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Noah's Ark of Chu Lai
Here's an odd-looking craft which appears to have sailed straight out
of the Bible into the harbor of the Chu Lai combat base. She looks very much
like Noah's Ark, but she's all Navy. She's a kind of river houseboat, painted
Navy gray. She's APL 5, moored at the LST ramp at Chu Lai.
Each Sunday morning at 1030, the crew's lounge becomes a chapel as
U.S. Naval Mobile Construction Battalion Four's Chaplain John C. Haney, Jr.,
conducts Divine Service.
The congregation is comprised of a mixture of Marines, Seabees,
members of shore parties, engineers, and Fleet sailors.

AT HOME IN VIETNAM - Odd-looking Navy 'houseboat'
known as APL 5 has berthing space for 700 Navymen. Below: HARBOR
HOME-These APLs (Auxiliary, Personnel Lodging), anchored two miles out in Da
Nang harbor, furnish barracks for Navymen working in the area.

APL 5 is 260 feet long and 48 feet wide. Like Noah's Ark, she has no
main propulsion system of her own. She must be towed by tugs and nudged into,
mooring sites. She came from the Reserve Fleet, Guam, pulled by an oceangoing
tug via Yokosuka, Japan, where she was recently outfitted to care more
comfortably for the men of the naval supply activity. She has berthing spaces
for 700. Her crew of 92 is commanded by Lieutenant (jg) Charles R. Newkirk and
four other officers.
The APL's unique "ark-like" silhouette is the result of canvas
awnings stretched across the boat deck from bow to stern. However, she has
mounts for 4-inch/50 caliber machine guns for defense.
APL 5 has all new stainless steel galley equipment, modernized head
facilities, and air-conditioned living spaces.
From a distance, moored as she is near the red sandy beach with its
palm trees, the APL 5 looks very much like Noah's Ark come to rest at Chu Lai,
South Vietnam.
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