This is a list of all the questions and their associated study carrel identifiers. One can learn a lot of the "aboutness" of a text simply by reading the questions.
identifier | question |
---|---|
40958 | The master asks,"All ready forward?" |
44206 | What did Columbus use? |
44206 | What did they have on the_ Mayflower_? |
45157 | What is she doing? |
45157 | And the serious question arises, how is the British merchant service to be built up again? |
45157 | How could a State department administer the shipping industry of this country in competition with foreign private enterprise? |
45157 | What is this"riddle of the sands"they asked? |
45157 | Will she carry them? |
27322 | And shall these fearful warnings also be without avail? |
27322 | But if all can not be rescued, must all therefore be left to perish? |
27322 | With the most ample means for the rescue of thousands of human beings from a watery grave, shall we still leave them to their fate? |
27322 | Wretched, exhausted, and in the last extremity of danger, on whom does their rescue devolve? |
4673 | How do you know my name is Mackintosh? |
4673 | Why, sir, supposing you are in a gale and a fire breaks out on board, what are you going to do? 4673 Among the number was one noble- looking man, who stepped up near to our captain and, addressing him, said,How do you do, Captain Mackintosh?" |
4673 | And who has not been good? |
4673 | How dare you? |
4673 | How is it that you are in command of that ship?" |
4673 | I said,"Perhaps you do n''t remember me?" |
4673 | I said,"Yes, and why not?" |
4673 | Is There a Fatality Attaching to Men or Inanimate Things? |
4673 | Is there a fatality attaching to certain men or things? |
4673 | Now, sir, what do you think was the effect? |
4673 | The following conversation then took place:"What is the name of the vessel you command?" |
4673 | What is to prevent us from having a smash- up before morning?" |
4673 | You have no back door to escape through?" |
15648 | ''Ah,''said he,''what can you do? 15648 ''Any other officers?'' |
15648 | ''Is Mr. Greely alive?'' 15648 ''What is the ship''s name?'' |
15648 | ''Where are they?'' 15648 ''Who all are there left?'' |
15648 | ''Who are you?'' 15648 ''Who are you?'' |
15648 | ''Who are you?'' 15648 At this moment there was a confused murmur within the tent, and a voice said:''Who''s there?'' |
15648 | Colwell crawled in and took him by the hand, saying:''Greely, is this you?'' 15648 The Triton crieth,''Who cometh now from shore?'' |
15648 | Think you can climb it? |
15648 | What luck, cap''n? |
15648 | But why continue the pitiful chronicle? |
15648 | But will ever these great liners, these huge masses of steel, guided by electricity and sped by steam, build up anew the race of American sailors? |
15648 | But will the American sailor share in the new life of the American ship? |
15648 | Could a boat laden with a heavy engine be made of so light a draught as to pass over the shallows of the Ohio? |
15648 | Could a boat laden with thousands of pounds of machinery make her way northward against that swift current? |
15648 | Could it run the falls at Louisville, or be dragged around them as the flatboats often were? |
15648 | For was it not on the Banks and in a fog that the blow was struck which sent"La Bourgogne"to the bottom with more than four hundred souls? |
15648 | Only thirty- four saved themselves-- and for what? |
15648 | What canal could it be? |
15648 | What good will come to the world with its discovery? |
15648 | What then? |
15648 | What was the natural result? |
15648 | What you got there?" |
15648 | Whence come you?'' |
15648 | Where are the fish?'' |
15648 | Who shall say now? |
15648 | Would it be seriously asserted that a steamer owned by New Jersey citizens could not land passengers at a New York port? |
21717 | Ay, thank God,echoes Willie''s mother, with the profoundest emotion and sincerity she ever felt; but think you, reader, that she did no more? |
21717 | Do they help to float the lifeboats at Blunderton? |
21717 | Do_ you_ help the cause in any way, sir? |
21717 | Have you seen anything of the lifeboat? |
21717 | Hold on, sir? 21717 Hope thou in God, for thou shalt yet praise Him,"perchance occurred to some of them: who knows? |
21717 | Me? 21717 The lifeboats? |
21717 | What are you firing for? |
21717 | And what of the lifeboat- men during all this time? |
21717 | And when the harbour was gained what saw they there? |
