearing the day before.

Bill

Although he was never deployed to Vietnam, he was an ex-Navy aviator having flown the Douglas A-4 Skyhawk, and a handful of smaller non-jet powered aircraft.  He signed up right out of college and for some reason only served four years of a six-year commitment.  I suspected he’d had a medical issue and was medically discharged, but anytime I tried asking he always managed to dodge the subject.

After returning to his small upper New York state hometown, he married his high school sweetheart and was hired to sell insurance for a couple of years at his father-in-law’s State Farm agency.  He admitted he was never very good at selling, and the longer I got to know him I better I came to understand why.

He had applied to the FAA two years ago, and after taking the entrance exam three times he was finally selected.  I asked why he chose Houston Center instead of New York Center, and he said Houston had been his only choice.  He decided not to tempt fate and accepted the offer, hoping that after he certified he could put in for a transfer back to New York.

That morning in early April was unseasonably cool for Oklahoma as we pulled out into the vehicle-cluttered avenue.  After visiting three or four apartment complexes we stopped for lunch to discuss our perceptions.  We agreed that they all were in our price range and offered roughly the same amenities.  Some offered free breakfast—usually bagels, donuts, and cereals—while others touted their large pools and spacious grounds, and some even had free Taco Tuesdays!

After lunch we decided that the one complex we both ended up liking had moderately-sized furnished bedrooms, and a small pool, but it was right off MacArthur Avenue which offered us a fairly straight and short drive to the academy.

We returned to the leasing office and signed off on our nine-week lease agreement.  Since we were FAA employees, the leasing manager explained as she gave us each a set of keys, we were not required to make a deposit.  I thought that was very convenient, but I guess it made sense since the complex knew where we worked and who we worked for.

Afterwards, I asked Bill if he wanted to join me for dinner and a few drinks later on that evening, but he said he probably couldn’t because he hadn’t asked his wife if he could go out.  I thought that was odd and told him that I didn’t think she’d be able to check his whereabouts all the way from New York.

“Oh no!” he said, arching his eyebrows.  “She’s here at the hotel waiting for me to come back.  If I told her I wanted to go out later without her she’d really be mad!”

“She’s here?” I asked, surprised.  “She came down with you?”

“Oh yeah.  She wouldn’t let me come by myself.”

“OK, so is she going to be moving in with us too?”

“No,” he said nervously, “she’s just going to help me move in and then she’ll fly back to New York.  She just wanted to make sure I’m OK.”

I was about to ask if he was sure it was his wife and not his mother that had come down with him but decided against it.

He drove me back to the parking lot where I’d left my car and as I got out I caught a sharp whiff of sour body odor.  As Bill drove off I and walked back to my car I discreetly made a double armpit sniff check.  Well, it wasn’t me.

***

I spent the next few days checking out of my hotel and repacking my car for the move into the new apartment.  Because my car was so small I had packed almost two weeks-worth of clothing changes into the trunk, right-front floor and seat, and every nook and cranny I could find.  Because I had to fold and roll most of my shirts and pants, so they would fit in the car, I knew that I’d be spending the first week in the new apartment ironing and re-hanging all my clothes.

When the decision was made that this complex was going to fit our needs nicely, Bill and I chose our respective bedrooms.  Mine turned out to be a little smaller but it had a nice view of the swimming pool and a larger closet.  Also, since it faced east it would get the early morning sun but was spared the late afternoon and early evening solar heat.

Since I was the first one to move my stuff into the apartment I picked the optimum areas of the bathroom cabinets to store my personal items and the more convenient towel bars to hang my towels.

When Bill finally showed up late in the afternoon after taking his wife to the airport to return to New York, I showed him the available areas in the bathroom for him to store his toiletries.  He just shrugged and said anywhere was OK with him.  And when I brought up the subject of who should take their morning shower first he told me that he’d just as soon go last as he normally didn’t take too long to get ready in the morning, and he wanted to get those extra few minutes of sleep anyway.

The apartment was fully furnished and featured a very spacious living room.  In it was a nice TV set, a roomy couch, comfortable upholstered chairs, and modern lamps and tables.  Everything looked pretty new, but I was especially fond of the kitchen which was decked out with all new appliances.  Checking out the kitchen drawers and cabinets I found that they were stocked with four-place setting dishes and eating utensils, and an abundant variety of cooking tools.

While it had taken me about an hour to get all my stuff out of the car and situated into the bathroom, my bedroom closet, and dresser drawers, I noted that it had taken Bill just a few minutes to get whatever stuff he had from his car and into his living area.  When I asked him if he’d already gotten all of his stuff out of the car and into his bedroom he said he had.

“I don’t like to pack a lot of stuff, so I traveled pretty light from New York.” he said casually while looking through the channels on the TV.  “I’ll buy more stuff now that I’m here.”

I thought that was probably OK, but I was a little surprised to see that he was still wearing the same yellow shirt and olive-green slacks that he’d been wearing for almost a week now.  For the move, though, he had removed his shoes and sagging socks and put on a pair of very thin-soled white flip-flops.  I noticed that he’d also rolled his pant legs almost up to his knees.

After taking a shower and putting on a fresh pair of jeans and a T-shirt I told Bill that I was planning on making a trip to the nearest supermarket to buy some detergent to use in the complex’s laundromat, and other odds and ends.  I asked if he needed anything.

“No…I don’t think so.  I’m good,” he said, not taking his eyes off the afternoon soap opera he was watching.

“OK, so by the time I get back maybe we can go get a bite to eat and check out one of the local bars.  Anyway, while I’m gone you’ll have time to shower and change so we can go.”

“Well,” he said, “I was planning on just walking up to that burger joint down the street in a few minutes and getting take-out.”

“Really?  Wouldn’t you rather go somewhere nice instead?  After this weekend I doubt that we’ll be able to splurge too much given the workload I think the academy will pile on us.”

“Nah…that’s OK.  I just want to eat, read a bit, and then hit the sack.  You can go out if you want.”

“OK, suit yourself.  Oh, and when you hit the shower I made sure to put all my stuff, like soap and all, to the side so you’d have room for yourself.”

“That’s not a problem.  I don’t plan to take a shower tonight anyway.  I didn’t sweat that much today.”

“Uh, OK.”  I said quietly.  As I got into my car I thought to myself that—well, he may not have sweated a lot, but he was starting to smell.

I spent Saturday morning doing wash, ironing and sorting my clothes after having had a bowl of cereal and some toast.  I didn’t see Bill until later that day when I was getting ready to walk out to the pool and enjoy the cool sunny afternoon.  He came out of his bedroom wearing a pair of white boxer shorts and his well-worn flip-flops.  For fear of what I might smell I made sure to stay on the other side of the room from him.

“Wow, you slept late!” I said.

“Yeah, I didn’t see any reason to get up, so I just slept in and read a little this morning.”

“OK, well I’m going out to the pool for a couple of hours and enjoy some of those free snacks and margaritas the apartment complex is serving.  Wanna come out later?”

“Nah, I don’t drink and I don’t like to swim.  Besides I’m gonna call my wife to make sure she made it home OK.”

“All right.  Maybe after you call her you can come out to the pool.”

“Nah, I don’t think so.”

And with that, I headed out to the pool to soak up some sun and chug down some free margaritas.

I didn’t see Bill for the rest of the day but noticed that his bedroom door was closed when I returned.  I assumed he was reading or maybe sleeping.  I did note, however, that when I took a shower after returning from the pool, the tub had not been touched since I’d used it earlier that morning.  His bar of Ivory soap sat in its little dish looking as pristine as it had when it came out of its wrapper.

On Monday morning, our first day of training, I awoke extra early to get a good start on the traffic situation between our apartment and the academy.  I was out in the kitchen, having already consumed a bowl of oatmeal and a cup of coffee, when at 6:50AM, I finally heard Bill’s bedroom door open and the bathroom door close.

I was already concerned because, although our first class didn’t start until 7:30AM, we had agreed to leave at 6:45AM to take into account any unforeseen traffic glitches.  For the last ten minutes I had been debating whether or not I should beat on his door to make sure he was up or whether to just wait him out.  Since we had a little time to spare I decided to wait.

I walked over to the bathroom door and in a loud voice reminded him that since we were already late he needed to hurry and shower, shave, and dress.  To my astonishment, he opened the door and told me that he’d be ready in a couple of minutes.  He said this as he was “brushing” his teeth with his index finger.

“Don’t you have a toothbrush?” I asked, incredulously.

“Whaaaa?” he said.

“Toothbrush!  Don’t you have a toothbrush?”

“Uh, I don’t like to use them.  This is faster!”  Then he bent over the sink and spit out what I hoped was toothpaste.

I didn’t believe what I was seeing.  “You’re haven’t taken a shower yet?  We’re already late!”

“Don’t need a shower.”  He informed me as he scooped two handfuls of water—splashing them over his head and face.  “Looks like I don’t need a shave either,” said he, as he peered into the mirror.  Then, opening up the largest bottle of “Aqua Velva” aftershave splash that I had ever seen, he shook some of the grossly aromatic fluid into one of his hands.  Putting the still open bottle down he vigorously rubbed his hands together and bathed his face, head, underarms and chest with the aftershave.  Before I could look away he pulled the elastic waistband from his boxers away from his gut and stuck his hand down, massaging his genital area with what was left of the liquid.

“There! All ready to go!  Just need to run this comb through my hair and I’ll rush into the bedroom and get dressed.  OK?”

He pushed past me and in a cloud of sickeningly sweet alcohol fragrance ran into his bedroom.

I was shocked and rapidly getting a bit nauseous.  Walking back towards the kitchen I remember thinking that God should strike me dead if he came back out wearing that same old yellow shirt, olive pants and light green saggy socks.

Luckily, God wasn’t listening.  He came out dressed as I was afraid he might—his pants still bearing the wrinkles from having been rolled up to his knees.

On the drive to the academy in my little car I made sure both windows were rolled all the way down and I concentrated on breathing through my mouth to avoid smelling the Aqua Velva and whatever other odor that may be coming from the passenger seat.

Air Traffic Controller Training

As I recall, the nine weeks of training were divided into three separate blocks:  The first two weeks were academic and included learning about the structure of the FAA, the differences between the three options within the Air Traffic Control field (Terminal, Center, and Flight Service Station), and an introduction to the tools of the trade—flight progress strips, flight strip bays and headers, and the infamous double-ended ATC pencil with its red lead on one end and black lead on the other.

The next two weeks were devoted to having the student memorize the imaginary airspace structure that existed above and around the, also imaginary, Oklahoma City Center.  We were issued high and low altitude ATC maps which contained airports, airways, airway intersections, navigational aids, restricted and prohibited airspace, military refueling routes, and sector boundaries and radio frequencies.  The low-altitude maps depicted airspace from twenty-three thousand feet and below, while the high-altitude maps depicted the airspace from twenty-four thousand feet and above.

We were told that to be able to pass the “Map Test”, to be administered at the end of this two-week training period, we would be required to draw every line, symbol, number, and notation on each map—by memory—on two blank sheets of paper.

In the meantime, we were to also memorize the format and type of information that was to be displayed on flight progress strips.  These strips of paper were about seven inches long and about an inch-and-a-half inches wide.  (See examples of strips and holders in the pic section of this blog).  Each strip is divided into approximately thirty sections wherein pertinent aircraft and time and route information is manually entered by the controller. Some of this information consisted of aircraft call-sign, type of aircraft, airspeed, departure and arrival time, altitude requested and approved, routing data, and time over fix and so forth.  Further, there were a plethora of symbols that needed to be memorized so that they could be hand-entered on each flight progress strip.  Each symbol denoted a particular action taken on a flight and was represented by: arrows pointing up or down, arrows pointing left or right, the capital letter “D”—with or without an arrow going through it, a strikethrough, the symbol “@”, the letter “X” and “C”, and many others.  To complicate matters, if an action was written in red on the strip it denoted a non-approved or requested action, and if it was in black it meant the action or request had been approved.  Information successfully passed to and approved by another controller was circled in black.

These paper strips slid into plastic or metal strip holders and displayed on what is described as a strip bay.  Since each strip represented one aircraft, the controller would have to scan each strip carefully to interpret that aircraft’s past, present, and future position and altitude.  After scanning all the flight progress strips in the controller’s strip bay, he should be able to formulate a three-dimensional mental picture of the position and altitude of all the aircraft in his section of airspace (called a sector).

This three-dimensional mental image of all the aircraft in a controller’s sector was commonly referred to as “having the picture”.  So, as an example, when a training controller made an error and assigned an aircraft a route or altitude that conflicted with another it was assumed, and loudly broadcast by the instructor, that he “…didn’t have the picture…”  Not having the picture is a fatal condition in air traffic control, and the main cause of controllers washing out of the training program.

It should be noted that all of this mental imagery had to be visualized without the assistance of a radar scope.  This was and is known as manual air traffic control—that is, controlling aircraft by imaging the complete moving air traffic picture solely in one’s mind based on the information that is presented to him on each aircraft’s flight progress strip.  And, while maintaining this moving picture the trainee was expected to communicate verbally with each aircraft, and coordinate information and aircraft requests with supervisors and other controllers.

The next two weeks we were going to learn (and all but memorize) the Air Traffic Controller’s Bible:  FAA Handbook 7110.65.  This document, made up of over seven hundred pages, contained rules of separation and all criteria necessary for controllers to be able to move aircraft from one place to another without losing the required spacing.  The handbook also contains everything there is to know about the world of air traffic control.

There were rules on how to apply departure separation between two aircraft departing the same airport when the leading aircraft was slower than the latter.  Hundreds of rules on how to apply the three basic types of separation:  Lateral, Vertical, and Longitudinal.  And finally, definitions of phraseology, descriptions of navaids, and procedures on how to handle emergency and radio-out situations.

The final five weeks were devoted to applying all this knowledge to simulated air traffic control scenarios, called “problems”.  This was accomplished by using flight progress strips representing imaginary aircraft.  Since the planes were not real, the imaginary pilots flying them were voiced by the instructors standing behind the student.  (Example— “Oklahoma Center, this is N1234, reporting over Enid at six-thousand, requesting seven thousand.”)  They always had a request.

Successful completion of the course depended on the student’s ability to memorize and use all the information presented up to that point, and to pass a complex one-hour “problem” involving no less than twenty imaginary aircraft.  Of course, they all wanted to violate every other aircraft’s altitude or route or developed a sudden emergency that required the student to descend that aircraft through the route or altitude of everyone else beneath him.

If the student was too good and was cruising through the problem with ease, the instructor would mischievously create a “pop-up”.  That would be an aircraft which had been flying without a clearance and mysteriously popped up on the controller’s radio frequency requesting a flight clearance to some airport that was on the other side of the airspace.  Of course, he would request a route or altitude that would conflict with three or four other aircraft already on the controller’s frequency.  It was the instructor’s job to shake up or destroy the trainee’s “picture” if he could.

If a student’s nerves, stamina, and mental capacity survived and he maintained the picture during the final evaluation at the end of the course, he would be certified as a developmental controller and be sent back to his home facility.  There, everything would start all over again, this time memorizing his home facility’s actual airspace and learning its particularities.  The whole training program was structured to last four years, after which he/she, if successful, would be promoted to “FPL”, or a Full Performance Level controller.  Having started government service as a GS-7 pay level developmental, the trainee would’ve gradually climbed the GS ladder to finally attain the coveted GS-13 pay level as an FPL.

As I’ve mentioned before, ATC training was the hardest thing I’ve ever had to do in my entire life; and adding to the job’s complexity factor would be a series of governmental changes in the program that would further complicate my training.

***

On a Friday, two weeks into my training at the academy I was called out of class by one of the head instructors and asked to report to the office of the supervisor of instructors.  Thinking that I’d done something that had put me in jeopardy of getting kicked out I walked down the hallway in a state of sheer terror.

I stepped into the office and was met by a female administrative assistant.

“Hi,” I said timidly.  “I’m Frank DeLeon, and I’ve been asked to report to this office.”

“Yes, Mr. DeLeon.  Have a seat and I’ll announce your arrival.”  She turned and walked into another office behind her whose door was open.  In a few seconds she stepped back out.

“He’ll see you now.”  She said cordially.

I stood and walked into the office.  A middle-aged man in a nice blue suit (all the instructors wore just shirts and ties), stood and walked around a large wooden desk with his hand extended.

“Hi, I’m John Robinson…glad to meet you Frank.  Have a seat.”  He gestured to a comfortable looking overstuffed chair set diagonally from his desk.

I sat down, too nervous to get myself too comfortable.

“First off,” he started, “you’ve done nothing wrong so don’t be concerned about that.”

“Oh, OK.”  I said, a little relieved.

“But it’s come to my attention that you may be able to help us out with a little problem.”

“Well, I’ll try.”

“You share an apartment with a guy named Bill—is that right?”

“Uh, yes that’s right.”

“Have you noticed anything strange about him?”

“Well…I’m not sure what you mean.  He’s kinda quiet and stays in his bedroom most of the time when we get back from school.”

“No, I mean…uh…hygienically.  You know, like his personal hygiene.”

“Uh…well, he doesn’t change clothes every day.  I know that.”

“To the best of your knowledge—and since you do room with him—does he shower or bathe…at all?”

I really didn’t know what to say.  Of course, I had noticed that for two weeks the solitary bar of Dove soap had remained untouched on one corner of the tub, while I was already on my second bar of Dial.  But, I felt uncomfortable discussing someone’s hygiene problem—especially a fellow student’s.

“Well, to tell you the truth I haven’t seen him use the shower since we moved in together.”

“OK.  Let me ask you this.  Do you drive in together every morning?”

“Yes.”

“And….?”

“Well, you mean does he smell?”

“Exactly.  You see, I’ve been receiving reports from my lead instructors about the state of Bill’s body…uh…odor.  It’s, I guess…repulsive.”

“OK, yes…I’ve tried not to notice, but I don’t think he changes clothes very often.  I’ve never seen him wear anything other than what he wears to school every day and a dirty T-shirt, shorts, and flip-flops he wears in the apartment.  I try not to get too close to him.  And when we drive in to school together I keep the car window open.”

“So you’ve not seen him take a shower, wash clothes, or wear anything else other than a yellow shirt and green pants, right?”

“Right.”

“OK, we’re going to deal with this situation today because students in his class, along with the instructors, are refusing to get close to him.  His condition is disrupting the learning environment and it’s affecting morale.  Thanks for you input, and this conversation will remain confidential.”  He stood up to shake my hand.

I quickly stood up and shook his hand.  “Thank you, sir.  I don’t know how to deal with this situation, but I guess I’ll try to talk to him today.”

“That would be great!  Thanks again.”

