17-1 NHS Review Mar 2017

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

17-1 NHS Review Mar 2017 NAVAL HISTORICAL REVIEW Patron: Vice Admiral T.W. Barrett, AO, CSC, RAN Chief of Navy Volume 38 No. 1 – March 2017 Contents Page The Bosun’s Call ............................................................................................................. ii Fifty Years under the Australian White Ensign ......................................................... 1 HDML 1321 and what she represents ........................................................................ 3 The Albert Medal .........................................................................................................13 Climate Change and ‘future wars between nation states’: A Rebuttal .................16 HMAS Norman - far from Home ...............................................................................22 Navy Training Today ...................................................................................................29 HMAS Nepal and Operation ES – June and July 1942 .........................................33 Unpicking the Goldsworthy Myths ...........................................................................38 Weather Signals .............................................................................................................42 Book Club ......................................................................................................................43 Letters to the Editor ....................................................................................................46 Editor (and Bosun): Walter Burroughs Assistant (and Bosun’s Mate): Doris Shearman All rights reserved. Reproduction in part or whole is forbidden without the express permission in writing of the Society. Opinions expressed by contributors are not necessarily those of the Society. The Editor of the Review is available to offer advice to prospective contributors. Contact: The Editor, The Boatshed, Building 25, Garden Island, NSW 2011 Phone: 02 9359 2372/2243. Fax: 02 9359 2383 Email: [email protected] Website: www.navyhistory.org.au ii Naval Historical Review March 2017 The Bosun’s Call: We trust our readers have had a pleasant festive season and are looking forward to an interesting New Year as political events which impact us unfold in the ‘Land of the Free and the Home of the Brave’. We lead this edition with a well- considered tribute to fifty years of service under the Australian White Ensign. The history of our ensign goes back many centuries to times, perhaps now forgotten, by a younger generation. Late last year we received news that MV Rushcutter, ex-HDML 1321, had sunk at her moorings in Darwin Harbour. This caused us to undertake considerable research into the remarkable career of this fine vessel. Australian built HDMLs which traversed Barracks we were delighted to receive a Pacific waters were only 80 feet (24 meters) contemporary article looking at naval in length as compared with present training going forward in supporting new generation Cape-class patrol vessels at and forthcoming construction. 190 feet (58 meters) long. HDML 1321 was We conclude with a medley of fine tunes possibly one of the smallest commissioned covering a wide range from the Albert ships in the RAN but she undoubtedly has Medal, to the Goldsworthy myths and an extensive history which needs to be told Weather Signals. if there is to be any chance of her possible We should not forget our friends across recovery. the Ditch who celebrated the 75th September last we stepped slightly anniversary of the Royal New Zealand Navy outside our comfort zone with an article on with an international fleet review from 16 - climate change. Not surprisingly this emotive 22 November 2016. There were a number of topic produced some intense comment warships representing at least fourteen which is included in a rebuttal featured in nations from our region. The RAN was ably this edition. The Society does not wish to represented by the submarine HMAS become overly involved in these debates, Dechaineux. After an absence of thirty years it but we acknowledge the importance of the was pleasing to note the presence of a topic to the RAN, which is not immune United States Navy warship, the destroyer from the ramifications of these issues. USS Sampson. Given the strong historic and We have two articles on the famous cultural ties, the unfortunate absence of a N-class destroyers HMA Ships Nepal and Royal Naval ship was noticeable. Norman, both concerning their times in or We look forward to more of your letters near the Arctic Circle. There is generally and we need more regular information from little known of these episodes as both the Land of the Long White Cloud – so any incidents were classified at the time. Kiwis please note. Following a visit by some members of Walter Burroughs, Editor and Bosun our Society to the Navy’s new Simulation Doris Shearman, Assistant Editor and Systems Training Centre at Randwick Bosun’s mate Naval Historical Review March 2017 1 Fifty Years under the Australian White Ensign By Norm Rivett ITH THE AUSTRALIAN White Ensign In 1660, following the restoration of Wapproaching its fiftieth anniversary on King Charles II and the re-establishment of 1 March 2017 it is appropriate to reflect on the Union flag, its use was restricted to the the history of the revered ensign in its King’s ships by the Lord High Admiral, the various forms with some relevant Duke of York, later King James II of background. England and VII of Scotland. However in When King James VI of Scotland 1674 English merchant vessels were allowed became King James I of England in 1603 he to fly a Red Ensign