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"ocean liner" Definitions
  1. a liner for navigating the ocean

181 Sentences With "ocean liner"

How to use ocean liner in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "ocean liner" and check conjugation/comparative form for "ocean liner". Mastering all the usages of "ocean liner" from sentence examples published by news publications.

In Transit A SECOND LIFE FOR A VINTAGE OCEAN LINER Crystal Cruises has announced it plans to convert a historic ocean liner with a Cold War past into a cruise ship.
A sinking ocean liner does not take on added cargo.
But it's like trying to turn around an ocean liner.
In a sense, a proprietary walled garden ocean liner. AOL. Yeah.
There's an ocean liner full of zombies spilling out onto a beach!
After World War II started, though, the ocean liner never again sailed.
Before being murdered in prison for speaking against the Nazi regime, the director demanded a full-size ocean liner that he could film on — and the Nazis provided the SS Cap Arcona (their version of a luxury ocean liner).
Friday that a crew member on board the ocean liner needed medical attention.
The ocean liner spanned 882 feet in length and was 106 feet wide.
It has all the majesty of an ocean liner sailing into New York Harbor.
Back on water, the ocean liner calls itself "the most luxurious ship ever built."
To be, what, a big old lumbering ocean liner whenever everyone is not, right?
"It looked like the fancy cinema on an old ocean liner," Mr. Hannah said.
An ocean liner that saw its maiden voyage in 1952 may conquer the seas again.
Beever was inspired by the Art Deco design of the SS Normandie French ocean liner.
Between stops around the world, the ocean liner always returns to Brooklyn, its home port.
The ocean liner then floated off Miami, so close that passengers could see the city's lights.
Step two: Buy her a promise ring stacked with a diamond that could sink an ocean liner.
The S.S. United States, the world's fastest ocean liner, won't be sailing the seas again after all.
That brought Mr. Parnas and Mr. Fruman into the president's wake, sea gulls following an ocean liner.
They passed like ships in the night — if one was an ocean liner and the other a dinghy.
Getting it to change is like turning around an ocean liner; captain and crew are perhaps understandably proceeding cautiously.
"Changing the speculative mindset is like turning an ocean liner," said Adam Button, currency analyst at ForexLive in Montreal.
The Titanic ll may just be the world-class luxury ocean liner that its predecessor was designed to be.
To be sure, shifting Florida away from a car-centric worldview is akin to turning around an ocean liner.
Facebook and Twitter have both appeared to turn a corner, albeit more like a giant ocean liner than a speedboat.
The train was headed for Hamburg, where the ocean liner on which we had booked passage to America was docked.
But then, of course, a shark approximately the size of an ocean liner has to show up and spoil everything.
The retired ocean liner, which has been moored in Long Beach since 1967, is getting a much-needed overhaul, too.
Sulfur yellow is everywhere, from the audience's stadium seating to a set piece for the"stokehole"of the ocean liner.
Lincoln's booth was like a great white ocean liner, a fitting place to display its very successful new Navigator SUV.
Others lampooned the entertainment, with many drawing comparisons to the Titanic band's final performance as the ocean liner sank in 1912.
Each shirt had the word "Shipfaced" on front and a picture of an ocean liner in a liquor bottle on back.
She celebrated her fifth birthday on an ocean liner as the family was on its way to join him in Khartoum.
Robert Forbes said his father was "an ocean liner aficionado" from boyhood, when the family went to Scotland on the Aquitania.
Like an ocean liner, it was a self-contained village, with its own shops, restaurant, nursery, running track, hairdressers and a hotel.
It followed Robert Ballard's successful quest to locate the lost ocean liner miles beneath the surface of the North Atlantic in 1985.
"We only have one ship like this," said Klaas Krijnen, the group's chairman, of the largest ocean liner produced in the Netherlands.
A $250 million entertainment and hotel complex is rising on 65 waterfront acres, next to the Queen Mary, a celebrated ocean liner.