21717 | And_ does_ Brown forget him? |
21717 | As, I doubt not, the reader is now sufficiently interested to ask the questions, How are self- righting and self- emptying accomplished? |
21717 | But what difference had the saving of Willie made in the lifeboat cause? |
21717 | Can you wonder? |
21717 | Did she leave the management and support of lifeboats to_ the people of the coast_? |
21717 | Did she pass languidly over the records of lifeboat work after_ that_ day? |
21717 | Have I and my fellow- inlanders nothing to do but read, admire, and say, Well done?" |
21717 | How does this war progress? |
21717 | Is not this a tremendous account of the doings of one gale? |
21717 | Ponder this well, good reader, and ask yourself the question,"Is all as it should be here? |
21717 | The crew of the Demerara were clinging to their quivering mast close by, but what could their weak voices avail in such a storm? |
21717 | Then he shouted,"How many can you carry? |
21717 | Think you, reader, that this sketch is exaggerated? |
21717 | Was hers the only Willie in the wide World? |
21717 | Were the Shingles to be forsaken, when possibly human beings were perishing there? |
21717 | Were they asleep? |
21717 | What is to be said of the other parts of our shores during that same wild storm? |
21717 | What more need be said in favour of the self- righting boats? |
21717 | What was to be done? |
21717 | Where and how do our coast heroes fight? |
21717 | Who can conceive the horror of the situation to such as these, save those who went through it? |
21717 | you exclaim,"wo n''t the water from below rush up through these holes and fill the boat?" |
27642 | ( L.S.T.)? |
27642 | 72 ° 45''W? |
27642 | 75 ° E. What is the local mean time of the Star Etamin''s meridian passage? |
27642 | 8 A.M. and 12 M. registered 32 miles, current running N x E 2 knots per hour; what was the actual distance made good? |
27642 | At what local mean time will the Star Arcturus transit on July 17th, 1919, in Latitude 45 ° 35''N., Longitude 28 ° 06''W.? |
27642 | For instance, CT 1h--25m--45s, WT 4h--13m--25s, what is the C- W? |
27642 | For instance, what are the various kinds of buoys and how are they marked? |
27642 | How can it be corrected? |
27642 | How can you combine the two so as to get accurately both your latitude and longitude? |
27642 | How can you steer for the North pole when the meridians of your chart never come together at any pole? |
27642 | How would you go about it? |
27642 | In the first place, what is a definition of the sun''s HA? |
27642 | Is it East or West? |
27642 | Latitude 30 ° N., Longitude 60 ° 30''W. Observed unknown star about 60 ° west of meridian and about 22 ° S. What was the star? |
27642 | Latitude 37 ° 37''N. Longitude 38 ° 37''W. At what local mean time will the Star Antares be on the meridian? |
27642 | Now, what is the star time that corresponds to local time? |
27642 | S 88 ° E. Variation 10 ° W. What was the ship''s true course and Deviation of Compass on direction ship was heading? |
27642 | TZ N 90 ° E. What will be the Watch Time of Local Apparent Noon? |
27642 | TZ N 90 ° E. What will be the watch time of Local Apparent Noon? |
27642 | That is, when Greenwich is 4h--16m--30s from the sun, how far is Greenwich from the First Point of Aries? |
27642 | The question is-- How can we correct our longitude to correspond with this error discovered in the latitude? |
27642 | What are your duties( a) before leaving port,( b) while at sea, and( c) on entering pilot waters? |
27642 | What compass course shall I sail? |
27642 | What compass course shall I sail? |
27642 | What compass course shall I sail? |
27642 | What compass course shall I sail? |
27642 | What is Declination and R.A. on May 15th, 1919, of Polaris, Arcturus, Capella, Regulus, Altair, Deneb, Vega, Aldebaran? |
27642 | What is the new latitude and longitude she arrives in? |
27642 | What method shall you use? |
27642 | What star will transit at about 4:10 A.M. on Aug. 3rd, 1919? |
27642 | What was the star? |
27642 | What was the star? |
27642 | What will be the watch time of Local Apparent Noon? |
27642 | What would be the corresponding C T? |
27642 | What would be the corresponding CT? |
27642 | and longitude in T which is E, what is the formula for G.S.T.? |
27642 | and the longitude in T which is W, what is the formula for L.S.T.? |
27642 | at ship? |
27642 | for the same moment? |
27642 | is April 15d--10h--17m--30s A.M. What is G.M.T.? |
