What do you think Captain Smith was thinking?
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Strazdamonas — 13 years ago(March 17, 2013 09:37 AM)
I think his though went something like "oh f**, oh beep oh beep becuase certainly with the way bourocracy works he will be blamed for the sinkage (and he was, apparently he steered into iceberg sideways instead of front and that sunk the ship).
P.S. beep imdb for its facist censorship.
Applied Science? All science is applied. Eventually. -
MadTom — 13 years ago(March 22, 2013 09:19 PM)
All right! This thread has been around for two years and still nobody's come up with what to me is the most obvious answer:
Andrews: How many people on board
Captain Smith: twenty two hundred or more, and there is room on the lifeboats for.how many?
Andrews: twelve hundred.
Captain Smith: We're gonna need bigger boats! -
Ambak — 12 years ago(July 29, 2013 07:58 AM)
He was probably thinking "Thank god we're not fully booked". Titanic had accommodation for 905 1st class (only 322 on board), 564 2nd class (only 277 on board) and 1134 3rd class (only 709 on board) plus 898 crew. Thus she was barely more than half full. Had she been fully booked there would have been 2,603 passengers on board rather than the actual 1,308 and hundreds more would have died. The media in general is always hyping up the Titanic and likes to ignore the identical Olympic which entered service the year before, making Titanic merely second banana. The low take up of berths on the ship indicates that the travelling public were less impressed than the people who have written about the disaster ever since, who always attempt to portray the Titanic as something the like of which the world had never seen before.
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Blueghost — 12 years ago(August 30, 2013 07:41 PM)
Probably nothing, just shock and astonishment. They really were arrogant and stupid people, or just uncaring. There was probably a few designers or safety conscious people saying the ship needed more life boats, all the while there was some cost cutting people saying no, and what are the chances of her sinking, especially on her first voyage.
Well, they got their answer.