July 14, 2003
NEW YORK -- The economy, geopolitical climate and regional health situations continue to affect the leisure travel patterns of travel agents' clients, according to a Travel Weekly poll.
Maybe for folks who grew up near Old Faithful, a viewing of the Pohutu Geyser on New Zealand's North Island can be taken more or less in stride.
PARIS -- As the politicians and diplomats of the U.S. and France continue to struggle with the political, economic and emotional fallout from the Iraq war imbroglio, I went to France.
ENGLEWOOD CLIFFS, N.J. -- Travel agents are flocking to Rezconnect Technologies here, a developer of private-label Web sites that reports it licenses 3,800 agency sites, more than quadruple the 850
It was just four months ago that the World Health Organization issued its first carefully worded advisories to the travel community about the strange new disease from Asia. In a short time, SARS scared
Some clients are ushered into the Honeymoon Room. Others ask to speak to a specialist about packages designed for gay travelers. All of them came to In and Out Travel in Lindenhurst, N.Y., because they
Failed suppliers have ghosts. It happened with Eastern Airlines. The carrier teetered, tottered and fell, but its ghost -- in the form of a trustee -- came back to haunt travel agents.
Cruise editor Rebecca Tobin caught up with Oceania Cruises chairman Joseph Watters during Oceania's inaugural sailing of the Regatta.
With the merger of Expedia and Barry Diller's InterActiveCorp less than a month away, rumors that Hotels.com will be reporting to Expedia's Erik Blachford keep cropping up.
July 14, 2003 by Arnie Weissmann
Michael Seltzer, former Vista volunteer, former Ford Foundation giver-of-grants, has these words for "old-fashioned" companies that want to do good deeds anonymously: "Get over it."