27642 | is ship? |
27642 | on June 10th? |
20520 | But,said my father,"there is no water,"when the Member of Parliament said,"Wo n''t money make the boat swim?" |
20520 | Can you read? |
20520 | Can you swim? |
20520 | Forgive you what? |
20520 | what have you done that you should ask_ me_ to forgive you? |
20520 | ''And for what do you know me, something good or bad?'' |
20520 | ''And how many souls had you saved?'' |
20520 | ''And why the people of Hull more than the people of any other place?'' |
20520 | ''Granted,''replied our friend,''but if you can drink with safety, can others? |
20520 | ''Has it come to this? |
20520 | ''Have you injured me?'' |
20520 | ''I ca n''t say, but I know I saved somebody''s boy, is he yours?'' |
20520 | ''O good, Sir; do n''t you remember jumping overboard and saving my life, at Hull? |
20520 | ''Then look me in the face; are you beyond God''s reach, or do you think that because he has restored your health once, he will not afflict you again? |
20520 | ''What brush?'' |
20520 | ''Yes,''said the rejoicing father,''I''m glad you were there, what am I in your debt?'' |
20520 | A gentleman came to me and said''Did you fetch yon woman out of the water?'' |
20520 | All the next week John was in great perplexity, thinking,''What can I say if I go? |
20520 | Am I a child of God? |
20520 | Am I prepared for entering the mansions of everlasting bliss?" |
20520 | Am I to be a slave to that liquid? |
20520 | And WHO IS HE of whom this land is proud, Whose name we honour and whose worth is known? |
20520 | And are there not tens of thousands of professors who could present similar offerings if they, in the name and spirit of their great Master, tried? |
20520 | And can we wonder that he should thus write? |
20520 | And do you think God will believe you if you again promise to serve him? |
20520 | And is not total abstinence the only safe side for the abstainer himself? |
20520 | And was this Christian woman wrong in calling the public house the devil''s ground? |
20520 | And where is the moderate drinker who can point to the glass and say,''I am safe?'' |
20520 | But I always believed in that little catch,''Have you not succeeded yet? |
20520 | But admitting, for the sake of argument, that you can drink with safety to yourself, can you drink with safety to others? |
20520 | But was he mad? |
20520 | Can I help them?'' |
20520 | Can a man go upon hot coals and his feet not be burnt? |
20520 | Can we wonder that he was within an ace of losing his life in this mad exploit? |
20520 | Could nothing have been done when they saw us sink together, again and again? |
20520 | Did not the Ethiopian Eunuch, having obtained salvation,''_ go on his way rejoicing_?'' |
20520 | Did not the converts in Samaria''make great joy in the city?'' |
20520 | Did not the pentecostal converts''eat their meat with gladness and singleness of heart, praising God?'' |
20520 | Do I now enjoy an interest in Christ? |
20520 | Do n''t you remember when you leaped into the drain forty years ago, and saved my life?'' |
20520 | Does thou think anybody but theeself would jump overboard a night like this? |
20520 | Eaby''s first expression on coming out of his fit was,''What are you doing here?'' |
20520 | Ellerthorpe, you do n''t seem to know who I am?'' |
20520 | Have I injured you?'' |
20520 | Have none of your acquaintances or friends fallen victims to drunkenness? |
20520 | Have you kept the promises you made to the Lord?'' |
20520 | Have you never seen the evil effects of tampering with the glass? |
20520 | He looked this way and that way; I said,''Well, B----, are you all right? |
20520 | How often has that room resounded with the cries of penitent sinners and the songs of rejoicing believers? |
20520 | I replied,''Do you think it possible that there will come a time when you will rather see any one''s face and hear any one''s voice than mine?'' |
20520 | I said to him,''Now, father, can you keep hold while I fetch the Hull horse- boatmen?'' |
20520 | I said''Why do you look so sad? |
20520 | If my corpse were here, where John Ellerthorpe lies, where would my soul be? |
20520 | My captain was provoked by( what_ he_ thought) this man''s niggardly gift, and said,''John, why did you drink it? |
20520 | Need we wonder that our friend had but little faith in a sick- bed repentance? |
20520 | Now, what followed? |
20520 | One day he had put but a few drops of water into a large glass of brandy, but the young gentleman said,''Did''nt I tell you to make it stronger? |
