Matrix Games Forums

Forums  Register  Login  Photo Gallery  Member List  Search  Calendars  FAQ 

My Profile  Inbox  Address Book  My Subscription  My Forums  Log Out

RE: Next quiz

 
View related threads: (in this forum | in all forums)

Logged in as: Guest
Users viewing this topic: none
  Printable Version
All Forums >> [New Releases from Matrix Games] >> World in Flames >> RE: Next quiz Page: <<   < prev  55 56 [57] 58 59   next >   >>
Login
Message << Older Topic   Newer Topic >>
RE: Next quiz - 9/8/2010 9:17:29 PM   
warspite1


Posts: 41353
Joined: 2/2/2008
From: England
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: Froonp

quote:

ORIGINAL: warspite1


quote:

ORIGINAL: micheljq


quote:

ORIGINAL: Extraneous

The traditional ship prefix in the Polish Navy is ORP.

What is the English translation for the meaning of ORP?


HMS for Her Majesty Ship.

Warspite1

Poland was a Republic...

So, in "ORP", "RP" must mean "Republic of Poland".

Does "ORP" mean "Of the Republic of Poland" ?

Warspite1

Not quite...close though.

CLUE: The O in ORP does not have the same starting letter in its English translation.

_____________________________

England expects that every man will do his duty. Horatio Nelson October 1805



(in reply to Froonp)
Post #: 1681
RE: Next quiz - 9/8/2010 9:46:10 PM   
warspite1


Posts: 41353
Joined: 2/2/2008
From: England
Status: offline
Apologies Extraneous - I appear to have hijacked your question by taking it upon myself to give out a clue.

It is a good question though

_____________________________

England expects that every man will do his duty. Horatio Nelson October 1805



(in reply to warspite1)
Post #: 1682
RE: Next quiz - 9/8/2010 10:28:42 PM   
Shannon V. OKeets

 

Posts: 22095
Joined: 5/19/2005
From: Honolulu, Hawaii
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: warspite1

Apologies Extraneous - I appear to have hijacked your question by taking it upon myself to give out a clue.

It is a good question though

With no disrespect intended, how about "Oh, Really! Please!"

_____________________________

Steve

Perfection is an elusive goal.

(in reply to warspite1)
Post #: 1683
RE: Next quiz - 9/9/2010 12:27:43 AM   
Extraneous

 

Posts: 1810
Joined: 6/14/2008
Status: offline
RP or “Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej” does mean “Polish Republic”.

As Warspite1 said close but what does the "O" stand for

_____________________________

University of Science Music and Culture (USMC) class of 71 and 72 ~ Extraneous (AKA Mziln)

(in reply to Shannon V. OKeets)
Post #: 1684
RE: Next quiz - 9/9/2010 6:44:39 PM   
Extraneous

 

Posts: 1810
Joined: 6/14/2008
Status: offline

The traditional ship prefix in the Polish Navy is ORP.

RP or “Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej” does mean “Polish Republic”.

O stands for Okręt or Ship.

ORP stands for "Polish Republic Ship" or "Ship of the Polish Republic".

_____________________________

University of Science Music and Culture (USMC) class of 71 and 72 ~ Extraneous (AKA Mziln)

(in reply to Extraneous)
Post #: 1685
RE: Next quiz - 9/9/2010 7:12:47 PM   
composer99


Posts: 2923
Joined: 6/6/2005
From: Ottawa, Canada
Status: offline
Who served as a crewmember on the German battleship Bismarck, the Royal Navy destroyer HMS Cossack, and the carrier HMS Ark Royal, surviving the sinking of all three vessels?

_____________________________

~ Composer99

(in reply to Extraneous)
Post #: 1686
RE: Next quiz - 9/9/2010 7:44:56 PM   
warspite1


Posts: 41353
Joined: 2/2/2008
From: England
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: composer99

Who served as a crewmember on the German battleship Bismarck, the Royal Navy destroyer HMS Cossack, and the carrier HMS Ark Royal, surviving the sinking of all three vessels?

