Exactly! Damn, it's good to see someone who didn't let their educational opportunities go entirely to waste.The Japanese god of joy and laughter.
Exactly! Damn, it's good to see someone who didn't let their educational opportunities go entirely to waste.The Japanese god of joy and laughter.
http://www.marvunapp.com/Appendix/hoti.htm
Aircraft carriers are probably an exception: fires raging on the hangar decks may well claim a large percentage of the ship's crew while the ship ultimately survives. Are there any examples of such in WWII?
Don’t know about World War II, but during the Vietnam war, the carrier U.S.S. Forrestal suffered massive damage in a fire that killed 134 sailors and injured 161 others. The ship underwent repairs and was put back in service eight months later.
Both are non-canon, but it was either Mr. Scott's Guide to the Enterprise or the FASA books (I think the former) that said the 1701-A was originally a new ship to be named the Ti-Ho.
Where did that name come from? It sounds like a corner mom-and-pop grocery store run by an elderly couple named Tilly and Homer.
I'm pretty sure it came out of Shane Johnson's rear end.![]()
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