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  • [[Image:CV-Nimitz.jpg|thumb|left|250px|Modern aircraft carrier: ''USS Nimitz'']] An '''aircraft carrier''' is a warship designed to support and operate aircraft, engage in attacks
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  • {{r|USS Randolph (CV-15)|''USS Randolph'' (CV-15)|**}} [[Aircraft carrier]] of the U.S. [[Ticonderoga (carrier)-class]]; commissioned in October 1944 {{r|USS Hancock (CV-19)|''USS Hancock'' (CV-19)|**}}[[Aircraft carrier]] of the U.S. [[Ticonderoga (carrier)-class]]; name changed from Ticonderog
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  • On an [[aircraft carrier]], the '''island''' contains the ship's superstructure, much smaller than t ...e the [[stealth]] characteristics of a ship. While it is impossible for an aircraft carrier to "disappear", the stealthier the ship as a whole, the harder it is for se
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  • 105 bytes (14 words) - 16:06, 22 August 2010
  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>A modified ship superstructure for [[aircraft carrier]]s, of minimal size for needed functions and offset to one side of the ship
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  • *See [[Aircraft carrier/Catalogs#Classes and unique ships|Classes and unique ships]] {{r|Island (aircraft carrier)}}
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Page text matches

  • [[Aircraft carrier]] of the [[Ticonderoga (carrier)-class]]; after major overhaul, first U.S.
    166 bytes (22 words) - 19:24, 20 August 2010
  • ...erial Japanese Navy]]; [[IJN Hiryu]] larger and with a different [[island (aircraft carrier)|island position]]
    201 bytes (26 words) - 13:20, 3 September 2010
  • ...long-range air surveillance and [[anti-submarine warfare]] capability of [[aircraft carrier]]s
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  • In aircraft operations, now principally [[aircraft carrier]] for manned aircraft and for some [[unmanned aerial vehicle]]s, a mechanic
    232 bytes (31 words) - 01:27, 19 October 2010
  • ...s; initially called "through deck cruiser" due to political sensitivity of aircraft carrier designation, but accepted as VTOL and commando carriers; commissioned 1980-
    267 bytes (34 words) - 19:39, 25 August 2010
  • ...ircraft will remain the primary aircraft type for [[United States Navy]] [[aircraft carrier]]s, and will be at least partially in use for planned French and U.K. carri
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  • [[Royal Navy]] 65,000 ton [[aircraft carrier]] of the [[Queen Elizabeth (carrier)-class]]; scheduled to be commissioned
    163 bytes (19 words) - 21:31, 25 August 2010
  • *See [[Aircraft carrier/Catalogs#Classes and unique ships|Classes and unique ships]] {{r|Island (aircraft carrier)}}
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  • [[Invincible-class]] [[aircraft carrier]] of the Royal Navy; slightly larger than her sisters; operates [[helicopte
    178 bytes (21 words) - 14:07, 3 September 2010
  • WWII U.S. Navy light [[aircraft carrier]] class converted from [[Cleveland-class]] light carrier hulls
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  • [[Aircraft carrier]] of the U.S. Navy [[Ticonderoga (carrier)-class|Ticonderoga-class variant]
    246 bytes (32 words) - 20:50, 20 August 2010
  • Light aircraft carrier converted from [[Cleveland-class]] light cruiser hull; lead ship of [[Indep
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  • ...Norfolk, Virginia]], and part of Carrier Strike Group 12 centered on the [[aircraft carrier]] ''[[USS Enterprise (CVN-65)]]'', a [[cruiser]] of the [[Ticonderoga-class
    221 bytes (28 words) - 00:04, 15 April 2009
  • Nuclear-powered [[aircraft carrier]] of the [[United States Navy]], lead ship of the [[Nimitz-class]], the mai
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  • An [[aircraft carrier|carrier]] battle between the U.S. and Japan in June 1944, called the "Great
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  • Originally planned as an eight-ship "supercarrier" class, the first large [[aircraft carrier]] built with angled decks and other features specifically intended to opera
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  • Originally commissioned to [[Essex-class]] aircraft carrier in August 1944; recommissioned as CVA-20 in November 1952; major explosion
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  • ...[[United States Navy]] [[Essex-class|Essex-]] and [[Ticonderoga-class]] [[aircraft carrier]]s; rebuilding program also known as the SCB-27 modernization program; most
    278 bytes (35 words) - 10:07, 10 February 2023
  • First [[aircraft carrier]] in the [[United States Navy]], but intended as an experiment rather than
    263 bytes (36 words) - 20:25, 16 August 2010
  • U.S. Navy [[Aircraft carrier]] initially of the WWII [[Ticonderoga (carrier)-class]] (name changed from
    257 bytes (33 words) - 10:59, 16 April 2011
  • A purpose-built class of [[aircraft carrier]]s that formed the bulk of U.S. Navy carrier forces in the [[Second World W
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  • A critical modification to the design of aircraft carrier [[flight deck]]s, in which part of the flight deck was slightly offset from