Warspite1



_____________________________

England expects that every man will do his duty. Horatio Nelson October 1805



(in reply to composer99)
Post #: 1687
RE: Next quiz - 9/9/2010 7:56:38 PM   
Shannon V. OKeets

 

Posts: 22095
Joined: 5/19/2005
From: Honolulu, Hawaii
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: composer99

Who served as a crewmember on the German battleship Bismarck, the Royal Navy destroyer HMS Cossack, and the carrier HMS Ark Royal, surviving the sinking of all three vessels?

A carrier pigeon named Lucky?

_____________________________

Steve

Perfection is an elusive goal.

(in reply to composer99)
Post #: 1688
RE: Next quiz - 9/9/2010 9:00:25 PM   
composer99


Posts: 2923
Joined: 6/6/2005
From: Ottawa, Canada
Status: offline
Clue: Steve is on the right track. Getting warmer, so to speak.

_____________________________

~ Composer99

(in reply to Shannon V. OKeets)
Post #: 1689
RE: Next quiz - 9/9/2010 9:50:07 PM   
Josh

 

Posts: 2576
Joined: 5/9/2000
From: Leeuwarden, Netherlands
Status: offline
An unbelievable story; "Unsinkable Sam", or "Herr Oscar"



Yes that's the actual cat.

" Herr Oscar / Mr. Unsinkable Sam: Named Oscar at birth, this brave warrior feline served as a ship’s cat on the infamous German battleship Bismarck. When his battleship was sunk on 27 May 1941, only 116 out of a crew of over 2,200 survived. Luckily, Oscar was picked up by the destroyer HMS Cossack. Cossack herself was torpedoed and sunk a few months later, on 24 October, killing 159 of her crew, but again, Oscar survived to be rescued, and was taken to Gibraltar. He became the ship’s cat of HMS Ark Royal, but she too was torpedoed and sunk in November that year. Oscar was again rescued, but it was decided at that time to transfer him to a home on land. By now known as Unsinkable Sam, he was given a new job as mouse-catcher in the Governor General of Gibraltar’s office buildings. He eventually returned to the UK and spent the rest of his life at the Home for Sailors. To our knowledge here at E-Verse, no cat has had more ships blown out from under him. Unsinkable Sam should be the most decorated of all war cats. He died peacefully in 1955. A pastel portrait of Sam (titled “Oscar, the Bismarck’s Cat”) by the artist Georgina Shaw-Baker is in the possession of the National Maritime Museum, Greenwich.

Shows cats *do* have nine lives.

(in reply to composer99)
Post #: 1690
RE: Next quiz - 9/10/2010 2:44:46 AM   
composer99


Posts: 2923
Joined: 6/6/2005
From: Ottawa, Canada
Status: offline
Josh has it.

I leave it to everyone else to quibble whether the 'ship's cat' is a crewmember or not.

_____________________________

~ Composer99

(in reply to Josh)
Post #: 1691
RE: Next quiz - 9/10/2010 3:23:01 AM   
warspite1


Posts: 41353
Joined: 2/2/2008
From: England
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: composer99

Josh has it.

I leave it to everyone else to quibble whether the 'ship's cat' is a crewmember or not.

Warspite1

Amazing story! I'm glad someone made the decision after Ark Royal's demise to put the cat ashore; Unsinkable Sam was obviously the feline version of Uncle Albert in Only Fools and Horses.

I suppose a more cunning use of said cat would have been to launch a commando mission and sneak her aboard Tirpitz in early 1942

I was completely on the wrong track and thought it must be an actor who had appeared on all three ships in various films....nice question Composer 99.

_____________________________

England expects that every man will do his duty. Horatio Nelson October 1805



(in reply to composer99)
Post #: 1692
RE: Next quiz - 9/11/2010 12:09:14 AM   
Extraneous

 

Posts: 1810
Joined: 6/14/2008
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: composer99

Josh has it.

I leave it to everyone else to quibble whether the 'ship's cat' is a crewmember or not.


The Ship's Cat could be a crew member...