And with that I quickly found myself back in the hallway headed back to my class.

***

The next day, Saturday, was the day I normally set aside to do my wash.  I hadn’t talked to Bill about my meeting, nor did I broach the issue of his hygiene, but what I did do was to knock on his bedroom door just before I left for the laundromat.

“Hey Bill!”  I said loudly while rapping at the door.  “I’m about to go to the laundromat with my wash and was wondering if you wanted to come along with your wash.”

I heard some shuffling behind the door.  “Oh yeah.  Let me get my stuff together and I’ll join you.  Just a sec.”

I put my laundry basket down with its load of laundry, a small box of detergent and a bottle of bleach for my tidy whities.  “Hurry up before the place gets crowded and there’s no washers left.”

“OK, coming.”

The door opened and Bill, in his old shorts, no shirt, and flip-flops, came out carrying a large box of Tide and a small brown paper lunch bag.

“What’s that?”  I asked, surprised at what he was carrying.

“Soap!  Tide!”  He held up the box for me to see.

“No!  The bag!  What’s in the bag?”

He peered at the small bag, looked at me with a look of surprise, shrugged his shoulders and said, “My wash.”

“WHAT??  In that little bag?  A week’s worth of wash?”

“Well, I don’t have as much as you do because I don’t change my clothes every day like you like to do…but yeah, this is all I have to wash.”

I was stunned, and just stood there for a few seconds.  Finally, I picked up my basket and headed for the door.  “When we get back you and I are going to have a long talk!”  I said, walking out the door.

Later that afternoon I told Bill about my visit to the supervisor’s office.  I expressed my shame and embarrassment for being asked to discuss my roommate’s hygiene and threatened to move out unless he made some drastic changes.

Surprisingly, he took the butt chewing quite well, actually apologizing for his conduct, and promised to improve.  He blamed everything on his wife’s absence.  “You see,” he said, “she’s the one who always reminds me to shower and put on deodorant.  She wanted me to bring a lot of clothes, but I refused, just promising that I’d buy new stuff down here.  I guess I’ve just gotten a bit lazy.  But look, I’ll go shopping this afternoon and buy some clothes with the money she gave me.  OK?  And I promise to take a shower every day.”

It felt weird listening to a grown man—a former Naval aviator—promise me that he would start practicing minimal hygiene.

***

Later that evening, I made my almost daily call to Kaz and was anxious to share the adventures I’d been having with Bill.  But before I got a chance to say much she broke down crying and told me suddenly that she was not getting along with my mom.

It had started when she decided to lend a hand in the kitchen and attempted to defrost mom’s freezer.  According to her, mom had accused her of trying to take over the household by showing her up and doing all the housework.  Mom had abruptly ordered Kaz out of the kitchen and told her to just stay in her room.

I was brokenhearted and disappointed to learn that mom had again shown her bad side and had started treating Kaz in much the same manner as she had treated Sharon those many years ago.

To be continued…

New Horizons – Part One

New Horizons – Part One

Thanksgiving 1968

As the fall season of 1968 began to wither and wane, the ever-shortening autumn days offered up a rapidly changing spell of wildly diverse weather.  On the best days, cold frosty crisp mornings usually gave in to pleasantly bright, warm and windy afternoons; while others dawned to a thick gray and mottled low overcast sky that blocked the sun’s best efforts to burn through and warm the ever-cooling Central Texas landscape.  On the worst days, instead of experiencing the past summer’s frequent and frighteningly vicious hail-filled black and green super-thunderstorms, endless sheets of cold swirling and bone-chilling drizzle drifted in from the north and made even the shortest walk unpleasant, freeway driving deathly treacherous, and VFR flying all but impossible.

The day I’d flown to Austin for my private pilot certification, I had been fortunate to have experienced one of those cool and sunny days.  After signing off my log book, my check pilot, Jack Webb, shook my hand, and walked me back out to my airplane.  Patting me on the back, he cautioned me not to let my certification go to my head—reminding me that I was still a very inexperienced pilot.  “Get back in the air as soon as you can,” he’d cautioned.  “And continue to practice all those things that your flight instructor taught you.  Right now, your worst enemy is complacency, and complacency kills.”

As I rotated my Cherokee off the runway, putting it in a steep climb and pointing the nose in the direction of Bergstrom, I promised myself that I’d keep flying as much as I could to maintain and improve on my skills.

Just as I was getting comfortable I remembered that the last instructions I’d received from the tower were to: “…depart and maintain runway heading…”  Since the active runway was pointed to the north, and Bergstrom was to the south, I had started, without further thought, a gentle fifteen-degree right turn to swing the plane around to a southerly heading as soon as I broke ground.  As I passed through five hundred feet I was no longer on a runway heading—instead I was passing through a heading of zero-three-zero—a northeast heading.  I reached for the radio’s mike, which was sitting on the seat between my legs, to quickly advise the tower of the heading I was passing through and to ask for permission to continue my right turn.

“Austin Tower, Cherokee 8438 Romeo, request right turn to heading one-eight-zero, direct Bergstrom…”

“Cherokee 8438 Romeo, be advised you have departing traffic behind you, now at five o’clock and less than a mile, closing fast—two Navy A-7’s, in a right turn formation climb.  Your last instructions were to remain runway heading!  Say heading and altitude immediately!”

“Roger, now passing through zero-three-five, one-thousand-two-hundred climbing to four-thousand five-hundred VFR to Bergstrom…”

“ROGER, turn left immediately and stop climb…!!”

Startled, I began a panicked uncoordinated left turn back to a north heading and pushed the nose down when, about fifty feet off my right wing—in a flash of brown and green camouflage—the largest Navy fighter jet I had ever seen zoomed by.  I instinctively ducked my head and hunched my shoulders…waiting for the impact that thankfully never happened.  Before I could think another thought, the second brown and green A7 blew by in a steep right bank even closer than the first—its landing gear doors open and the still-spinning wheels retracting.  Blue-black jet exhaust poured out of its tail pipe, and I could see the orange and blue flame extending back ten feet as the pilot engaged the jet’s after-burner.

“…Uh…November 8438 Romeo, I…uh…have the traffic in sight…”  I said, trying to mask my panic.

“Roger…” the tower answered sarcastically.  “I’ll bet you do.  Continue left turn to a northerly heading to avoid jet wake turbulence.”

Still rattled by the near mid-air collision I coordinated my left turn, put the radio mike back up to my lips and said softly, “Austin tower, I appear to be clear of the traffic now, can I continue my right turn direct Bergstrom and climb to four-thousand five-hundred VFR?”

“November 8438 Romeo, you can do whatever you want now.  Just get out of my airspace…”

“Roger…”  I said, completely humiliated.

***

Not fifteen minutes after my check-pilot had caution me not to get complacent, I had done just that—ignoring the tower’s instructions to maintain runway heading—and almost caused a fatal mid-air collision.  Further, I had violated an ATC instruction and would probably have an inflight violation report waiting for me back at Bergstrom.

Shaken, and shaking, I scanned my instrument cluster to make sure that everything was operating normally, and carefully continued my VFR climb up to four thousand five hundred feet and my shallow turn to a south-southwest heading.  My error on departure was a bitter lesson that I would carry with me for the rest of my flying career, but sadly, it would not be the last.

Back at the Bergstrom Aero Club, I reserved my plane for several one-hour flight blocks during the next five days, intent on keeping my flying skills as sharp as possible.  On the flight back from Austin I decided that, weather permitting, I would plan a flying trip home to Houston with my wife the following week to visit my parents on Thanksgiving Day.

As luck would have it, a messy, wet, cold front swept through Austin for the next two days, effectively grounding me.  The first clear day I was back in the air practicing my long-range navigation and concentrating on keeping the plane straight and level for Kaz’s comfort.

We drove up to the Bergstrom Aero Club in our little red sports car at around eight in the morning.  Although Kaz had visited the base several times, this was the first time she’d been at the aero club.  We walked into the small building and as luck would have it my flight instructor, Marshall Norgaard was there.  Since we were planning to spend the day in Houston visiting my folks on Thanksgiving we were dressed to the nines—me in a pair of dark brown slacks, pale yellow shirt, tan wool sports jacket and a paisley tie, and Kaz in a pretty light grey dress, white sweater, and dark grey patent leather pumps.

I introduced my wife to Marshall and several other officers and flight students and told them we where we were heading when they curiously asked.  Everyone seemed impressed with Kaz’s beauty and her shy mannerisms.

In less than an hour I had completed my preflight inspection and we were taxiing out to the active runway.  Kaz was noticeably nervous, this being her second flight ever since we’d flown from Okinawa to the United States, but the size—or rather, the lack thereof—of our plane, was her main concern.

“It’s so small!  And a little noisy too…” she said, a little tremble in her voice.

“As soon as we’re airborne you won’t even notice the size anymore.  It’ll be like riding in our car, except with less bumps.  The weather forecast for our flight to Houston said calm southwesterly winds at altitude, so it’ll be fine.”

As I applied full power to the little 150-horsepower Lycoming engine, I noticed Kaz hands wrapped tightly around each other resting stiffly in her lap.  In just a few minutes we were cruising at five thousand five hundred feet and I had trimmed the aircraft and leaned the fuel mixture for maximum performance.  The weather couldn’t have been any better and soon I noticed that Kaz was completely relaxed and taking in the brown and green beauty of the central Texas fall landscape from our perch a mile high.

After landing at Houston’s Hobby Airport, I followed the tower’s instructions and taxied to the Gulf Oil General Aviation facility.  Before leaving Austin, I had called my parents to give my father parking directions at the Gulf building, so as I neared the facility I wondered if he’d found it or if we’d have to wait.  Luckily, as I taxied to the General Aviation designated parking area I spotted his car.  After checking in and giving the attendant instructions to top off the plane’s gas tank and perform a quick engine check, Kaz and I exited the building and headed for the visitors’ parking area to greet my parents.

To my surprise, after we got into the car my parents said that we were actually going to my Aunt Janie’s house to celebrate Thanksgiving dinner.  Apparently, after my mom told my aunt about our impending visit, it had been decided that we should all get together (something that we’d never-ever done) and celebrate the holiday at her house.  It turned out to be a lot of fun, and as usual, everyone was impressed with Kaz.

Later that evening, after my dad drove us back to the airport, we paused to take some pictures by my plane before flying back to Austin.  My Aunt Janie and her husband Johnny, having also followed us back to Hobby Airport, were anxious to see what kind of airplane I was flying and proudly posed as I snapped some shots.

The flight back home was pretty non-eventful, except for the fact that I took off later than I should have and had to execute one of my very first (and completely illegal) night landings at Bergstrom.  I didn’t log the type of landing in my log book and chose not to tell anyone else about it either.  I was relieved when, after taxiing up to the Aero Club tarmac, I found that no one was in the club building to witness my illegal landing.  After gassing up the plane and securing it with wheel chocks and its wing tie-downs, I slipped the plane’s keys into the lockbox and drove us back home.

Careers—as one ends, a new one beckons

On Friday morning, December 13, 1968, I walked into the administration building and submitted my final papers for separation from the U.S. Air Force.  Because my actual date of separation fell on Sunday, I was allowed to be processed out two days early.  Although technically still in the Air Force for two more days, when I exited the building two hours later I was as much of a civilian as I could be.

I drove back to my duty building to say goodbye to Sergeant Kendall and my old crew, and while there was reminded by all that I had ninety days to change my mind and re-enlist with no penalty to my rank or my time in grade.  While secretly harboring a nugget of doubt deep in my gut about my future, I hardily laughed off everyone’s prediction that I would fail civilian life and would soon be back.  I reminded them that if I somehow lost my mind and did decide to re-enlist, my next, and probably immediate, assignment would be to spend a year of remote duty at Kotzebue, Alaska.  That frightening thought itself was more than enough to forever keep me out of any type of military uniform.

Taking the weekend off from the shoe store, Kaz and I splurged a bit and celebrated my new civilian status by going out to dinner and a movie.  But, because I hadn’t heard anything from the FAA, and didn’t know if I ever would, I promised Mr. Sims that I’d start back full time selling shoes on Monday.

My transition from full-time military man, part-time shoe salesman, and fledgling airplane pilot to normal civilian life was in some ways easier than I thought it would be, but more difficult in others.  After getting through the holidays I started 1969 by taking on a full-time schedule at the shoe store in early January.  One thing I soon I quickly discovered was that the typical female shoe shopper literally goes into hibernation for the entire month of January, then slowly renews her hunt for shoes in time for St. Valentine’s Day celebration, and for Easter Sunday shoes again in early February.

Because of the lull in foot traffic coming into the store Mr. Sims assigned us mundane, and extremely boring, “make-work” duties to perform.  Things like straightening up the display tables, purse racks, and accessories counters were bad, but by far the worst assignment he doled out was that of taking inventory in the badly lit back room where the new shoe stock was kept in boxes on shelves.

After a few days, and because of our hurry to get out of the store at quitting time, unsold shoes would inevitably be returned to the shelves in willy-nilly fashion and all the wrong places.  So, say later on when I would go back to look for a pair of black or gray patent leather opera pumps in a size 7D, I would typically look for them in the section that would conform with their serial number—consisting of numbers depicting their color, material and size.  Of course, if one of us, after not being able to sell that shoe previously, hastily placed that particular box in the first open slot we found and not where it actually belonged, it would be effectively lost forever.  We were forced to take more time than necessary trying to find the shoe, and more often than not, chancing the loss of a potential sale. Hence the need to regularly go through the entire store-room and re-inventory the stock.  Although necessary, it was an annoyingly mind-numbing exercise in futility.  Further, because we were stuck in the back room we lost any sales opportunity for the occasional walk-in customer.

It was during these early winter days in January and February that I hoped to be hearing from the Federal Government on the status of my application for Air Traffic Controller.  To this end, I decided to put my apartment manager, Mrs. Gentry, on lookout duty for any letter that looked official enough to have originated from the government.

Since she received the apartments’ daily mail from the carrier in a large plastic box—each individual’s mail neatly bundled with a couple of rubber bands—and placed the bundles in our personal mail slots, I asked her to look through my personal mail for that “official government” type letter.  If she were to find one she was to call me immediately at the shoe store.  I suspected that she already went through our mail anyway, so I didn’t think I was placing any extra work on her.

As luck would have it the call came from her during one of my busiest days at the store.  A few days after having completely re-arranged the stock room our foot traffic began to increase in anticipation of the upcoming Easter holiday.

That particular day in early March, around 12:30PM, as I was waiting on five customers all at one time, I heard my name being called out by one of the cashiers.  I looked around, as I hurried to the stock room to retrieve a pair of white fabric high-heeled pumps (suitable for dyeing to a nice pale aqua-green tint), and saw the cashier waving the receiver from our two pay phones in my direction.

“For me?”  I silently mouthed and pointed to myself over the din of excited women vying for my attention.

“Yes!”  She mouthed back.

I wondered why Kaz would be calling me at this time and turning away from the direction of the stock room—I headed for the cash register counter.

“Hello?”  I asked breathlessly into the receiver.

“Mr. DeLeón?”  The voice did not belong to my wife but sounded vaguely familiar.

“Yes?”

“Hey, this is Mrs. Gentry…you know…the apartment manager.”

“Oh!  Yes!”

“Anyway, I just got the mail…and while looking through it…I mean like you asked me to do…I see that you got a letter from a Department of Transportation in Washington, D.C.”

“Oh…”  I said, my mind beginning to spin.  “What does it say?”

“Oh well, I didn’t open the letter…oh no, I’d never do that.  But you said to call you if something looked official.  And this really does look like that.”

“OK, go ahead and open it and tell me what it says.”

“Are you sure, Mr. DeLeón?  I mean, I think it’s a Federal offense to open someone else’s mail…especially something from the government.”

“Yes, I’m giving you permission to open the letter and read to me what it says.  OK?”

“Oh, well sure…OK.  Just a minute.”

My heart was beating rapidly, and I think I had momentarily forgotten how to breathe.  As I looked worriedly over my shoulder to see if my customers were still in place I spied Mr. Sims rapidly heading in my direction.

“Hey, what’re you doing on the phone?”  He said, a bit annoyed.  “There’s money to be made!”  And he snapped his fingers in my face.  “Money.  Sell.  Money!  Let’s go!”  (snap, snap, snap).

“OK, yeah I know.  But this is a very important call and I’m almost done!”  I said, just as annoyed as he was.

“Uh, Mr. DeLeón?”  Mrs. Gentry said.

“Yes?”

“OK, I’m gonna read this to you.  I think it’s good news.  Is that OK?”

“Yes, please hurry.”

“OK…it’s addressed to you and starts out this way: ‘We are pleased to inform you that based on your placement on the ATC Register, you have been selected as a GS-7 Developmental Air Traffic Controller.  If you wish to accept this position please contact the Houston Air Route Traffic Control Center, located at 16600 JFK Boulevard, Houston, Texas, by calling the number at the bottom of this letter within the next seven days.’ You want me to go on?”

“Uh…no…not right now.  Wait!  Does it have a start date?”

“Let’s see.  Yes, it does!  It says:  ‘proposed employment start date is 28 March 1969.’

“OK, thanks.  Oh, I just want to ask you seriously: you are really reading from a letter I got, right?  Because if you’re playing a joke on me and the letter is not for real it’s going to cost me my job here at the shoe store.”

“Oh no, Mr. DeLeón!  I would never do that.  The letter is real.”

“Alright, thanks again.”  I hung up and took a deep breath.

I handed the receiver to the cashier and turned to find Mr. Sims.  I saw that he’d had scurried off to greet another group of walk-in customers and was attempting to point them in the direction of one of the salesmen.  Although I was anxious to tell him what I’d been waiting to say for a couple of months, I thought better of it at that moment and decided that perhaps I should deal with the bevy of customers on which I’d been waiting on before receiving the call.

Walking over to the customer nearest to me, a middle-aged red-head whose feet had certainly seen better days.

“OK, I’m sorry for the delay but…”

“Do you have these cute sandals in a 6B?”  She asked breathlessly as she handed me the 8D’s which had fit her bunion-twisted feet just fine.

“I probably do, but two problems–…” I said boldly.  “First, it would be a waste of time for both of us for me to go find these in a 6B because they’d never fit you.  Secondly, I’m going to direct you to that gentleman in the nice looking light gray suit (Eddie).  He’ll be serving you from now on because, well, I just quit my job.  Excuse me.”  I turned and headed to my next customer, leaving her wide-eyed, and mouth agape, the sandal dangling from her fingers.

Four customers later and I was free.  Looking away from the last one, a confused teen who’d been looking to buy just the right shoe for her upcoming gig as bridesmaid for her best friend’s wedding, I spotted Mr. Sims having an animated conversation with the cashier who’d handed me the phone.

