Seaman (SN) is the third enlisted rank from the bottom in the
U.S. Navy and
U.S. Coast Guard, ranking above
seaman apprentice and below
petty officer third class. This naval rank was formerly called seaman first class. The rank is also used in
United States Naval Sea Cadet Corps, a naval-themed uniformed youth program under the sponsorship of the
Navy League of the United States. The actual title and insignia for an E-3 varies based on the job rating to which the member will ultimately be assigned. • Those in the general deck, technical, weapons and administrative groups (with the exception of the aviation administration men) are called "seamen" (SN) and they represent the largest group of Navy and Coast Guard personnel in pay grades E-3 and below. They wear white stripes on their blue uniforms (USN and USCG), and navy blue (black) stripes on their white uniforms (USN only). • Those in the medical group are now called "hospitalmen" (HN). In October 2005, the USN dental technician (DT) rating was merged into the hospital corpsman (HM) rating, eliminating the "dentalman" title for E-3 and below. Those who once held the rate of "dentalman" have become "hospitalmen". They wear white stripes on their blue uniforms, and navy blue stripes on their white uniforms. After the completion of their "A" school, they wear a caduceus of the same color as the stripes on their uniforms. On their combat uniforms, a hospitalman wears their caduceus on the tab of their left collar tab. This rating was previously called pharmacist's mate (PHM) and HMs are colloquially referred to as "corpsman" in the naval service. Hospitalmen exist only in the U.S. Navy; their equivalent in the U.S. Coast Guard is the health services technician (HS), which is sourced from seamen in that service's administrative and scientific group. • Those in the shipboard engineering and hull group, comprising conventional (USN + USCG) and nuclear (USN only) powerplants and propulsion, as well as the hull maintenance area, are called "firemen" (FN). They wear red stripes on both their USN and USCG blue uniforms and, in the case of the Navy, white uniforms. • Those in the aviation group of the Navy and Coast Guard are called "
airmen" (AN), and they wear green stripes on blue uniforms (USN + USCG) and white uniforms (USN only). • Enlisted personnel in the construction group, which primarily populates the U.S. Navy's civil engineering construction battalions (i.e.,
Seabees), are called "constructionmen" (CN) and they wear light blue stripes on both their blue and white uniforms. Constructionmen are unique to the U.S. Navy; there is no U.S. Coast Guard equivalent. No such stripes for E-1, E-2 or E-3 are authorized to be worn on working uniforms, e.g.,
navy work uniform, USCG operational dress uniform, coveralls, utility wear, flight suits, hospital and clinic garb, diving suits, etc. However, sailors with the pay grade of E-2 or E-3 are permitted to wear silver-anodized collar devices on their service uniforms. Some sailors and Coast Guardsmen receive a rating following completion of a military technical training course for that particular rating known as an "A" school. Other sailors and Coast Guardsmen who have completed the requirements to be assigned a rating and have been accepted by the Navy Personnel Command/Bureau of Naval Personnel (USN) or the Coast Guard Personnel Service Center Command (USCG) as holding that rating (a process called "striking") are called "designated strikers", and are referred to by their full rate and rating in formal communications (i.e., machinist's mate fireman (MMFN), as opposed to simply fireman (FN)), though the rating is often left off in informal communications. Those who have not officially been assigned to a rating are officially referred to as "undesignated" or "non-rates." Once selected for a particular rating of their choice they become eligible for advancement in that community. == Venezuela==