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  • Britain's second [[aircraft carrier]] and arguably the first true carrier even though a conversion from a merch
    243 bytes (34 words) - 14:05, 3 September 2010
  • ...rations, the most critical units (e.g., [[C3I-ISR]] or tanker aircraft, [[aircraft carrier]]s, command, or amphibious troopships) in a formation, which receive the gr
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  • First nuclear-propelled [[aircraft carrier]] of the [[United States Navy]]
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  • [[Forrestal-class]] U.S. Navy [[aircraft carrier]], in service 1957-1998
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  • [[Forrestal-class]] U.S. Navy [[aircraft carrier|"supercarrier"]], in service 1956-1994
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  • [[Audacious-class]] [[aircraft carrier]] of the [[Royal Navy]]; scrapped in 1980
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  • [[Forrestal-class]] U.S. Navy [[aircraft carrier|"supercarrier"]], in service 1957-1993
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  • U.S. admiral commanding [[aircraft carrier]] task forces in the [[Pacific War]]
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  • [[Essex-class]] aircraft carrier of the [[United States Navy]], in service 1944, suffered greatest combat da
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  • ...n Raid''', also known as '''Operation F.7''', was the first raid from an [[aircraft carrier]], ''[[HMS Furious]]'' in July 1918. Much as in the 1942 [[Doolittle Raid]
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  • Conventionally powered large [[Forrestal-class]] U.S. [[aircraft carrier]] in service 1959-1998
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  • The main deck area of [[aircraft carrier]]s, from which aircraft take off and land; high-performance jet operation b
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  • U.S. Navy [[aircraft carrier]], lead ship of [[Forrestal-class]], in service 1955-1993
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  • {{r|Aircraft carrier}}
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  • [[Yorktown-class]] U.S. [[aircraft carrier]]; commissioned in May 1938; served through the Second World War; scrapped
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  • ...in 1943, originally twenty-four ship class was the backbone of U.S. WWII [[aircraft carrier]] operation, continuing in a secondary role well into the [[Cold War]]; pla
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  • Single-ship [[aircraft carrier]] class converted from [[Yamato-class]] battleship hull
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  • Operating area for U.S. Navy [[aircraft carrier]]s operating against [[North Vietnam]]
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  • ...nding to capture [[Midway Island]] was turned back with the loss of four [[aircraft carrier]]s, at the cost of one U.S. carrier; it was the last major Japanese offensi
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  • One who is rated as a member of an aircrew that operates from an [[aircraft carrier]], including [[pilot]]s, naval flight officers, and enlisted aviation techn
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  • In the [[United States Navy]], the group of ships centered around a large [[aircraft carrier]]
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  • ...y]] [[torpedo bomber]], also used for high-level horizontal bombing from [[aircraft carrier]]s
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  • Light [[aircraft carrier]] of the [[Independence-class]]; Second World War; [[George H.W. Bush]] was
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  • ...n [[arrested landing system|arresting wire]] in the landing system of an [[aircraft carrier]]. Land-based CTOL may have a tailhook to assist in a high-speed landing, b
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  • ...[[naval aviation|Naval Aviator]] who received accelerated promotion from [[aircraft carrier]] command to command of a carrier task force, especially at the [[Battle of
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  • Naval aircraft that will operate from [[aircraft carrier]]s not equipped with [[catapult (carrier)|catapults]] will use '''short tak
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  • ...ubpages}}</noinclude>Main class, in the [[United States Navy]], of large [[aircraft carrier]]s with [[nuclear power|nuclear propulsion]]
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  • World War II three-ship class of [[aircraft carrier]]s, purpose-built under treaty restrictions and generally too small for maj
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>First raid launched from an [[aircraft carrier]], ''[[HMS Furious]]'', July 1918; damaged German [[Zeppelin]] facilities a
    212 bytes (28 words) - 18:00, 22 August 2010
  • ...e U.S. Navy, the first four being sailing warships and the fifth a light [[aircraft carrier]]. ...rry 2070 Marines. Displacing 40,500 tons, she looks superficially like an aircraft carrier, but can only operate [[helicopter]]s [[V-22 Osprey]] tilt-rotor and [[STOV
