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A Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART) train departs West Oakland station and will
shortly enter the Transbay Tube towards San Francisco and Daly City on
Tuesday 11th December 2007.
This girl was telling us, upon seeing the BART full of wigs and ridiculousness, how sad she was that she didn't bust out the crazy a bit more for SF Pride. She scored herself the clown nose in my pocket.
Retrofitting the support columns... in case of an earthquake? All work is being completely obscured. My theory is they are removing so much material people would freak out and refuse to stand on the BART platform if they could see what's going on.
Bart lives with his family in Paddy's group. He is lucky to have been cared for by his mother and has a multitude of adoring aunties and uncles to watch over him and play with him. This is lovely to see in a group of animals who were removed from their own mothers as babies and variously mistreated. They are unrelated individuals and came together to make a close group.
This is a shot from my photoshoot with Bart Rochon a few weeks back. He selected this as one of the ones he liked and wanted processed.
The only adjustments here are the fill light, a tweak to the tint and cropping it in tighter.
i went out on a last minute photo exploration today with a couple other photogs, Rafa and Polykinase. i think i can safely say that we all enjoyed it immensely... hopefully we got some worthwhile images too! it's been a long while since i've taken my D300 dSLR out just to shoot for fun, mostly been all about the Holga recently...
taken on my way over, awaiting a train transfer at the 12th street, oakland BART station.
Jean Bart (and her sister ship Richelieu) were designed to counter the threat of the heavy ships of the Italian Navy. Their speed, shielding, armament, and overall technology were state of the art, but they had a rather unusual main battery armament arrangement, with two 4-gun turrets to the bow and none to the stern.
Jean Bart was laid down in December 1936, and she was launched on 6 March 1940. Barely 75% completed, her steam engines never having been worked before, she was taken out of St. Nazaire's dry dock by Captain Ronach and steamed to Casablanca, Morocco, in June 1940 in order to escape the advance of the German army in France. Only one of her two 380-millimetre (15 in) main turrets had been installed by then. The second turret, with only two of its four naval guns, was loaded onto a cargo ship. The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk by a German U-Boat. Her 152-millimetre (6.0 in) secondary battery was also non-installed, and it was replaced by anti-aircraft guns. Like other French naval and military forces in North Africa, the Jean Bart was under the control of the Vichy French government.
On 8 November 1942, during Operation Torch, the French fleet in Casablanca was attacked by American warships and warplanes from the aircraft carrier USS Ranger (CV-4). The Jean Bart went into a gun battle with the battleship USS Massachusetts (BB-59). The Jean Bart suffered hits from several aerial bombs and 16-inch (406 mm) shells. On the 10th, the Jean Bart opened fire again on the cruiser USS Augusta, much to the surprise of the American naval officers - who thought that the Jean Bart had been silenced by her heavy damage. This gunfire drew action from the warplanes of the USS Ranger, and the Jean Bart suffered two more hits by 500-pound (230 kg) bombs. These opened a leak in her hull, forcing her to be run aground by her Captain. Combat was over by that evening, and along with the rest of French forces in North Africa, she surrendered and then took sides with the Allies of the United States and the United Kingdom.
Soon, it was suggested that the Jean Bart be sent to the USA and completed there (her sister ship, Richelieu, had already undergone a refitting there), but that proved to be impossible. The notion of converting the Jean Bart into an aircraft carrier was studied, but was found to be impractical. For the next two years, the unfinished battleship remained stranded in Casablanca harbour.
The Jean Bart returned to France in 1945, and she was completed in 1949, under an updated design influenced by lessons from experience with battleships in the previous war. The Jean Bart took her part in the Suez Canal Crisis off Egypt in 1956, but engaged in no ship-to-ship combat. She was put into reserve in 1957, and then she was decommissioned in 1961. The hulk of the Jean Bart was scrapped in 1969.