“Mr. Sims?”  I asked, tapping him on the shoulder.  “Can I have a word, please?”

“Frank!  What are you doing here?  You need to be dealing with your ups (customers) instead of taking phone calls or talking to me.  I was just telling her (the now cow-eyed cashier) that from now on she is never to interrupt a salesman with phone calls.  I don’t care if your mother died, you will complete your sales duties before you talk on the phone!”

Instead of feeling reprimanded I felt a wave of exhilaration and relief.  He just made it that much easier for me to tell him what I needed to.

“Great!”  I said.  “So, here’s your sales receipt book back,” I handed him the little sales book on which we recorded each shoe sale, “and you can officially show me off duty forever.  As of now, Mr. Sims, I am quitting my job.  Thanks for teaching me the shoe business but I now need to move on!”

He looked up at me—the upper right side of his mustachioed lip quivering slightly—and sputtered: “What?  What do you think you’re doing?  You’ve got…got…at least four or five ladies that you’re waiting on now!  What do you mean, you’re quitting?  You can’t do that now!  Get back on the floor!”

“OK, Mr. Sims.  That phone call was to advise me that I’ve been hired by the Federal Aviation Administration as an air traffic controller.  I’m to report for duty in Houston by the end of this month—and, I plan to accept their offer.”

His face went all at once from annoyance and anger to a quizzical, puppy-dog look complete with a faint head-cock.  “Wait, you mean you’re gonna just walk out with all these customers in the store?”

“Yes, I’m afraid so.  If you want, you can send my last check to the address you have on file.  If I’m not there I’m sure the post office will forward it to my next address.”

His features now took on a look of resignation with a touch of understanding.  “OK, I see you’re serious, but can we talk back here in the store room?”

I had earlier decided that when the moment came for me to quit I was just going to walk out; but at the moment I thought that, well…after all this job had kept me and Kaz above water so maybe he deserved a little respect.  “Sure, I just need to go to tell my wife the good news and start making plans for our upcoming move.”  I followed him into the back storeroom.

“Well, Frank…” he started out, “it’s no secret that you’ve become one the best salesmen I’ve ever had…and well, in that regard this news kind of caught me off guard.”

“I’m sorry Mr. Sims, but I did tell you some time back that I had applied to the FAA for a job.”

“Yes, you did.  But I never thought you were really serious about that given the energy and your dedication to the job you did here.  Quite frankly, I was planning to discuss with you an upcoming position as assistant manager for a new store that’s going up in that new mall across the freeway and opening up next year.  In fact, I’ve sent in your name in to corporate in Chicago for consideration—with a very strong recommendation from me.  You’re a shoo-in for that job.”

For a few seconds I felt a bit sorry for Mr. Sims as I had never realized that he was considering a promotion for me.  “Mr. Sims, I really don’t know what to say.  I’m flattered and completely surprised at what you just told me about the new store, but I’ve made up my mind.  You know my first love is aviation, so I just think this would be a great fit for me.”

“But Frank.  Don’t you see what’s going to happen to you?”  The FAA is a giant bureaucracy and they don’t give a crap about the individual.  They’re going to stick you in some tower in a cornfield in the middle of Iowa somewhere and forget about you.  Our company, on the other hand, needs dedicated and intelligent people like you, and we’re willing to reward you for your talent and loyalty.  I can almost guarantee you that you’ll be managing your own shoe store in a couple of years and making at least $10,000 a year!  The FAA’s not going to pay you that kind of money, believe me!”

Not having any kind of counter-argument, I just took a deep breath and said, “I admit that I’m leaping into a job that I really don’t know too much about.  But it’s what I want to do.  And if it keeps me close to airplanes and aviation then I think I’ll be happy.  I appreciate what you’ve done for me, but my mind is really made up.  Thank you for everything but I just have to do this.”  And with that I shook his hand, stood up and headed out onto the sales floor.

I walked over to the cashier, who was still in a bit of shock, and handed her my stack of sales receipts, each representing every pair of shoes and each purse I’d sold that morning.  “Tally me out,” I said, “and make sure my last pay check is sent to my present address.  Thanks, and goodbye.”

As I turned and headed towards the front door, one of the customers who I’d sent to Eddie, an attractive, tall fortyish blond, stopped me as she stepped away from the cash register.

“So,” she said, “you said you were quitting today is that right?”

“Yes ma’am.  I’m heading out as we speak.”

“Why are you quitting, if I may ask.”

“Well, I got a new job.”

“Doing what?”

“I’m going to train to be an air traffic controller, ma’am.  Down in Houston.”

“Really!  Do you know anything about doing that, or have you done that before?”

“No ma’am I haven’t done any work as an air traffic controller, but I’m a private pilot, so maybe that’ll help me.”

“I’m sure it will.  Alright honey, good for you!  I don’t really know you, but you’ve sold me a few pairs of shoes in the past and I always thought you were very thoughtful and polite.  I’m sure you’re going to be very successful.”

“Thank you for saying that.  I appreciate it very much.”

“Good luck and come back to Austin and let us know how you do.”

“Uh, ok…sure.  Bye.”  And with that I walked out through the glass doors of Bakers Shoe Store in Austin, Texas for the last time—and, never to return.

***

My first stop after stepping out into the cool and humid Austin afternoon was to head over to Mervyn’s to tell Kaz the good news.  Of course, since she was working the buffet, and since they were still serving lunch, it took a while for her to slip out for a couple of minutes.

“Hey!” She said, wiping her hands on a dish cloth and looking a little surprised.  “What are you doing here?  Not busy at the store?”

“Oh yeah, very busy!”  I said, suppressing a little Cheshire catlike smile.  “But, I decided to quit!”

“Quit?  Quit what?”

“My job!”

“What you mean, ‘you quit your job?’  How can you quit your job?  You crazy?”  Her voice easily carried over the din of more than a hundred-people eating and talking and the scraping of metal spoons on flat pans filled with mashed potatoes, green beans and gravy.  A few customers, less interested in their food, looked up.

“Nope!  I just got hired by the FAA!”  I said, motioning her to lower her voice.

“What you mean?”

“I mean, I’m going to train to be an air traffic controller!”

“Ahh…you sure?  How you know this?”  Her volume shot back up to near yell.

“Well.”  I said easing closer to her and lowering my voice a decibel or two. “I got a letter today from the Department of Transportation in Washington, D.C., telling me I was hired.”

“Really?  Show me letter!”  She cocked her head in a little bit of a mock challenge mode.

“Well, I don’t have it with me.  But you remember I asked our apartment manager to be on the lookout for an official-type letter—so she called me a while ago and read the letter to me.  I’m to report on March 28th.”

“Report? Report to who?

“Uh, well I have to call first to accept the offer, but I’m supposed to report to the Air Route Traffic Control Center in Houston for training on the 28th.  I’m on my way home right now to see the letter myself and make the call.”

“I hope apartment manager not playing some kind of trick on you.”

“Kaz, you know how serious she always is.  I doubt that it’s a trick.”

A louder than normal scraping sound came from the buffet line and she looked over her shoulder to see that the fried chicken pan was just a few pieces short of being empty.  “OK, look I got to go fill chicken pan, then I have to relieve cashier.  You go home and call that Houston place and make sure this is no trick.  If it is, you need to go back to work!”  Her brows arched worriedly.

“OK.”  I gave her a quick peck on the lips and hurried out into the parking lot.

Although it was a short drive from the mall to our apartment, less than two minutes, it seemed like an eternity.  I jumped from my car and walked hurriedly to the apartment manager’s office.  Before I got to the door, it opened, and Mrs. Gentry stepped out holding a long business envelope.  The bold dark blue printing on the return address corner all but jumped out at me, and I recall seeing just two words: “DEPARTMENT…TRANSPORTATION”.  And with that I knew my life had just changed.

Goodbye Austin, Hello Houston

Within two days of receiving the letter both Kaz and I had quit our jobs and had begun the arduous job of figuring out how to gather all of our belongings to make the move to Houston.  Since we only had the little red Toyota sports car and I was the only one who knew how to drive, I worried that it was going to be a challenge, both financially and logistically, to make the move to Houston.

When I had called the air traffic control center to accept the position I had inquired about the length of training.  I was very surprised when I was told that I would only be at that facility for one day before being re-assigned to the Federal Aviation Administration’s training facility in Oklahoma City.  That one day was an orientation day for the new employee to fill out paperwork and get familiar with the building layout.  When I began to ask one too many questions the lady on the phone bluntly told me that I would be given all the information I needed during my short stay in Houston.  All she was authorized to do was to record my acceptance for the position, but she did offer me some advice:

“Since you don’t live in Houston right now I would suggest that you make the trip here, go through the orientation, and get information that’s going to help you financially, before you cancel your lease there in Austin.  You can bring your wife on the trip, but she’ll be stuck in some hotel all day long while you’re in orientation, so I would suggest she stay there in Austin.”

“Oh!  OK, actually my parents live in Houston, so I think I’ll bring her along and we can both stay there.  And since the orientation is on Friday I can spend the weekend with them.”

“Sure, that would certainly work.  You’re lucky you have family in Houston.  Most of our ATC candidates are from out of town and have to stay in hotels.  Also, if you’re from out of town you can expect to receive a moving allowance to help you settle your family down here in Houston.  But you’ll get all that information on Friday.”

That turned out to be the perfect solution, and Kaz and I began making plans for the trip down.  As far as my parents were concerned they seemed to be elated that not only would I be working in Houston, but we would be staying with them for the week…or maybe longer.  Since I still remembered how “well” my mom and Sharon had gotten along those many years ago, I wasn’t as excited, and in truth was a bit apprehensive.  But Kaz, in her usual upbeat mood, seemed to really be looking forward to the visit.

Since we had both already quit our jobs, and after calling my mother to give her the good news, we decided to leave a few days early and spend a week with my folks.  Our car was so small it wasn’t practical to take suitcases, so we piled our clothes in layers in the tiny trunk hoping that we’d have enough to last out the week.  We left for Houston early in the morning and the trip was uneventful as we drove casually enjoying the one-hundred-eighty-mile drive with plenty of stops along the way.

As we cruised eastbound, the gently rolling slopes and valleys of the gorgeous Texas hill country slowly flattened out and gave way to wide and deep patches of freshly blooming Texas bluebonnets on either side of the highway.  Kaz was mesmerized with the windblown waves of purple stretching almost as far as the eye could see, and several times made mention of wanting to just stop and walk amongst the colorful blanket of purple and green.

Soon, the landscape began to give way to seemingly never-ending fields of young corn stalks, gray and white cotton plants and sorghum, all separated by low-lying hedgerows of windbreaks and guarded by farm houses of every size, shape and color.  As our little car’s AM radio began to pick up static-filled Houston stations the croplands thinned out and hundreds of black hammer-like oil pumps, rhythmically sweeping their swan-like heads first up to the heavens then back earthward again, took their place.  Gradually, the cool dry air’s flowered aroma took on the weighty smell of raw petrol and swirled into the cabin laden with the occasional salty hint of the nearby Texas Gulf.

The closer we got to Houston the highway’s traffic load increased exponentially, and before we knew it the city’s growing skyline began to appear in the horizon.  My mind started to buzz with the vacuity of the unknown and the angst of again spending time with my parents.  I agonized silently and wondered if they would, as before, insist that we accompany them to their church and pondered how they’d take it when I refused.  Meanwhile, as Kaz curiously marveled at the enormity of Houston’s rapidly growing maze of freeways, a heavy seed of uneasiness and discomfort began to grow deep in my gut.

Turning right off of Griggs Road and onto Grace Lane, our little red car finally crunched onto my parent’s shell and gravel driveway.  Before we came to a full stop behind my dad’s aging dark blue Ford, my mother was already on the small porch of the faded white frame house, waving hysterically—her face a picture of pure joy and genuine euphoria.  Behind her, my dad, dressed in a washed-out wife-beater and floppy khaki pants, stood, hands on hips, smiling stoically.  Kaz let out a small squeal of happiness and said, “Oh, look at your mom!  She so happy to see us!”

“Yes, it seems so, doesn’t it?” I said, silently trying to swallow the sudden tightness in my throat.

To be continued…

Texas – Part Five

Texas – Part Five

Fortunes, Misfortunes, and Strokes of Luck

In 1968 the nation was on fire.  The military was in the death grip of a vicious and deadly war in Vietnam, while here at home countless violent protests and demonstrations were decimating college campuses and several large cities.  Lyndon Baines Johnson, finally beaten down by the incessant drumbeat of rebellion to his policies and disloyalty in his own administration, announced that he would not seek, nor would he accept, his party’s nomination for reelection.

In late August, amidst a plethora of devastatingly destructive and violent anti-war and civil rights demonstrations in some large cities, the Democrat Party held their National Convention in Chicago.  Mayor Richard Daly, determined that his city would not fall prey to the violence and destruction that had descended on other big cities like New York and Los Angeles, deployed 12,000 city police and 15,000 state and federal officers to maintain order on the streets in and around the convention center.

Inevitably, within a few hours thousands of protestors marching in support of Senator Eugene McCarthy, a committed anti-war presidential candidate—while at the same time demanding the complete withdrawal of U.S. troops from Vietnam—clashed with a multitude of baton-swinging and teargas-lobbing law enforcement officers.  Total chaos quickly ensued.  In the melee, not only were the demonstrators severely beaten and gassed, but so were newsmen and medical personnel sent there to tend to the injured.

Inside the hall it was not much better.  Political supporters of Senator McCarthy lodged a challenge against the faction supporting the war.  The loud and raucous debate between the two groups suddenly intensified and quickly spiraled out of control.  Fistfights broke out and delegates and reporters were knocked to the convention floor.  Mayor Daly, a staunch supporter of the war, stood and yelled obscenities in the direction of the dais and had to be physically restrained by his group of burly bodyguards.

Eventually order was restored and the delegates committed to then Vice-President Hubert Humphrey—whose platform was to maintain the status-quo—won out.  He went on to win the Democrat nomination for president and ran unsuccessfully against the Republican candidate, Richard Nixon.

All of this turmoil, including the bloody war being waged overseas and claiming dozens of active duty personnel of all services on a daily basis, was completely lost on…well, me.  I don’t recall ever worrying or losing a minute of sleep about suddenly receiving orders sending me to some exploding airbase in Vietnam, or being called up and shipped out to quell a riot in some flaming city like Philadelphia or Dallas.

Thinking back on those days I recall that the three main areas of concern on my mind were, (1) taking and passing the Civil Service Air Traffic Controller Exam (which I was scheduled to take in July); (2) taking and passing my Single Engine Land Private Pilot Exam; and, (3) selling enough shoes to finance my flying activities.

To me, the Vietnam War, to which I had lost some of my dearest and most beloved friends, was nothing more than annoying background noise in the daily hub-bub of my otherwise complicated life.  During my duty days at Bergstrom, when not building or striking tents and radar equipment or policing up cigarette butts and chewing gum wrappers, all my crew could talk about was how so-and-so just got orders to go to Danang, or what they would do if one of them got called up to go to ‘Nam.  ‘Man, I would just shit if I got those orders…’ seemed to be the most popular response among my crew—immediately eliciting vacant-eyed head-nodding and a few random ‘fucks’ here and there.

“How ‘bout you, Sarge?” they would occasionally ask me.  “What the fuck would you do if you got orders to go to ‘Nam?”

“I don’t have time to go to ‘Nam or anywhere else,” I would casually respond.  “Too fucking busy working and flying.  Besides, I get out in December.  Last I heard they ain’t sending short-timers over there.”

“Shit, sarge, you’re one lucky bastard.  Plus, you ain’t no lifer, are you?”

I put down my flight training manual, which I carried with me in spite of being ordered not to. “Well, considering the Air Force has been poking me with the short end of the stick for almost eight years, I think the smartest thing I can do is to get out and seek my fortune elsewhere.”

“Fuck, you got it made, Sarge.  In a few months, you gonna be flying some cool airliner and making all kinds of money while most of us are gonna be getting blown up in ‘Nam.  Fuck.”

“Nobody here is going to ‘Nam.  By the time the Air Force figures out who we are and where we’re at, we’ll all be civilians.  Take my word for it.”

***

 I finally made that phone call to the Federal Aviation Administration at the Austin Airport in early July, and spoke to a nice lady who claimed that she didn’t have the slightest idea how to go about getting hired to be an air traffic controller.  She instead suggested that I call the Civil Service Commission and ask them.  After asking for and getting the number, I hung up and did just that.

When I made that next phone call I was told that it just so happened that the FAA had just opened up testing for several options within the air traffic control (ATC) field, and that they (the Civil Service Commission) were presently administering entrance exams for various ATC options.  I was then asked if I was interested in taking the ATC exam.  I immediately said yes.

After giving my name, address, and social security number, I was told that within a few days I would be receiving a series of forms in the mail.  Once they received the completed forms I would be notified of the next examination date.  Before I terminated the call, I asked if there was something I should study to prepare myself for the exam.  I was told that it would be better if I came to take the exam totally unprepared.

The exam lasted eight hours: four hours in the morning, then thirty minutes for lunch, followed by another four-hour session in the afternoon.  We were given no other breaks except individual bathroom breaks.  There were about thirty people taking the test, and as was typical for the era we were all male.  The test was divided into four parts—three of which seemed to me to contain questions of a psychological nature.

For example, one question in the first section asked which newspaper headline would interest me the most:  one announcing a national rise in interest rates, or one stating that a mad, rapist killer was on the loose.  I chose the gory headline, of course.  All of the questions were in a hypothetical format, such as—if this or that happened to you or a loved one what would your response/action/feelings be?

Another section tested one’s ability to predict logical number and/or letter patterns—such as: 1-2-3-4//1-2-3-4-5//1-2-3-4-5-(fill in the next logical number).  Of course, the sequences were much more complex, consisting of series of numbers, letters, and shapes.  We were also shown drawings of three dimensional shapes such as cubes, triangles, and circles, and were asked to pick the correct depiction of its two-dimensional shape.

The third section consisted of simple time and distance problems.  I assumed this section had more to do with air traffic control than any of the others.  The last section was made up of several nonsensical narratives.  Following those there were about twenty true-false, and multiple-choice questions, asking for the reader’s interpretation of the foregoing narratives.  Since I hadn’t really understood what the narratives were talking about I was at a loss on how to answer the questions.  Ultimately, I decided to answer each question with the first thing that popped into my head.

By the time we were done with the exam and released around five in the evening I was mentally exhausted.  My head was spinning and I actually thought about stopping somewhere and imbibing in a few adult beverages before heading home.  But I had promised Mr. Sims that regardless of what time the exam was over, I would come in and work at the shoe store.

