Proceedings of the United States Naval Institute, Volume 46The Institute, 1920 - Naval art and science |
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Results 1-5 of 100
Page 1017
... German base , and often who was the commanding officer . Whenever the German vessels opened up with their radio , which they did with Teutonic regularity nearly every evening at the same hour , they would with a Teutonic lack of ...
... German base , and often who was the commanding officer . Whenever the German vessels opened up with their radio , which they did with Teutonic regularity nearly every evening at the same hour , they would with a Teutonic lack of ...
Page 1019
... German submarine on the surface in light condition . Immediately submerging he made . for her , but in the maneuvering she outdistanced him and disap- peared . Then Rood submerged and , using his listening tubes , followed the sound ...
... German submarine on the surface in light condition . Immediately submerging he made . for her , but in the maneuvering she outdistanced him and disap- peared . Then Rood submerged and , using his listening tubes , followed the sound ...
Page 1039
... German sub- marine had been destroyed . What happened will never be fully and exactly known . It may be that the torpedo made an erratic run , and returning sank the ship that fired it . Another conjecture is that the German's magnetic ...
... German sub- marine had been destroyed . What happened will never be fully and exactly known . It may be that the torpedo made an erratic run , and returning sank the ship that fired it . Another conjecture is that the German's magnetic ...
Page 1040
... German sources that the UB - 65 , which was last reported to be operating south of Fastnet , on the date the AL - 2 made her contact , having failed to return had been given up as lost . And with this intelligence , the Admiralty ...
... German sources that the UB - 65 , which was last reported to be operating south of Fastnet , on the date the AL - 2 made her contact , having failed to return had been given up as lost . And with this intelligence , the Admiralty ...
Page 1041
... German Navy's loss of morale . But also we find another explanation . At every turn where there was an important ship , there was not far away a defender . Had the Germans , with reckless courage and a fair degree of skill , persisted ...
... German Navy's loss of morale . But also we find another explanation . At every turn where there was an important ship , there was not far away a defender . Had the Germans , with reckless courage and a fair degree of skill , persisted ...
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