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  • [[Colossus-class]] aircraft carrier launched in 1944, transferred to Canada and then sold to Argentina in 1958
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  • On an [[aircraft carrier]], the '''island''' contains the ship's superstructure, much smaller than t ...e the [[stealth]] characteristics of a ship. While it is impossible for an aircraft carrier to "disappear", the stealthier the ship as a whole, the harder it is for se
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  • A two-ship class of [[aircraft carrier]]s, the first built by the [[United States Navy]] for operations rather tha
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  • {{r|Aircraft carrier}}
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  • ...rial Japanese Navy]] command centered around [[Japanese First Fleet]] of [[aircraft carrier]]s, but, at the time of the [[Battle of Leyte Gulf]], without enough aircra
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  • U.S. [[aircraft carrier]] of the [[Yorktown-class]]; commissioned in September 1937; sunk at the [
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  • [[Lexington-class]] U.S. Navy [[aircraft carrier]], converted from a battle cruiser hull in 1927, and serving throughout Wor
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  • {{r|Aircraft carrier}} {{r|Kitty Hawk-class}} U.S. [[aircraft carrier]], improved [[Forrestal-class]]
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>[[Royal Navy]] medium [[aircraft carrier]], entering service in 1938, and amassing a distinguished combat record bef
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  • First aircraft carrier built by the [[United States Navy]] and intended for fleet rather than expe
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  • ...e U.S. Navy, the first four being sailing warships and the fifth a light [[aircraft carrier]]. ...rry 2070 Marines. Displacing 40,500 tons, she looks superficially like an aircraft carrier, but can only operate [[helicopter]]s and [[STOVL|short-takeoff-vertical-la
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  • {{r|Aircraft carrier}}
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  • {{r|Aircraft carrier}}
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  • ...etween U.S. and Japanese carrier task forces. It is one of the five true [[aircraft carrier battles]]. ...ged the ''Enterprise'', while U.S. aircraft damaged a heavy cruiser and an aircraft carrier. Hornet, however, had to be abandoned. The Japanese finally sank her.
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  • ...robably the most potent surface [[warship]]s built since WWII (excluding [[aircraft carrier]]s)
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  • ...er, designed to follow the wake of a large warship target, especially an [[aircraft carrier]]
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  • '''USS Yorktown''' was an [[aircraft carrier]] which named the Yorktown-class. Commissioned in September 1937, she was s
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  • Single-ship class, a U.S. nuclear-propelled [[cruiser]] intended as an [[aircraft carrier]] escort; only Cold War cruiser with substantial armor; purpose-built as mi
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  • A single-ship class of 14,500 ton U.S. Navy [[aircraft carrier]], purpose-built under treaty restrictions but with some improvements over
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  • Four-ship class of conventionally powered [[aircraft carrier|"supercarriers"]] derived from the [[Forrestal-class]]; significant variati
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  • U.S. [[Yorktown-class]] [[aircraft carrier]]; commissioned in October 1941; participated in [[Doolittle Raid]] and [[B
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  • It is the only US company that makes and refuels nuclear-powered [[aircraft carrier]]s and one of only two companies that design and build nuclear-powered [[su ...rge H.W. Bush (CVN 77)]]'', a large-deck, nuclear-powered [[Nimitz-class]] aircraft carrier
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  • Fought in May 1942, the first battle between naval forces built around [[aircraft carrier]]s, in which the opposing United States and Japanese ships never saw one an
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>A modified ship superstructure for [[aircraft carrier]]s, of minimal size for needed functions and offset to one side of the ship
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  • [[United States Navy]] [[aircraft carrier]]; part of the [[Nimitz-class]] but incorporating a number of features maki
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  • ====[[Aircraft carrier]]==== ...ship construction and aviation procurement plan includes the first CVN-21 aircraft carrier, a [[Virginia-class]] submarine, one amphibious assault ship, one logistics
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  • ...st spectacular modern uses of the catapult is in launching aircraft from [[aircraft carrier]]s, using the CATOBAR technique.
