Singapore Airlines Quotes

We've searched our database for all the quotes and captions related to Singapore Airlines. Here they are! All 6 of them:

β€œ
A Singapore Airlines cargo flight had to make an emergency landing in Bali due to a smoke sensor being triggered from the dung and farts of the 2,186 sheep aboard the plane.
”
”
Charles Klotz (1,077 Fun Facts: To Leave You In Disbelief)
β€œ
The sensory branding of the Singapore Girl reached its zenith by the end of the 1990s, when Singapore Airlines introduced Stefan Floridian Waters.
”
”
Martin Lindstrom (Brand Sense: Sensory Secrets Behind the Stuff We Buy)
β€œ
Airlines deal differently with in-flight deaths. Some major airlines keep body bags on-board just in case, while Singapore Airlines is known to have fitted the aircraft with special cupboards for corpses.
”
”
Nayden Kostov (853 Hard To Believe Facts)
β€œ
100 Air China: 22" Γ— 16" Γ— 8" (max: Economy, 11 pounds/Business, 2 pieces of luggage, 17 pounds each) 101 American Airlines: 22" Γ— 14" Γ— 9" (max: undisclosed) 102 Delta Air Lines: 22" Γ— 14" Γ— 9" (max: 15 pounds when flying out of Singapore Changi Airport, 22 pounds when flying out of Beijing Capital Airport and Shanghai Pudong Airport) 103 EasyJet: 22" Γ— 17.7" Γ— 9.8" (max: undisclosed) 104 Emirates: 22" Γ— 15" Γ— 8" (max: 15 pounds) 105 Quantas: 22" Γ— 14.2" Γ— 9" (max: 15 pounds) 106 Ryanair: 21.7" Γ— 15.7" Γ— 7.9" (max: 22 pounds) 107 Southwest Airlines: 24" Γ— 16" Γ— 10" (max: 15.4 pounds) 108 Turkish Airlines: 21.7" Γ— 15.7" Γ— 9" (max: 17.6 pounds) 109 United Airlines: 22" Γ— 14" Γ— 9" (max: undisclosed)
”
”
Keith Bradford (Travel Hacks: Any Procedures or Actions That Solve a Problem, Simplify a Task, Reduce Frustration, and Make Your Next Trip As Awesome As Possible (Life Hacks Series))
β€œ
Sinclair James International Review: What to With Your Pets on a Flight Most of the times, most pet owners do not know what to do with their pets when on a flight. To make it easier, we have allotted today’s feature for pet owners and address their challenges when flying with their pets. Whether you are flying with your pet or it is flying without you, it is important to choose an airline that serves the entire route from beginning to end. After finding your airline, you will need to know their pet policies. Will the airline allow your dog or cat to fly in the cabin with you? What are the restrictions? Will your pet need to travel in the cargo hold? Health Certificate A health certificate is required when shipping your pet as cargo. Most airlines will require a health certificate for all pets checked as baggage. Some destination states may require a health certificate for your pet such as health cities like Manila, Philippines or Singapore. It is best to ask you veterinarian for more requirements. If a health certificate is required, it must be issued by a licensed veterinarian within 10 days of transport. It must be authentic and not fraud. Airlines now have a lot of ways to know the authenticity of your documents. It must include: β€’ shipper’s name and address β€’ tag numbers or tattoos assigned to the animal β€’ age of the animal being shipped (USDA regulations require animals be at least 10 weeks old and fully weaned before traveling) β€’ statement that the animal is in good health (If the shipper knows that the pet is pregnant, it must be noted on the health certificate) β€’ list of administered inoculations, when applicable β€’ signature of the veterinarian β€’ date of the certificate Live Animal Checklist/Confirmation of Feeding When you check in your pet, you will be asked to complete a live animal checklist. When you sign this checklist, you are confirming that your pet has been offered food and water within four hours of check-in. On the checklist, you must also provide feeding and watering instructions for a 24-hour period. If in-transit feeding is necessary, you must provide food. This is to avoid any complaints of improper handling of animals on board. Tranquilizers The use of pet tranquilizers at high altitudes is unpredictable. If you plan to sedate your pet, you must have written consent from the pet’s veterinarian. This information must be attached to the kennel. Please keep in mind that some airline agents cannot administer medication of any kind.
”
”
James Sinclair
β€œ
The prime minister was provoked by what he considered to be unfriendly or inept coverage, or both, over many months. He concluded that the editors had lost control of the newsroom. . .What was probably the last straw for him was coverage of Israeli president Chaim Herzog's visit. When the Foreign Ministry announced the visit, fury flared across the Causeway. The Malaysian prime minister, Dr Mahathir Mohamad, recalled his high commissioner to Singapore and demanded the visit be cancelled. For Singapore to do so after the visit was announced would inflict serious damage on its sovereignty. Demonstrations erupted in many parts of Malaysia, and at the Malaysian end of the Causeway more than 100 demonstrators tried to stop a Singapore-bound train. Singapore flags were burnt. There were threats to cut off the water supply from Johor. Malaysia saw the visit as an insult. It did not recognise Israel, and had expected Singapore to be sensitive to its feelings. Singapore, however, could not refuse the Israeli request for its head of state to make a stopover visit in Singapore, the tail end of his three-week tour of Australia, New Zealand, Fiji and the Philippines, the first visit to this part of the world by an Israeli leader. Singapore could hardly forget the crucial assistance Israel had provided the Singapore Armed Forces in the early days of independence, when other friendly countries like Egypt and India had declined to help. What angered Lee Kuan Yew was our coverage of the Malaysian reactions to the visit. He felt it was grossly inadequate. . .Coverage in the Malaysian English press was restrained, but in their Malay press, Singapore was condemned in inflammatory language, and accused of being Israel's Trojan horse in Southeast Asia. A threat to target Singapore Airlines was prominently reported. . .And by depriving Singaporeans of the full flavour of what the Malaysian Malay media was reporting, an opportunity was lost to educate them about the harsh reality of life in the region, with two large Muslim-majority neighbours.
”
”
Cheong Yip Seng (OB Markers: My Straits Times Story)