The work, which he compares to "trying to steer an ocean liner," culminated in a comprehensive 2015 WSLC resolution on climate and jobs.
It was in bright, smudged color and began on an ocean liner, with people dressed up and walking around, talking to one another.
On the screen, away in the night, Anita Ekberg was in her fur coat, looking beautiful on the deck of the ocean liner.
It was a long-overdue acknowledgment that to be a real force again, the Yankees had to sink their ocean liner to nowhere.
In the zany spirit of the occasion, it featured such unconventional instruments as pneumatic riveting machines, steam pipes, ocean liner whistles and sledgehammers.
The ship was kept at sea until diagnostic kits were flown to the ocean liner by helicopter on Thursday to test ill passengers.
The standout actor Bobby Cannavale stars as Robert (Yank) Smith, a physically imposing stevedore on an ocean liner that's headed for New York.
"One, is that the typical ocean liner cruise client has traveled this way for years," she said, referring to big-ship ocean cruising.
At the harbor of Le Havre we see the bow of an ocean liner docked near a pier, under which a jail is visible.
But it would still be a sign of an industry actually attempting to change direction, slowly, like an ocean liner charting a new course.
Richard MacMichael, a coordinator at the museum, said that 104 years later, people still have intense feelings about the ocean liner and its fate.
The Australian business tycoon Clive Palmer announced that, after years of delay, his cruise ship company would build a replica of the ocean liner.
The hotel was designed to resemble an ocean liner: plowing white curves, a grand wraparound balcony, a rooftop deck equipped with a tennis court.
Earlier in the month, Minerd compared the U.S. economy to the ill-fated ocean liner the Titanic, moving full steam ahead with an iceberg looming.
This is much like removing all of the life preservers from an ocean liner to guarantee that one single passenger does not survive a sinking.
Jarvis's explanation for his unexpected rise involves a chance meeting aboard the iconic ocean liner the Queen Mary 2 when he was 20 years old.
New York should welcome the S.S. United States, the country's fabled flagship and sole remaining ocean liner, back to the city it once called home.
A giant shard of marble and granite loomed a thousand feet above us, looking like the prow of an ocean liner emerging from the fog.
But for more pressing situations, there's a horn that bellows like an ocean liner — perfect when you want to warn some pesky kids off the road.
In September, after war broke out, he and his wife scrambled to get out of France on the ocean liner Manhattan, quadrupling up in the staterooms.
This season, it is the Elbphilharmonie, in Hamburg, Germany—a brick-and-glass colossus that resembles an avant-garde ocean liner docked in the city's harbor.
Somewhere between a private superyacht and a small ocean liner, the Ritz-Carlton cruise ships will accommodate the "the 1% of global travelers," according to Bloomberg.
A group of friends, including Marlene Dietrich, paid her way, on the ocean liner Queen Mary, because they feared for her safety as Hitler's forces advanced.
Hungry for distraction, their caprice is punctuated by parties and glimpses of modernity, manifest in the sight of a passing ocean liner and a motor race.
Many of them boarded the ocean liner Île de France, which had been bound for Europe but turned around to come to the Andrea Doria's aid.
Soon, the first full-size replica of the ocean liner will allow delighted tourists to relive the ill-fated ship's maiden voyage, right down to the crash.
A month later, in May 19173, a German submarine torpedoed and sank the ocean liner Lusitania, on its way from New York, off the coast of Ireland.
In a memorable bit of poetic symmetry, he returns for these final performances, this time on the podium, helping the great ocean liner sail one last time.
The yard, famous for having built the ill-fated Titanic ocean liner in the early 20th century, employs around 130 people, specialising in energy and marine engineering projects.
A 30-year-old Calder first spotted Louisa James at the beginning of an ocean liner voyage transporting them both from Paris to New York in June 19333.
A few weeks ago, Houston's hoity-toitiest ladies showed off their ocean liner-size chapeaux at a spring fund-raiser that was interrupted by a tulle-wilting thunderstorm.