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  • ...aid down as a [[battleship]] of the [[Yamato-class]] but converted to an [[aircraft carrier]]; sunk on 29 November 1944 by the submarine [[USS Archerfish (SS-311)]] w
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  • ...tates Navy]], built in 1943 and served through WWII, sinking the Japanese aircraft carrier ''[[IJN Shinano]]''; served again between 1952-1955; as a research auxiliar
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  • ...e C2]] predecessor; many converted to naval uses, particularly as [[escort aircraft carrier]]s (CVE)s and as tenders for destroyers, submarines and seaplanes
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  • .... forces (including [[IJN Shinano]], a Yamato-class hull converted to an [[aircraft carrier]])
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  • ...], '''YANKEE Station''' was a designation for the operating area of U.S. [[aircraft carrier]]s operating against [[North Vietnam]]. It was not a fixed location in the
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  • Pioneering [[aircraft carrier]], originally a specialized large light cruiser built in 1917, and then ada
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  • ...were built, although the last, ''[[IJN Shinano]]'', was converted to an [[aircraft carrier]]. The 71,000-ton ships ''IJN Yamato'' and ''IJN Musashi'' did have 18.1" 4 As the Second World War progressed, Japan recognized the dominance of the [[aircraft carrier]] enough to order the conversion of the Yamato-class hull, ''IJN Shinano'',
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  • Early purpose-built U.S. Navy [[aircraft carrier]]; too small (14,500 tons) for Pacific duty; supported "Neutrality Patrols
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  • [[Essex-class]] aircraft carrier in [[World War Two in the Pacific]] name changed from Bon Homme Richard in
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  • ...f concentric rings of escorts developed in the [[Second World War]] with [[aircraft carrier]] and [[amphibious warfare|amphibious ships]], as well as dedicated [[flags
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  • ...hter, the Tomcat was among the heaviest aircraft ever to operate from an [[aircraft carrier]]. The "A" version had underpowered engines, and could not land on the carr
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  • ...Fleet]], which controlled the major component of [[Naval Aviation]] and [[aircraft carrier]]s at sea; primarily commanded by Adm. [[Marc Mitscher]]; replaced the earl
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>U.S. Navy [[aircraft carrier]] of the [[Essex-class]]; commissioned 1943 and served in numerous [[World
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  • [[Essex-class]] U.S. Navy [[aircraft carrier]]; commissioned 1943 and fought in [[Battle of the Philippine Sea]], assau
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  • ...z]], a naval tactical formation in which the [[high value unit]]s (e.g., [[aircraft carrier]]s and [[amphibious warfare]] ships) are in the center of the formation, su
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  • '''''HMS Ark Royal'' (1938)''', was a 22,000-ton [[aircraft carrier]] of the [[Royal Navy]], built at Birkenhead, England, was completed in Nov | title = HMS Ark Royal (Aircraft Carrier, 1938-1941)
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  • Also called the CVN-21 and CVN(X) class, ten-ship class of advanced [[aircraft carrier]]s, the lead ship under construction and to be commissioned in 2015 to repl
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  • ...making her the most decorated ship in U.S. history. She was also the only aircraft carrier in operation at the beginning of the conflict still in service at war's end * [[aircraft carrier]]
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  • A 2010 British defence review is retiring the Sea Harrier and the aircraft carrier [[HMS Ark Royal (1985) |''HMS Ark Royal'' (1985)]], to make funds available
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  • *One large '''aircraft carrier''', most often [[Nimitz-class]], with full catapult and arresting wire syst
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  • ...Enterprise'' (CV-6)''' was a [[Yorktown-class|''Yorktown''-class]] U.S. [[aircraft carrier]]. She was commissioned in May 1938; served through the [[Second World War
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  • ...e objected, the Navy temporarily removed most aircraft from a full-sized [[aircraft carrier]] and made it available as the Army base. The Army has changed its helicopt
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  • .... He took command of an [[F-18 Hornet]] squadron in May 1987, aboard the [[aircraft carrier]] ''[[USS Theodore Roosevelt (CVN-71)]]'' After duty on the [[United States
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  • ...ld War II]], many C3 ships were converted to naval uses, particularly as [[aircraft carrier#escort carrier|escort aircraft carriers (CVE)]]s and as tenders for [[destr
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  • The first [[aircraft carrier]] to use [[nuclear propulsion]], the '''USS ''Enterprise'' (CVN-65)''' has
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  • ...onal units at sea than is possible by the limit imposed by the number of [[aircraft carrier]]s.
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  • ...the Gulf of Aden, 15 November 2011. The [[Nimitz-class|''Nimitz''-class]] aircraft carrier was deployed to the U.S. 5th Fleet area of responsibility conducting mariti
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  • The second [[aircraft carrier]] of the [[Queen Elizabeth (carrier)-class]], to be operational in 2018, wi
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  • Task Force 77, at the time, was the headquarters for [[aircraft carrier]]s operating in [[Operation Rolling Thunder]] against North Vietnam. It ope ...ommanded by RADM Richard B. Wren, who [[flagship|flies his flag]] on the [[aircraft carrier]] ''[[USS Kitty Hawk]]''.
