Green Cross
Look up green cross in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. |
Green Cross may refer to:
- Green Cross of Florida Flag, a flag with a green cross on a white ground flown at Fort San Carlos on Amelia Island in Florida by Gregor MacGregor, a Scottish-born soldier of fortune, who seized the island in June 1817. The flag played a part in an historical episode called the Amelia Island Affair.
- Green Cross Monterrey (Monterrey, Mexico), city-run emergency medical service, in most cases replaces the Mexican Red Cross.
- Green Cross, a kind of company in Philippines.
- Green Cross (alcohol), a kind of an alcohol.
- Green Cross (South Korea), a Korean pharmaceutical company
- Green Cross (Japan), a Japanese pharmaceutical company
- Green Cross, Inc. (formerly Gonzalo Laboratories), a Filipino company whose product Green Cross Alcohol is the flagship brand. Other brands under Green Cross are Lewis and Pearl Cologne, Zonrox Bleach and Del Fabric Softener
- Green Cross Code, a traffic safety education program in the United Kingdom
- Green Cross International, an environmental organization founded by Mikhail Gorbachev
- The Green Cross is the logo for the National Safety Council in the United States
- Green Cross flags are the industrial safety/health flags in Japan. They are not related to the Japanese pharmaceutical company
- The Green Cross Code Man was played by David Prowse
- Green Cross (chemical warfare), a group of World War I chemical warfare agents
- C.D. Green Cross (1916–1985), a Chilean football (soccer) club currently defunct
- Club Atlético Green Cross, an Ecuadorian football (soccer) club
- A common symbol used in the medical marijuana community
- Retail Pharmacies/Chemists in Europe and elsewhere may display a green cross
See also
- Blue Cross (disambiguation)
- Bronze Cross (disambiguation)
- Gold Cross (disambiguation)
- Red Cross (disambiguation)
- Silver Cross (disambiguation)
- White Cross (disambiguation)
- Yellow cross (disambiguation)
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/21/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.