Member: julianmcginn
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offline
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Name Change
This member has changed their member name. Members may change their own member name at most every 30 days.
Name change history:
August 4th 2009
julianmcginn
December 29th 2008
iakame
September 29th 2008
dirtymammal
July 17th 2008
blanks
Registered as
SR.is.killer
My Friends
Member
julianmcginn$
Currently
offline
Last Login
November 5th 2009
Status
:0 (===8
Member Since
April 3rd 2008
Member Number
109438
Contributions
3426 Posts - Donator
Region
SIERRA LEONE, Gbangbatok
Profile Views
5242 (Since Jan 23 2009!!)
Current Location
lappy
Home Mountain
funday river
Best Tricks
i slid a rail once. unfortunatley i have no proof an i dont think i could do it again.
Favorite Tricks
the skiing
Outerwear Look
faggotry
Skis
08 anthems original lizzies 09 amplid c7s and 06 nothing but troubles
Crew
assorted sunday river shredders, HBS, t-heitz
Sponsors
oh yeah all of them
Segments
HBS teeeheeeeheeeee
E-Mail
yeah right
IM
yeah right
Skype
Web Page
www.newschoolers.com
Comments
USS Connecticut (BB-18) was the fourth United States Navy ship to be named after the state of Connecticut, and was the lead ship of the six Connecticut-class battleships. Owing to the Royal Navy's commissioning of HMS Dreadnought seven months earlier, Connecticut was obsolete before she was commissioned in the early 1900s; thus, she was the last lead ship of any class of pre-dreadnought battleship commissioned by the U.S. Navy.
Connecticut served as a flagship for the Jamestown Exposition, which commemorated the 300th anniversary of the founding of the Jamestown colony. She later sailed with the Great White Fleet on a circumnavigation of the Earth to showcase the United States Navy's growing fleet of blue-water-capable ships. After completing her service with the Great White Fleet, Connecticut participated in several flag-waving exercises intended to protect American citizens abroad until she was pressed into service as a troop transport at the end of World War I to expedite the return of American Expeditionary Forces from France.
For the remainder of her career, Connecticut sailed to various places in both the Atlantic and Pacific while training newer recruits to the Navy. However, the provisions of the 1922 Washington Naval Treaty stipulated that many of the older battleships, Connecticut among them, would have to be disposed of, so she was decommissioned on 1 March 1922 and sold for scrap on 1 November 1923.
Skiing
dicks everywhere
Photography
drop cash on shit and photoshop
Videography
HV20
Hobbies
skiing, biking
Music Interests
stones throw records, rephlex, electronica, sufjan stevens,devandra banhart, bob dylan, some indie stuff, ari's aquerena
Video Interests
law and order
Book Interests
a separate peace