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  • ...of ships, some reflecting the evolution of one type from another (e.g., [[aircraft carrier]]s were considered, in their first form, a subset of [[cruiser]]), and some *'''C''': [[Cruiser]]s and [[aircraft carrier]]s; some ships that may appear to be aircraft carriers are, due to their mi
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  • ...While she missed [[World War Two in the Pacific]], she was the first U.S. aircraft carrier to play a combat role in the [[Korean War]]. ...ia. After operating for a time in the Persian Gulf, she became the largest aircraft carrier to transit the Suez Canal. The ship finally arrived at San Diego, via the M
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  • ...ff and landing (CTOL) aircraft that will be catapulted from the deck of an aircraft carrier, and land with the usual naval tailhook and arresting wire system. For thos
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  • '''''USS Lexington'' (CV-2)''' was the first non-experimental [[aircraft carrier]] in the [[United States Navy]], lead ship of the [[Lexington-class]]. The
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  • The first battle between forces led by [[aircraft carrier]]s, in which the ships never saw one another, the '''Battle of the Coral Se ...irpower from bases to the north and by two naval forces containing a small aircraft carrier, ''[[IJN Shoho]]'', several cruisers, seaplane tenders and gunboats. More d
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  • ===Aircraft carrier===
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  • {{r|USS Randolph (CV-15)|''USS Randolph'' (CV-15)|**}} [[Aircraft carrier]] of the U.S. [[Ticonderoga (carrier)-class]]; commissioned in October 1944 {{r|USS Hancock (CV-19)|''USS Hancock'' (CV-19)|**}}[[Aircraft carrier]] of the U.S. [[Ticonderoga (carrier)-class]]; name changed from Ticonderog
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  • ...high school and college yearbooks. The cruise book of a [[Nimitz Class]] [[aircraft carrier]] typically reaches over 600 pages in length, as it includes portraits of t
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  • ...marine tender]] ''[[USS Hunley (AS-31)]]'' and [[aircraft carrier|training aircraft carrier]] [[USS Lexington (CV-16)|''USS Lexington (CV-16)'']]. On ''Lexington'', sh
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  • ...isers and [[battleship]]s could thicken the antiaircraft defenses around [[aircraft carrier]]s, yet be survivable.
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  • ...constrained waters such as the [[Persian Gulf]] or [[Shatt-el-Arab]]. An aircraft carrier is very vulnerable here, but is extremely potent when operating from deeper
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  • ...but gained special fame for its one-way mission and seemingly impossible [[aircraft carrier|carrier]] takeoff for the [[Doolittle Raid]] of 1942, the first direct offe
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  • * Chiyoda – light aircraft carrier that was sunk in the Battle of Leyte Gulf * Ryūjō – light aircraft carrier, sunk in the Battle of the Eastern Solomons
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  • Originally commissioned in 1943 as an [[Essex-class]] [[aircraft carrier]] in the [[United States Navy]],<ref>{{citation
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  • ...er, does not mean a soldier in a tank can get into every application on an aircraft carrier. The applications themselves add an additional security level(s), so that s
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  • A single-ship class of 14,500 ton U.S. Navy [[aircraft carrier]], purpose-built under treaty restrictions but with some improvements over
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  • ...'USNS Bob Hope"'', and Theme from the movie [[The Final Countdown]] by the aircraft carrier [[USS Nimitz (CVN-68)|''USS Nimitz'' (CVN-68)]], which was featured in the
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  • "During the first half of 1942, Astoria operated with, or in support of, aircraft carrier task forces, primarily that built around USS Yorktown (CV-5). From February
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  • {{r|Aircraft carrier}}
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  • {{r|Aircraft carrier}}
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  • Built on the hulls of cancelled [[battlecruiser]]s, '''Lexington-class''' [[aircraft carrier]]s were the first built, by the [[United States Navy]], intended for fleet
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  • ...al gunfire support]] and sometimes additional [[close air support]] from [[aircraft carrier]]s.