20520 | One of them said,"Is he that Ellerthorpe of Hessle?" |
20520 | Our friend shook his head and said,''Do you think, Sir, I could see a man overboard and not plunge in after him? |
20520 | Placing his hand on this man''s shoulder, he said,''Will you take the pledge?'' |
20520 | So the professor said,"Can you write, my man?" |
20520 | Soon after I was born, one of my uncles asked,"What is the lad''s name to be?" |
20520 | The great question we ought to ask ourselves individually is"Am I prepared to die? |
20520 | Then I would ask,''Why did n''t they make a venture?'' |
20520 | We can not close this chapter of our little book without asking, Were the motives which led our friend to sign the pledge, right or wrong? |
20520 | What, then, must be the feelings of the thirty- nine who have been saved at the eminent risk and peril of Mr. Ellerthorpe''s life? |
20520 | When I returned, Mr. Chapman met me and said,''John, was it you who saved my boy?'' |
20520 | While closing the cabin door for the night, I heard a splash, and running aft, I called out,''Is anyone overboard?'' |
20520 | Why did''nt you try to save him?" |
20520 | _ 8th._--What is now the state of my mind? |
20520 | replied the Master,''how could you get it?'' |
20520 | when Davis said,''Is John Ellerthorpe that young man''s father?'' |
20520 | when his deliverer replied,''Havn''t I as much right here as you have?'' |
42415 | Are all there? 42415 Are they all saved?" |
42415 | But are you positive you saw anything? |
42415 | Can anything have happened? |
42415 | Can it be so? 42415 Did n''t I tell you so?" |
42415 | Have not I got a wife? 42415 Have we got all?" |
42415 | Have you seen anything of the life- boat? |
42415 | How many will the life- boat carry? |
42415 | Is even this attempt to be a failure? 42415 Is the anchor clear?" |
42415 | Likely enough; but there is one thing certain, is there not? 42415 Look sharp, men, look sharp; do you want to drown us all?" |
42415 | Ready all? |
42415 | Ready in the bow? |
42415 | Right enough then, and I am your man; but what next? |
42415 | What did you do next? |
42415 | What good can that be to us? |
42415 | What is noble? 42415 What was she like?" |
42415 | Where? 42415 Which way are you going?" |
42415 | Who comes here? |
42415 | Who shall be the first coxswain of our new_ Northumberland_ Prize Life- boat? |
42415 | --"But with the seas running over the boat, and the boat full of water, it must have been salt- water grog very soon-- how did you manage it?" |
42415 | --"What can we do? |
42415 | Alive? |
42415 | And was it thus, that Lionel Luken gained unto himself the immortal honour of being the first inventor of the Life- boat? |
42415 | Any one hit? |
42415 | Are any washed out of her?" |
42415 | But how long will the wreck float under them? |
42415 | But what is to be done to save the poor crew? |
42415 | But where was the wreck? |
42415 | Do I want to be taken from them, any more than you do from yours? |
42415 | Had she been beaten to pieces, all lives lost, and were they too late? |
42415 | Have I not got six children? |
42415 | Have such things been possible? |
42415 | How can there be? |
42415 | How long will she be away? |
42415 | I see a gleaming light; O say what may it be?" |
42415 | Is he alive? |
42415 | Is it a signal from some unfortunate vessel in distress similar to that which they are in? |
42415 | Now all the men seem to be saved; names are shouted-- do all answer? |
42415 | The look- out man reports a dim light ahead; What kind? |
42415 | The men in the boat shout out,"It begins to look bad; do you not think that we had better be leaving, and get out of this?" |
42415 | The ship is the_ Fusilier_, bound from London to Australia; her captain and pilot shout out to the men on board the boat,"How many can you carry? |
42415 | The wreck can not by any possibility float much longer; how can the men be saved? |
42415 | The wreck must have been abandoned long before this; has the boat been unable to get away from her? |
42415 | Thus the only question is, what they shall try next? |
42415 | What can be done? |
42415 | What can we do?" |
42415 | What fearful image works its way? |
42415 | What for you run away? |
42415 | What horrible mistake have they made? |
42415 | What is it? |
42415 | What is it? |
42415 | What shall we do? |
42415 | What''s up now? |
42415 | What''s up now? |
42415 | Where are they? |
