Not exactly a Golden Age vessel, but I snap up any interior shot I can find. Reviews are nice, though - some people insist it was the standard by which they judged all other ships. Reviews also mention the oddly nonstandard room sizes. One trip you'd get one size, the next trip another. This may explain:

A strange looking ship at all stages of her career, the Atlantis was originally built as the wartime troopship General W.P.Richardson. She was rebuilt after the war as the American Export Lines' La Guardia, for services from the US to the Mediterranean. She was not a success, being very expensive to operate, and after further trooping to Korea, and a period as Leilani for the Hawaiian Steamship Company, she was sold to American President Lines as the President Roosevelt.
 
In 1970 she was bought by Chandris Lines who cut her down to two decks above the waterline before completely rebuilding the upper hull and superstructure. She began cruising out of New York as Atlantis, but was again found to be too expensive to operate, and was sold to Eastern Steamship Lines as Emerald Seas in 1972, 

A 2004 comment on cruisecritic.com said:

The Emerald Sea's was beached recently in Alang, India. This report come directly from Kumar Steal in India. She is in the process of being stripped of her furnishings.