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SS Chelyuskin
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==Legacy== In the wake of the catastrophe, a central square in [[Yaroslavl]] was renamed after the ''Chelyuskintsy'', as was [[Chelyuskinites Park]] in [[Minsk]]. [[Marina Tsvetayeva]] wrote a poem applauding the rescue team. Nine days after the two Soviet cameramen aboard reached Moscow, their footage was developed, edited and released as a feature documentary motion picture. In 1970, [[East Germany|East German]] television produced ''Tscheljuskin'', a film about the ship's voyage, directed by Rainer Hausdorf and featuring Eberhard Mellies as Prof. Schmidt, [[Dieter Mann]] as the surveyor Vasiliev and [[Fritz Diez]] as [[Valerian Kuybyshev]].<ref>[https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1877819/ Tscheljuskin] on the [[IMDb]].</ref> Efforts to find the wreck of the ship were made by at least four different expeditions, and it was finally discovered in September 2006, at a depth of about 50 metres in the [[Chukchi Sea]].<ref name="approved">[http://www.rian.ru/science/20070213/60678107.html В Чукотском море найдены фрагменты «Челюскина»] — in Russian</ref> The polar explorer [[Artur Chilingarov]] argued that the ship should be raised and converted into a museum. [[Michael Roberts (writer)|Michael Roberts]], an English poet, wrote a poem "Chelyuskin", which was included in his collection ''Poems,'' published by Jonathan Cape in 1936. The story was dramatised in the radio drama ''[[The Cruise of the Chelyuskin]]''.
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