with the St. George’s desired that both countries be represented Cross in the canton. on a national flag which his subjects could In 1702, in order to avoid confusion with fly in their ships. The result was the first the plain white field of the French ensign of Union flag which was introduced on Louis XIV (1643-1715), the Red Cross of St 12 April 1606. It was intended to be flown at George was placed upon the fly of the the main top in all British ships and, as a White Ensign of the White Squadron which concession to the Scots, either the Scottish had hitherto been plain white. The plain or the English flag, those of St Andrew or St White Ensign was retained for use in home George, was to be flown in the foretop. waters until 1720. In 1634 the use of the Union flag was With the Act of Union between England restricted by King Charles I to ships in the and Scotland under Queen Anne in 1707, Royal Service and has never again been the 1606 Union flag became the National permitted to be used by merchant ships in flag of Britain and is sometimes referred to its plain form. as Queen Anne’s flag. Squadron Ensigns The method of dividing the English fleet wore the Union Flag in the canton. into squadrons is said to have originated in Merchant ships were then permitted to fly the reign of Queen Elizabeth I (1558-1603). the Red Ensign with the Union flag in the The earliest surviving instructions relating to canton instead of the cross of St. George. coloured flags to denote the three squadrons into which the fleet was divided, namely Red, Blue and White in that order of seniority, is dated 1617. During the Commonwealth era (1649-1660) the ‘Council of State’ (1649-1653) changed the order of seniority of the squadron colours in 1653 to Red, White and Blue for unknown reasons. Colonial ship Spitfire berthed at Cooktown c1855 flying her state ensign 2 Naval Historical Review March 2017 HMAS Yarra on commissioning 10 September 1910 flying the Australian National Flag. On her delivery voyage to Australia she flew the British White Ensign commissioned into the Royal Navy, and conseq- uently flew the British White Ensign. After Federation in 1901, ships of the newly formed Commonwealth Naval Force used the Australian National Flag in its original format with a six pointed Commonwealth As a result of the union of Ireland with Star, which in 1908 became a seven pointed England and Scotland in 1801, the 1606 star. style Union flag was redesigned to its With the formation of the Royal present form and from 1 January 1801 Australian Navy in 1911, RAN warships became the national flag. Prior to the battle used the British White Ensign, with the of Trafalgar on 21 October 1805, Lord Australian National Flag flown at the jack to Nelson, as Vice Admiral of the White signify their nationality. This situation served Squadron, ordered all ships under his well and was used throughout two World command, irrespective of their squadron Wars and the Korean War. However colour, to fly the White Ensign and to fly Australia’s participation in the Vietnam War the Union flag from a foremast stay in order created an unusual situation as this was the to avoid confusion in battle. first time the Commonwealth had not On 5 August 1864 the Squadron colour fought alongside Britain. The British system was abolished as being of no further Government was embarrassed that its flag relevance in the era of steam warships. The was being used in a conflict in which it was Red Ensign was allocated for use by the not involved. merchant navy, as it had been for a long During a Naval Estimates hearing on time; the Royal Navy adopted the White 28 October 1965, Samuel Benson, a Ensign, whilst the Blue Ensign was assigned Victorian politician, voiced concern on the to ships in government service. use of the British White Ensign by Australian ships on wartime deployments, Evolution of the Australian White and Frederick Chaney, Minister for the
Recommended publications
  • The International Forum for the Military
    a 7.90 D 14974 E D European & Security ES & Defence 3/2018 International Security and Defence Journal ISSN 1617-7983 • www.euro-sd.com • April 2018 Regional Focus: The Black Sea Close Air Support Danish Turnaround Force Multipliers The new Defence Agreement suggests additional Combat drones have entered service in several funding for the armed forces. European armed forces. Politics · Armed Forces · Procurement · Technology MQ-9B SkyGuardian DESIGNED FOR EUROPEAN AIRSPACE • Sovereign capability and NATO interoperability • 40+ hours endurance • Modular payloads up to 2,177 kilograms • Enables European Basing Options • From a family of UAS with more than 5 million flight hours Multi Role - Single Solution www.ga-asi.com ©2018 General Atomics Aeronautical Systems, Inc. Leading The Situational Awareness Revolution 1804_European Security and Defence (Apr)_v2_Engl.indd 1 4/5/2018 3:20:47 PM Editorial Following the Yellow BRIC Road A lot of water has flowed under the bridge make sure that both sides reach a balanced since the world, and not least the world’s resolution as to the “type” of Brexit we will defence industry, looked to Brazil, Russia, all enjoy. “Hard” or “soft” there will be peo- India and China as its economic saviours. ­­ ple who think they have won, and people The world still seeks truth and certainty who think they have lost. The fact remains in frightening and inconstant times, but it that the Brexit vote was never a vote against appears to us as interested but clearly un- Europe, but was a vote primarily against Brus- informed observers that our political elites sels, spiced with a reaction against German- engender hopelessness and disillusion: our driven refugee policies.