The results of my ATC Exam came by mail about two weeks later from the Civil Service.  I had scored a 95 percentile, plus five points added for being a veteran (since I was still in active service they took into consideration my first four-year enlistment) for a final score of 100 percentile.

The accompanying letter advised that my name had been placed on the Air Traffic Control Register as a potential selectee for the Flight Service Station option.  On my test day we had been briefed that the Air Traffic field consisted of three options:  (1) Tower/Approach, (2) Enroute Center, and (3) Flight Service Station.  If our test scores were successful, our names would be placed on one of the registers representing each option.  The higher the test score, the lower our names would go into the sequence—and that was a good thing, as the FAA drew potential candidate names from the bottom of the list.

Also, our names would not necessarily be placed onto the individual registers according to our scores, but according to the agency’s current need.  Thus, if the FAA needed more employees in the Enroute option rather than the Flight Service option, then the name and score would be entered into that option.  So basically, it was a crap shoot.

When I read that I’d been placed on the Flight Service Station register (FSS) I was perfectly happy.  That career field consisted of providing pilots with preflight weather briefings, airport information, and disseminating NOTAMs (Notice to Airmen), and advising of air traffic hazards along routes of flight.  What they didn’t do was actively control air traffic; that is, assign routes, altitudes and control flights via radar.  And I was just fine with that.

As a fledgling pilot, I had experienced more face time with Flight Service personnel at the various airports I’d flown into than with the air traffic controllers in the towers.  It was there that I filed my VFR flight plans and got my weather briefings, so I was thoroughly familiar with what the FSS did and not so sure what the tower controller did when they weren’t barking at me on the radio.  So in that regard I was comfortable that, if/when my name came up and I was hired, I would be able to do the job.

The letter also said that the starting salary grade of an FSS employee was as a GS-6 (Government Scale 6).  Although I wasn’t sure what that meant exactly, what I was sure about was that it had to mean that I’d be earning more money than what I was earning in the Air Force.

While the receipt of the letter from the Civil Service was a relief to me and Kaz, I knew that it was not a guarantee of future employment by the FAA.  There were just too many variables.  First, there had to be existing vacancies in the career field that I’d been placed in; second, since names for vacancies were selected from the bottom up, and new names with higher scores were continually being added to the bottom of the list, there was always a chance that my name would never get low enough on the list to be picked.

Knowing that the odds of my being selected anytime soon were long, I comforted myself with the knowledge that I still had about five months left in my current enlistment anyway.  If somehow the FAA appointment didn’t come through I would go on with my flight training—with the hope that I could continue to fund it by working long hours at the shoe store.

Over coffee one morning I happened to mention my taking the FAA exam to Sergeant Kent.  At first, he seemed a bit shocked—carefully putting his coffee mug down on the steel-topped table before coaxing a fresh Marlboro out of a half-empty pack with a few taps on the heel of his hand.

“FAA ATC test, huh?” he asked, striking a small wooden match and lighting the cigarette bouncing between his lips as he spoke.  “And here I was thinking, (long drag)…you were going to re-enlist so you could continue to take your flying lessons and maybe sew another stripe on your sleeve.  You’re due for a nice promotion to technical sergeant soon.”  He leaned back in his squeaky armless office chair and tilting his head back blew a billowing cloud of gray-white smoke up into the dead air of our tin-roofed building.

“Well, no.  I know we haven’t talked about it too much, but after what the Air Force has done—or not done—for me, I don’t see much of a future staying in.”

He chuckled, tapping his cigarette’s gray ash into the small silver ashtray already filled with this morning’s butts.  “Well, to me it looks like the Air Force has done quite a bit for you already.  I doubt the shoe store would let you take off every day to get the amount of flying time that you’ve accumulate for the last few months…and continues to do so.”

“Yes, you’re right.  Let’s just say a career in the Air Force just doesn’t fit into my future plans.”

Since Sergeant Kent was what the grunts on my crew would describe as a “lifer”, I decided that that was no way I could ever make him understand what I’d gone through for the last eight years, or what I envisioned my future to be.  I looked at my watch and decided that it was time for me to gather up my crew and take our first morning walk around the building in our never-ending hunt for stray gum wrappers and discarded cigarette butts.

***

The second letter from the Civil Service Commission arrived in late September.  As I looked at the white envelope, my name and address peeking out from the clear cellophane window, I wondered if I could’ve been selected for assignment so soon.  If so, this was going to be a disaster.  I was still in the service and not scheduled for discharge for another ninety days, and there was no way I could accept a position now.  Maybe if they delayed my assignment for another three months, I thought hopefully, and even then, it would be a bit dicey—depending, of course, on where the Flight Service Station for which I’d been selected was located.  Anywhere in Texas would probably work, but what if the assignment was out of state—way out of state?  The back of my quickly drying tongue began to sense the bitter taste of bile.

“Well?  Are you going to open it to see what it says?” Kaz’s inpatient voice startled me.

“Huh?  Oh…sure…yeah.  Let me see what it says.”  I hastily tore open the end of the envelope and carefully pulled out the folded stationary.

As I read the first few lines my heart sunk.  The news was worse than I’d imagined.  In part, it read:

“…and as a result of our recent reassessment and revision of the current Federal Aviation Administration’s Air Traffic Controllers’ Placement Examination, we have readjusted your final score of 95% (which includes an award of 5 points for your military service), to 105%, again including the 5 point military veteran bonus.

“Because of your readjusted score, your name has been removed from the Flight Service Station Specialist Option register (FSSS), and placed on the Air Traffic Control Specialist Option (ATCS) register.

“Please note that the Agency will select candidates for ATCS positions based on the numerical score achieved on their exams.  Thus, candidates with higher ranking scores will be eligible to be selected before those with lower scores.  To improve your chances of being selected earlier you may reconsider retaking the exam.

“Congratulations, and we wish you success in your future endeavors.”

Kaz, taking note of my slumping shoulders and disappointed demeanor asked, “What does it say?  Is it bad news?”

“Yes.” I said simply.

“What happened?”

“My name was removed from the Flight Service Station option register.”

“Why?  Why would they do that?”

“Because of my score on the test.”

“Was it too low?  I thought you said it was a ninety-five percent plus the 5 points for your veteran’s service!”

“Well, it was.  But now it’s been readjusted to a one-hundred and five percent.”

She cocked her head and looked at me quizzically.  “OK, I don’t understand.  Why they take you off the list if your score went up?”

“OK, this is what happened.  Apparently because the test was so hard they were having a lot of people fail.  Many of those who failed filed a lawsuit saying the test was unfair and too difficult to comprehend, so the Civil Service Commission revised the test to make it easier.  So to make things fair those of us who took the original test, we had our scores reevaluated and re-scored based on the easier test.  So, my score went up—and when it did the score was too high for the Flight Service Station Option.  Now they’ve moved my name to the Air Traffic Control Option.”

“Oh.  Is that bad?”

“Well, I had my heart set on being a Flight Service Station specialist because I feel that I’m really suited to that job.  I don’t want to be an air traffic controller because I just think that’s too technical of a job.  Besides, I don’t really know what they do.”

“But don’t you talk to them when you fly from the airport?”

“Yes, but besides giving me permission to take off and land I don’t know what else they do.  I know the job the flight service guys do because I see them when I file my flight plans and talk to them when I get my preflight weather briefings.  I know I can do that job.  I don’t know about the controllers though.”

“So, now what are you going to do?”

“I don’t know.  I guess I could call the Civil Service Commission and ask that my name be moved back because I don’t want to be a controller.”

“Yes, that’s a good idea.  Want me to go get the phone book?”

“No, I know the number.  I think I’m going to call them now.”  And I reached for the phone.

After speaking to several different people, I was finally transferred to a lady who was in charge of testing.  After listening to my plea, she curtly informed me that there was absolutely nothing that could be done for me.

“If, and when, you get notice from the FAA that you’ve been selected as an ATCS candidate”, she said in a light Texas drawl, “you can then refuse the appointment.  But until then honey, there is nothing that I, or anyone else, can do.  Besides,” she added, “you do know that controllers make more money than FSS specialists, don’t you?”

“Well, with all due respect,” I said, “I don’t really care about the money.  I just want to be successful in the FAA—and I just don’t think I’m cut out to be a controller.”

“You never know, darlin’, you just might end up surprising yourself.  You really scored high on the test sections that relate to air traffic control, so my suggestion would be to accept the appointment when you get called and go from there.  Then if after a while you don’t like it or you think you’re not going to be successful in the training, you can ask for a transfer to the FSS option.  The trick is to get your foot in the door, don’t you see?  Tell you the truth, it ain’t easy getting hired into the FAA so if you are, I’d take full advantage of the opportunity.”

“OK, thanks for your help.” I said, a bit disappointed as I hung up.  I turned to Kaz and told her that we’d just have to play the cards we’d been dealt.

An Air Force Surprise

Since my solo flight in September I had been extremely busy—well, busier than normal.  Our squadron had been asked to step up training and several of our lower-ranking airmen had already been shipped out to Vietnam.  Because I had to train the new replacements, my workdays started to take a toll on my mid-day flying as we sometimes worked right through our lunch.

At the same time, Mr. Sims had decided that we should all tune up our salesmanship techniques in order to set some sales records during the upcoming Thanksgiving holiday season.  I didn’t mind the extra money, but because I wanted to be sure to be ready to take my Private Pilot’s certification prior to my upcoming Air Force discharge, I begged off coming in to work early on Sunday mornings and scheduled myself to fly two to three hours in order to make up for my lost weekday flying sessions.

When I wasn’t flying or selling shoes, I was hitting the books to make sure I could answer whatever questions the Check Ride pilot decided to ask whenever I went up for my pilot’s exam.

One sunny morning as I drove onto the base to start my duty day, I decided to stop at the administrative building to check my mail.  I didn’t do this very often as most of my mail was normally delivered to our home, but as I approached my mail slot I saw that there was a large official-looking manila enveloped stuffed into it.

I pulled it out and saw that it had been mailed from Air Force Headquarters in Washington D. C.  I quickly assumed it had something to do with my upcoming discharge so I didn’t open it right away.  Starting my car, I noted that I was still a bit early for my shift so I grabbed the envelope from the passenger seat and ripped open the seal.

Orders!  The envelope contained three identical sets of orders reassigning me for twelve months to Kotzebue, Alaska—a remote radar station located on the far northwest coast of the state.  My assignment was to begin on February 3rd, 1969, and I was being granted home leave the entire month of January.  My whole body turned cold and my mouth turned as dry as sand.

For a few moments, all I could think of was having to leave my wife—again—and having to spend another year of my life in loneliness and isolation.

Then…my brain came to!  WAIT!!  They can’t send me anywhere in February, my mind screamed out.  By then I’m a goddam civilian and completely out of the military.  Because I had served two full enlistments they couldn’t even make me join the fucking reserves!  No way!

I balled up my fists and banged on the steering wheel of my little red sports car, trying to blow out the tension that had instantly built up in my body.

I rammed the stack of paper back into the envelope and pushed myself out of my car, heading towards the stairs of the administrative building.  By God, I thought, I’ll be talking to someone about this shit…and right now!

Re-entering the large marble-floored lobby, I re-traced my steps back to the mail room.  I knew that somewhere in that complex of offices and cubicles there had to be an administrative officer, and that’s who I needed to speak to.

After a few minutes of walking I finally found the offices that housed the administrative personnel attached to my wing.  I cautiously opened a door and stepped in.

A young airman in full dress blues was sitting behind a desk in an area that I assumed was designated to be reception.  Since I outranked him I didn’t worry too much about being diplomatic.

“Hi, I need to speak to someone about a set of orders I just received in my mail box.”

“OK…uh…Sergeant DeLeón,” he said, scanning the name embroidered above my right breast pocket, “what is it you want to know?”

“It’s complicated.  I need to speak to an administrative officer.”

“Well, if I know what it’s about I could probably point you in the right direction.”

“OK, I just got these orders in my mail box—sending me to Kotzebue, Alaska, on a twelve-month remote assignment, and it just so happens I won’t be able to go.”

“Can I take a look at them?”

I handed the envelope over to him.  After pulling the orders out and reading through them he looked up at me and said, “These all seem to be proper.  Besides, they come from USAF Headquarters in Washington, D.C. so, they’re legit.”

“They may be legit, but I won’t be able to go.”

“May I ask why not?”

“Sure, my enlistment ends on December 15th, so I will be a civilian by February.”

“Oh….in that case let me go talk to the first sergeant and see what he says.  Let me take a copy of these orders if you don’t mind.

“Sure, here you go.”  I pulled the first copy from the stack and give it to him.

I didn’t have long to wait.  A few minutes after the airman disappeared behind a door after knocking and being admitted he came back out, still carrying the set of orders in his hands.  He looked at me a bit sheepishly and said, “The sergeant says he can’t do anything about this and that the orders are correct.  You’ll have to be in Alaska on February 1st.”  He stuck the set of orders out for me to take.

Resisting my first impulse to bitch-slap the airman’s sheepish little grin smack off his face, I instead quickly regained control of myself and asked simply, “OK, could I just talk to an administrative officer, please?  I’d like someone, preferably an officer, to look me in the eye and tell me that as a civilian I am duty-bound to obey Air Force orders.”

He slowly lowered the sheaf of papers and looked around.  “Well, I guess I could see if Lieutenant Rainwater is available.”

“Lieutenant Rainwater?”

“Yes, he’s just a junior officer—a first lieutenant—but you won’t need to make an appointment with him.  He’s usually not too busy.  You want me to check to see if he’s available?”

“Yes, please…” I said, resisting the urge to clench my teeth.  He turned and quickly walked away and into a maze of small office cubicles.

Finding his way back in a couple of minutes, the envelope and my orders gone from his hand, he said, “The lieutenant will see you now.  He’s studying your orders.  Follow me.”

I walked behind him, and finally arrived at a small cubicle where a tall, thin, blond-haired officer sat.  He was studying my orders intently.

“Sir.  Sergeant DeLeón to see you.”

I snapped to attention and popped a smart salute.  Without looking up, he half-heartedly returned my salute.

“Good morning, sir.  Sorry to bother you with this so early in the day.”  Again, without looking up from the stack of orders he motioned me to a metal chair sitting next to his desk.  I sat down, keeping my back rigid and off the back of the chair.

“So,” he finally said, “you say you think these orders are not official?”

“No sir, they are official; and I’m sure that the Air Force has all intentions of sending me to Alaska next February.  That’s not the problem.”

“He looked up and for the first time looked at me.  “Well then, what is the problem?”

“Well sir, as I explained to the airman when I first came in, I am due to be separated from the Air Force in December, so by the time these I’m supposed to be in Alaska I’ll be a civilian.”

“Oh…”  He turned in his chair to face me fully.  “So, you’ve already put in your paperwork for a December discharge?”

“Yes sir, I have.”

“And, when do you become active in the Air Force reserves?”

“I won’t be in the reserves, sir.”

“Sergeant DeLeón, you have to serve at least two years in the reserves after your discharge—you know that, right?”

“Yes sir, but I’m completing my second four-year enlistment and I won’t have to sign up for the reserves.”

“Oh!  I didn’t know that.  Well now, that puts a little different spin on this.  Have you discussed this with your commanding officer?”

“No sir.  I just received these orders today.  They were in my mail slot when I arrived to work this morning.”

“I see.  Well…”

“Sir?”  He was back to studying my orders intently.

“OK, well I don’t see what can be done about this.  These orders originated from Headquarters USAF, in Washington—so normally nothing can be done.”

“So what does that mean?”

“It means that legally you’re bound to obey these orders.  No one in this command can change or abridge these orders.”

I looked at him and wanted to say something, but nothing would come to my mouth that didn’t contain a vile curse word.

He looked back at me and smiled—sheepishly.

I stood up and retrieved the packet and the manila envelope from his desk.  “Well sir, just so you know:  Respectfully, I have no intention of obeying these orders next February.  So I guess the Air Force will just have to come find and arrest me for being AWOL.”  I stood up and looked around his cubicle, finally seeing what I was looking for. “May I sir?” I asked as I pointed.

“Uh, yes…sure.”  He said, probably not sure what I was talking about.

I took a couple of steps and dropped the packet into his trashcan.  I turned, saluted, and without another word, quickly exited his cubicle.

As I walked back out into the hallway, I was surprised that I wasn’t being pursued and apprehended by a pair of burly Air Force policemen.  I made it to my car and headed in the direction of my squadron, not sure what was going to happen to me the following February.

Private Pilot SEL (Single Engine Land)

September and October flew by for me.  Besides putting in many hours at the shoe store during those cool fall evenings, I was fine tuning my flying skills for my impending pilot certification by piling up as many hours as I could during my lunch time and on weekend mornings.  By the end of October, I had accrued well over thirty hours in the Cherokee’s cockpit by executing what seemed to be hundreds of touch-and-go landings at Bergstrom, and making tedious round-robin flights to San Antonio, Hondo, Galveston, College Station, Houston, and Dallas.

After a couple of final flights with my instructor a few days before, during which he ran me through the various types of landings and maneuvers which were required for certification, we reviewed procedures for engine out; did various landings such as, short field; soft field; cross-wind, and tail-wind.  He made me perform accelerated and inflight stalls, and even gave me thirty minutes of instrument flying—my outside vision obscured by a hood resembling a welder’s mask.  Having completed the exhausting process to his satisfaction, he pronounced me as fit and ready to take the written and flying exam.

The day finally arrived:  Thursday, November 21, 1968.  It was a sunny, cloudless day, the temperature reaching a moderate 79 degrees as I pulled into the Aero Club parking lot.  I noted that both of the Cherokee 140 airplanes that the club owned were there for me to choose from for my flight from Bergstrom to Austin Mueller Airport.  I chose my favorite of the two, tail number, N8438R, hoping that because I had done so well in that particular airplane, my pilot certification would also go well.

Just before I walked out to pre-flight my airplane, I noted that my pilot log book showed that I had accumulated a total 43.2 hours in the air.  As I turned onto to runway 35L, and introduced full power for my take-off roll, I felt that maybe another ten hours of flight instruction might’ve been nice even though my flight instructor had congratulated me for having so few hours.

After having mostly flown in and out of Bergstrom during my training, with its ten-thousand-foot long and three-hundred-foot wide runways, Austin Mueller Airport looked woefully small.  As I turned final, I was cleared to land on runway 35, which was 5,006 feet long and 150 feet wide.  I wasn’t sure that was enough concrete for my type of landings.  Surprisingly, I did just fine and after I touched down was able to easily turn left onto the first taxiway.  I glided to a smooth stop on the tarmac in front of the General Aviation Building as I had been instructed.