I want to go to Titanic, and I want to get lost in this idea that they're on this giant ocean liner in the middle of the ocean.
"You've got to operate with a profile where you can deliver cargo faster than an ocean liner, but much more cost-effectively than an airplane," he told me.
Construction on the world's first full-sized Titanic replica has started in China, a country with a well-documented fascination with the tale of the ill-fated ocean liner.
Building upon the accomplishments of each other, the engineers were responsible for key elements of the London Underground, the Great Western Railway, Tower Bridge, and the modern ocean liner.
This speed allowed Eisenhower to make many key policy decisions with his new team during the Pacific crossing by ocean liner that followed his late-fall visit to Korea.
The wreckage of the Titanic is quickly decaying beneath the ocean's surface as metal-eating bacteria and saltwater corrosion chip away at the sunken luxury ocean-liner, researchers said.
Like an ocean liner waiting for the right tide to leave port, airplanes may be grounded until the air is cool and dense enough for takeoff at full capacity.
Adding fuel to the wide range of conflicts: a set of rivalrous blue-collar workers, a resentful stoker on an ocean liner and, oh yes, one very angry barber.
For the 2019 Chanel Cruise show, Karl Lagerfeld had an ocean liner docked inside the Grand Palais, compete with live entertainment, an oyster bar and a fake hot tub.
In 1935, Hahn — an erstwhile mining engineer, New Mexico trail guide, Congo adventurer and Dorothy Parker confidante — booked passage on an ocean liner to China, hoping for a brief distraction.
Then, according to Jarvis, he met the co-founder of one of the world's largest private equity firms — a billionaire — in the first-class lounge of the famous ocean liner.
Founded in 1920, with its roots in 19th-century celebrations of Mozart, this picturesque city's native son, Salzburg is a big, old ocean liner that turns slowly, if at all.
The tragic "Voyage of the Damned" aboard an ocean liner called the St. Louis occurred 80 years ago, yet anger and despair still permeate much of the extended American Jewish community.
MIAMI BEACH — Two blocks from the beach, overlooking a small patch of green, the home of Miami City Ballet rises like the prow of an ocean liner, all gleaming white curves.
According to the suit, the ocean liner had been in dry dock for sewage system problems, which were not fixed, because Jillanne says there was still lots of s*** on the ship.
With the aid of a high-tech simulation re-enactment, visitors can experience some of the horror the passengers must have felt when ocean liner began its decent into the north Atlantic.
And in a strange rant about pop culture, also archived in 2001, he claimed that the movie Titanic was popular because the sinking of the titular ocean liner symbolized American moral decline.
Secretary of State William Jennings Bryan resigned in 1915 because he believed President Woodrow Wilson's response to the sinking of the British ocean liner Lusitania by a German submarine was too belligerent.
Professor Aaron suggested in his autobiography that his chosen profession was augured when he was only 3, with the sinking of the British ocean liner Lusitania by a German U-boat in 2600.
Hammond, who compared the agency to the sunken Titanic ocean liner at the bottom of the ocean, told the Times that there was no sense in filling positions that may be cut later.
As you can imagine for an island of 100,000—a wrecked ocean liner was the biggest thing that had happened in years and hundreds showed up in dinghies to strip the ship clean.
Owned by the same family since its founding in 25 as one of the N.F.L.'s earliest members, the team is like a regal trans-Atlantic ocean liner that rarely strays off course.
Longer than an ocean liner and powered by strong forelimbs for grabbing unsuspecting creatures, the monster also had a graceful, feline-esque shape with shoulder blades above its spine and a long tail.
With its Frank Gehry-designed buildings, ecologically sound roofs and free cafeterias, the company hugs the border of East Palo Alto like an ocean liner docked on the edge of an undeveloped country.