    [Show full text]
  • 19800009728.Pdf
    N O T I C E THIS DOCUMENT HAS BEEN REPRODUCED FROM MICROFICHE. ALTHOUGH IT IS RECOGNIZED THAT CERTAIN PORTIONS ARE ILLEGIBLE, IT IS BEING RELEASED IN THE INTEREST OF MAKING AVAILABLE AS MUCH INFORMATION AS POSSIBLE /) NASA TECHNICAL MEMORANDUM NASA TM 75732 SOLUTION OF A FEW NONLINEAR PROBLEMS IN AERODYNAMICS BY THE FINITE ELEMENTS AND FUNNCTIONAL LEAST SQUARES METHODS Jacques Periaux Translation of "Resolution de quelques problemes non lineaires en aerodynamique par des methodes d'elements finis et le moindres carres € fonctionnels, It Doctoral Dissertation, University of Paris, June 19, 19%9, 280 pages (NASA-TM-75732) SOLUTION OF A FEW NONLINEAR N80-17990 PROBLEMS IN AERODYNAMICS BY THE FINIT ELEMENTS AND FUNCTIONAL LEAST SQUARES METHODS Ph.D. Thesis - Paris (National Unclas Aeronautics and Space Adainistration) 278 p G3/02 47187 ^ "0 I NATIONAL AI.AZO.NAUTTCS AND SPAC!; ELI MINI ''."_1ATION WASHT\GTO\, D.C. 20546 DECEMBER 1979 AIL- ;; ACKNOWLEDGMENTS a This thesis is the result of two years of applied research un- der the direction of Professor R. GLOWINSKI and is the fruit of a research collaboration between the LABORIA/IRIA and the AMD/BA in- dustries. I should like to thank Professor J.L. LIONS whose instruction made it possible to undertake this research. I am deeply indebted to Professor R. GLOWINSKI who directed and encouraged this research, and who gave me the honor of presiding over the examining committee. I should like to acknowledge my deepest gratitude to MR. 0. PIRONNEAU, who together with MR. GLOWIN 1"KIq originated the optimal control methods presented, and who lavished me with advice and en- couragement throughout this research.
    [Show full text]
  • Greenbank Naa Newsletter Grey Funnel Dits
    GREENBANK NAA NEWSLETTER GREY FUNNEL DITS Disclaimer: The material contained in this publication is in the nature of entertainment for the members. Contributions are acknowledged, with thanks, from service organisations. The editor expressly Disclaims all and any liability to any person, whether an association member or not. Views expressed may not necessary be those held by the Executive or the members. Editor: Tony Holliday [email protected] 0403026916 Series No.2 Date: June 2019 Issue No. 6 GREENBANK NAVAL ASSOCIATION SUB SECTION EVENTS JUNE / JULY 2019: June: Sunday 02 June 1030-1200 Normal Meeting RSL Rooms Wednesday 29 June 1000-1030 Executive Meeting RSL Rooms July: Sunday 14 July 1030-1400 Informal Meeting RSL Rooms (sausage Sizzle) Wednesday 31 July 1000-1030 Executive Meeting RSL Rooms Editors Request: Articles for the newsletter can be handed in at meetings, or by email: articles may be edited to fit the newsletter. The contents of this edition of the newsletter have been obtained from information provided from Len Kingston-Kerr whom I thank greatly, various publication publications and NAA information emailed in. 1 NAVAL PERSONALITY CPO Arthur Cooper Arthur William Cooper was born on 15 February 1909 in Fremantle, Western Australia. He joined the Royal Australian Navy on 15 February 1927, undertaking his basic training at HMAS Cerberus (Flinders Naval Depot), Victoria.Rated an ordinary seaman, Cooper served variously in HMA Ships Melbourne, Sydney and Adelaide between June 1927 and March 1928 during which time he was promoted Able Seaman. He again served at Cerberus between 1928 and 1930 successfully passing the RAN Educational Test before returning to sea in the heavy cruiser HMAS Canberra.
