LONG BEACH, Calif. ­­-- After three-and-a-half months out of service, 47,000 displaced guests and a $65 million in repairs and lost revenue, the Carnival Splendor returned to service last week. The ...
The Carnival Splendor, which was disabled by an engine-room fire during a November cruise, will be out of service one month more than previously estimated. Citing additional issues and delays in ...
The huge cruise ship Carnival Splendor made international news last fall when it was disabled by an engine-room fire off the Mexican coast - an accident that turned out to be an economic windfall for ...
A crippled cruise ship ended its three-day nautical nightmare Thursday, docking after passengers were forced to cope with reeking toilets, bags of vomit and meals of Spam. The first passengers ...
The Carnival Splendor, which lost power due to an engine room fire leaving 4,500 passengers and crew adrift at sea, will be out of commission until January, according to company officials. An engine ...
The ship arrived in the bay early Thursday after a slow journey up from the Mexican coast. Tugs helped gently steer the nearly 1,000-foot-long vessel to the dock. A line of about 20 passengers of the ...
A fire suppression system on the Carnival Splendor failed after a fire erupted%2C the Coast Guard says The agency also says a crew member on the bridge made a %27critical error%27 A bad decision on ...
After more than three months of around-the-clock technical repairs, the 3,006-passenger Carnival Splendor is back in Long Beach, Calif., sailing roundtrip Mexican Riviera cruises to Puerto Vallarta, ...
Why is Christian Science in our name? Our name is about honesty. The Monitor is owned by The Christian Science Church, and we’ve always been transparent about that. The Church publishes the Monitor ...
The nearly 4,500 passengers and crew of the Carnival Splendor have no air conditioning or hot water. Running low on food, they have to eat canned crab meat and Spam dropped in by helicopters. And for ...
The ship arrived in the bay early Thursday after a slow journey up from the Mexican coast. Tugs helped gently steer the nearly 1,000-foot-long vessel to the dock. A line of about 20 passengers of the ...