42415 | Where can they be? |
42415 | Where is he? |
42415 | Where?" |
42415 | Which will happen first? |
42415 | Who among Ramsgate boatmen has been better known in his time than Isaac Jarman-- or Mr. Jarman, as I suppose I ought to call him now? |
42415 | Why did that fearful old woman kneel upon his chest, and cover his mouth with her cloak? |
42415 | Will the remaining two strands hold? |
42415 | Yes, and do you see how her masts are swinging about, and in different directions? |
42415 | _ Lavater._ What dreams had Lionel Luken, coach- builder of London, in the year 1780, or thereabouts? |
42415 | and Whither away? |
42415 | and are all lost? |
42415 | do you hear that?" |
42415 | for is he not master of a thriving public- house, which he will take good care to keep respectable? |
42415 | is the boat swamped or stove? |
42415 | must she not fall into the sea? |
42415 | or dead? |
42415 | what shall we do?" |
42415 | where is he? |
42415 | why not? |
39415 | (_ a_) How many persons on board the_ Titanic_ at the time of the casualty were ultimately rescued and by what means? |
39415 | (_ a_) Was ice seen and reported by anybody on board the_ Titanic_ before the casualty occurred? |
39415 | (_ a_) Was the apparatus for lowering the boats on the_ Titanic_ at the time of the casualty in good working order? |
39415 | (_ a_) Was the_ Titanic_ sufficiently and efficiently officered and manned? |
39415 | (_ a_) Were binoculars provided for and used by the lookout men? |
39415 | (_ a_) What installations for receiving and transmitting messages by wireless telegraphy were on board the_ Titanic_? |
39415 | (_ a_) What messages for assistance were sent by the_ Titanic_ after the casualty, and at what times respectively? |
39415 | (_ a_) What other precautions were taken by the_ Titanic_ in anticipation of meeting ice? |
39415 | (_ a_) What steps were taken immediately on the happening of the casualty? |
39415 | (_ a_) What was in fact the track taken by the_ Titanic_ in crossing the Atlantic Ocean? |
39415 | (_ a_) What was the cause of the loss of the_ Titanic_ and of the loss of life which thereby ensued or occurred? |
39415 | (_ a_) What was the nature of the casualty which happened to the_ Titanic_ at or about 11.45 p.m. on April 14 last? |
39415 | (_ a_) What was the number of the boats of any kind on board the_ Titanic_? |
39415 | (_ a_) What was the number of(_ a_) passengers,(_ b_) crew taken away in each boat on leaving the vessel? |
39415 | (_ a_) What was the speed of the_ Titanic_ shortly before and at the moment of the casualty? |
39415 | (_ b_) Did she keep to the track usually followed by liners on voyages from the United Kingdom to New York in the month of April? |
39415 | (_ b_) How long after the casualty was its seriousness realized by those in charge of the vessel(_ c_) What steps were then taken? |
39415 | (_ b_) How many lost their lives prior to the arrival of the steamship_ Carpathia_ in New York? |
39415 | (_ b_) How many operators were employed on working such installations? |
39415 | (_ b_) How was this number made up, having regard to( 1) sex,( 2) class, and( 3) rating? |
39415 | (_ b_) If so, what measures were taken by the officer on watch to avoid it? |
39415 | (_ b_) In what latitude and longitude did the casualty occur? |
39415 | (_ b_) Is the use of them necessary or usual in such circumstances? |
39415 | (_ b_) Was a good and proper lookout for ice kept on board? |
39415 | (_ b_) Was such speed excessive under the circumstances? |
39415 | (_ b_) Were the arrangements for manning and launching the boats on board the_ Titanic_ in case of emergency proper and sufficient? |
39415 | (_ b_) Were the boats swung out, filled, lowered, or otherwise put into the water and got away under proper superintendence? |
39415 | (_ b_) Were the watches of the officers and crew usual and proper? |
39415 | (_ b_) Were they such as are usually adopted by vessels being navigated in waters where ice may be expected to be encountered? |
39415 | (_ b_) What messages were received by her in response, and at what times respectively? |
39415 | (_ b_) What was the total number of her passengers, distinguishing sexes and classes, and discriminating between adults and children? |
39415 | (_ b_) What was the total number of her passengers, distinguishing sexes and classes, and discriminating between adults and children? |
39415 | (_ c_) Are such tracks safe tracks at that time of the year? |