    [Show full text]
  • Proposedlooe
    1^01/ 1 '?80 RESEARCH rrn -« r» ^^^^ UBRAR1AN'^S2 2 1988 Environmental Impact Statement Proposed Looe Key National Marine Sanctuary October 1980 DOCUMENT \ VJcods'n^ Oceanographic Inslilution U.S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Office of Coastal Zone Management Li: Woods i!r •iphiC / ! r=l : m I a CD i ; D 1 m a FINAL ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT STATEMENT PREPARED ON THE PROPOSED LOOE KEY NATIONAL MARINE SANCTUARY DOCUMENT LIBRARY V^ods Hoie Oceanographic Institution November 1980 U. S, Department of Commerce National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Office of Coastal Zone Management TABLE OF CONTENTS COVER i NOTE TO READER ii INTRODUCTION AND SUMMARY 1 CHAPTER ONE: PURPOSE AND NEED FOR ACTION 21 CHAPTER TWO: ALTERNATIVES INCLUDING THE PREFERRED ALTERNATIVE 23 I. Introduction 23 II. No Action Alternative: Rely on the Legal Status Quo III. Preferred Alternative 25 A. Goals and Objectives 25 B. Management 26 C. Preferred Boundary Alternative 29 D. Preferred Regulatory Alternatives 30 IV. Regulatory Alternatives Eliminated From Detailed Study 36 V. Summary of Analysis of Alternatives 38 CHAPTER THREE: AFFECTED ENVIRONMENT 45 I. Marine Environment 45 II. Socio-Economic Setting 59 III. Historic and Cultural Resources 67 IV. State and Other Federal Resource Management Provisions in Adjacent and Nearby Areas 69 V. Legal Status Quo 73 CHAPTER FOUR: ENVIRONMENTAL CONSEQUENCES 93 I. Introduction 93 II. Boundary Alternatives 94 III. Environmental Consequences of the Proposed Regulations 99 A. Coral Collecting
    [Show full text]
  • 1947-1997 History Hall of Honour
    Page 19 CVI~E~ AIREY COLE GOLDSMITH ALEXANDER COLEMAN GOLDSWORTHY ALLOM COLLINS GORDON ANDERSON .... Page 21 CONNOLLY ..... Page 36 GORSKI ..... Page 51 ARCHER CONWAY GRACE ARNOLD COOPER GRAHAM ARTHURS COURT Sir Charles GRAY ASHMAN ..... Page 22 COURTNEY ..... Page 37 GREY ..... Page 52 AVERY COWIE GRlMBL Y BAGSHAW CRANSWICK HACK BAINTS CREWE HALL DON BAIRD ..... Page 23 CUTTING ..... Page 38 HALL JIM ..... Page 53 BAKER DACRE HALL PERCY BALFE DARGIE HALVORSON BALL DALL YWATER HANCOCK Sir Val BAMFORD ..... Page 24 DAWBARN ..... Page 39 HANGER ... Page 54 BANCROFT DAWE HANTKE BANNISTER DAWSON HARDERS BASSHAM DE BRUYN HARPER-NELSON BATE ..... Page 25 DICK ..... Page 40 HARRIS ..... Page 55 BEAZLEY DIGBY HARRISON BENNESS DIXON GERRY HATELY BENNETT DAVID DIXON JOHN HAYDEN BENNETT TONY ..... Page 26 DONALD ..... Page 41 HEENEY ..... Page 56 BENSKY HYMIE DOUST HENDERSON BENSKY JACK DOWSON HERLIHY BESSELL-BROWNE DUBBERLIN HERNAMAN BIERWORTH the General .... Page 27 DUNSTAN ..... Page 42 HILL ..... Page 57 BINKS EAKIN HILLMAN BIRD EAST HOBBS BIRKS EGAN HOLMAN BLADEN ..... Page 28 ELLIOT BOB ..... Page 43 HORTON ..... Page 58 BLAIR ELLIOT FRED HOULAHAN BLAKERS EMBRY Sir Basil HOURN BOAN FARMER HOWARD BOON ..... Page 29 FENNELL ..... Page 44 HUGALL ..... Page 59 BRADY FERGUSON HUMMERSTON BRICE FERRERO HUNGERFORD BRIDGES FINLAYSON HUNTER BRIGGS ..... Page 30 FIRKINS ..... Page 45 HUTCHISON ..... Page 60 BRISBANE Sir Lance FITZHARDINGEJOHN HYNAM BROADHURST FITZHARDINGE ROGER IKIN BROMELL FITZHARDINGE BILL INGRAM BROOKS ..... Page 31 FLANAGAN ..... Page 46 JACKES ..... Page 61 BROWN FLETCHER Sir Nonnan JACKSON BROWNELL FLETCHER BOB JAGOT BUNNING FREETH Sir Gordon JAMBU BURRIDGE 32 ..... Page GARDINER ..... Page 47 JAMES ..... Page 62 BURT Sir Francis GARRETT Sir Ragnar JAMIESON CADDY ERNIE GEDDES JEFFERY the General CADDY LINDSAY GELDART JENKINS CAMERON ....