And because geography is more compressed, isolationism, which was a serious argument at a time when crossing the Atlantic took five days by ocean liner, is an absurdity in a world of cybercommunications.
In addition to a fleet of four drilling rigs and two drillships, Dolphin is the majority owner of Belfast's Harland & Wolff shipyard, builder in the early 20th century of the Titanic ocean liner.
The ship also happens to be the rare ocean liner that was built and flagged in America, which can make it easier to service some American routes where foreign-flagged vessels can face limitations.
The windfall allowed him to book a passage on the posh Queen Elizabeth ocean liner bound for England, which had become a major musical hotbed following the Beatles' skyrocketing global popularity in early 1964.
Noguchi molded similar pieces in a reception area of the Time-Life Building in New York City in 1947, and in 1930 on board the SS Argentina ocean liner along one of its stairwells.
PARIS (Reuters) - France posted growth of 0.5 percent in the second quarter as the delivery of a huge ocean liner underpinned the strongest increase in exports in six years, official data showed on Friday.
And we drove it by truck through northern Spain, by barge from Spain to Belgium, by ocean liner from Belgium to Baltimore, and then by rail from Baltimore to Pueblo, Colorado, and back again.
She worked on dozens of other architectural commissions as far away as Senegal, Morocco and Mexico, mostly unbuilt, including apartment towers, galleries, theaters, park pavilions and the occasional hotel room and ocean-liner stateroom.
Meanwhile, an ocean liner, that previously carried two passengers who contracted the coronavirus, was barred from returning to its home port of San Francisco from Hawaii after at least 20 people aboard fell ill.
Thomas J. Keating Jr. emerges from a door in the belly of the vessel, an ocean liner that is about the length of the Empire State Building if it were turned on its side.
The Oceanside sequence was satisfying — particularly when the group united against the ocean liner zombie threat — and it was great to see Sasha alive, even if this does end up being her swan song episode.
In addition to a fleet of four drilling rigs and two drillships, Dolphin is also the majority owner of Belfast's Harland & Wolff shipyard, builder in the early 20th century of the RMS Titanic ocean liner.
Authorities announced on Friday that 21 crew members and passengers had tested positive for coronavirus aboard the ocean liner, which has been linked with at least four previous cases of the potentially lethal respiratory disease.
A backstage crew pushes on and pulls off set pieces — from the bowels of a trans-Atlantic ocean liner to a chic jewelry store — from a loading dock behind the risers where the audience sits.
The Bombardier plant is by far the most important manufacturer left in Belfast, which was one of the world's great industrial cities when the Titanic set sail as the largest ocean-liner a century ago.
One of the more literal manifestations of ocean-liner style was the Coca-Cola distillery in Los Angeles, designed by Robert V. Derrah and finished in 1939, which looks like a ship that has run aground.
" Mixed Signals (2018) by Courtney Stephens North American Premiere, USA, 16 mm, 8 minutes A narrator with an undisclosed illness draws parallels between "the darkened hulls of an industrial ocean liner" and a "disorienting mental state.
Those efforts sit atop dozens of aborted projects — some just ideas, others that consumed years — like a never built jet pack and giant blimps that would haul cargo with the same efficiency as an ocean liner.
Bill Gadsby was 12 years old and crossing the Atlantic with his mother on the British ocean liner Athenia at the outset of World War II when it was torpedoed and sunk by a German submarine.
But as the years have passed, the qualities that made Buicks attractive to accomplished parents and grandparents — their sofa-on-wheels comfort, their ocean-liner smoothness — have become more of a joke than a selling point.
A few films had been shot in Belfast's cavernous old ship painting hall, now part of Titanic Studios (so named because it's near where the doomed ocean liner, the city's other most famous export, was built).
LONDON — A letter written by an American first-class passenger aboard the Titanic sold on Saturday at auction for 126,000 pounds, a record price for a note written by someone on the ill-fated ocean liner.