Having safely secured my airplane, I entered the grey, low-roofed building and walked up to the briefing counter and waited until the attendant finished filling out a completed flight plan.

Finally, he looked up at me.  “Yes, may I help you?”

“Yes, hi.  My name is Frank DeLeón, and I’m here to take my Private Pilot exam.”

“Sure.  Just a minute.  You do have an appointment, right?”

“Yes, I was told to arrive at 1PM, and to check in when I got here.”

“OK, just a sec.  I’ll see who’s the check pilot assigned to you.”  He turned and started to walk away—then he quickly looked over his shoulder.  “What was the last name?”

“DeLeón.”

“OK.”

I looked around the large room and noted that it resembled the Bergstrom Aero Club.  Lots of maps, a radio chattering in the background, pilots coming and going—some being debriefed by their instructors—and a hint of aviation oil and gas in the air.

A gruff voice caught my attention.  “Say, you the student from Bergstrom?  DeLon?”

“Yes, DeLeón.”  He was tall and tanned, muscular, probably in his late forties, and was wearing khaki pants, and olive drab cotton shirt, under a thin brown leather flight jacket.  Perched on his head was a tan baseball hat with the name, “JACK”, embroidered on the front.  He stuck a beefy hand out.

“I’m Jack!  Jack Webb, and I’ll be your check pilot today.”

My blood froze.  In the sixties, Jack Webb was a famous television actor who played a dour, business only, detective in New York in a series called, Dragnet.  He was known for never cracking a smile, and his famous, go-to line, while interrogating suspects, was always, “Just the facts, ma’am, just the facts!”  He delivered that line through a cloud of cigarette smoke swirling from the Lucky Strike which was constantly glued to his lips.

“Oh…hi…” I managed to stutter out.

“Yeah, but just remember—I’m the real Jack Webb—not that god-damned goofy-ass actor!”  He said, punctuating his little joke with a resounding slap on my back.

“Yeah, OK…”  I said, still a little terrified.

He motioned for me to follow him as he walked toward a small office.  On an old wooden desk, I saw a small sheaf of papers.  “Here,” he said, “sit here and take this written test.  If you know anything at all about flying you’ll be able to finish this in about ten minutes.  Let me know when you’re done.  There’s a pencil there.”

I sat down and looked at the first page.  “OK.” I said.

As he walked out, he looked over his shoulder and said, “And don’t cheat.  Just because there’s all that shit on the walls of my office doesn’t mean you get to look at them!”  Then he slammed the door shut.

As terrified as I was, I wasn’t about to even look at anything other than the papers in front of me.  I figured he’d pop in just to see if I was cheating.  (Just the facts, ma’am.  Just the facts.)

***

 He graded my test, which had consisted of weight and balance problems, meteorology, CG (center of gravity) calculations, and my knowledge of navigational aids and VFR chart symbology interpretation.  After making several marks on my paper he announced to no one in particular, “You aced the damned thing!  Now let’s see if you can fly as well as you take paper tests!”

He watched me as I began to preflight my airplane then abruptly said, “OK, you just flew this thing over here from Bergstrom so if there wasn’t anything wrong with it when you landed an hour ago there shouldn’t be anything wrong with it now.  Let’s go punch some holes in the sky!”

He did pay very close attention to me as I read off each item on the checklist on pre-start, start, and taxi-out.  Since I wasn’t very familiar with this airport he pointed out an area just short of the active runway where I could do my run-up and magneto checks.  Before I knew it we were in the air.

“OK,” he said, as I trimmed the aircraft for climb out flight.  “You’re gonna do me some dead-reckoning navigation now, so climb up to sixty-five hundred feet and plot me a course to Hondo, Texas.”

I leveled the airplane at altitude and re-trimmed for level cruise flight.  After leaning out the fuel mixture for maximum cruise I took up an initial heading of two-hundred and ten degrees (south-south-west) for Hondo.  “I’m setting a two-ten heading until I can plot a more direct course to destination,” I told Jack, who seemed to be distracted by the beautiful flat brown and green Texas landscape.

“Uh-huh,” he said, still looking out his starboard window.  “When you figure that out, tell me our time enroute, and our fuel burn.  Don’t forget to figure the winds into your calculations.”

“I won’t.”  I said, a little insulted that he’d think I’d forget that.  I found Hondo on the sectional and folded the map so it would fit on my half-sized clipboard.  Within a few minutes I had plotted a route direct to Hondo and had calculated the time enroute.

“Looks like a heading of two-one-three degrees at this altitude, and one-plus-ten enroute (one hour, ten minutes).”

“How you gonna know you’re on course?”

“Well, there’s a water tower depicted on the chart here,” I pointed to a small figure on the chart, “so on our course it should be just off to our right in about five minutes.”

“OK, how about highways?”

“No real large highways, but there’s a main road from San Antonio to Hondo…”  I looked out my window and spotted the highway.  “So that should help in keeping me on course.”

“Providing you don’t run into a cloud layer, right?”

“Yes sir.  As a VFR pilot I have to maintain a constant view of the ground and stay clear of clouds.”

“Right answer.  OK, let’s turn this hog around and get us back to Austin.  I wanna see how you handle landings.  So, without referring to your sectional how would you navigate us back?”

“Uh, I tune in the Austin VORTAC (navigational aid) and fly an inbound radial.  That should guide us directly back to the airport.”

“Right again.  Let’s do it.”

***

As we approached the airport Jack seemed to take a keener interest in what the airplane was doing.  For the last fifteen, or so, minutes he had been nothing more than a casual observer as I did my best to stay on the inbound radial to Austin.  By my calculations we were just about eight miles southwest and now flying at five-thousand-five-hundred feet—the correct VFR altitude for our direction of flight.

“All right,” he said, stifling a healthy yawn, “how far you think you’re from Austin?”

“About eight miles.  I’m getting ready to start a slow descent and call the airport for clearance into the traffic pattern.”

“Right-o!  Tell’um we’re going to be making multiple touch-and-go landings.”

My heart skipped a beat and I wondered just how many landings we were going to do.  “Sure, OK.”  I said.  “Austin Tower, N8436R, six miles southwest, descending to pattern altitude and requesting multiple touch and go’s.”

“N8436R, Austin Tower, roger.  Report entering downwind, runway 35 right, wind three-six-zero at 8 knots, altimeter 3012.”

“N8436R, roger.”

Jack hoisted his large frame upright in the Cherokee’s smallish passenger seat, grunted, and said, “OK, I want you to set the airplane up for a short field landing.  Be sure you tell the tower that you’re a student pilot on a check ride so he’ll know what to expect.”

My body absolutely froze!  The first landing, and he wants me to make it a short field!  That was my absolute worse landing of all the ones that I’d learned.  It called for me to set up the airplane for a steep full-flap, high-speed, descent—finally flaring the plane ten to fifteen feet above the runway and touching down right on the numbers!  During my training with Marshall I had yet to properly execute the landing to his satisfaction—either landing too long, too hard, or too fast.  As I descended down to pattern altitude I resigned myself to failing the check ride.

I scanned the pattern and verified that there was no traffic.  Reducing power, I descended into the right traffic pattern.  “Austin Tower, N8436R, entering right traffic pattern at pattern altitude.”

“N8436R, roger.  Report turning base leg.”

“N8436R, roger.”

“OK, remember,” Jack said sternly, “line up the aircraft on centerline, drop full flaps, and center the nose on the numbers.  From that point on, you’re controlling your speed with the elevators and your rate of descent with power.  If your nose pushes up beyond the numbers it means you’re going too fast so you’ll need to pull back on the yoke to slow down.  Concurrently, if you’re nose drops below the numbers you’re descending too fast so you’ll have to add power to slow your descent.  Remember, a short field landing means you have to land with a minimum of rollout.  Got it?”

“Yes, yup, got it.”  I wanted him to be quiet so I could concentrate on what I was doing.  At that point my multi-tasking skills were being pushed to their absolute maximum.  As I concentrated on keeping the runway numbers, 35R, square on the nose, I realized that they were located at the absolute beginning of the concrete runway.  At Bergstrom, the runways were so incredibly large (mostly designed to handle the monstrous B-52s that had been stationed there in the early sixties) that a huge 30-yard over-run had been added to the either end of each of the runways, and painted in a bright yellow cross hatch mark design.  Then ten yards after the over-run, the huge runway numbers had been painted in.  Not so at Austin.

Here, there was grass, and then the runway started—the numbers painted a bare five yards from the start of the concrete runway.  If the landing was short of the numbers there was an excellent possibility that the main gear would land on grass.  If that happened, there was a more than good chance that the gear would be ripped off as the concrete runway’s six-inch height above the ground smashed into the wheels.  More often than not, when executing my short field landings at Bergstrom I landed short—in the yellow hatched area.  If I did that here, no telling what was going to happen.

I was not only going to fail my check ride, I was about to kill Jack Webb.

“Steady, steady…” Jack softly hissed as we descended.  “Don’t forget, your flare-out is going to have to be over-exaggerated to quickly bleed off airspeed and stall as your gear hits the runway.”

The runway numbers began to grow larger and larger, but I held them right on the nose!  Suddenly my instinct told me to pull back hard on the yoke, inducing an exaggerated flare-out.  The numbers disappeared under the plane, and I clenched my teeth, waiting on the sound of the gear ripping off!  Instead, I heard a sweet, soft squeal as the two main gear tires kissed the hot concrete.

“Beautiful!  Just god-damned beautiful!  Jesus!”  Startled, I turned to see Jack slapping his huge hands on his hunched-up knees.  “Holy shit!  That was the best god-damned short field landing I’ve ever seen.  Shit!”

I didn’t know what to say.  I was just glad I was still alive.

“Fuck!!  OK, clean up the airplane and climb up to pattern altitude!  Tell the tower you want another touch and go.”

“OK…uh.”  I fumbled to grab the microphone speaker from where it had slipped—under my crotch.  “Austin Tower, N8436R, request departure, right turn to remain in the pattern for another touch and go.”

“Roger, N8436R, cleared right turn pattern altitude, report turning base and final.  Wind three-four-zero at nine knots, altimeter 3012.”

“N8436R, roger.”  I pulled the flaps in, applied full power, and rose back into the sky.

I stole a look at Jack and he was grinning like a kid.  “OK,” he said, “let’s do another one of those!  That last one was fabulous!”

My heart sunk.  This time I would surely kill us.  He had no idea that that last successful landing had been nothing but pure luck.  No way I could ever do that again; and now I really wanted to pee.

“N8436R, turning final to runway 35 right, touch and go.”  I said, thinking that those would probably be my last words on earth.  The tower mumbled their acknowledgment and cleared me for the touch and go.

“Let’s nail this fucker!” Jack said, enthusiastically.  His last words too, for sure.

I felt the rate of descent was too steep and I cautiously added power.  The numbers grew to their abnormally gigantic size again, and I pulled forcefully back on the yoke.

Squeak!

“HOLY SHIT!  YOU FUCKING DID IT AGAIN!  HOLY SHIT!”

I pushed the nose down, and while rolling slowly down the runway, asked meekly, “You want me do to another one?”

“NO!  Give me the fucking airplane!  I wanna try one!”

“OK, your airplane.”  I took my hands off the yoke and pulled my feet off the rudder pedals.  He pulled the flaps up and added power.

“Tell the tower we’re gonna do another one.”

“OK.”

I knew we were really were gonna die on this approach.  He set up the airplane too close in and the rate of descent was too great.  He added power to slow our sink rate but it was too late.  I saw the plane’s nose swallow up the numbers and we were still nowhere near the surface.  Jack cursed, pushed the nose over, and we began a gentle porpoise maneuver.  The wheels banged onto the concrete and we bounced back up into the air.  Nose down again, and we bounced once more.  We did this three or four times.  He finally got the plane under control near midfield.

“FUCK!”  He said.  “Your airplane.”  I pulled flaps in and applied brakes to slow our speed.

“Another one?”  I asked.

“Fuck no!  Tell the tower we’re done.  Take that next taxiway and let’s get back to the GA.”  (General Aviation building).

As I pulled the throttle full out and cut fuel flow, killing the engine, he kicked open the door.  The cool air swirling into the cockpit reminded me just how sweaty I was.  “Secure the plane and then come on in.  I’ll sign you off on your logbook.  Congratulations, you’re a private pilot.”

The entire flight had lasted eight-tenths of an hour—or 48 minutes.

But, I had prevailed.  And now, after all the effort that Kaz and I had put into this endeavor, I was now, Frank DeLeón, Private Pilot (SEL), Certificate #1890712.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Texas – Part Four

Texas – Part Four

 

Flying Planes, Selling Shoes, and Saving Lives

The day I took my first flying lesson, August 13, 1968, marked almost exactly four months before I would arrive at the end of my career in the Air Force.  Although I had a general idea about what I wanted to do for a living after getting my discharge, I had no real plan on how to achieve it (aside from earning a pilot’s license); nor did I spend any time wondering how long it would take me to get a job in aviation.  In short, I was just winging it.  (No pun intended).

I was just ignorant enough to not realize that some successful people either spent years in college, or labored in low-paying apprenticeships preparing themselves for a career in their chosen field, while others hired into companies or corporations right out of high school and slowly gained the knowledge and experience that would eventually make them desirable candidates for higher level positions.

Me?  I never spent a moment worrying about where I was going to end up once I got out of the service.  As I said before, I had a vague idea that maybe once I earned my private pilot license I could continue my training for a commercial and instrument rating—then maybe get hired by someone, somewhere, to fly airplanes.  Yeah.

Of course I could always sell shoes, right?  By now I was pretty much keeping up with Eddie on commissions at the shoe store, in spite of putting in less total hours than he did.  And, every day I felt more and more comfortable in my role as a debonair ladies’ shoe salesman.

Sadly, it never dawned on me that once I left the Air Force a good chunk of my monthly bring-home would disappear; even with the increase in my hours at the shoe store, my sales income would barely match what I was bringing in before my discharge.

But, ignorance is certainly bliss, because up until then I was a happy, if not tired, camper.

Had it not been for a timely and fortuitous conversation with my flight instructor one day during my flight debrief, I would’ve probably just continued to march blindly toward that proverbial cliff with no bottom, and no telling where I would’ve ended up.

We had just landed after about ninety minutes of practicing stalls, dead-reckoning navigation, and four well-executed short field approaches and landings. “Well,” Marshall said while making an entry into my flight book, “you’re really coming right along.  Almost a natural, I’d say.”

“Thanks,” I answered, checking my watch to see how long I had before my return to my daily Air Force duties.  “I’m really having a lot of fun—although sometimes I get a bit nervous, especially when I’m doing accelerated stalls and handling engine out procedures.”

“Really?  Well, you sure don’t show it.  You’re very cool under pressure and you don’t seem to lose your composure like some of my other students.  You always been that calm?”

“Are you kidding me?  I think I tend to fly off the handle rather easily.  I don’t think I’m calm and cool at all.”

“Well, you are, and if what you say is true you hide it very well.”

“Trust me, I may look cool on the outside, but inside I’m a mass of doubts and always on the verge of sheer panic.”

“So, what are your plans?’

“Plans?”

“Yeah, you know—when you get out of the service in December.  Gonna stay with the shoe store?”

“Uh…well, I guess—for a while.”

“Then what?”

“Well, I’ll probably want to continue my flight training.  You know—work on my commercial, multi-engine, and instrument ratings.  Stuff like that.  Don’t I have to have those ratings to get a job with an airline?”

“Son, you’re gonna need a whole lot more than that.  You need to have a bunch of hours as PIC (pilot-in-command) logged in before anyone’ll even consider you.”

“Oh…about…how many hours do you think?”

“I’ve got over fifteen-hundred as PIC, and twelve-hundred of those is jet time, and I don’t know if that’s gonna be enough.  It’s pretty competitive, you know.”

I did a quick mental calculation and figured that I’d probably need another fourteen-hundred and ninety-seven hours to get where Marshall was.  At an average of seven dollars per flying hour I’d need another $10,479, and God knows how many more years of flying.  Of course, that didn’t take into consideration that I would still have to have a job that would allow me to spend that kind of money outside of normal living expenses.

“Holy cow!” was the most intelligent response I could think of right then.  After returning back to my squadron, I spent the rest of the afternoon mulling over what we’d talked about and wondering whether or not I was making the right decision by getting out of the Air Force.

That evening I decided to talk over the situation with Kaz and I told her about the conversation I’d had with Marshall.

“So what are you going to do?  We made all these plans and I’m working so you could learn to fly.”

“I know, but I don’t think we can afford to spend all that money for the next however many years it would take for me to get all those flying hours.  And then, there’s no guarantee that I’ll be hired.  But I do know one thing:  I’m not going to reenlist for another four years in the Air Force.  That’s for sure!”

“But you said we may not be able to live just on your shoe store salary.”

“I’ll get another goddamn job before I stay another day past my separation in the Air Force.  They’ve done nothing but screw me over for the last eight years.  First, they send me to Alaska for a year, and I have to leave Sharon with a six-month-old baby with another one on the way.  Then, a year and a half later they send me unaccompanied for another eighteen months to Okinawa.”

“But Okinawa ended up being a good move, don’t you think?”  She gave me a cute little mischievous smile and I reached over and gave her a little kiss on the forehead.

“Yes, that’s true.  But I went through hell before we met.  And it sure wasn’t a picnic for Sharon and the boys either.  No, I’m not going to give the Air Force a chance to fuck over me again!”

“So…what we going to do then?”

“If I have to, Kaz, I’ll work two or three jobs to make ends meet.”

“Isn’t there something you can do with your Air Force training?”

“There isn’t much of a call in civilian life for a guy who stared at a radar scope for eight years.”

“Well, I think you will think of something.”

“I hope so.”

For the next few days I did little other than worry about our future.  Then, while flying in after a training session for an approach to the Bergstrom Airport an idea popped into my head.

***

“Bergstrom Approach, Cherokee 8461R two miles east of the field, request enter downwind at one-thousand five hundred feet for a touch and go to runway 36 right.”  I leveled the aircraft and scanned the skies for traffic.

“Cherokee 8461R, in sight and enter traffic pattern at one-thousand five hundred feet approved.  Bergstrom altimeter is 2993, wind 350 degrees at ten knots, report turning crosswind.”  The controller’s confidently crisp voice crackled from the speakers in the ceiling over my head.

“Cherokee 8461R, roger.”

“Don’t forget to check your altimeter and set it to the current reading.” Marshall said quietly.  “Remember, when you turn final that farmer’s cornfield to the south of the runway’s just been plowed so you’ll get a bit of a thermal out of it.  Keep the nose down and concentrate on your airspeed and glide ratio.”

