The Titanic's demise
Saturday 31st December 2005 11:00 AM
International Herald Tribune
Twenty years ago, a team of scientists led by Robert Ballard discovered the remains of the Titanic 12,400 feet under the surface of the North Atlantic. It was a big deal. When the search team returned to Woods Hole, it held a brief service to honor those who died when the Titanic sank in the early hours of April 15, 1912. Now scientists have discovered large sections of the hull that suggest the ship may have split into three parts rather than two, and may have sunk much more quickly than was thought. This, Ballard said, is not a big deal. "It hit an iceberg and it sank," he said. "Get over it."
Tony Robinson Titanic Trip Premieres Tuesday
Saturday 31st December 2005 11:00 AM
Channel 4 - Tuesday - 9:00pm - 10:30pm
Radio Times: Tony and Titanic director James Cameron plunge the depths for what you could describe as a very damp Time Team. It takes a long time for them to disappear beneath the waves in their tiny submersible, but be patient. Once they're on the ocean bed viewing mesmerising footage of the rusticle-covered wreck of the Titanic, you'll be glad you stuck with this. Inevitably, the murky water makes it hard to tell the poop deck from the boiler room, but clips from Cameron's movie help.
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Titanic's "little sister" may miss anniversary refit date

Wednesday 24th June 2009

The £7m restoration of a tender ship that ferried passengers on board the doomed Titanic may not be finished in time for the centenary of its launch, an official report warns today.

The charitable trust responsible for refitting the derelict SS Nomadic, known as Titanic’s ‘little sister’, is also struggling to meet a fundraising target of £5m by this autumn — having received less than £1.4m by the start of the year.

It was intended the vessel would be open to the public in Belfast's docklands ahead of the much-hyped 100th anniversary of the day the Titanic rolled down the slipway at Harland and Wolff in May, 1911. But auditors today cast doubt on whether the refit of the tender ship would be completed on schedule.

In a report on the Government spend on the tender since it was rescued from a wreckers' yard in France three years ago, the Northern Ireland Audit Office said the restoration target of 2011 was “challenging”.

“The (Nomadic Charitable) Trust's action plan for the restoration phase indicates that work is to commence December 2009 and is to be completed ahead of the centenary celebrations,” comptroller and auditor general John Dowdall said. “This will be a challenging target for the Trust.”

Mr Dowdall raised concern that there still appeared to be no formal agreements between the Department for Social Development and the Trust for the transfer of ownership.

“Although it was a condition of DFP (Department of Finance and Personnel) approval (for the project) that the Nomadic should be transferred to the Charitable Trust as soon as was possible after the acquisition, the department still retains ownership more than three years on,” he said.

Mr Dowdall said the initial business case was “over-optimistic and did not include the full range of costs”.

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Belfast Telegraph (2009) Titanic's "little sister" may miss anniversary refit date <http://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/news/local-national/titanicrsquos-lsquolittle-sisterrsquo-may-miss-anniversary-refit-date-14356389.html> (Accessed 2009-06-24 22:26:05)

 
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