Ship's Cat Convoy earned his name after escorting the crew members of HMS Hermione on numerous convoy missions across the Atlantic in the Second World War. Convoy was duly listed in the ship’s book and provided with a full kit, including a tiny hammock so he could sleep with the crew. He stood by his ship to the end and was lost along with 87 of his crew mates, when they were torpedoed and sunk on 16 June 1942.

But...

Some serious researchers of the matter believe that the tale of Oscar as given above, while it makes a marvellous story, is what would probably today be called an 'urban myth', and is highly unlikely to have happened in that way, or even at all.


The Royal Navy has disallowed ship cats since 1975.

< Message edited by Extraneous -- 9/11/2010 12:11:11 AM >


_____________________________

University of Science Music and Culture (USMC) class of 71 and 72 ~ Extraneous (AKA Mziln)

(in reply to composer99)
Post #: 1693
RE: Next quiz - 9/14/2010 2:15:49 PM   
Extraneous

 

Posts: 1810
Joined: 6/14/2008
Status: offline
We’ve done cats so it would be remiss not to mention dogs.

At the time of Pearl Harbor in December 1941 only 50 dogs were assigned to military stations by 1945 this had risen to nearly 10,000 dogs.


At the time of Pearl Harbor what was the only type of working dog in the Army?

(A) Guard dog.
(B) Explosives sniffing dog.
(C) Messenger dog.
(D) Lookout dog.
(E) Sled dog.




_____________________________

University of Science Music and Culture (USMC) class of 71 and 72 ~ Extraneous (AKA Mziln)

(in reply to Extraneous)
Post #: 1694
RE: Next quiz - 9/14/2010 3:59:10 PM   
terje439


Posts: 6813
Joined: 3/28/2004
Status: offline
I know there were sled dogs in Alaska so guess that must be the answer.

Terje




_____________________________

"Hun skal torpederes!" - Birger Eriksen

("She is to be torpedoed!")

(in reply to Extraneous)
Post #: 1695
RE: Next quiz - 9/15/2010 2:38:06 PM   
Extraneous

 

Posts: 1810
Joined: 6/14/2008
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: terje439

I know there were sled dogs in Alaska so guess that must be the answer.

Terje






In December 1941, at the time of Pearl Harbor, the sled dog was the only working dog in the Army. About fifty were assigned to military stations in Alaska, and another forty were used by the U.S. Army Air Corps Ferrying Command to rescue airmen forced down in Newfoundland, Greenland, and Iceland. As World War II started in Europe, and the U.S. Army began to prepare for its coming role, an estimate was made that 200 dogs might be needed. In actuality, about 10,000 dogs were trained for the Army, Navy, Marine Corps and Coast Guard by the time the war ended in 1945.

War Dogs in WW II

_____________________________

University of Science Music and Culture (USMC) class of 71 and 72 ~ Extraneous (AKA Mziln)

(in reply to terje439)
Post #: 1696
RE: Next quiz - 9/16/2010 4:51:41 PM   
Extraneous

 

Posts: 1810
Joined: 6/14/2008
Status: offline
What was Unternehmen Nordpol (Operation North Pole)? I will accept the German or English name.

This was played by the German Abwehr (military intelligence) and the British Special Operations Executive (SOE).


_____________________________

University of Science Music and Culture (USMC) class of 71 and 72 ~ Extraneous (AKA Mziln)

(in reply to Extraneous)
Post #: 1697
RE: Next quiz - 9/17/2010 1:16:15 PM   
Extraneous

 

Posts: 1810
Joined: 6/14/2008
Status: offline
The operation took place in the Netherlands from 1940 - 1944.

The operation finaly shut down when Major Hermann Giskes (of the Abwehr) sent a clear text message to the SOE on April 1, 1944.


_____________________________

University of Science Music and Culture (USMC) class of 71 and 72 ~ Extraneous (AKA Mziln)

(in reply to Extraneous)
Post #: 1698
RE: Next quiz - 9/18/2010 1:43:57 PM   
Extraneous

 

Posts: 1810
Joined: 6/14/2008
Status: offline
RECAP:

What was Unternehmen Nordpol (Operation North Pole)? I will accept the German or English name.

