I also remembered a few more.
The Bon Homme Richard was called the " Bonnie Dick" The John F Kennedy was the "JFK", Intrepid was the "Evil Eye"
The Jimmy Carter is also called the "USS Peanut" as was the George Washington Carver .
The Halibut was called " The Hell of it"
The Parche was also called The "Too Shay" or "French Fry"or as we called her and Halibut the"Spook Boats" which I'm sure the Carter is also called.
A post on another site reminded me of the whole November Class of Soviet Boats being called "Glow Boats". ( that class had several reactor problems and they lost a few as well as every boat in the class had a major accident ( or more) with their reactors) I'll wager there isn't a single November Class crewman alive today without a serious radiation poisoning or related health problem if you can still find one alive at all. Very Dangerous Boats, more so to their own sailors than to other vessels for sure.
The Skipjacks were called "The S Boats"
In 1960s and 70s Submarine jargon the SS Boats were all called Smoke Boats, or Pig Boats by Nuke sailors. SSNs were also called Glow Boats or Nukes by SS Sailors , and SSBNs were all called "Boomers" or Barges or Turtles. All surface craft were called "Targets" or "Skimmers" and all Soviet Boats were called "Ivans". The RN Boats were called "Pommy Boats", RAN Boats were called "Ozzie Boats" & RCNs were "Canook" We also had nicknames for the Italian, China, French and German Boats but they were not "Politically Correct"and I don't wish to offend anyone..All Submarines were called "Sewer Pipes" by "Skimmers" and their crews were called Sewer pipe sailors a title we were proud of and worked really hard living up to it LOL....
More will come to me I'm sure, us old guys have a problem with CRS from time to time.
Be Well/DBF
Walt