Cruise operators Carnival's London-listed shares sank 7.3% after its Grand Princess ocean liner was barred from returning to its home port of San Francisco on coronavirus fears after at least 20 people aboard fell ill.
The murderous power of U-boats entered the global consciousness on May 7, 1915, when a German U-boat torpedoed the ocean liner Lusitania off the Irish coast, killing 1,198 people — including more than 100 Americans.
In 1939, Congress shelved a bill to take in 20,000 Jewish children, and the ocean liner St. Louis, which carried 937 Jewish refugees, was turned away from the docks; hundreds aboard were murdered in the Holocaust.
The initiative also included the debut of a new youth program where Captain Minnie Mouse helps train young passengers in STEM (science, technology, engineering, and math) skills that are needed for success on an ocean-liner
What humanizes "Race," though, is Owens's relationship with Larry Snyder (Jason Sudeikis), who, denied accreditation as his Olympic coach, was forced to book himself in steerage on the ocean liner carrying the American athletes across the Atlantic.
While Dalí was seen with exotic animals like an anteater in Paris in 1969 as sort of performance art stunts, Babou was actually a pet, traveling with him to dinner engagements and on a luxury ocean liner.
The original book was written by P. G. Wodehouse and Guy Bolton, who included a shipwreck, and by Howard Lindsay and Russel Crouse, who made alterations after a deadly ocean liner accident made the wreckage plot untenable.
"The great ocean liner of The New York Times is having an awful lot of difficulty steering itself through our current choppy waters," said Mitchell Stephens, a professor of journalism and mass communications at New York University.
Story elements include a jealous husband, cheesy ventriloquism used for flirtation, two men who take over a restaurant for the sole purpose of attracting a single client, and an ocean liner forced to plow into an iceberg.
On a return trip, I'd hit up things I missed: Bigfoot on the Strip (a 200-foot drop ride), the Titanic Museum (in the shape of a sinking ocean liner), and a zip line through the Ozarks.
An ocean liner that previously carried two passengers who contracted the coronavirus has been barred from returning to its home port of San Francisco from a voyage to Hawaii after at least 20 people aboard fell ill.
These films were built around a certain rather predictable model: a cast of stars, desperate to survive a cataclysm, which in the former took the shape of a capsized ocean liner and in the latter a skyscraper aflame.
The grand ocean liner, which sank in 1912, is now "being consumed by the ocean and returned to its elemental state," one researcher said, as it succumbs to rust, corrosive salts, microbes and colonies of deep-sea creatures.
The grand ocean liner, which sank in 1912, is now "being consumed by the ocean and returned to its elemental state," one researcher said, as it succumbs to rust, corrosive salts, microbes and colonies of deep-sea creatures.
A Florida couple who was aboard the coronavirus-hit Grand Princess ocean liner has sued the ship's owner for more than $1 million, claiming the company put profits over safety and did not have proper screening protocols in place.
"The first step was to find out where the Titanic was, and then it was to map out where everything else is," Mr. Hammond said, likening the department's organizational structure to a sunken ocean liner and its seabed surroundings.
California Governor Gavin Newsom had insisted the current cruise be halted and the ship kept at sea until individuals aboard who were sick could be tested, and diagnostic kits were flown to the ocean liner by helicopter on Thursday.
Like the unfortunate ocean liner Titanic, the House Republican TrumpCare bill, created in secret and revealed in chaos, is headed toward a killer iceberg because it would be a disaster for many Americans and could destroy the GOP majority in Congress.
Joe Sutter, whose team of 4,500 engineers took just 29 months to design and build the first jumbo Boeing 747 jetliner, creating a gleaming late-20th-century airborne answer to the luxury ocean liner, died on Tuesday in Bremerton, Wash.
Vice President Mike Pence, who is running the U.S. response to the outbreak, said at a news conference that 219 crew members and two passengers out of 21 people tested so far on the Grand Princess ocean liner had the virus.