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  • ...lf]] and of the [[Battle of Surigao Strait]] and an escort mission for the aircraft carrier ''IJN Unryū''. On a much more mundane duty, she was lost on January 24, 19
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  • ...'' class guided-missile cruiser''' is the largest [[warship]] other than [[aircraft carrier]]s built by any nation since [[World War II]]. Originally named after the S
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  • ...to [[CRUDESGRU 3|Cruiser-Destroyer Group 3]], part of the escort of the [[aircraft carrier]], ''[[USS Abraham Lincoln (CVN-72)]]''. She has also had independent missi
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  • ...the top priority for the Los Angeles was sufficient speed to cruise with [[aircraft carrier]]s.<ref>{{citation
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  • ...g onto the flight deck from one of the ship’s weapons elevators aboard the aircraft carrier USS ''Kitty Hawk''
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  • ...unnery schools. In 1944, he was assigned as [[executive officer]] of the [[aircraft carrier]] ''[[USS Essex]]'', and received the [[Silver Star]] for his efforts in li ...came the navy staff deputy for [[guided missile]]s, and then commanded the aircraft carrier ''[[USS Bennington]]'' when she suffered a catastrophic explosion of her ol
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  • ...States Navy]], the ten ships of the '''''Nimitz''-class''' are its major [[aircraft carrier]]s. The [[Gerald R. Ford-class|''Gerald R. Ford''-class]] carriers, enterin
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  • ...gile electronics of the time. WWII commanders became more likely to use [[aircraft carrier]]s or purpose-built [[command ship]]s, (e.g., [[USS Mount McKinley (AGC-7)
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  • ...he enemy had to attack to stop the inexorable advance. The climax of the [[aircraft carrier|carrier ]]war came at the Battle of the Philippine Sea. Airfields on the is
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  • ...lengthy refueling, maintenance, and modernization process for a nuclear [[aircraft carrier]] can last up to almost three years and be referred to as a '''Refueling an [[Image:USS Abraham Lincoln (CVN-72) dry dock 1990.jpg|thumb|300px|[[Aircraft carrier]] ''[[USS Abraham Lincoln]]'' (CVN-72) in a [[Newport News Shipbuilding]] [
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  • .... Navy ships have been named to commemorate this engagement, the light aircraft carrier ''USS Vella Gulf (CVE-111)'' and the current [[Ticonderoga-class]] cruiser
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  • Both attacks were made by [[United States Navy]] aircraft operating from [[aircraft carrier]]s in the South China Sea. The actual military effectiveness was not great;
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  • [[Image:CV-Nimitz.jpg|thumb|left|250px|Modern aircraft carrier: ''USS Nimitz'']] An '''aircraft carrier''' is a warship designed to support and operate aircraft, engage in attacks
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  • ...Midway, not annihilating the Japanese fleet after sinking its four main [[aircraft carrier]]s.
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  • ...rating with non-U.S. navies. The Sixth Fleet is composed of one or more [[aircraft carrier]] strike groups and shore-based [[maritime patrol aircraft]] (e.g., [[P-3 O
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  • ...asure" would be to have Tangier assigned to a task force formed around the aircraft carrier [[USS Lexington (CV-2)|''USS Lexington'' (CV-2)]] and escorting destroyers.
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  • '''''USS Saratoga'' (CV-3)''' [[Lexington-class]] U.S. Navy [[aircraft carrier]], converted from a battle cruiser hull in 1927, and serving throughout [[W
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  • ...D help.jpg|left|thumb|[[Destroyer]] ''USS Rupertus'' maneuvers alongside [[aircraft carrier]] ''USS Forrestal'' to fight fire]] ...rotor. These are only a few of the hazards especially on the deck of an [[aircraft carrier]], but also in the flight operations areas of [[destroyer]]s and [[cruiser]
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  • ...of Taranto]], [[torpedo]]-equipped warplanes launched from a Royal Navy [[aircraft carrier]] provided the first practical demonstration of the vulnerability of battle Two [[Queen Elizabeth (carrier)-class]] 65,000 [[aircraft carrier]]s are under construction.
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  • ...of [[United States Central Command]]. Strike Group 10 is centered on the [[aircraft carrier]] [[USS Harry S. Truman (CVN-75)|''USS Harry S. Truman'' (CVN-75)]]. Her ad
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  • ...d by U.S. Army| U.S. Army bombers, launched from a United States Navy|Navy aircraft carrier to which they could not return, and attacking multiple minor targets in Jap
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  • ...small forces, and frequently, even when the task group commander is on an aircraft carrier or large amphibious warfare ship, carry the group anti-air warfare officer.
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  • ...hips), notably [[attack cargo ship]]s, [[attack transport]]s, and [[escort aircraft carrier]]s.
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  • ...l forces in New Guinea, New Britain and the Solomon Islands on the British aircraft carrier ''HMS Glory''. The Japanese officers involved were. General H. Imamura, com
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  • ...ers were optimized for blue water warfare. This meant that units such as [[aircraft carrier]] battle groups would spread out circular formations hundreds of mile in ra
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  • *10 – 11 [[aircraft carrier]]s and 10 carrier air wings
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  • ...iate new technology, such as [[radar]], [[communications intelligence]], [[aircraft carrier]]s and ...mation]] to the fleet, first based on a battleship and then on the early [[aircraft carrier]], [[USS Langley|USS ''Langley'']], in 1924. <ref name=Potter>{{citation
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  • ...e Force H formation was steaming north from [[Gibraltar]] and included the aircraft carrier ''[[HMS Ark Royal (1938)|HMS Ark Royal]]'' with a flight of [[Fairey Swordf
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  • ...lly designed for newer destroyers. All of these models were also used on [[aircraft carrier]]s, [[battleship]]s, and other large combatants.
