Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
On 17 May 2006, Kalraj Mishra expressed his concern to the Indian Parliament over possible hazards Blue Lady presented, and requested that the government put a halt to the ship's entry. As the Indian Supreme Court had lifted any ban on the ship's entry, Blue Lady had come from Fujairah, UAE, and was anchored 100 km off the Indian coast in mid-July.
Blue Lady may refer to: "Blue Lady" (song), a song by Hello Sailor "Blue Lady", a song by Labi Siffre from Crying Laughing Loving Lying; Blue lady orchid (Thelymitra crinita), a species endemic to Australia; SS Blue Lady, originally SS France, an ocean liner (Untitled) Blue Lady, a sculpture by Navjot Altaf
SS France (1961) 1960 SS Norway (1979–2008) Scrapped at Alang, India in 2007, work completed in 2008. SS Fürst Bismarck (1890) 1890 Don (1905) Moskva (1906–1917) San Guisto (1917–1924) Scrapped in 1924 – Italy SS Fürst Bismarck (1905) 1905 Amboise (1922–1935) Scrapped in 1935 – Italy SS Galileo Galilei: 1961 Galileo (1984–1990)
The SS France was a French transatlantic liner that sailed for the Compagnie Générale Transatlantique (CGT), known as "French Line". She was later nicknamed " Versailles of the Atlantic", a reference to her décor which reflected the famous palace outside Paris.
SS France may refer to: SS France (1854), a French steamship chartered by the French Government during the Crimean War; SS France (1896), a French liner sunk in 1915; SS France (1912), a French liner scrapped in 1936, and is the only French ship to be one of the four-funnel liners; SS France (1960), a French liner; later renamed SS Norway ...
SS France of 1962 served as the setting for the final scene of the French film The Brain with Bourvil and Jean-Paul Belmondo, as well as for Gendarme in New York, with Louis de Funès. [125] The company's ships also gained a certain amount of affection from the public.
Get AOL Mail for FREE! Manage your email like never before with travel, photo & document views. Personalize your inbox with themes & tabs. You've Got Mail!
The family planned to leave France in late 1912, but Juliette discovered she was pregnant for a third time, and Joseph decided to hasten their travel arrangements so the child could be born in Haiti. [citation needed] Joseph's mother purchased first class passage for the family aboard the liner SS France.