“Got it,” I said confidently.

I entered the traffic pattern and confirmed my altimeter read 1,500 feet.  I was about 150 feet high so I nudged the nose down gently and eased down to my assigned altitude.

“Cherokee 8461R, report crosswind leg,” the tower controller ordered.

“Cherokee 8461R, roger wilco.”  I looked off to my right and saw the ten-thousand-plus-foot runway glistening in the hot Texas afternoon.

Marshall pointed towards the horizon and said, “OK, now remember where your imaginary point is, (referred to as a key), so you’ll start your right turn into your crosswind leg.  If you turn too soon you’ll be too high to execute your turn to final.  If you wait too long you’re taking up pattern airspace and the controller will probably ask you what the fuck your intentions are.  That’s an ATC phrase you don’t want to hear.  These guys in the tower are Air Force controllers but most of them are as sharp as the FAA controllers at the civilian towers.”  I suddenly wanted to know more about these civilian controllers, but decided to wait until I was not so busy flying an airplane before asking Marshall anything else.

Once we were on the ground and had completed our post-flight briefing I decided to ask for a little more information about these civilian controllers.  “So, these guys here at Bergstrom Air Force Base tower are Air Force, right?”

“Righto!”

“And the guys, say in the tower at Mueller, the downtown Austin Airport, are civilians?”

“Right again.  You haven’t had a chance to work with those guys yet since we’re still just doing local Bergstrom to Bergstrom flights, but pretty soon we’ll be doing some unknown airport training—where you fly to and land at an airport you’re not familiar with, like Waco or maybe Temple, and for sure, Austin—and then you’ll be dealing with civilians at those towers.  For the most part they’re pretty savvy, but they can be assholes too—especially if they sense you’re a low-time student pilot and don’t know what the fuck you’re doing.”

“How do you mean?”

“Well, they’ll throw some phraseology on you that you may not be familiar with, and when you give them a ‘say again’, or act like you don’t know what they’re asking, they’ll ream you a new one.  You gotta be pretty sharp on your airport procedures and ATC (air traffic control) phraseology.”

“So, most of the civilians at those towers used to be military controllers?”

“Hmm, not all of them.  I hear the transition from military to civilian controller is pretty tough, and the testing is extremely complicated, but yeah, some of them are ex-military.  Why?  You think you might want to try for a job there when you get out?”

“Oh no!  I doubt that I’d be able to get to first base with my experience.”

“Well, you know they not only work up in the tower.  There’s civilian controllers that work in RAPCONs (Radar Approach Controls), Enroute Centers, and facilities they call Flight Service Stations.  If you want I can try to get you some pamphlets from the FAA (Federal Aviation Administration) that detail the various jobs controllers do.”

“Sure, that would be great—if it’s not too much trouble.”

“OK, I’ll see what I can do.  When I go on training missions in my F-4, I deal with all those guys since I’m IFR rated (Instrument Flight Rules).  We’ll learn about them later on in your flight training.  Even though you’re only going to be VFR rated (Visual Flight Rules), you’ll want to take advantage of a service that ATC Enroute Centers provide.  It’s called VFR Flight Following.  We’ll cover that later, but in short when you’re flying VFR from one airport to another you can dial up an Enroute Center up on the radio and ask the controller to watch you on radar and warn you of any other traffic that may be in your line of flight.”

“Wow, that’s cool!”

“Yeah well, but for now let’s just concentrate on your landings and stall procedures.  We need to get you sharp enough to where I can trust you to solo the airplane.  What do you think?”

“Sure.  When do you think that’s gonna happen?”

“Oh, I don’t know.  But when I think you’re ready you’ll be the first to know.”

For the next few days I continued with my flight training during my lunch hour at the air base and working at the shoe store in the evenings.  In spite of my busy schedule, I kept thinking about what Marshall had said about the civilian controllers.  By the end of the week I had made up my mind to get more information and also to discuss this with Kaz.  As I sat down for a quick dinner as I was getting ready for a busy Friday evening at the shoe store I told her about my conversation with Marshall.

“But I thought you wanted to be a pilot,” she said, quizzically.

“Yes, I do.  But from what Marshall tells me it’s going to be a long and expensive road.  I’m thinking that maybe I should have some backup plan to carry us along after my discharge from the Air Force.”

“And you think you are qualified for a job being an air controller?”

“I don’t know.  All this time I thought that to be a controller you had to have worked as one in the Air Force.  But Marshall told me that while a lot of them are ex-military controllers, he knew of a few that are not.”

“How they become controllers then?”

“Well, that’s what I’m not too sure about.  I think they work for the government—the Federal Aviation Administration—so maybe there’s some kind of test that you take, or something.”

“How you gonna find out?”

“I’m thinking maybe I can call the control tower at Austin Mueller Airport.  They might have some information.”

“Good idea.  Maybe they have number in phone book.  I go get it!”

A few minutes later I found several phone numbers listed under the Austin Airport listing in the white pages.  But of all of them, the one that caught my attention was the one that was listed as, “Federal Aviation Administration – Austin Mueller Tower and Approach Control”.

“Here’s a number to the tower at Austin.  Let me call it and see what happens.”  I told Kaz as I reached for the phone.

***

Marshall asked me to come to a full stop as I was rolling out of my fourth touch-and-go landing to the Georgetown, Texas airport.  The field was uncontrolled, with no tower or air traffic control services.

I had been in the air for over an hour executing stalls, turns to headings, and unusual attitudes in N8438R, a green and white Cherokee 140.  As I applied brakes and stopped on the runway centerline, he suddenly opened the door and stepped out onto the starboard wing.

“OK son,” he yelled over the prop wash, “I want you to take this baby up and shoot me three more touch-and-go approaches.  When you’re done with the third one, don’t forget to stop right here to pick me back up ‘cause I don’t feel like walking back to Bergstrom.”

“You want me to do those by myself?” I asked, my heart suddenly jumping into my throat.

“Yup!  You’ll notice that take-off speed will come much sooner once my fat ass is out of the plane, so don’t let it shock you.  Just do what you know how to do.  Now hurry up, it’s fucking chilly out here.”

With that, he slammed the door shut, motioning me to activate the lock, and jumped off the wing and on to the runway.  He trotted over to the sloping grass hugging the narrow asphalt strip and vigorously waved his arms urging me to turn the airplane around and taxi to the end of the runway in preparation for take-off.

I took a deep breath and pushed the throttle in while introducing full left rudder.  The little plane responded gingerly and in a few seconds, I was headed in the opposite direction to the end of the five-thousand-foot strip.  Reaching the marked over-run area, I reduced throttle and again carefully turned the aircraft around one hundred and eighty degrees.  I looked down the runway and was barely able to pick Marshall out as he stood in the grass.

Giving myself a few seconds to calm down, I lowered the flaps to fifteen degrees and slowly brought the engine up to take-off RPM.  Releasing the brakes with my toes the plane seemed to leap forward with a burst of energy that I had not experienced before.  Easing in a few inches of right rudder to counteract the craft’s natural tendency to pull left of runway centerline, I began my takeoff roll.  As promised, I glanced at the airspeed indicator and noticed that I had reached takeoff speed sooner than anticipated.  I eased the yoke gently back an inch or so, and the little Cherokee all but leaped off the runway.

The altimeter needle was passing through a hundred feet as I saw Marshall out of the corner of my eye waving wildly.  I sincerely hoped that he was waving at me ecstatically because I had actually gotten off the ground successfully, and not because I was on fire.

I leveled off at pattern altitude, retracted the flaps, and turned crosswind setting the airplane up for a left-hand pattern approach.  After executing three successful touch-and-go landings, I came to a full stop and taxied confidently back to retrieve Marshall.

“Holy shit, Frank!  You did it!  Those landings were flawless—Christ almighty!!”  He literally jumped in, strapping on his shoulder harness and slamming and locking the door.  “Let’s do three or four more just to see if you weren’t just being lucky!”

When we finally landed back at Bergstrom that afternoon, I had completed a total of ten takeoffs and landings.  It was Tuesday, September 10th, 1968—and it was the seventh flight I had ever taken.  I had managed to solo less than a month after my first flight, and after logging a grand total of 5.9 hours of flight time.

When we walked into the flight office, Marshall chopped a piece off the back of my fatigue uniform shirt and presented me with it and my solo certificate.  There were five or six other students and instructors there and had it not be necessary for me to return to duty for the rest of the day, I would’ve had a glass of the champagne that was being poured all around.

***

My days and evenings at the shoe store were beginning to take their toll.  My days—Monday through Friday—consisted of my waking up at 6AM and reporting to my squadron at 7:30AM.  Unless we were on mobile deployment, I would spend the morning running my ten-man crew through countless mind-numbing set-up drills, or walking around our buildings checking for discarded cigarette butts or trash in general.  We still took our generous breaks, but the trips to the cafeteria were also beginning to get monotonous, and I often found myself dozing off at the table while nursing a cup of caffeine-rich black coffee.  When I was scheduled to fly during my two-hour lunch I tried to use my break-times to mentally review my flight procedures, as I’d been told by my supervisor that I couldn’t read my flight manuals during duty time.  By the time I got to the shoe store at 5PM, I was almost completely exhausted—having already put in a full day at the base plus at least one stressful flying hour during my lunch.

Because I was expected to stay completely occupied while at the shoe store when I wasn’t on the floor selling shoes, I was in the back taking inventory or in the display window re-arranging the shoes.  The only time we were allowed to be off our feet was during the oft-interrupted twenty minutes we were given to gulp down our lunch.

Although the store closed at 9PM, but I usually didn’t make it out to my car any earlier than 10PM.  Once the doors were locked we had to clean the floor of all the shoe boxes that had been left open—some with only one shoe, others completely empty—and restock them back in the stock room.  Then, while the cashiers were tallying up the day’s sales we were expected to tidy up and rearrange the in-store shoe displays, restock the purse poles, straighten up the customer seating area, and finally vacuum the floors.  All this was done while still wearing a suit, tie, and dress shoes.

Our apartment was only a couple of minutes away, and by the time I got home Kaz was usually already in bed—also exhausted from putting in a twelve-hour day at the department store’s buffet line.  After a hot shower I all but collapsed into our bed and usually fell into a deep and mostly dreamless sleep.  The worst sound in the world was the alarm clock shocking me out of bed at 6AM.

Although I worked at the shoe store all day both Saturdays and Sundays (10AM until 8PM), I was able to sleep until 9AM.  It doesn’t sound like much of a bonus but I eagerly looked forward to my weekends just to be able to sleep in.

One Saturday morning in late November I had gotten up a little earlier than usual because Kaz had been asked to work as cashier and I had to drive her up to the store.  That week, what is described as a “blue norther” in Texas, had descended on Austin, and temperatures had dipped into the low twenties.  That particular morning seemed extra cold—the sky bleak and gray, and the north wind swirling madly around the large swimming pool in the center of the complex.

Since our apartments were for adults only, when I got back from dropping Kaz off at work,  I was surprised to see a small child, maybe three or four years old, riding a trike around the concrete walkways surrounding the pool.  Because I had just thrown my dress overcoat over my pajamas when I drove Kaz up to the mall, I hurried back into my cozy apartment not paying a whole lot of attention to the little kid.

While in the shower I wondered which of my neighbors had dared break the “No Kids” rule so strictly enforced by our Nazi-like apartment manager.  For sure she was probably already going through the residents’ listing to figure out who would be most likely to have allowed a small grandchild or nephew to spend the night at our complex.

After donning a newly dry-cleaned suit, I slipped into my brand new Johnston-Murphy cordovan wingtip shoes.  Eddie had convinced me that no shoe salesman worth his salt (especially a wildly successful one) would ever be taken seriously if he didn’t own at least one pair of Johnston-Murphy shoes.  Paired with a nice pin-stripe, Brooks Brothers single breast wool-blend suit, you could almost guarantee yourself a ten-percent boost in sales just for looking snappy.

I popped a couple of slices of bread into the toaster and filled a mug with the last of the coffee Kaz had brewed prior to leaving.  As I waited for the toaster I walked into the living room with my cup and drew the curtains slightly to see if any snow was coming down.  No snow, but I did notice the little kid on his trike precariously close to the pool.  Sitting there, little red sneakers resting on the pedals and dressed in an overstuffed blue parka and khaki pants, he seemed to be mesmerized by the ripples the stiff wind was creating on the surface of the water in the pool.

Glancing over to the apartment manager’s door, I wondered why she wasn’t out there asking the kid who he belonged to.  By now she should have already come bursting out of her door, her kinky gray-streaked permed hair mashed down under the olive-green safari hat she favored in cold weather, yelling for the kid to back away from the pool.

The toaster popped and I walked back into the kitchen to butter it up and wash it down with the last dregs of my coffee.  After rinsing my mug and placing it in the dishwasher I threw my navy-blue top coat over my shoulders and gave the apartment one last look.

Pulling and locking the door behind me I lowered my head into the wind and began the short brisk walk out into the parking lot.  I had gone about ten feet when the gentle and almost unperceivable sound of splashing water reached my ears.  I stopped dead in my tracks.

Without looking back I waited to see if there were any further sounds of splashing water.

Nothing.

I took another step or two, after which curiosity got the better of me.

I turned around slowly and saw the red trike still sitting by the side of the pool.  The kid was not on it and the handlebars were skewed to one side.  I looked over to the pool and saw what I was hoping not to see:  The kid was in the water.

The down-filled parka he was wearing was acting somewhat like a life preserver, allowing the kid’s head and shoulders to remain above the water.  He was bobbing up and down like a cork—slowly drifting to the center of the pool’s deep end.

Looking around, panic beginning to swell in my chest, I was hoping to see someone but saw absolutely nothing.  The kid and I were the only ones within the confines of our apartment complex and its pool.  Focusing back, I saw that the kid was thrashing his feet ferociously in an instinctive effort to stay afloat.  It wasn’t working; and he was sinking slowly—the water now touching his chin.  His eyes were locked on me—opened wide and pleading.  I looked around in all directions silently praying that someone besides me was seeing what was happening.  No one.

Finally deciding that there was nothing else to do but try to pull him out of the pool, I began to run.  As I reached the edge of the deep end I realized that his wildly kicking legs had taken him to the farthest point of the deep water.  He was too far for me to reach out with my arms, and without a ten-foot pole there was no way I could reach him.  I hurriedly shrugged off my heavy wool topcoat and reached down to pull my shoes off.  My right shoe pulled off easily as I grasped it by the heel while balancing on my left foot, but when I switched over to my left shoe it didn’t come off quite as effortlessly.  Realizing that the kid would be taking mouthfuls of water any second now I jerked violently at the stubborn shoe.  It came off, but because of the force I had to use, instead of dropping to the ground, it instead flew up into the air landing about ten feet away from me and into the pool’s frigid water.  I watched dumbfounded as it sunk a couple of feet before it rose to float merrily on the surface of the freezing water.

The water was now over the kid’s chin and he was forced to throw his head back to keep his mouth from filling with water.

I fumbled to unbutton my jacket, but because of the cold my fingers just couldn’t grasp the small button.  I pulled hard on the lower half of the jacket and saw the button fly off and join my left shoe in the water.  It sank slowly to the bottom as my jacket dropped to the concrete.

Reaching the knot on my tie I saw the kid’s head go under.  No time for the tie.

Without further thought I leaped feet first into the pool.

As I sunk down into the water I felt as if the soul had left my body.  Instantly, every muscle in my body seemed to want to lock up and my heart felt as if it had completely stopped.  I blinked to clear the air bubbles clinging to my eyes and tried to focus so I could find the kid.  My feet touched the bottom of the ten-foot pool.

Seeing the kid, I willed my legs to kick so I could close the distance between us.  He was still kicking wildly and I saw one of his red sneakers drifting to the bottom.  Because of the weight of my pants and shirt I was barely able to break to surface.  I saw that I was still about four or five feet away from him so I began to kick my feet to try to close the gap between us.  It was excruciatingly painful as my knees and hips insisted on trying to lock up, but with some effort I finally got within an arm’s reach.

As I reached out for him he suddenly sunk.  I stopped pedaling and I sunk with him.  Because I was heavier I sunk faster and found myself directly under him.  Reaching out with an almost dead arm I grabbed the kid’s bottom to stop his gradual descent.  Instinctively, he stopped kicking.

Gathering the strength that the cold water had not yet sapped from my body, I pushed up—hoping that the effort would push the kid’s head up out of the water.  I looked up and saw that my efforts had taken both of us up to the surface.  My face broke out of the water and I saw that the kid’s mouth as it was in the process of sucking air.

I let loose of his bottom and grabbed a handful of blue parka.  I rolled over to my left side and pulled him up and on top of me with my right arm—my right, weakly trying to side paddle to the edge of the pool.  It took a supreme effort to keep the kid on top of me and his head above the water.

After what seemed an abnormally long time, my left hand hit the concrete side of the pool.  I put a death grip on the small gutter under the lip of the edge and pulled us in.  Because I was losing strength quickly, I concentrated on pulling the kid to the concrete edge of the pool, hoping he’d grip it and hold himself up.  But I soon realized that he had lost all muscle control and his body was almost total dead weight.

With a final gigantic effort, I hung on to the edge with my left hand and arm and swung the kid up and over my head.  He landed with a wet squish on the rough surface of the pool’s concrete edge and rolled slowly over.

On his side, still slightly paralyzed by the extreme cold, he turned his head and looked at me with his little bloodshot eyes.  I tried to tell him he was okay, but all my now trembling jaw would allow me to say was, “You…K.”

Knowing he was now out of danger I began to concentrate on trying to pull myself out of the pool.  As I tried to bring my legs up to swing them over the side I realized that they had both cramped up and would not cooperate with any command I gave them.  I then tried to move my arms up and out, but found that they too were quickly going numb.  I was still in ten feet of water, clinging helplessly to the edge and try as I might, I could not pull myself up and out.

All feeling, from my neck down was swiftly disappearing—replaced by a feeling of damp warmth.  I needed to get out of this water but knew I was quickly losing the ability to do so.  Any longer and the strength in my arms would leave and I would slip soundlessly into the freezing depth.

I made another gigantic effort, and slid my left arm away from my body while still gripping the small gutter with my stiffening fingers.  I concentrated all my strength on my left hand’s fingers, hoping they were tightening up on the lip of the gutter.  With another painful effort, I began to pull my body to the left—sliding along the side of the pool, in the direction of the shallow water.

After about three or four pulls I began to feel the smooth tile bottom touch my feet.  I was making slow but steady progress.  Suddenly, I thought I heard the sound of a door opening.

