Rence said:Actually, ironically it was Princess that had the the non-smoking cruise ship. (It was not the Star Princess)
I Googled it, and it was the Carnival Paradise:
In November 1998, Carnival Cruise Lines introduced the first all-non-smoking cruise ship, the De.az/S Paradise. This September, the Paradise will make its last non-smoking cruise and then will become a normal smoking OK cruise ship.
And so another noble experiment ends in failure.
Carnival never built another non-smoking cruise ship. Paradise was the first, and it will be the last.
No other major cruise line currently operates a non-smoking ship. Renaissance Cruises operated eight non-smoking shipswhich also did not allow children on boardbut they closed down in September 2001. No cruise lines have announced plans for non-smoking ships.
For perspective, there are right around 100 cruise ships run by the major cruise lines serving Americansthe exact number varies from month to month as new ships are added and old ones retired. Carnival Cruise Lines operates about half of those ships under its five biggest brand names: Carnival, Costa, Cunard, Holland-America, and Princess. Yet it seems that there is no longer room for even one of those cruise ships to be non-smoking.
I have sailed on the Paradise on four sailings, including the inaugural sailing. On all of the sailings, the ship was booked to near-capacity. There was no shortage of people who wanted to cruise in an environment where smoke didnt fill the public areas of the ship. So, if the ship was always popular, why did Carnival never build another, and why are they ending the non-smoking experiment entirely?
I cannot say for certain, as I do not work for Carnival and they have not made any explanation in their announcement. The announcement plays it as an obvious move since Paradise is now one of their smaller (and older) ships and thus will be relegated to making short cruises. All of which is reasonable, but the question is Why is there no new non-smoking ship for the big cruises?
Here is my own guess. On the Paradise, it was nice that there was no smoke hanging in the casino and lounges. But there also were precious few passengers hanging in the casino and lounges. On the other hand, the fitness centerand Paradise has one of the largest fitness centers on a cruise shipwas always bustling. Casinos and drinks make money for the cruise line; the fitness center is a free service.
Non-smokers tend to have a more conservative life-style than do smokers, and this hits the cruise lines in their big profit centers: liquor and gambling. And that is my guess as to why the cruise lines cater to smokers.
Sunday, 18 January, 2004
http://creativekarma.com/ee.php/weblog/comments/surprising_failure_non_smoking_cruises/
However, there IS some good news: On THIS site http://travel.howstuffworks.com/cruise1.htm they list Renaissence Cruises as entirely non-smoking, as is the above mentioned Carnival Paradise.
Non-smoking cruiser -- The cruise industry is paying attention to people calling for non-smoking dining rooms and facilities. Most lines now have non-smoking dining rooms. Many limit smoking to a few public areas on the ship and a couple have gone completely non-smoking. Renaissance Cruises' entire fleet of ships are non-smoking vessels. So is the Carnival Paradise. If smoking bothers you, be sure to inquire about non-smoking cruises and/or non-smoking cabins.

The first article that was found said that the ship pulled into port at 11 am. I was guessing that it had started a few hours earlier. Then, they are lucky that more people didn't die.
, they sought to remove the Rasul spa because to me there are certain placed mud just shouldnt go!
, they sought to remove Palo and I did nothing because I wasnt a sophisticated diner. Then they came to take away the video games, and no one would help me for there was no one left!
).