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  • ...s Christi in February, 1942. Voris was soon flying combat missions off the aircraft carrier [[USS Enterprise (CV-6)|USS ''Enterprise'']] in the South Pacific. ...," under the command of [[Vice Admiral]] [[James H. Flatley]] aboard the [[aircraft carrier]] [[USS Enterprise (CV-6)|USS ''Enterprise'' (CV-6)]]. On his next cruise h
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  • ...n 1929, 20th in a class of 243. On graduation, Heinlein was assigned to an aircraft carrier, the U.S.S. Lexington. After a few years on the Lexington, he was rotated t
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  • ...was U.S. Vice Admiral [[Frank Jack Fletcher]], whose flagship was the U.S aircraft carrier ''Saratoga''. The Allied commander of the amphibious transport force was U On August 20, the U.S. [[Escort aircraft carrier|escort carrier]] [[USS Long Island (CVE-1)|''Long Island'']] delivered two
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  • While waiting to take off on a combat mission from from the [[aircraft carrier]] ''USS Forrestal'', his aircraft was hit by a rocket accidentally fired by
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  • ...val vessel designation code]] for cruisers, and, for historical reasons, [[aircraft carrier]]s, begin with the letter "C". Carriers were originally called aviation cr ...e principal mission of AAW, and was focused on providing air defense to an aircraft carrier. As well as having more VLS tubes, the Tico has an additional very-long-ran
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  • ...eaty]], would have had to be scrapped if continued, so were converted to [[aircraft carrier]]s; this was the origin of the U.S. [[Lexington-class|''Lexington''-class]]
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  • ...hen head of the Navy's Bureau of Aeronautics, offered him command of the [[aircraft carrier]] [[USS Saratoga (CV-3)|''USS Saratoga'' (CV-3)]] if he would qualify as ai ...ged the ''Enterprise'', while U.S. aircraft damaged a heavy cruiser and an aircraft carrier. Hornet, however, had to be abandoned. The Japanese finally sank her.
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  • ...regasified in a receiving terminal. LNG carriers are similar in size to an aircraft carrier and are very expensive to build and to operate. Therefore, they cannot affo
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  • ...hile the [[battleship]]s and [[cruiser]]s in suicidal attacks, the [[Light aircraft carrier|"jeep carriers"]] launched planes.
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  • ...ho was known throughout his life for his irascibility, took command of the aircraft carrier [[USS Lexington (CV-2)|Lexington]] in 1930. Ensign Heinlein was assigned to
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  • ...ctics#The outer air battle|Outer Air Battle component of the defense of an aircraft carrier battle group, and there are few threats of this type with which Iran needs
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  • ...d from her contacts with the radar picket [[destroyer]]s, she controlled [[aircraft carrier]] planes protecting the vast concentration of shipping assembled for the as
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  • ...e made it impossible for the navy to develop its own air service. The one aircraft carrier it started to build was to have flight crews under Luftwaffe command, but t
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  • ...350px|Transferring Vice Admiral Ozawa's flagship function from the damaged aircraft carrier IJN ''Zuikaku'' to the light cruiser IJN ''Oyodo'', at about 1100 hrs. on O ...arl Harbor]] and certainly by 1944, it was obvious that aircraft and the [[aircraft carrier]] had replaced the [[battleship]] as the decisive factor in major naval com
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  • ...t submarines share, and possibly exceed, the previous queens of the sea, [[aircraft carrier]]s. Other than a few early Soviet designs, ballistic missile submarines all
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  • ...ive-cent jar of F. W. Woolworth vanishing cream might have on vanishing an aircraft carrier of the ''Forrestal'' class when rubbed into the armor plate."<ref>''The Man
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  • ...Harbor]], sinking or damaging the entire American battleship fleet. U.S. [[aircraft carrier]]s were not in the harbor, and the attack left [[submarine]]s and the logis A raid by a powerful Japanese Navy aircraft carrier force into the Indian Ocean resulted in the [[Battle of Ceylon]] and sinkin
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  • ...ship construction and aviation procurement plan includes the first CVN-21 aircraft carrier, a [[Virginia-class]] submarine, one amphibious assault ship, one logistics
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  • ...onvoy included ''Almaack'', a transport, a storeship and an oiler, and the aircraft carrier [[USS Wasp (CV-7)|''Wasp'' (CV-7)]]—the latter with planes of the 33d Pur
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  • ...arried systems for LCS operations. Analogies were drawn to the first U.S. aircraft carrier, [[USS Langley (CV-1)|''USS Langley'' (CV-1)]], which was clearly experimen
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  • .... Navy ships have been named to commemorate this engagement, the light aircraft carrier ''USS Vella Gulf (CVE-111)'' and the current Ticonderoga-class cruiser, ''
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  • ...1944, more than 60 Japanese ships were sunk . The attack involved U.S. [[aircraft carrier| carrier]] based aircraft attacking Japanese shipping and land based target
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  • ...impressed by the alerting of U.S. Marines on Okinawa, and the moving of an aircraft carrier into range. <ref>Heritage, pp. 8-10</ref> Thieu told the cabinet that whil
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  • ...ship construction and aviation procurement plan includes the first CVN-21 aircraft carrier, a Virginia-class submarine, one amphibious assault ship, one logistics shi
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  • ...tate eligibility for the award annually among the various type commands ([[aircraft carrier]]s, [[submarine]]s, [[amphibious assault ship|amphibious ship]]s, etc.).