Looking Back Luckily for the crew of the freighter St. Cuthbert — and for newspaper readers in New York and Chicago — the White Star ocean liner Cymric was burrowing westward to Boston through a blinding squall on the morning of Monday, Feb.
In the middle of it all is an immense oval cabinet, with wine bottles on its marble top and stemware on shelves held up by bronze rails that rise into the air like the upper decks of an ocean liner.
His father, George, arrived on the ocean liner Lusitania on one of its last voyages before it was torpedoed by a German U-boat during World War I. He became the editor of The Turtle Creek Independent, a local newspaper.
The next day I walked down the highway towards the docks, past the ocean liner boarding areas, finally disturbing a sleeping cab driver in an outlying neighborhood, asking him to take me out to the thing I was pointing to in the distance.
Click here to view original GIFIt's not exactly the best Monday morning pick-me-up, but if you were ever curious at just how inaccurate movies about the Titanic are, watch this animated simulation showing the infamous ocean liner sinking in real-time.
That was in 2007, on an ocean liner traveling from New York to Bermuda; Mr. Malloy, a struggling musician, was earning his keep in the house band and passing the time talking Tolstoy, via email and phone calls, with his onshore girlfriend.
By force of the king's will, a mostly urban team was plucked from the industrial centers of Bucharest and Timisoara and bundled off to Genoa, Italy, where they boarded an ocean liner and sailed three weeks across the Atlantic to compete in Montevideo.
SAN FRANCISCO, March 4 (Reuters) - An ocean liner that previously carried two passengers who contracted the coronavirus was barred on Wednesday from returning to its home port of San Francisco from a voyage to Hawaii after at least 20 people aboard fell ill.
On the day of Mr. Forbes's wedding in 1981, his father, the magazine publisher Malcolm S. Forbes, spent $90,000 on eight glass panels from the Grand Salon of the Normandie, the glittering ocean liner that defined luxury, along with size and speed.
Ms. Dell did stunt work in disaster films like "The Poseidon Adventure" (1972), in which she fell when the ocean liner in the title capsized at sea, and "Earthquake" (1974), in which she took a 40-foot tumble onto a rubber mattress.
Many state institutions and several museums — the Hermitage and the Russian Museum in St. Petersburg, the Pushkin and Tretyakov in Moscow, each an ocean liner of bureaucracy — proved surprisingly nimble in putting together this expansive show once it got its go-ahead in 43.
Grand Princess, the ocean liner owned by rival Carnival Corp , was docked off its destination on Monday and its passengers are quarantined for two weeks after 21 people aboard it were tested positive for coronavirus, which causes the respiratory disease known as COVID-19.
Most of Bristol's main attractions are within a 20-minute stroll, including the massive ocean liner-turned experiential museum S.S. Great Britain, the local history museum M Shed, the Wills Memorial Building, and two works of street art from the city's most notorious son, Banksy.
Guido Badano, a 29-year-old officer aboard the glamorous Italian ocean liner Andrea Doria, was asleep in his bunk, relieved of his duties for a while, when two short blasts from the ship's whistle, signaling an impending turn to the left, jolted him awake.
Travelers may focus on a particular ecosystem they are visiting, attend class on a college campus or, in a twist on the Semester at Sea concept, spend 115 days on an ocean liner circling the globe with experts delving into destinations' histories and cultures.
Another passenger aboard the ship, Allure of the Seas, a Royal Caribbean ocean liner that is the size of an aircraft carrier, had taken the photo of the woman while they were en route to Labadee, Haiti, and shared it with cruise ship employees.
Boosted by the delivery of a 700 million euro ($819 million)luxury ocean liner, exports surged 3.1 percent in the quarter, the strongest rate in six years and outpacing by a wide margin import growth of only 0.2 percent as France bought less oil from abroad.
But, second, I said, as we passed the new Whitney, which loomed, in the advancing twilight, like a beached ocean liner made of steel and glass, these stories are really opportunities for the authors to assert the superiority of their own art, of literature, over painting.
