Lt.jg Steve Crowston is the former enlisted Sailor who became an officer and then went through a fighter pilot naming, as previously discussed:
Crowston told the IG that [his commander, Commander Liam] Bruen and the unit’s then-executive officer, Cmdr. Damien Christopher, were in the unit’s ready room during an August 2009 all-officer review of squadron call signs, when Crowston was offered choices such as “Fagmeister,” “Gay Boy” and the group’s final choice, “Romo’s Bitch” — a reference to the quarterback of Crowston’s favorite football team, the Dallas Cowboys. Crowston was the squadron’s administrative/legal officer.
Crowston is demanding an apology for the experience: Read more…
Categories: Fighter Pilot Tags: callsign, damien christopher, Fighter Pilot, john harvey, liam bruen, Military, naming, Navy, steve barney, steve crowston, Tradition
The Inspector General has reportedly determined that US Navy Ensign Steve Crowston faced reprisal in the form of an “unfavorable fitness report” after lodging complaints against his leadership.
Crowston was an “administration/legal officer” and had recently become an officer after previously serving as a petty officer. The aviators in his unit included him in the fighter pilot tradition of a Naming; Crowston lodged complaints as a result.
Crowston’s then-commander, Cmdr Liam Bruen, Read more…
When General Robert Magnus retired in 2008 after nearly 40 years of service, he was second in command of the US Marine Corps and the highest ranking Jewish member of the US military.
He was also a Naval aviator, though a transport helicopter pilot, so even he received a “callsign:”
The assignment prompted a friend to bestow on him a “call sign,” a nickname given to a military pilot as a substitute for the officer’s given name. “Fighter pilots and attack helicopter pilots all had call signs, but I was a transport helicopter pilot and we didn’t,” he explains. His friend insisted and Magnus became “Heeb,” short for “Hebrew.”
Think a callsign like that would last long in today’s politically correct environment? Interestingly enough, it did last more than 30 years: Read more…
Though a few days older than the original story on the Naval officer who filed a complaint over his naming, a Time Magazine story contains more details on “callsigns” in the military, with some interesting, stereotypical (and likely accurate) comments:
In the testosterone-laden world of military aviation, call signs for pilots and other squadron personnel can be really sticky — the more an aviator complains about the moniker his colleagues bestow upon him, the tighter its grip will be.
Over the years, that has led to lots of embarrassing call signs beyond the famous one brandished by Read more…
FoxNews has an article about Ensign Steve Crowston, a Navy officer who said he was the victim of sexual discrimination:
The harassment began in August 2009, says Crowston, 36, when his fellow officers called him into a room for a review of call signs, a military moniker that easily identifies a service member. He says his name was written on a whiteboard with a list of call sign recommendations: “Cowboy,” “Gay Boy,” “Fagmeister,” “Cowgirl,” “Romo’s Bitch,” “TO, “Terrell Owens” and “Redskins.”
Call signs can be used in official military correspondence and Read more…
Ret. Col. Walker “Bud” “Honest John” Mahurin, credited with 24.25 kills in both WWII theatres and the Korean War, passed away on May 11 at the age of 91. Besides shooting down aircraft in three theatres, Mahurin had the dubious honor of being shot down in each one. He escaped France with the aid of the French resistance (as did Chuck Yeager). Yeager talked his way into continuing to fly in Europe (despite his exposure to the underground); Mahurin went to the Pacific theatre instead. In the later conflict, Mahurin was a Korean POW for 16 months.
For those who are wondering, “honest John” Read more…
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