This was played by the German Abwehr (military intelligence) and the British Special Operations Executive (SOE).

The operation took place in the Netherlands from 1940 - 1944.

The operation finaly shut down when Major Hermann Giskes (of the Abwehr) sent a clear text message to the SOE on April 1, 1944.

Final clue: Spiel means game. Yes, Major Hermann Giskes of the Abwher was playing a very serious type of game with the English Special Operations Executive (SOE).


< Message edited by Extraneous -- 9/18/2010 1:45:36 PM >


_____________________________

University of Science Music and Culture (USMC) class of 71 and 72 ~ Extraneous (AKA Mziln)

(in reply to Extraneous)
Post #: 1699
RE: Next quiz - 9/19/2010 12:52:21 PM   
Extraneous

 

Posts: 1810
Joined: 6/14/2008
Status: offline
Das Englandspiel or English Game, also called Unternehmen Nordpol (Operation North Pole), was an enormous counter intelligence operation launched by the German Intelligence Organisation (Abwehr) during World War II. German forces captured Allied resistance agents operating in the Netherlands and used the agents' codes to fool the Allies into continuing to provide the agents with information and supplies. About fifty Allied agents were identified, captured, and executed.

Apprehended radio operators continued broadcasting encrypted messages, but without the required "Security Checks" that should have alerted the SOE that they had been compromised. Further, SOE's head of codes Leo Marks claims to have soon realised that unlike all other coded messages, the Dutch messages contained no errors which made them indecipherable. He reasoned that this was because they were not coded in the field, but by German cryptographers. Finally, he sent them a deliberate indecipherable of his own, which was replied to. He reasoned that no ordinary agent could have resurrected his message. However no action was taken.

When it became apparent that the penetration had been uncovered, Major Hermann Giskes sent the following message in clear to London on April 1, 1944:

To [the SOE section chiefs] Messrs Blunt, Bingham and Successors Ltd. You are trying to make business in Netherlands without our assistance. We think this rather unfair in view of our long and successful co-operation as your sole agent. But never mind whenever you will come to pay a visit to the Continent you may be assured that you will be received with the same care and result as all those who you sent us before. So long.


_____________________________

University of Science Music and Culture (USMC) class of 71 and 72 ~ Extraneous (AKA Mziln)

(in reply to Extraneous)
Post #: 1700
RE: Next quiz - 10/2/2010 12:17:48 PM   
BlackStarWizard

 

Posts: 16
Joined: 8/13/2007
Status: offline
Which what the critical issue in getting Mussolini out during the final step of the rescue operation by the German commandos, according to Otto Skorzeny?

(in reply to Extraneous)
Post #: 1701
RE: Next quiz - 10/2/2010 4:37:03 PM   
Extraneous

 

Posts: 1810
Joined: 6/14/2008
Status: offline
Skorzeny didn’t want to have to report to Hitler that after a successful rescue Mussolini had died in an airplane crash on the slopes of the Gran Sasso.

_____________________________

University of Science Music and Culture (USMC) class of 71 and 72 ~ Extraneous (AKA Mziln)

(in reply to BlackStarWizard)
Post #: 1702
RE: Next quiz - 10/2/2010 4:46:09 PM   
BlackStarWizard

 

Posts: 16
Joined: 8/13/2007
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: Extraneous

Skorzeny didn’t want to have to report to Hitler that after a successful rescue Mussolini had died in an airplane crash on the slopes of the Gran Sasso.


Indeed, you are right, but for full points: which was the specific complicating factor that made Skorzeny fear a crash? :)

(in reply to Extraneous)
Post #: 1703
RE: Next quiz - 10/2/2010 7:54:20 PM   
Extraneous

 

Posts: 1810
Joined: 6/14/2008
Status: offline
He had squeezed his 6 foot + bulk into the cargo compartment behind Mussolini

This significantly overloaded the plane.