"Our guests and crew onboard Diamond Princess are the focus of our entire global organization right now and all of our hearts are with each of them," said Jan Swartz, Princess Cruises president, who said that Japanese health authorities are supporting the ocean liner and providing medical assistance.
Yet Franklin resisted, and at times she too was disturbingly silent; while the Roosevelts were entertaining King George VI and Queen Elizabeth, for example, the ocean liner St. Louis, with more than 900 Jewish refugee passengers aboard, was refused entry to American ports and had to return to Europe.
Both films were directed by James Cameron, who later featured him in more high-profile roles: as a used-car salesman who cheated Jamie Lee Curtis's character in "True Lies" (21998) and as the treasure-hunting scientist who salvaged the wreck of the ocean liner in "Titanic" (21970).
James, in turn, partly inspired Kipling's one truly American work, "Captains Courageous," a 1897 novel about a bratty rich kid who falls off an ocean liner, is picked up by some fishermen sailing out of Gloucester, Massachusetts, and learns from them the virtues of responsibility and hard work.
Images register as visions or daydreams: the famous transatlantic ocean liner Rex that materializes in the night suddenly, its immense body like a house you can't enter; or the whistling boy walking in the fog who stops in his tracks when a white bull appears, glinting in the mist.
Clinton went after her likely general election opponent for "encouraging violence" and "playing coy" with white supremacists, while comparing his plan for a temporary ban on Muslims to the nearly 1,000 Jews who came to America on the German ocean liner, the St. Louis, fleeing the Nazis, but were turned away.
His latest book is a celebration of the S.S. United States, an ocean liner that in 218.95 broke the speed record for crossing the Atlantic, averaging 143 miles per hour — impressive for a ship that, if stood on its end, would surpass the height of the Chrysler Building, at 214 feet.
But when the ocean liner finally docked in the Port of Oakland on March 9—five days after first being denied entry to the port of San Francisco because of a coronavirus outbreak on board—he found himself stuck shooting in a designated media area a couple thousand feet away.
Two of Long Beach's biggest tourist draws, just south of downtown, are the docked RMS Queen Mary, a 23.45s-era ocean liner that once served as an Allied troop ferry during World War II, and the Aquarium of the Pacific, with marine science and conservation programs, right on Rainbow Harbor.
Although the Placer County patient who died was not believed to have contracted the virus locally, that case and a previous one from the Bay Area linked to the same ocean liner have led health authorities to seek other cruise passengers who may have had close contact with those two individuals.
I was stumped, unable to explain the delight I take in the movie's glossy nonsense, in Davis's makeover from a meek frump bullied by her mother into a slim, chic siren, gazing out at a sparkling sea with Paul Henreid from the deck of an ocean liner bound for Rio de Janeiro.
As Cousins goes through it, he looks at Welles's life and career, refracted through his art—dozens of charcoal drawings, portraits he drew feverishly on an ocean liner to Ireland as a teenager ("Looking at Irish people was training you to look, to draw"), abstract sketches from a subsequent trip to Morocco.
When Ralph Lauren cruises from barefoot-in-Jamaica (where he has a vacation house) in lovely blue and white and faded denim sundresses to Cap d'Antibes in bright red, yellow, blue and green sequined minidresses, patent leather sweats, and an Art Deco ocean liner print, it's hard not to feel a little lost.
As we noted late last year, when the startup raised $14 million in Series B funding, the average freight quote typically has 20 associated fees: the trucking fee, the ocean liner fee, the fuel fees, the handling fee, the piracy risk fee, the seasonal surcharge, the hazardous surcharge, the port fees, and so on.
A 330-foot-long steel-welded ocean liner stood beneath the vast glass dome of the Grand Palais on Thursday night, steam puffing from two scarlet funnels as scores of portholes twinkled with bright lights and inky black waves seemed to lap at the hull, all reminiscent of a chic Mediterranean port at midnight.