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  • ...adnought (1905)]]. The supremacy of gun-armed battleships yielded to the [[aircraft carrier]] and land-based aviation, with the role of aircraft the [[Battle of Tarant ...an fleet in Nov. 1940 at the [[Battle of Taranto]] using warplanes from [[aircraft carrier]]s. The Japanese took note and at the [[Pearl Harbor (World War II)|attack
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  • ...high school and college yearbooks. The cruise book of a [[Nimitz Class]] [[aircraft carrier]] typically reaches over 600 pages in length, as it includes portraits of t
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  • ...e and provided Navy, Marine and Royal Navy tactical air sorties from two [[aircraft carrier]]s. Enemy forces had to hide during the daytime; they could only attack at When the war started in June 1950, the [[aircraft carrier]] [[USS Valley Forge (CV-45)|''USS Valley Forge'' (CV-45)]] was in the Phil
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  • ...ency incidents during the past year, including an extensive fire aboard an aircraft carrier. The committee will examine the Navy's training programs, with specific em
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  • ...a room to large-scale operations such as establishing air superiority in [[aircraft carrier]] battles. Today, military tactics are employed on all levels of command, f
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  • ...ht training. This lasted almost 18 months, during which he qualified for [[Aircraft carrier|carrier]] landing aboard the [[USS Cabot (CVL-28)|USS ''Cabot'']] and [[USS
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  • ..., at sea. The June [[Battle of Midway]] cost Japan four of its six large [[aircraft carrier]]s and destroyed its capability for future major offensives. In the [[Guada
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  • In April, she was one of the vessels protecting the aircraft carrier [[USS Hornet (CV-8)|''USS Hornet'' (CV-8)]] on the [[Doolittle Raid]].
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  • ...vy as an ensign. He served 47 months, including 18 months aboard the light aircraft carrier [[USS Monterey (CVL-26)]] in the South Pacific, and was discharged in Janua
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  • ...ive-cent jar of F. W. Woolworth vanishing cream might have on vanishing an aircraft carrier of the ''Forrestal'' class when rubbed into the armor plate."<ref>''[[The M
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  • ...earthquakes]], [[meteor|meteor showers]], and a [[tsunami]] which dumps an aircraft carrier on the [[White House]].<ref name=twsMar14b/>
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  • ...rted it. The attack was carried out by United States Navy aviators from an aircraft carrier in the South China Sea. FLAMING DART II was a response to an attack on Qui
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  • ...ive-cent jar of F. W. Woolworth vanishing cream might have on vanishing an aircraft carrier of the ''Forrestal'' class when rubbed into the armor plate."<ref>''[[The M
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  • ...show in 2003.|The talented singer and actress entertained troops aboard an aircraft carrier in 2003.]]
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  • On 11 December 1961 the United States aircraft carrier ''USNS Card'' docked in downtown Saigon with 82 U. S. Army H-21 helicopters
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  • ...naval vessels, but the costs eventually showed it was suitable only for [[aircraft carrier]]s and [[submarine]]s. Electric automobiles have been technically feasible
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  • ...dime]]. Many parks, schools, roads, an [[USS Franklin D. Roosevelt (CV-42)|aircraft carrier]]. along with sites in Europe, Twelve days after his death in 1945, Thomas
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  • ...mission from 1961 to 1982; and the ''USS Theodore Roosevelt'' (CVN-71), an aircraft carrier that has been on active duty in the Atlantic Fleet since 1986.
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