USS La Salle
Two ships of the United States Navy have been named USS La Salle, after Rene Robert Chevalier de La Salle.
- USS La Salle (AP-102), originally named Hotspur, was a transport ship of World War II
- USS La Salle (AGF-3), was a command ship commissioned in 1964 and decommissioned in 2005
Other
The United States steam merchant ship La Salle built in 1920 was sunk by German submarine U-159 on 7 November 1942 during World War II near the Cape of Good Hope, Africa. None of the 60 crew and personnel survived.
gollark: > that could almost negate the need for special space for generating electricity<@617750798960558091> No, industry has massive power use per area and likely not convenient windows everywhere.
gollark: Speaking of nuclear fusion, someone *just* posted this in another server I'm in (not sure of accuracy):
gollark: I don't know, look up the efficiency figures or something. I don't see the use case though.
gollark: Probably somewhat. Any light which passes through is light they can't absorb. I guess they could be just absorbing a few frequencies, but that would be worse than nontransparent ones.
gollark: Here is the "pseudoscience" you "implied" you "wanted".
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