    [Show full text]
  • Military Intelligence Blunders
    Military Intelligence Blunders Colonel John Hughes-Wilson Carroll & Graf Publishers, Inc. NEW YORK Carroll & Graf Publishers, Inc. 19 West 21st Street New York NY 10010-6805 First published in the UK by Robinson Publishing Ltd 1999 Copyright © John Hughes-Wilson 1999 Maps and diagrams copyright © John Hughes-Wilson 1999 All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced in any form or by any means without the prior written permission of the publishers. ISBN 0-7394-0689-2 Manufactured in the USA For Victor Andersen + of the British Intelligence Services And Val Heller + of the US Defense Intelligence Agency Who both made it possible Contents Preface ix 1 On Intelligence 1 2 The Misinterpreters - D-Day, 1944 16 3 "Comrade Stalin Knows Best" - Barbarossa, 1941 38 4 "The Finest Intelligence in Our History" - Pearl Harbor, 1941 60 5 "The Greatest Disaster Ever to Befall British Arms" - Singapore, 1942 102 6 Uncombined Operations - Dieppe, 1942 133 7 "I Thought We Were Supposed to be Winning?" - The Tet Offensive, 1968 165 8 "Prime Minister, the War's Begun" - Yom Kippur, 1973 218 9 "Nothing We Don't Already Know" - The Falkland Islands, 1982 260 10 "If Kuwait Grew Carrots, We Wouldn't Give a Damn" - The Gulf, 1991 308 11 Will It Ever Get Any Better? 353 Suggested Reading List 361 Glossary of Terms 365 Index 367 vn Maps and Diagrams The Intelligence Cycle 6 An Intelligence Collection Plan's Essential Elements of Information 11 Dispositions June 1944 22 The Allied Deception Plans for D-Day 30 Operation Barbarossa 45 Pearl Harbor - Japan's Grab for Empire, 1941/2 75 Malaya and Singapore, 1942 112 Disaster at Dieppe, 19 August 1942 153 The Vietnam War, 1956-75 182 The Tet Offensive, South Vietnam, 30-31 January 1968 199 "Greater Israel", 1967-73 232 Yom Kippur, 1973: Suez and Sinai 255 The Falklands War, 1982: relative distances 276 The South Atlantic, 1982 293 A Threat Curve 306 The Gulf War, 1990/1 324 via Preface This is a book that tries to tell the story of some recent events, all within living memory, from a different angle: intelligence.
