Has it been 48 years since that night? I can remember it like it was yesterday. We on the night shift that night will always remember, not the panic, not the fear, not the nightmare, but a situation that was out of our control. Dave, Tiny, Pat and myself will always remember. We did as we were told, without fear or panic, just a job. The Ops guys did their thing, the way they were taught. All of us were there. Not the hundreds of others who say they were there but weren't. They may have come a day or two later but not there that night. Professionals trying to do what they thought they should. The guys who came into the situation on day shift, picked up the job and did their thing. The only person who even showed an ounce of fear, later became a NRC Inspector, how appropriate. Another just flat out left town, never to be seen again, how appropriate. The rest of us stayed worked, what forever seemed like endless hours, doing our job. What is really ironic about the whole situation, nobody, nobody was killed, nobody was injured that night and the days to follow, we did our job. Remember these folks and the job they did. No thanks to the Jimmy Carters, Dick Thornbourgh, and not the other political posturers of that time, we did our best. Thank you for remembering TMI.