History, asked by viviannar26, 10 months ago

Why did the US Navy never authorize the savage of the US S Arizona?

Answers

Answered by yskar1385
1

Answer:

It was determined that there was so much damage that the ship was a total loss and could not be salvaged, although some parts from the Arizona were taken for use on other ships during WWII. ... The decision to leave the USS Arizona underwater at the bottom of Pearl Harbor was made after much deliberation.

Answered by Ashish9375
0
For the 2008 9X TV series produced by Balaji Telefilms, see Kahaani Hamaaray Mahaabhaarat Ki. For the 2013 Star Plus series produced by Swastik Pictures, see Mahabharat (2013 TV series).
Mahabharat
Mahabharattvseriestitle.jpg
Genre Historical
Created by B. R. Chopra
Based on Mahabharata
Vishnu Purana
Written by Pandit Narendra Sharma
Dr. Rahi Masoom Raza
Screenplay by Dr. Rahi Masoom Raza
Directed by B. R. Chopra
Ravi Chopra
Creative director(s) Yashwant Mahilwar
Starring Nitish Bharadwaj
Mukesh Khanna
Gajendra Chauhan
Praveen Kumar
Arjun
Nazneen
Puneet Issar
Pankaj Dheer
Roopa Ganguly
Narrated by Harish Bhimani
Composer(s) Rajkamal
Country of origin India
Original language(s) Hindi
No. of seasons 1
No. of episodes 94
Production
Executive producer(s) D.H. Vengurlekar
Producer(s) B. R. Chopra
Cinematography Dharam Chopra
Editor(s) Shailendra Doke
Bhirpal Singh
Running time 60 minutes (approx)
Production company(s) B R Films
Release
Original network DD National
Picture format 480i
Original release 2 October 1988 –
24 June 1990
Chronology
Followed by Mahabharat Katha
Mahabharat is an Indian television Historical series based on the Hindu epic of the same name, A total of ninety-four episodes in Hindi series[1] had its original run from 2 October 1988 to 24 June 1990 on DD National.[2][3] It was produced by B. R. Chopra and directed by his son, Ravi Chopra.[4] The music was composed by Raj Kamal. The script was written by the Urdu poet Rahi Masoom Raza, based on the original story by Vyasa. Costumes for the series were provided by Maganlal Dresswala.[5]
Each episode ran for approximately 60 minutes and began with a title song that consisted of lyrical content and two verses from the Bhagavad Gita.[6] The title song was sung and the verses rendered by singer Mahendra Kapoor. The title song was followed by a narration by Indian voice-artist Harish Bhimani of a personification of Time, detailing the current circumstances and highlighting the spiritual significance of the content of the episode. It is the most successful Mahabharata series ever produced for
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