    [Show full text]
  • Juno Beach Landing Tables
    Operation Overlord/Neptune Force 'J' - Juno Beach They were Waiting - German Defences The Germans used millions of slave labourers during four years of occupation to construct the 'Atlantic Wall' - a modern fortification system along the coast of France. The fortifications consisted of a series of reinforced concrete gun emplacements supported by well protected infantry strong-points and heavy machine gun nests overlooking the beaches. These were surrounded by trenches with mortars and machine guns. The beaches were strewn with obstacles and mines. Tetrahedral obstacles - three iron bars intersecting at rights angles had been constructed on the beaches. Fields of barbed wire and mines covered the land past the beaches. Also the seafront houses provided excellent observation and firing positions for snipers. There were 32 static Infantry Divisions of widely varying quality defending these fortifications along the French and Dutch coast. This first line of defence was backed up by Panzer Divisions (Armoured and Motorized Divisions) positioned inland from the Atlantic wall. The strategy was, if the Atlantic wall were breached, theses elite formations of crack mobile troops would strike as soon as possible after the landing and throw the Canadians and the Allies back into the sea. Within striking distance of the coast were five first-class divisions: the 21st Panzer Division with an estimated 350 tanks, the 12th SS Division with 150 tanks, the Panzer Lehr Division in the Le Mans area and two more tank divisions in the Seine. The proximity of 12th SS and 21st Panzer Divisions made it difficult for the British and Canadians to capture their objectives of Caen on D-Day.
    [Show full text]
  • WARFARE SAILORS CAREER HANDBOOK FOREWORD Iii Foreword
    WARFARE SAILORS CAREER HANDBOOK FOREWORD iii Foreword The Warfare Sailors Career Handbook is a • Naval Police Coxswain compendium of information relating to the • Photographic professional opportunities available to any young Australian man or woman who is either interested • Physical Trainer in a career in the Navy, or who aspires to serve as Importantly, this career handbook offers some a member of the Royal Australian Navy’s Warfare contextual commentary on how each of these Community. individual categories combine to form the The Sailor Warfare Community is comprised of a formidable team of skills that make a modern, number of specialist categories, each of which offer technologically advanced warship function to unique life skills and challenging and rewarding its full capability. In doing so, it also looks at experiences within the maritime environment. the proud history of sailors within the Royal Each of these employment categories has its Australian Navy and how their achievements and own dedicated chapter that details the history, selfless sacrifice have shaped not only the Navy nature of work and predominant type of platform of today, but the values and freedoms that we (ship, aircraft or submarine) in which the work is enjoy in Australia. The essence of this sacrifice undertaken. These specialist warfare employment is captured in the following poem penned by US categories are: Naval Chaplain, Father Denis Edward O’Brien who wrote, after witnessing the carnage of Guadalcanal • Aircrew in World War II: • Acoustic Warfare Analyst
    [Show full text]
  • CI Reader Volume II
    TABLE OF CONTENTS Chapter 1Counterintelligence In World War II ................................................................................... 1 Introduction ...................................................................................................................................... 1 The Office of Naval Intelligence (ONI) .................................................................................................. 3 Storm on the Horizon ....................................................................................................................... 3 Contributing to Victory.................................................................................................................... 4 A New Kind of Conflict ................................................................................................................... 4 A Continuing Need .......................................................................................................................... 5 Colepaugh and Gimpel ............................................................................................................................ 5 The Custodial Detention Program ........................................................................................................ 17 President Roosevelts Directive of December 1941 ............................................................................. 21 German Espionage Ring Captured .......................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Diving and Hyperbaric Medicine