Skorzeny cut a hole in the bottom of his glider to navagte to Gran Sasso.

They had to hold the wings so the plane could rev the engines up to top speed.

The pilot had to jump a ditch before going over the edge.


The History channel was interesting when they showed this.

< Message edited by Extraneous -- 10/2/2010 8:11:12 PM >


_____________________________

University of Science Music and Culture (USMC) class of 71 and 72 ~ Extraneous (AKA Mziln)

(in reply to BlackStarWizard)
Post #: 1704
RE: Next quiz - 10/2/2010 11:12:27 PM   
BlackStarWizard

 

Posts: 16
Joined: 8/13/2007
Status: offline
Extraneous - I award you extra points for detail

Ok, let's stay on the Mussolini topic:

Q1. Where was Mussolini's dead body found and in what position?
Q2. Who was he with?

(in reply to Extraneous)
Post #: 1705
RE: Next quiz - 10/3/2010 4:22:33 AM   
paulderynck


Posts: 8201
Joined: 3/24/2007
From: Canada
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: Pazuzu

Extraneous - I award you extra points for detail

Ok, let's stay on the Mussolini topic:

Q1. Where was Mussolini's dead body found and in what position?
Q2. Who was he with?

Upside down for the position and with his mistress for Q2. As for where... I'm guessing Bologna

_____________________________

Paul

(in reply to BlackStarWizard)
Post #: 1706
RE: Next quiz - 10/3/2010 4:24:01 AM   
paulderynck


Posts: 8201
Joined: 3/24/2007
From: Canada
Status: offline
Wrong on the city..

_____________________________

Paul

(in reply to paulderynck)
Post #: 1707
RE: Next quiz - 10/3/2010 7:31:47 AM   
warspite1


Posts: 41353
Joined: 2/2/2008
From: England
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: Pazuzu

Extraneous - I award you extra points for detail

Ok, let's stay on the Mussolini topic:

Q1. Where was Mussolini's dead body found and in what position?
Q2. Who was he with?

Warspite1

He was hanged in April 1945 - upside down alongside his mistress (Clara?) Petacci in Milan - I cannot recall the name of the Plaza and am unsure of the mistress' spelling.

_____________________________

England expects that every man will do his duty. Horatio Nelson October 1805



(in reply to BlackStarWizard)
Post #: 1708
RE: Next quiz - 10/3/2010 9:12:38 AM   
BlackStarWizard

 

Posts: 16
Joined: 8/13/2007
Status: offline
Correct.

Hung upside down in Piazza Loreto in Milan with his mistress Clara Petacci. They had been executed by shooting in a village north of Milan and then brought to the city to be put on display.

(in reply to warspite1)
Post #: 1709
RE: Next quiz - 10/3/2010 6:56:29 PM   
Extraneous

 

Posts: 1810
Joined: 6/14/2008
Status: offline
After being shot they were hung upside down on meat hooks.

The shootings of Mussolini, Clara Petacci (his mistress), and 15 members of their group (primarily ministers and officials of the Italian Social Republic) took place in the small village of Giulino di Mezzegra. His body was then taken to Milan where it was hung upside down at a Esso petrol station.

_____________________________

University of Science Music and Culture (USMC) class of 71 and 72 ~ Extraneous (AKA Mziln)

(in reply to BlackStarWizard)
Post #: 1710
Page:   <<   < prev  55 56 [57] 58 59   next >   >>
All Forums >> [New Releases from Matrix Games] >> World in Flames >> RE: Next quiz Page: <<   < prev  55 56 [57] 58 59   next >   >>
Jump to:





New Messages No New Messages
Hot Topic w/ New Messages Hot Topic w/o New Messages
Locked w/ New Messages Locked w/o New Messages
 Post New Thread
 Reply to Message
 Post New Poll
 Submit Vote
 Delete My Own Post
 Delete My Own Thread
 Rate Posts


Forum Software © ASPPlayground.NET Advanced Edition 2.4.5 ANSI

2.142