I twisted my head to the right and strained to look over the edge toward the doors of the apartments facing the pool.  Sure enough, one of them was open and an elderly lady, who I recognized as one of our resident tenants, was coming out.  She was wearing a white chenille duster and furry aqua slippers.  I called out and made some sort of gurgling sound while waving weakly with my left arm.

To my horror, she completely ignored me—instead, running awkwardly in the direction of the kid with one arm extended while trying to keep the front of her duster closed with the other.  While I watched, she scooped up the child with her free arm, and without a word spun around and ran clumsily back toward her apartment’s still open door.

Just as she got to the door she stopped, turned, and looked directly at me.  I waved again weakly, imploring her with my eyes to return and help me out.  After four or five seconds, she turned, entered the apartment and slammed the door.

Too cold and weak to spend precious energy wondering why she did what she did, I instead returned to my efforts to try to reach shallow water.

Painfully and slowly pulling myself along the side of the pool I was finally able to stand on my feet, keeping my head above the surface of the water, and painfully plotted toward the semi-circular steps at the end of the pool.  Reaching them, I found that I no longer had the strength to raise or bend my knees enough to bring my feet up, so I semi-collapsed and crawled up each step.

Finally, I was out of the water and I rolled over and lay on my back on the cold concrete.  My body felt like it was covered in an invisible and very heavy blanket of warm air.  Knowing I needed to get back into my apartment I made yet another supreme effort and got on my knees.  From there I crawled in the direction of my door.  Several times I tried to get back on my feet but my legs did not want to support my body and once I tried to get upright a wave of dizziness washed over my head.

When I reached my door, I lay by it for a few minutes trying to will the strength to reach into my pocket for my keys.  After a while I retrieved my keys and reached up to insert the door key into the lock.  It slipped in easily enough, but then I realized that my fingers had cramped so that I was unable to hold the key tight enough to turn the lock.

Leaving the key in the lock, I brought my right hand down to my mouth and tried to blow whatever warm air I still had in my body onto it.  While doing this I tried to flex my fingers to get them to move.  It was insanely difficult to do so, and once they began to move I experienced intense pain in the joints of my fingers.

After what seemed to be hours, I was able to hold the key tight enough and I heard the lock release.

I pushed the door open and dragged myself in.  I pushed the door closed with one of my feet and lay on the carpet completely exhausted.  The heat was still on in the apartment and soon feeling began to seep back into my body.  It was then I felt my cold clammy shirt stinging my skin and my soaked wool pants clinging icily to my legs.  I needed to get out of my clothes.

After pulling my tie off, I found that I was unable to feel the buttons on my shirt with enough strength to slip them through their respective holes.  I reached down, pulled my shirt up out of my pants, and gripped the bottom with both hand.  With another concentrated effort, I pulled the shirt in opposite directions with each hand and ripped the buttons clean off.  I was now able to pull it over my shoulders.

I was beginning to warm up sufficiently enough to where some of my muscle strength was returning so I sat up and ripped the sleeve cuffs off my arms.  The effort made me a little dizzy and nauseous but soon I found that by supporting myself on the table lamp by the door I was able to get up on my feet.  With an unsteady gait and by shuffling my feet, I was able to navigate myself in the direction of the bathroom.

Kneeling by the tub I knew that I needed to get some warmth back into my body so I reached over and gripped the chrome faucet.  I knew that the water that started pouring out was probably cold, but to my near frozen hands it felt insanely warm.

I pushed the stopper lever and watched the tub begin to fill.  I adjusted the temperature of the water to what I thought should be warm but it felt painfully hot.  I knew I had to somehow force myself into what felt like blisteringly hot water.

Supporting myself by gripping the hand basin I got up and removed the rest of my clothes.  Carefully I climbed into the tub, and before I was able to sit in the water experienced excruciating painful cramps in the calf and thigh muscles of both legs.  As the warm water rose over my tortured legs the cramps began to subside.

I spent about thirty minutes in the tub, occasionally replacing the lukewarm water some that felt much hotter.  The cramps disappeared and I began to feel normal.

It was time to get out, dry myself off, and call work.

“Good morning, Baker’s Shoes, how may I help you?”  It was the head cashier—a heavy dark-skinned girl named Olivia.

“Yes—hey it’s Frank.  Is Mr. Sims around?”

“Yeah, he’s here—and he’s been wondering where you are.  Wanna talk to him?”

“Yes, please.”

I heard Olivia tell Mr. Sims that it was Frank calling.

“Frank?  Where are you?  You need to be here now!  We need to sell, sell, sell!”

“Mr. Sims, I may have to take the day off.  I…I…well, I just got out of the apartment pool.  A little kid fell in as I was leaving for work and I had to dive in and get him out.”

“…Uh…well that’s unfortunate now, isn’t it?”

“Yes sir.  I’ll be in tomorrow.”

“No Frank!  You’ll be in as soon as you dry off and get dressed.  Won’t you?”

“Mr. Sims…did you hear what I said?  I’ve been in freezing water and I’m chilled to the bone.  I just got out of a hot tub but I’m still having chills.  I need the day off.”

“Hmmm.  Well son, I don’t think you do.  If what you say is true and the boy that you pulled out of the pool is OK, then there’s no further reason for you to stay home.  Stand by the heater, drink a hot cup of cocoa, and get in here.  It’s going to be a busy day and we need to make some money.”

“Well, I…”

“There’s no ‘well’ about it!”  I could hear him snapping his fingers.  “Unless you’re on your way to the hospital you’ll be here as soon as you can.”

I could see that there was no way for me to talk my way into a day off.  I was getting angry but knew that if I kept talking to him I was going to end up telling him to go fuck himself and I’d tell him I was going to quit.  And, if I did that then for sure there would be no money for me to continue my flying lessons.

“Uh…OK.  But I ruined my suit so I’ll have to go to the laundry and get the one that’s there out to wear.”

“Yes, that’s the spirit.  Tell you what: to hurry you along I’ll send Eddie to get your suit and he’ll drive it over to your apartment.  That way we’ll cut your time in half.  I’ll tell the dry cleaners that you’ll be sure to pay them when you take your lunch.  How’s that?”

“Fine, I’ll be in as soon as Eddie gets here with my suit.”

“Wonderful!  By the way, how old was the kid?

“I don’t know…maybe three or four”

“Hmm…don’t you live in an adult only residence?”

“Yes.”

“But there was a kid there that for some reason decided go swimming in freezing weather.  Hmm, that’s curious, isn’t it?”

“You sound like you don’t believe me.”

“What I believe and what I don’t believe is not important here.  What is important though is that you need to be in here selling.  See you soon.”  And the line went dead.

***

Despite several attempts to contact the people whose grandchild, or nephew, almost caused us both to drown, no one ever answered the door.  Since I was rarely home during the day, whenever I’d come knocking in the late evening the shades remained drawn and the lights off.

I eventually resorted to writing a letter in which I threatened to sue, and had it hand-delivered by the apartment manager.  After about two months I came home one evening to find an envelope in the door with one-hundred and eighty-five dollars inside.  This was the amount that I had referenced in my letter that I was demanding to get my ruined suit and shoes replaced.

I never saw the kid again.

***

When I called the air traffic control tower at the Austin Airport and inquired about a job, I was told that all hiring for jobs in the ATC field was done by the Federal Aviation Administration.  The lady to whom I spoke gave me a number to the Civil Service Commission in Austin and said I’d have to ask them about hiring since she had no idea what the procedure was.

I wrote the number down and since it was already late Friday afternoon I decided to make the call on Monday.  As it turned out, that call ended up being the most important and pivotal phone call of my life.

To be continued…

 

Texas–Part Three

Texas – Part Three

 

Bakers and Lungs

One afternoon, not long after Kaz and I had decided that to even consider flying lessons I would need a part-time job, we went out to dinner at a Chinese restaurant which had been recommended to us by the apartment complex manager.  It was a small place—maybe six or seven tables—and it was located outside a cozy residential area just north of where we lived.  The food was good, and even better, the prices were very reasonable.  The only problem was their apparent lack of a waitress, as the same man who seated us was manning the register, taking the orders, and bussing the tables.

During our meal, I casually mentioned to Kaz that if she was willing to work for Chinese people she should probably apply for a job here.  She laughed, saying that if she applied to work here she’d only want to be the cashier.

By the end of our meal, and after discussing this issue at length, Kaz had decided that if there was indeed a vacancy for a cashier at this restaurant she wouldn’t mind working here.  As we paid for our meal we asked about this.  The man who’d served us was now also working the register and said that if she was interested he’d be happy to take her application.  The only thing though, he advised, was that he didn’t need a cashier.  What he needed was a waitress.  He handed Kaz an application form and told her to call him for an interview if she thought she’d be interested.

On the way home we talked about it, and although she wasn’t crazy about waitressing, thought that if the hourly pay was good she was willing to work there.  Besides, she surmised, the extra money would come in handy for paying off our furniture debt; plus, because she had no friends or family here in Austin, her days at home were long and lonely.  It would do her good to get out and work outside the home.

Since neither of us had previously considered her getting a job—our discussions had always centered on me getting a part-time job—we hadn’t figured out the logistics of her also working.  Since Kaz didn’t know how to drive (and even if she did, we only had one car) I wasn’t sure how this was going to work out.  Regardless, once we got home Kaz got busy filling out the application.  Just as she started another problem surfaced.  She had no Social Security card.

After we’d married on Okinawa, and before we’d departed for the states, she had applied for a Permanent Residence Card—commonly known as a ‘Green Card’, but not a Social Security card—as we had not anticipated her having to work once in the state.  But without one I doubted that she could apply for any job.

The wait for the Social Security card wasn’t as bad as I thought it was going to be, so about a month later Kaz was ready to work.  She called the Chinese restaurant and was told that the cashier position was still open.  Now, all we had to do was figure out how she was going to get to and from the job.

We decided that the only way this was going to work was to have her start her shift sometime during my two-hour lunch break.  That way I could leave the base, take her to work, then by the time her shift was over I would be off work and would be able to pick her up.  She discussed this with the owner of the restaurant and he said he’d be fine with that as long as she could be there not later than twelve noon.  It would be close, but if I took off for lunch at eleven-thirty, I could have her there by noon.

Now that Kaz had secured a job it was my turn to look for something.  Besides the crappy restaurant and poultry processing jobs I’d had in high school, the gas stations in Winnemucca and Olathe, I didn’t have outside experience in much else.  Besides, I was burned out on these types of jobs and I wanted to try something else.

One day, as I was dropping off some of Kaz’s stuff at a laundry and dry cleaners located in the Capital Plaza mall across the street from our apartment, I noticed that the customer in front of me was a young black man who was dressed in a very stylish suit and a very expensive-looking pair of shoes.  As he engaged the clerk behind the counter they began to chat.  The waiting area was small and not very private so I couldn’t help but overhear their conversation.

“So, Eddie,” the clerk asked, “how’s the shoe business nowadays?”

“Oh, you know—runs hot and cold,” the black man replied.  “But for me, it’s always hot—if you know what I mean!”

“Well, you must be doing well considering these two new suits you’re picking up.”

“It’s all about knowing how to sell,” Eddie said, with a little chuckle.  With that, the clerk hung two expensive and very stylish suits on the bar and Eddie pulled out some bills to settle the bill.

Pocketing his change and pulling the plastic-bagged suits off the bar, Eddie turned.  “Excuse me,” he said, as he walked around me.

“So, where do you work?”  I asked as he started towards the door.

“Huh?  Oh…”

“I’m sorry,” I said, apologetically, “I couldn’t help hearing what you said about selling shoes.”

“No problem.  I work just a couple of store fronts down.  Why?”

“Oh, no reason.  Just curious I guess.  I never thought selling shoes would be so profitable.  Those are some really nice clothes.”

“Thanks!” he said, smiling widely.  He seemed to be in his mid-twenties and was very good looking.  “It’s all about the smile!  The ladies like that, you know.”

“Ladies?”

“Yeah, I work at Baker’s Shoes.  A ladies’ shoe store.”

“Oh…”

“You should bring your wife or girlfriend in.  We have the latest styles at half of department store prices.  If you do decide to come in, be sure to ask for Eddie.”

Eddie smiled, turned, and smoothly walked out the door.  As I completed my transaction with the clerk, I wondered what it would be like to work somewhere where you wore a nice suit and tie.  Up to this point in my life, the only time I’d ever worn a suit was at our wedding on Okinawa; and I just couldn’t see wearing it again at someplace I worked.

That evening, over dinner, I brought the subject up to Kaz.

“You want to work selling woman shoes?” she asked, twisting her head in that inquisitive way and wrinkling her nose.

“Oh, I don’t know.  All I’ve ever done is work at gas stations and that drive-in in Kansas.  It would certainly be different to work in a nice clean store for a change.”

“But what you know about selling shoes to woman?”

“Nothing!  But how hard could it be?”

“Woman very picky.  Not like filling car with gas or making hamburger.  Woman never know what she want to buy.  Especially shoes.”

“OK, I guess that’s true—but I think I’ll drop by tomorrow anyway and fill out an application.  Can’t hurt, you know.”

“Hmm.  Do what you want, I guess.”

A couple of days after submitting an application I was called in to meet with the store manager.  He was a small man, about five feet four inches, probably in his early fifties, and wore his lightly-graying brown hair slicked back.  His name was Arthur Mims, and he’d been in the shoe-selling business for over thirty years.  “I’m a licensed chiropractor,” he told me, “but early on I decided that I liked selling much better than I did cracking bones.  Never looked back.”

He was constantly moving around—crossing and re-crossing his legs, popping his knuckles, readjusting his tie—so maybe he wouldn’t have done well as a chiropractor.

“When can you start?” he asked, looking over my application.

“Well, I’ll have to buy a couple of suits, since I only have one—so maybe this coming weekend?”

“Can you make it Friday evening?  Say around four or five?  That’s when the walk-ins start filing in, so I could use another set of feet on the floor.  Eddie will show you the ropes…I think you met him already, right?”

“Yes, at the cleaners.”

“Oh sure.  He’s my top salesman, so you’ll have a good teacher.  Any questions?”

“Well, what about the pay?”

“You’ll work on commission…so the more you sell, the more you make.  Plus, add-ons like buckles, shoe polish, purses, all add up, you know.”

“Well, if I could ask—how much is the commission?”

“You’ll earn eight percent for each pair of shoes you sell.  Add-ons are twenty-five percent.  So, you’ll want to sell, sell, sell!”  He punctuated the last three words by snapping his fingers as he spit them out.  I would soon learn that that was one of his annoying little habits.  If he caught you lounging or day-dreaming, or letting customers just mill about the store, he’d sneak up behind you and hiss: “Sell (snap), sell (snap), sell (snap)!”

On the way out of the store, I stopped to look at the shoes arranged inside of the display windows.  I was startled to see that the cheapest shoes (sandals) were $3.99, and the most expensive shoes (fancy patent-leather dress pumps) were priced at $9.99.  At eight percent, I’d have to sell a whole hell of a lot of shoes just to make up for the price of the two suits I was about to buy.

By that first weekend, both Kaz and I were gainfully employed at our new jobs.  She, cashiering part-time and bussing tables at Lungs Chinese Restaurant; and I, an apprentice working evenings from five to nine, and weekends from eight in the morning until ten at night, at Baker’s Shoe Store.  There I was going to try my hand at selling shoes to what seemed like hundreds of women who seemed to want to try on dozens of pairs of shoes, and usually ended up leaving without buying a thing.

My dream of learning to fly suddenly seemed much further away now than when I didn’t have a part-time job.

Hits and Misses

Working part time at Baker’s Shoes was all at once interesting, boring, confusing, and stressful.  Not ever having worked for a retail company, and never on commission, I experienced a steep learning curve for the first four or five weeks of my employment.  I quickly discovered that this type of work was extremely competitive, and if I wanted to make any money at it I would have to quickly learn how to outmaneuver my four other co-workers on a daily, if not hourly, basis.

When I’d had my final interview with Mr. Sims the week before, I was told that for the first two months my pay would be based on a “draw”; that is, for that period of time I would be guaranteed a monthly salary of three hundred dollars a month, or seventy-five dollars a week, if my commissioned sales total remained below that threshold.  However, if my paid commissions met or exceeded that amount, the draw would become moot and I would receive my actual earnings—minus deductions for federal withholding taxes, of course.  After a quick mental calculation, I determined that based on an eight percent commission, to even meet the monthly draw I would have to sell almost four hundred pairs of the store’s highest priced $9.99 shoes.  I further calculated that the odds of my accomplishing that feat (no pun intended), working four hours each weekday evening and full days over the weekend, were very long indeed.

I also learned that customer contact was determined by what was described as “ups”.  Each morning (for those salesmen who worked full-time) the first customer of the day belonged to whoever sold the most shoes the day before, the second customer belonged to the next highest salesman, and so forth until everyone on the floor had had the opportunity to contact a customer.  Each customer contact opportunity was known as an “up”, so whenever a customer came into the store and it was my turn to wait on her, Eddie, or whoever noticed her entering, would say, “Frank, it’s your up.”  I soon learned not to depend on someone else (especially Eddie) to notice when a new customer entered the store.  Several times, during my first few weeks, I was cheated out of my ups because I was not paying attention to the front door.  Before I knew it, Eddie or one of the other salesmen were waiting on two or three customers while I had none.  When I complained to Mr. Sims about this,s his dole reply was, “The eager bird gets the worm, and you gotta learn how to sell, sell, sell.”

My first week began on a Monday evening when I reported to the shoe store at five o’clock.  After having put in a full day at the base, I hurried home to shower and change into one of the new suits I had bought on credit the previous weekend.  Because I hadn’t had a chance to eat dinner, I hurried over to the mall and visited the full-line buffet offered at a Mervyn’s department store just a few storefronts down from the shoe store.

After getting briefed on how to document each shoe sale on the little sales pad and ensuring I understood that I had to turn in the carbon copies to the cashier, he turned me loose on the floor.  Naturally, I was lost.

I did an absolute disservice to my first few customers who had to tolerate my not knowing what they were talking about when they described a particular style of shoe they were interested in—finally giving up after I had brought out the wrong thing—and taking me out to the display window to show me the exact shoe.  Then they were forced to wait forever while I bumbled around in the storage room trying in vain to find the right box in the exact style and size before finally giving up and bringing out something completely different for them to try on.

But little by little I started getting comfortable in the job, and against all odds, that first month I missed meeting my draw by a hundred dollars.  When Mr. Sims handed me that first paycheck I promised him that from then on I would exceed my draw.  And I did—significantly.  I had to…that’s how much I wanted to learn how to fly.