    Diving and Hyperbaric Medicine The Journal of the South Pacific Underwater Medicine Society and the European Underwater and Baromedical Society Volume 48 No. 2 June 2018 In-water recompression Air breaks during HBOT in Australasian units Maxillo-facial problems in diving Does stored soda lime lose its absorbtive capacity? Glass drug ampoules tolerate multiple recompressions Bleak future for diving research in Norway Variable performance of the Dräger Oxylog® under pressure ISSN 2209-1491 (online); ISSN 1833-3516 (print) ABN 29 299 823 713 CONTENTS Diving and Hyperbaric Medicine Volume 48 No.2 June 2018 Editorials From the recent literature 71 The Editor’s offering 116 Hyperbaric oxygenation 72 The future of diving research in Norway for tumour sensitisation to radiotherapy Bennett MH, Feldmeier J, Smee R, Original articles Milross C 117 An evidence-based system 73 Audit of practice in Australasian hyperbaric units on the for health surveillance of incidence of central nervous system oxygen toxicity occupational divers Susannah Sherlock, Mandy Way, Alexis Tabah Sames S, Gorman DF, Mitchell SJ, Sandiford P 118 Immersion pulmonary edema Review articles and comorbidities: case series and updated review 79 Rhinologic and oral-maxillofacial complications from scuba Peacher DF, Martina SD, Otteni CE, diving: a systematic review with recommendations Wester TE, Potter JF, Moon RE Devon M Livingstone, Beth Lange 84 In-water recompression David J Doolette, Simon J Mitchell Professional development meeting summary Technical reports 119 DCI study day
    [Show full text]
  • Works in the Rare Book Collection
    Works in the Rare Book Collection Title Main Author Publication Year Material Type Call Number "A letter to an Honourable Brigadier General, Commander in DA 508 A3 1841 Imperfect: cover detached; 1841 BOOK Chief of His Majesty's Forces in Canada", t.p.-p.[i] wanting "A world of its own" / McAuley, James Phillip, 1917- 1977 BOOK PR 9619.3 M22 W6 1977 Gilbert, W. S. (William Schwenck), "Bab" ballads : 1879 BOOK PR 4713 B11 1879 1836-1911. Gilbert, W. S. (William Schwenck), "Gretchen" : 1879 BOOK PR 4713 G7 1879 1836-1911. PR 9619.3 D25 K56 1941 Limited ed. of 200 "Known and not held" : Dalziel, Kathleen. 1941 BOOK copies. "Let my people go" : Gollancz, Victor, 1893-1967. 1943 BOOK D 810 J4 G64 1943 Porteous, R. S. (Richard Sydney), d. "Little known of these waters" / 1945 BOOK PR 9619.3 P556 L5 1945 1963. "Mulloka", "The great spirit" and other verses / Dunsdale, John. 1950 BOOK PR 9619.3 D8557 M96 1950 "Private" discipline / Pauling, Marie. 1960 BOOK PR 9619.3 P29 P7 "Ten o'clock" : Whistler, James McNeill, 1834-1903. 1920 BOOK N 7445 W57 1920 "The book!", or, The proceedings and correspondence upon DA 538 A22 P4 1813 DAL copy imperfect: Perceval, Spencer, 1762-1812. 1813 BOOK the subject of the inquiry into the conduct cover semi-detached. "The book!", or, The proceedings and correspondence upon Caroline, Queen, consort of George 1813 BOOK DA 538 A22 P4 1813 the subject of the inquiry into the conduct IV, King of Great Britain, 1768-1821. "The hut," and other verses / Anderson, A.
    [Show full text]
  • Iitues by the ITALIANS AUSTRIANS ALLEGE IE NOTE
    J*-ekwsmsj. %.-arxM$Msst&msasnM*»u-<*,WlWZamri^*.’.*H*i .* > .'.tar,» •- -•. » *>«.••. » -«Nfr-'Ai-rWslI.Vr* ^«seuctiTSMRïceejz* WE ARE PROMPT ♦ If you want an Express, Furniture WELLINGTON COAL Van. Truck or Dray, phone us. : PACIFIC TRANSFER CO. V HALL A WALKER 737 Cormorant. Plionea 248 and 84». iitues BAGGAGE STORED. 1231 Government St. Prions S3 VOL. 46 VICTORIA, B. C., FRIDAY, JUNE 11, 1915 NO. 136 ADVANCE MADE AT PRESENTED NOTE REPORT TELLS OF THE DARDANELLES IE THIS AFTERNOON BRYAN SAW THE NOTE RUSSIAN SUCCESSES 111 111 Paris, June 11.—A official announce­ Petrograd. June 11.—Concluding ment concerning the operations long statement on the Russian oper­ BY THE ITALIANS the Dardanelles, given out In Parts this IN ITSFINAL FORM ations in the Caucasus, the general SUFFERED HEAVILY afternoon, reads as follows: !’^t the Dardanelles we have con “On the 6lh of June we had cap important Success; Austrian solidated the results obtained by us In Germans Still Are Being tured the vast region of Van and part the fighting of June 4. Wording Was Not Changed of the sanjak of Mush. We had anni­ Austro-German Forces Met Lines of Communication Are “At the right end of the ravine of Pressed Back, Says Report After It Had Been Shown hilated Khalil Bey’s original corps, Kereve Dere we were successful, dur­ and we had cleared of Turkish troops With Severe Reverse Near Threatened Now ing minor engagements. In making Issued at Paris 1 to Former Secretary ihe region between Van and Oursh. Zurawno, on Dniester further progress. We captured Turkish territory be­ Prisoners who fell Into our hands tween the mountain ranges of Tch- confirmed previous reports that the akhir Baba.
    [Show full text]