39415 | (_ c_) By what vessels were the messages that were sent by the_ Titanic_ received, and from what vessels did she receive answers? |
39415 | (_ c_) Had a boat drill been held on board, and if so, when? |
39415 | (_ c_) Had the_ Titanic_ the means of throwing searchlights around her? |
39415 | (_ c_) How many were children and how many adults? |
39415 | (_ c_) Was her course altered in consequence of receiving such information, and, if so, in what way? |
39415 | (_ c_) Was the_ Titanic_ supplied with proper charts? |
39415 | (_ c_) Were any, and, if so, what, directions given to vary the speed-- if so, were they carried out? |
39415 | (_ c_) Were the boats sent away in seaworthy condition and properly manned, equipped, and provisioned? |
39415 | (_ c_) Were they proper measures and were they promptly taken? |
39415 | (_ d_) Did each boat carry its full load and, if not, why not? |
39415 | (_ d_) Did the boats, whether those under davits or otherwise, prove to be efficient and serviceable for the purpose of saving life? |
39415 | (_ d_) Had the master any, and if so, what discretion as regards the track to be taken? |
39415 | (_ d_) If so, did she make use of them to discover ice? |
39415 | (_ d_) What endeavors were made to save the lives of those on board, and to prevent the vessel from sinking? |
39415 | (_ d_) What replies to such messages or signals did the_ Titanic_ send, and at what times? |
39415 | (_ d_) What vessels other than the_ Titanic_ sent or received messages at or shortly after the casualty in connection with such casualty? |
39415 | (_ d_) What was the carrying capacity of the respective boats? |
39415 | (_ d_) What was the number of the crew, discriminating their ratings and sex, that were saved? |
39415 | (_ e_) Should searchlights have been provided and used? |
39415 | (_ e_) What is the proportion which each of these numbers bears to the corresponding total number on board immediately before the casualty? |
39415 | (_ e_) What were the vessels that sent or received such messages? |
39415 | (_ f_) What reason is there for the disproportion, if any? |
39415 | (_ g_) In regard to such erroneous messages, from what vessels were they sent and by what vessels were they received, and at what times respectively? |
39415 | 40.52 N., 61.18 W.||"Are you steering southerly to meet us?" |
39415 | Are such tracks safe tracks at that time of the year? |
39415 | By what vessels were the messages that were sent by the_ Titanic_ received, and from what vessels did she receive answers? |
39415 | Did each boat carry its full load; and if not, why not? |
39415 | Did she keep to the track usually followed by liners on voyages from the United Kingdom to New York in the month of April? |
39415 | Did the boats, whether those under davits or otherwise, prove to be efficient and serviceable for the purpose of saving life? |
39415 | From what I have heard subsequently? |
39415 | Granted, therefore, that the question of form must take priority, how can it be best attained? |
39415 | Had a boat drill been held on board; and, if so, when? |
39415 | Had the master any, and, if so, what, discretion as regards the track to be taken? |
39415 | Had the_ Titanic_ the means of throwing searchlights around her? |
39415 | He states that the master answered,"Are they company''s signals?" |
39415 | How long after the casualty was its seriousness realized by those in charge of the vessel? |
39415 | How many lost their lives prior to the arrival of the steamship_ Carpathia_ in New York? |
39415 | How many operators were employed on working such installations? |
39415 | How many persons on board the_ Titanic_ at the time of the casualty were ultimately rescued and by what means? |
39415 | How many were children and how many adults? |
39415 | How was this number made up, having regard to( 1) sex,( 2) class,( 3) rating? |
39415 | If so, did she make use of them to discover ice? |
39415 | If so, what measures were taken by the officer on watch to avoid it? |
39415 | In answer to a question during his examination,"Had she much light?" |
39415 | In regard to such erroneous messages, from what vessels were they sent and by what vessels were they received, and at what times, respectively? |
39415 | In what latitude and longitude did the casualty occur? |
39415 | Is the use of them necessary or usual in such circumstances? |
39415 | It is the latter type we are chiefly concerned with; how is it that the form has so deteriorated as to create this concern in our minds? |