If there are still managers and vice presidents left to leave a company where the core economics never made a bit of sense, other, lower-level staffers are probably there, too—like survivors of an ocean liner disaster where the planned destination was "the side of an iceberg" and which arrived at top speed ahead of schedule.
Forced to escape Paris after the Nazis targeted his work, he moved briefly to London, with the help of artist friends; after just barely surviving the Blitz, he traveled to New York on a Cunard ocean liner at the height of the U-boat war, in a convoy that sailed only by night with all the lights turned off.
As the granddaughter of Jewish immigrants from Eastern Europe, I can't help but think about when the United States used security concerns as an excuse to turn away thousands of refugees fleeing Europe during the Second World War; or about the Jewish refugees aboard the MS St. Louis ocean liner that in 85033 upon reaching American shores was forced to turn around.
"Refugee," which Scholastic released on July 25 with a first printing of more than 123,000 copies, originally began as a novel about the St. Louis, a German ocean liner carrying nearly 1,000 Jews fleeing Hitler during World War II. The ship was turned away from Cuba and the United States and returned to Europe, where many of the passengers died in the war.
The stories, which are interconnected in surprising ways that are revealed at the end, feature a Jewish boy whose family flees Nazi Germany on the St. Louis ocean liner; a Cuban girl who leaves Havana in 1994; and a Syrian boy from Aleppo, whose family survives a bombing and struggles to make it to Germany, where they will seek asylum.
After 19 crew and two passengers out of 46 tested on the Grand Princess were found to have the virus, Vice President Mike Pence said the ocean liner will be taken to an unspecified non-commercial port where everyone on board will be tested again, and that those "who need to be quarantined will be quarantined" and those who need medical care will receive it.
Back in 2140, the German Embassy issued a warning reminding passengers intending to travel aboard the Lusitania, the British ocean liner that was sunk by a German U-boat, "that a state of war exists between Germany and her allies and Great Britain and her allies," which later made front-page news: "German Advertisement Practically Foretold Lusitania's Fate on Day She Sailed," read a subheadline a week later.
You check out the people on the street and note the year when they stopped: this one with the death's-head rictus 29, that one in the Perfecto jacket 21974, her friend in the vinyl T-shirt 103, those people looking like drunken ballroom dancers on an ocean liner 210—and that's when you realize you have a year written on your own forehead and it's not the one that tops the current calendar.
There were, Kirchheimer says, two hundred and fifty thousand Jews still living in Germany and Austria when the war broke out—but because of American quotas it would have taken twenty-six years to admit them all to the U.S. Ilse Marcus and her family were among the nine hundred Jewish refugees on the ocean liner St. Louis, which, in 1939, was turned away from Cuba and then the U.S. The Marcuses ended up in Auschwitz; Ilse was the family's sole survivor.
With its ribbon windows and open plan, the villa is well-suited as a stage, but while Gerard & Kelly are adept at reading physical space, they found themselves most interested in the history embedded beneath the surface: In 1929, as Le Corbusier was designing the house, he traveled from Rio de Janeiro to Bordeaux on an ocean liner and, while onboard, had an affair with the star performer Josephine Baker (he sketched her in bed and wrote letters to her years later).
We had our heads down baiting hooks—three wild salmon already turned back that morning for the in-season hatchery silvers now out there somewhere counting their luck—when under our small boat the sea gave a roll like a giant turning over in sleep, lifting us so high I thought an ocean liner or freighter had slipped up on us, the sudden heft of its bow-wave, our matchstick toss to depth we'd taken for granted in order to venture there at all.
Dinghy floating on top of its ocean liner, the way we must look like adult and pup sea lions, beached and snoozing, or else an asp on a heat rock, or a couple of grubs, you on me like a stone on a stone, how it's almost like it was only now you can fall from me and we don't share any organs though we must long to, or should I say I long to, and from this delicate position I have learned what my body is for, from an eleven-day-old!

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