Trivia!
Last Post 14 Jan 2011 06:43 AM by Tugboat. 1388 Replies.
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AnachronusUser is Offline
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14 Apr 2010 09:49 AM
Correct. A fascinating man.
Pamnjay, over to you.
I am prepared to meet my maker, whether He is prepared for the ordeal of meeting me is another matter. -Sir Winston-
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14 Apr 2010 09:49 AM
Wilhelm Franz Canaris.
He was the head of the German military intellegence agency from 1935 to 1944.
He was also a member of the German resistance but was under arrest during the assasination attempt on Hitler.
J
"There it is again...kind of a BOOM sound" -short lived Allied lookout
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14 Apr 2010 09:50 AM
No extra points for answering it twice!
I am prepared to meet my maker, whether He is prepared for the ordeal of meeting me is another matter. -Sir Winston-
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14 Apr 2010 10:04 AM
Blasted work computers!!
This is a 2 parter,
1. Who said that submarines were 'Underhanded, unfair and damned un-English'?
2. What was the ironic result of another of his quotes refering to submariners being hanged as pirates?
J
"There it is again...kind of a BOOM sound" -short lived Allied lookout
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14 Apr 2010 10:48 AM
1. Admiral of the Fleet Sir Arthur Wilson VC, the Controller of the Royal Navy
2. In response, Lieutenant Commander (later Admiral Sir) Max Horton first flew the Jolly Roger on return to port after sinking the German cruiser SMS Hela and the destroyer SMS S-116 in 1914 while in command of the E class submarine HMS E9.

--Chase
Chase H.
IRCWCC:
Battle Ready Ships: SMS VDT & USS Juneau
Under Construction: Henri IV & DKM Gneisenau
Battlestations 1/96
Planned: Charlemagne Class
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14 Apr 2010 10:58 AM
Correct! In fact not only did Horton fly the Jolly Roger, but the RN submarine service and Commonwealth navies submarine services adopted the Jolly Roger and we still have it today.
You' re up.
J
"There it is again...kind of a BOOM sound" -short lived Allied lookout
AnachronusUser is Offline
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14 Apr 2010 02:56 PM
Sorry theGeek. I did not see your edited response when I checked. It just showed your original answer.
I am prepared to meet my maker, whether He is prepared for the ordeal of meeting me is another matter. -Sir Winston-
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14 Apr 2010 03:05 PM
Hey, no problem,I should type faster and be more accurate.
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14 Apr 2010 03:15 PM
Good, I would hate to displease the mighty Ming!
I am prepared to meet my maker, whether He is prepared for the ordeal of meeting me is another matter. -Sir Winston-
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14 Apr 2010 11:28 PM
What was the only capital ship not sunk at scapa flow?
Chase H.
IRCWCC:
Battle Ready Ships: SMS VDT & USS Juneau
Under Construction: Henri IV & DKM Gneisenau
Battlestations 1/96
Planned: Charlemagne Class
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14 Apr 2010 11:31 PM
Wasn't that SMS Baden?
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15 Apr 2010 12:14 AM
Correct, you're up.
Chase H.
IRCWCC:
Battle Ready Ships: SMS VDT & USS Juneau
Under Construction: Henri IV & DKM Gneisenau
Battlestations 1/96
Planned: Charlemagne Class
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15 Apr 2010 02:52 AM
B.F. Skinner was a famous psychologist specializing in human behavioral studies. How in the world is he related to naval warfare?
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15 Apr 2010 03:15 AM
I should think there were quite a few capital ships *not* sunk at Scapa Flow. Hood, Invincible, and Warspite, to name a few. In fact, if you think about it, most ships in the world were *not* sunk at Scapa Flow. Really, only most of the HSF and a few British ships were sunk there.
There are 101 different types of people: those who understand binary, those who don't, and those who just can't count...
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15 Apr 2010 09:37 AM

Sorry, poorly worded, but I think you know what I meant.

--Chase

Chase H.
IRCWCC:
Battle Ready Ships: SMS VDT & USS Juneau
Under Construction: Henri IV & DKM Gneisenau
Battlestations 1/96
Planned: Charlemagne Class
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15 Apr 2010 09:37 AM
Operation Pigeon

In 1944 World War II was in full swing. Airplanes and bombs were common, but there were no missile guidance systems. Anxious to help, Skinner sought funding for a top secret project to train pigeons to guide bombs. Working intently, he trained pigeons to keep pecking a target that would hold a missile onto a target. The pigeons pecked reliably, even when falling rapidly and working with warlike noise all around them. While Project Pigeon was discontinued (because of another top secret project unknown to Skinner - radar), the work was useful. Pigeons behave more rapidly than rats, allowing more rapid discoveries of the effect of new contingencies. As Skinner put it, "the research that I described in The Behavior of Organisms appeared in a new light. It was no longer merely an experimental analysis. It had given rise to a technology." Skinner never again worked with rats. Skinner described Project Pigeon in an article with the same name.
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15 Apr 2010 11:19 PM
You pecked the bird on the beak. B.F. Skinner was a proponent of the "pigeon-guided bomb." Just imagine what PETA would do if someone tried that today.

http://www.arischindler.com/photos/1412/

http://historywired.si.edu/object.cfm?ID=353
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29 Apr 2010 09:37 AM
In ww2 what is a "kiss"
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29 Apr 2010 10:34 AM
"You must remember this
A kiss is just a kiss, a sigh is just a sigh.
The fundamental things apply
As time goes by."

I am prepared to meet my maker, whether He is prepared for the ordeal of meeting me is another matter. -Sir Winston-
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29 Apr 2010 01:31 PM
No, not a Hollywood production.

"I’m shocked, shocked to find that gambling is going on in here!"
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