39415 | Should searchlights have been provided and used? |
39415 | Was a good and proper lookout for ice kept on board? |
39415 | Was her course altered in consequence of receiving such information; and, if so, in what way? |
39415 | Was ice seen and reported by anybody on board the_ Titanic_ before the casualty occurred? |
39415 | Was proper discipline maintained on board after the casualty occurred? |
39415 | Was proper discipline maintained on board after the casualty occurred? |
39415 | Was such speed excessive under the circumstances? |
39415 | Was the apparatus for lowering the boats on the_ Titanic_ at the time of the casualty in good working order? |
39415 | Was the_ Titanic_ sufficiently and efficiently officered and manned? |
39415 | Was the_ Titanic_ supplied with proper charts? |
39415 | Were any, and, if so, what, directions given to vary the speed; if so, were they carried out? |
39415 | Were binoculars provided for and used by the lookout men? |
39415 | Were such instructions, if any, safe, proper, and adequate, having regard to the time of year and dangers likely to be encountered during the voyage? |
39415 | Were the arrangements for manning and launching the boats on board the_ Titanic_ in case of emergency proper and sufficient? |
39415 | Were the boats sent away in seaworthy condition and properly manned, equipped, and provisioned? |
39415 | Were the boats swung out, filled, lowered, or otherwise put into the water and got away under proper superintendence? |
39415 | Were the watches of the officers and crew usual and proper? |
39415 | Were they proper measures and were they promptly taken? |
39415 | Were they such as are usually adopted by vessels being navigated in waters where ice may be expected to be encountered? |
39415 | What endeavors were made to save the lives of those on board and to prevent the vessel from sinking? |
39415 | What happened to the vessel from the happening of the casualty until she foundered? |
39415 | What happened to the vessel from the happening of the casualty until she foundered? |
39415 | What installations for receiving and transmitting messages by wireless telegraphy were on board the_ Titanic_? |
39415 | What is the proportion which each of these numbers bears to the corresponding total number on board immediately before the casualty? |
39415 | What is|| your position?" |
39415 | What messages for assistance were sent by the_ Titanic_ after the casualty, and at what times, respectively? |
39415 | What messages were received by her in response, and at what times, respectively? |
39415 | What other precautions were taken by the_ Titanic_ in anticipation of meeting ice? |
39415 | What reason is there for the disproportion, if any? |
39415 | What replies to such messages or signals did the_ Titanic_ send, and at what times? |
39415 | What steps were taken immediately on the happening of the casualty? |
39415 | What steps were then taken? |
39415 | What vessels other than the_ Titanic_ sent or received messages at or shortly after the casualty in connection with such casualty? |
39415 | What was in fact the track taken by the_ Titanic_ in crossing the Atlantic Ocean? |
39415 | What was the carrying capacity of the respective boats? |
39415 | What was the cause of the loss of the_ Titanic_, and of the loss of life which thereby ensued or occurred? |
39415 | What was the nature of the casualty which happened to the_ Titanic_ at or about 11.45 p. m. on April 14 last? |
39415 | What was the number of the boats of any kind on board the_ Titanic_? |
39415 | What was the number of the crew, discriminating their ratings and sex, that were saved? |
39415 | What was the number of(_ a_) passengers,(_ b_) crew taken away in each boat on leaving the vessel? |
39415 | What was the speed of the_ Titanic_ shortly before and at the moment of the casualty? |
39415 | What were the vessels that sent or received such messages? |
39415 | Where and at what time did the_ Titanic_ founder? |
39415 | Where and at what time did the_ Titanic_ founder? |
39415 | Why, then, did the master persevere in his course and maintain his speed? |
39415 | || 7.7 a. m.|| Baltic sends following to Carpathia:"Can|| I be of any assistance to you as|| regards taking some of the passengers|| from you? |
39415 | || D. F. T.( Frankfurt) says,"What is the|| matter with u?" |
39415 | ||( Titanic) says,"Are you coming to our?" |