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Proceedings Magazine - November 1945

November 1945 Proceedings Magazine: United States Naval Institute

UNITED STATES NAVAL INSTITUTE PROCEEDINGS

NOVEMBER, 1945, No. 513

Contents from Front Cover

  • The Carrier Task Force in World War II
  • The Road Ahead.—McIntosh
  • They Pioneered a Channel to Tokyo.—Say Kamehameha
  • Classification of Naval Vessels.—Hamilton
  • Naval Gunfire: Scourge of the Beaches.—Heinl
  • Matthew Fontaine Maury, Naval Scientistessiona
  • This Is ANSCOL.—Watson and Brown
  • The Army and Navy of Kamehaineha I.—Kenn
  • The Naval Academy as Housekeeper.—Robert
  • Discussions, Comments, and Notes
  • Book Reviews
  • Notes on International Affairs Professional Notes
  • Secretary's Notes

November 1945
Whole No. 513, Vol. No. 71, No. 11

Table of Contents

  • THE CARRIER TASK FORCE IN WORLD WAR II
    By Lieutenant William H. Hessler, U. S. Naval Reserve
    The Fast Carrier Task Force has appeared so often in new dispatches, has become os much a commonplace in this war of unnumbered innovations, that its uniqueness tends to escape notice. It represents in fact a revolution in Naval war, and more completely than did the invention of the submarine or torpedo.
  • THE ROAD AHEAD
    By Captain K. C. McIntosh (S.C.), U. S. Navy (Retired)
    The cessation of formal hostilities will not bring peace, but only problems -- only the end of large-scale belligerent action along the old lines, and a necessity for regouping the worldinto a cohesive pattern.
  • THEY PIONEERED A CHANNEL TO TOKYO
    By Commander Harold Bradley Say, U. S. Naval Reserve
    To one familiar with the work of the Navy's Underwater Demolition teams, the notes conveyed a comprehensive picture prior to the last major landing in the war against Japan.
  • CLASSIFICATION OF NAVAL VESSELS
    By Captain J. E. Hamilton, U. S. Navy
    The rules of classification are the business of professional naval personnel, both military and technical. They should not be promulgated by laymen.
  • NAVAL GUNFIRE: SCOURGE OF THE BEACHES
    By Lieutenant Colonel R. D. Heinl, Jr., U. S. Marine Corps
  • MATTHEW FONTAINE MAURY, NAVAL SCIENTIST
    By Lieutenant (j.g.) Orrin E. Klapp, U. S. Naval Reserve
  • THIS Is ANSCOL
    By Colonel Elmer S. Watson, Inf., and Lieutenant Stanley M. Brown,
    U. S. Naval Reserve
  • THE ARMY AND NAVY OF KAMEHAMEHA I
    By Charles W. Kenn
  • THE NAVAL ACADEMY AS HOUSEKEEPER
    By Sarah Corbin Robert
  • DISCUSSIONS, COMMENTS, NOTES
  • BOOK REVIEWS
    • Science The Endless Frontier, Report to the President on a Program for Postwar Scientific Research by Vannevar Bush
    • Famous American Naval Officers by Charles Lee Lewis
    • USS Seawolf: Submarine Raider of the Pacific
    • The Ships and Aircraft of the U.S. Fleet by James C. Fahey
  • NOTES ON INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS
  • PROFESSIONAL NOTES
  • SECRETARY'S NOTES

The opinions or assertions in the articles are the private ones of the writers, and are not to be construed as official or reflecting the views of the Navy Department or the naval service at large.

Published monthly at 450 Ahnaip St., Menasha, Wis.

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The GG Archives is the work and passion of two people, Paul Gjenvick, a professional archivist, and Evelyne Gjenvick, a curator. Paul earned a Masters of Archival Studies - a terminal degree from Clayton State University in Georgia, where he studied under renowned archivist Richard Pearce-Moses. Our research into the RMS Laconia and SS Bergensfjord, the ships that brought two members of the Gjønvik family from Norway to the United States in the early 20th century, has helped us design our site for other genealogists. The extent of original materials at the GG Archives can be very beneficial when researching your family's migration from Europe.