
[floatr]

Hot Topics | |
---|---|
Doctor Stop wrote:Raising the Yamato would require a boatload of fluffers.
Despite jaw-dropping costs and immense technical difficulties, business leaders here plan to salvage parts from the sunken World War II imperial battleship Yamato. Officials said the project would help revitalize this area of western Japan. A five-member preparatory panel announced the plan Thursday. In the words of one official, "We hope to have the real thing on exhibit" so as to revitalize this once-thriving naval port that developed as a shipbuilding center. The official called the Yamato a "symbol of Kure." The panel is headed by Seiichiro Okuhara, chairman of the Kure Chamber of Commerce and Industry. Kazushige Todaka, chief of the Kure Maritime Museum, more commonly known as the Yamato Museum because it has a replica of the battleship on display, is among the members. The city of Kure is joining the project as an observer. The panel said an executive committee will be formed in April to start the drive to raise funds, which it estimates will run into billions of yen.
...Panel members said they hope to at least raise the 2,780-ton main guns and the front portion of the hull, which they say bear distinctive Yamato characteristics. Okuhara said salvaging parts from the historic ship is partly aimed at praying for the repose of the dead and to show young and future generations the misery of war and the importance of peace. "The technology used to build the Yamato still plays a big role in the manufacturing industry here," Okuhara said. In surveys in 1985 and 1999, a bugle, eating utensils and other artifacts were salvaged, but no ship parts.
Yutairui wrote:I've never understood the Japanese fascination with the Yamato.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 8 guests