To her misfortune, Kaz was not having the same kind of success at Lungs as I was at Bakers.  Although the owner had promised that she was being hired as a cashier, she ended up doing that job only when the restaurant was virtually empty.  During the lunch and dinner rushes she wound up doing nothing but waiting on tables then bussing them up once the customers left, while the owner worked the register.  Worse, a few times she was even asked to help out in the dish washing area when the little guy working back there got a little bit behind.

Tips were split up among the employees and typically were very low.  So given the time and effort she was putting in at the restaurant compared to what she was bringing home, it was not a good deal for her at all.  Two months after starting she came home disgusted and suggested that perhaps she should be looking for something else to do.

One day while I was driving Kaz to work I mentioned the buffet bar at Mervyns.  I told her I’d stopped by there a couple of times for a quick bite before heading to the shoe store.  It was quick and cheap—all you could eat for $1.99—and the food was decent.  Almost as an afterthought she said that maybe she should look into getting a job there.  “Anything would be better than working at that Chinese place,” she said.  “Not only don’t I like the owner but he very cheap.  You know, when I clean up table he order me to not throw away any food left on plate if customer not eat it.  ‘Save it.’ He tells me.  ‘Maybe warm it up again if another customer order same thing.  Or maybe you can eat it for your lunch so cook doesn’t have to cook fresh for you.’”

“What?!” I said.  “That’s disgusting.  He can’t do that!  I think if the health department found out they’d close him down.”

“Yeah, they should.  He also make us save and re-serve butter not used by customer—and rolls too.”

“OK, that’s it!” I said forcefully.  “Why don’t you just call in sick today and I’ll drop you off at the buffet where you can ask if they need help.  If so, then you can put in your application while you’re there.  Besides, if you get a job there it’ll be so much more convenient—it being just across the street from where we live, and all.  What do you think?”

“OK with me.  I don’t want to go to Chinese restaurant to work anymore anyway.”

So that was that.  We turned around and I drove Kaz back to the apartment so she could change clothes.  That afternoon when I got back from the base to get ready to go to the shoe store Kaz cheerfully informed me that she had indeed been hired at the buffet and would start work the next day.  She would be training for a couple of weeks keeping the buffet stocked with fresh food, and because she had previous experience operating a cash register the manager assured her that she’d have first shot at an upcoming vacancy.

Because she didn’t bother to give the Lungs Restaurant manager the required two-week notice that she was quitting, he told her he’d just keep her last check.

TAC, Selling Techniques, and Pre-flight Prep

If I ever thought I had been busy before, I was sadly mistaken.  Going to work every morning and discharging my TAC (Tactical Air Command) duties, and attending ground school and meteorological classes, while still selling shoes every evening and on Saturdays and Sundays didn’t allow me too much time for anything else.

As luck would have it the Air Force had sent down a directive dictating that TAC squadrons increase their field set-ups from one about every month to one every two weeks.  Apparently, our times had been lagging in getting our equipment set up and operating during our drills, so the brass in Washington decided that we needed more practice.

Besides being physically exhausting, the time from start to finish easily consumed a twelve-hour day—leaving me no time to put in even a few hours at the shoe store.  Worse, our breaks—but most importantly our two-hour lunches—were all but eliminated.  While in the field we were provided box lunches and canned soft drinks by the base chow halls, and those were consumed between the times we set up and tore down our tents and equipment.

Somehow and luckily, our field exercises just happened to fall on days when I had no scheduled ground school or meteorological classes, so I was able to complete them successfully and without interruption.

Kaz was almost as busy—spending long hours at the buffet at Mervyns and trying to keep up with the small amount of housework in the apartment.  When we did finally find ourselves at home together for a few hours we were too tired to do anything else but collapse from sheer exhaustion.  And I hadn’t even started to fly yet!

By late July I had finally completed all my pre-flight classes, which I had been taking during my long lunch breaks, and I was ready to take to the air.  By this time we’d saved enough money to comfortably defray my flight time, fuel costs, and instructor time—so now it was just a matter of trying to find the time that would actually allow me to take an airplane up into the air while still working two jobs.

That problem was solved one day as I was paying off my aviation class fees at the Aero Club and my future flight instructor, Captain Norgaard walked in.

“Hey!” he said, cheerfully as he walked up to the weather briefing desk.  “I hear you passed your Ground School and Meteorology classes with flying colors and are ready to get some flying lessons under your belt.”

“Yup.  Now all I have to do is find the time to do that.”

“What do you mean?  You can get plenty of time during the weekends…money permitting, that is.”

“If only.  I work all day on Saturdays and Sundays.”

“What? Here on the base?”

“No, I work part time at Bakers Shoe Store at Capital Plaza.”

“Every day?”

“Almost.  I work from five during the weekday evenings until ten—an hour after we close; then, from eight in the morning until ten at night on Saturdays and Sundays.”

“Shit!  Selling shoes?”

“Women’s shoes,” I said.

“Are you kidding me?  When do you get any time off?”

“Well, I don’t have much of that, and my wife works too.  She’s putting in twelve-hour days over at Mervyn’s at the same mall working on their cafeteria’s buffet line.”

“Jesus!  You guys are insane.  Why’re you doing all of that?”

“Well, we decided that for me to have a career in aviation we’d have to work hard and save enough money to finance that.  So that’s what we’re doing.  The only problem now is that I don’t know where I’m going to fit in any actual flying time.”

“So that’s the reason you were doing your ground classes during your lunch time, huh?”

“Yup.”

“Makes sense.  So why couldn’t you do your flying during the same time?”

“Uh…I don’t know if it’s legal for me to do that.  Technically, I’m on duty with the Air Force, so I don’t know if I can be actually flying when I’m on duty.”

“How long you get for lunch?”

“Anywhere from ninety minutes to two hours.”

“Every day?”

“Yes, when we’re not deployed in the field.”

“Shit, that’s more than enough time then.  OK, how about I talk to your squadron commander and get his OK for you to take flying lessons during your time off for lunch?”

“You would do that?”

“Sure.  I’d do anything to get me some more flying hours logged.  You don’t think I’m gonna spend my time flying these damned F-4s all my life, do you?  I got a couple of more years in this man’s Air Force then I’m gonna go fly me some commercial jets.  Gotta have plenty of hours in my log book to make it easier for me to get hired.”

“OK, well I guess if the commander thinks it’s OK I can come up and take my flying lessons during my lunch time.”

“Fine!  I’ll give you a call when that’s done.  But for now, let’s look at the flight schedule and see if we can reserve one of the Cherokees for the next couple of days so we can get you up into the air—whaddya think?”

“Fine by me.”

“Now you know you’ll be paying the ‘wet rate’ (flight time plus fuel), plus my instructor fee, right for your hours flown, right?”

“Yes.”

“OK, just so you understand that it’s gonna be a little steep, financially, in the beginning.  It’ll be cheaper once you solo.  Then you won’t be paying me.”

“How many hours before I solo?”

“That depends on you.  Normally, it takes at least ten or 12 hours for a student to solo.  Sometimes it takes longer, occasionally a student does it in less.  But it’ll depend on how good a pilot you turn out to be.”

“Ten or twelve hours…”

“Sounds like a lot of time, but it’ll go faster than you think.  I’ll let you know how it goes with your commander.”

“How long after that before I’ll be ready for a check ride…you know, to get my license.”

“Whoa there partner!  Let’s get you in the air before we start thinking about a certification.  But, to answer your question, you can expect to go forty or more hours before being recommended for a check ride.  Then, a good percentage of students don’t make it the first time.  So let’s just concentrate on you learning how to handle the airplane, OK?”

“Sure, OK.”  But in my mind, I kept thinking, ‘…forty hours…or more…’.

I walked out of the Aero Club, my head swimming.  I was thinking of the expense I had just taken on, the time it may take me to complete the program, and the amount of effort that I’d have to devote to this endeavor.  I worried if I’d bitten off more than I could chew.

***

On the other hand, things at the shoe store were going pretty smoothly, all things considered.  I had quickly learned that to be successful in selling there were a set behaviors that I would have to develop and strictly adhere to.  First, I was to always maintain a strict watch on the entrance door.  Just because it was my up meant nothing to the rest of my co-workers—especially Eddie.  If a customer or customers were loitering outside by the display windows checking out the different styles of shoes, one had to be extremely vigilant, if not clairvoyant, to determine just exactly when they were going to break towards the entrance door.  If I was up, I had to make sure that I was positioned at just the right area of the store—not too close to the door, but close enough for me to meet and instantly greet the customers as they entered.  Just as important, while lurking close to the door one must appear to be totally disinterested in said customer.

I developed a style that proved to be extremely successful.  I would position myself at the center aisle of the store, about twenty or thirty feet from the front door, and busy myself with rearranging some shoes on display tables near the center of the store—all the while keeping the customers in view out of the corner of my eye.  As they started to break for the door I would casually walk toward the front, careful not to make eye contact, but timing my stride so as to arrive at the entrance area at about the same time that they entered.  If for some reason they changed their minds and stopped just short of the door or U-turned back out to the exterior walkway, I would nonchalantly direct my attention to the pole just to the left of the door on which display purses were hung and give them a good straightening out.  If the customer or customers walked in they would instantly become the extreme focus of my attention.  A big smile, a cheery greeting, and welcome was just the beginning of the outpouring of charm that I was about to bestow on them.

I found that solid and steady eye-to-eye contact was mandatory, coupled with a soft vocal manner, maybe a couple of registers higher than a normal male business voice.  Lastly, and maybe most importantly, making them truly believe that they had just become the very center of my personal universe.

My trips to the back storeroom had to be short.  Any more than a minute and the thick helping of charisma that I had shed all over them would slowly begin to dissipate.  If I didn’t find the exact style that they’d asked for in their size, I would quickly grab three other similar styles or colors and bring them out.  I would explain that not having their size in their requested style/color was really fortunate because, “…I think these styles/colors just look so much better on you because of the lovely shape of your foot, your magnificent skin tone/shade, or how this shoe accentuates the shape of your legs/calf.”  The trick was to have them try them on and walk around near the mirrors.  I would float around them being sure to compliment them how this shoe just transformed them and made them taller, shorter, or thinner.   Of course, all this charm would not always work, but it never ceased to surprise me just how often it did.

Next, never be satisfied in just selling the customer one pair of shoes.  If she came in looking for a dress shoe, also show her a pair of sandals or casual loafers.  If it was casual she was looking for, also show her a dress pump—and be sure to add a nice matching purse and maybe a bow clip to accentuate the style.  More often than not, a customer that walked in looking for a particular pair of shoes walked out with three or four pairs, a purse or two, and a set of nice add-on bows or clips for those nice black patent leather opera pumps.  So, a $9.99 shoe sale could easily be catapulted into a $60 purchase just for one customer if one tried hard enough.  (Sell, sell, sell!).

The real money was made when the store had enough customers for me to wait on two, three or four customers at the same time.  Of course, some women didn’t react well to the charm routine so for them I would be sure to display a serious businesslike tone.  When waiting on multiple customers I would have to adjust and change my character as I floated among them.  At first, I found it difficult to do that, but the more I worked at it the better I got.

Touch was another aspect of the shoe sales game that I had to learn carefully.  Eddie had advised that most women did not mind being touched if it was done impersonally and in a complimentary fashion.  For example, if the customer was standing facing one of the full-length mirrors while looking down at the shoes I’d just placed on her feet, he suggested standing just off to the side, looking where she was looking.  He suggested displaying a serious contemplative look, maybe left arm folded over midsection supporting the right elbow.  The right arm should be extended up to one’s face, index finger curled across lips, shoulders back and head nodding approvingly.

I should then say, “Let’s see how these look from the back…”, and just gently touch her shoulder with one finger, lightly guiding her around so that her back was now to the mirror.  Naturally, she’d look over a shoulder to see how the shoes would look from the back, and I, after quickly removing the finger, stepping back—and reassuming the previous contemplative stance—then say something like, “Oh my…just look at that!”

“You think they look nice?” she might ask.

“Well, your husband/boyfriend may not say anything out loud, but trust me, he would most certainly think so.  Oh yes, most definitely.”

After that initial impersonal touch, which by the way would probably be categorized as sexual assault by today’s standards, she would usually become more amenable to one casually draping a purse over her shoulder, slipping a new pair of hose or socks on her feet, and so forth.  That first delicate soupçon of physical attention would somehow transform the relationship from salesman/customer to personal advisor/woman.

I also learned from Eddie that the sales goal to set for oneself for a twelve-hour day was a thousand dollars in sales.  If that goal was met I stood to earn a commission close to, or just over, eighty dollars a day—pretty good money in those days.  After the first month, I found myself in direct competition with him and we ended up being the store’s dynamic duo—once exceeding twelve-hundred dollars each in sales on a very busy Saturday.  Of course, because I was not putting in as many hours as the rest of the full-time salesmen, I was never able to match what the others were making.  I just hoped it would be enough to cover my flight expenses.

Kaz was much happier working at the Mervyn’s cafeteria buffet than she’d ever been at Lungs.  Soon she was not only keeping the buffet trays full but being a quick study and learning the price of each buffet item, she had been elevated to a part-time cashier.

It wasn’t long before we had saved enough money for me to begin my flight training.

Taking to the Skies

My first flying day started with a weather briefing commencing shortly after I entered the Aero Club at 11 AM, right at the beginning of my lunch period.  The previous day, Sergeant Kent had given me a letter from the base commander granting me permission to “participate in any and all Bergstrom Aero Club activities, including active flight, during non-assigned work hours, as long as my dues were paid and remained a member in good standing”.

After receiving the weather briefing from the Austin Flight Service Station, via telephone, Marshall, my flight instructor and I, proceeded out to the flight line to conduct my first-ever pre-flight walk-around aircraft inspection.

I was assigned a yellow and white Cherokee Model 140, equipped with a 150-horsepower Lycoming four-cylinder engine; tail number N8461R.  It was probably four or five years old, but it looked brand-new to me.

Prior to arriving at the Aero Club, I had been asked to bring along my copy of the Cherokee Model 140 flight manual—a sort of owners’ manual—as I was to refer to it as we visually checked the fuel level in each of the aircraft’s two-wing tanks; drew a sample of the fuel to ensure that it had not been contaminated with water and did not contain any type of residue; check the level and viscosity of the oil in the engine’s crankcase; visually check and physically pull on the belt attached to the spool on the oil pump; visually check and ensure solid connectivity of each magneto wire (spark plug wires), and look carefully at the engine looking for leaks or drips of any kind.

Next, I was taught to run my hands over the propeller to make sure it didn’t have any nicks or dings and to make sure it was solidly connected to the propeller shaft.  From here we proceeded to the wings and manually moved the ailerons to ensure their travel was unimpeded and did the same thing at the tail section to the rudder and the elevators.

Finally, suppressing the urge to kick them, I was to make sure all three landing gear tires were inflated and pointed in the right direction.  By the time I climbed up to the wing and squeezed myself into the port side (left) pilot’s seat I was sweating in spite of the cool weather.

I was instructed to close the door, but not lock it (one of the last items on the pre-takeoff checklist), and refer to the pre-start checklist prior to turning the ignition key.

There was a different checklist for everything—each one laminated and attached to a small steel ring, and once completed they were all to be stored in a small rectangular compartment located on the right side of my seat cushion.  I was asked to also put my little owners’ manual in there this time because before our next flight I was expected to have all the pertinent information memorized, so I wouldn’t need it.

After engine start-up, I was briefed on what the rudders at my feet did (not much until we actually reached 35 or 40 mph), and the brakes, located on top of each rudder pedal and activated by pivoting the foot forward (learn to push on the brakes without also pushing on the rudders).  Steering, after moving the aircraft by gently pushing in on a small plunger-like throttle with a red knob and accelerating the engine, was accomplished by pushing on the respective rudder pedal—when under flying speed right rudder turned the plane right and left rudder turned it left.  I also had to suppress a desire to turn the yoke (steering wheel) since doing so had absolutely no effect on steering the plane on the ground.

After receiving clearance from the tower, Marshall instructed me to taxi the plane to what was called the “run-up area”, and I did so in a rather crazy zigzag manner.  I recall that the word I uttered most on that first taxi was, “oops”.

While stopped at the run-up area, Marshall explained that while holding the aircraft steady by pushing and locking the brakes (push hard with the toes until they click), bring the engine up to 2000 RPM.  Then I was to turn the ignition key two clicks to the left, shutting off one set of magnetos, then two clicks to the right.  Next, turn the key one click to the left, shutting off the second set of magnetos.  He pointed out that each time I shut off a set of magnetos the engine’s RPM decreased slightly.  This was normal and was the expected result.  I was then asked to pull the power lever back to achieve normal RPM.

After asking for and receiving clearance to taxi to the active runway and I pushed hard with my toes and unlocked the brakes, and the plane lurched forward.  I zigzagged onto the runway.  Within a few seconds, I heard the tower clear us for takeoff.

So, on Tuesday, August 13, 1968, at 11:28 am, I introduced power to the little engine up to 2500 RPM, and accelerated down runway 36 at Bergstrom Air Force Base in Austin, Texas.  The day was what pilots referred to as “severe clear”, with a light quartering breeze from the north, and the temperature was in the mid-eighties, extremely mild for central Texas at that time of the year.  As the plane lurched into the bright blue sky at about sixty miles an hour, a feeling of exhilaration flooded my body.  I would experience that same feeling from then on, every time I took to the air.

***

My first flight lasted just a few minutes less than one hour (.9 hours on the Hobbs meter).  After takeoff, I was shown how to set the plane up for a climb then how to level off at altitude.  The rest of the time was spent familiarizing me with the various instruments on the panel and how to use them to fly with the nose steady and the wings straight and level.  Trust me, it was harder than it sounds.

I remember thinking how much work it was just to keep up with such a small plane.  In spite of the cool air circulating the cockpit I was drenched in sweat, although I assume most of that could probably be attributed to a slight case of nerves.

After Marshall was satisfied that I could keep the plane reasonably level and on a steady heading, he directed me to what was described as the “training area”.  This was a slice of airspace about 15 to 20 miles east of the airport where most potentially dangerous traversing air traffic was mostly non-existent.  Once there, I was taught and practiced a few turns—learning to keep the nose above the horizon during the turn to maintain a steady altitude—as all aircraft tend to want to dive when one wing is lower than the other.  “This,” the captain explained, “is known as a coordinated turn.”

Before I knew it, we were headed back to the airport to line up for a landing.  By the time we’d taxied back to the Aero Club flight line and had gassed and secured the aircraft it was time for me to return to duty.

As we entered the club, Marshall asked if I was interested in flying again tomorrow.  “I’d like to introduce you to multiple landings if you’d like.”

“Heck yes, I’ll be here,” I said, feeling a little flutter of excitement at the thought of going up again.

To be continued…