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Archive for June 6th, 2012

Budget-Savvy Summer Travel Jun 06

MEMPHIS, Tenn., June 6, 2012 /PRNewswire via COMTEX/ –
According to a recent study by the U.S. Travel Association, more than half of vacationers planning to drive by car will alter their summer driving leisure plans because of gas prices. Rather than changing family vacation plans, AutoZone encourages motorists to proactively maintain vehicles to ease the pain at the pump and get the most out of their gas tanks.

A few minutes of proactive maintenance, including checking and replacing oil and spark plugs at recommended intervals, can often improve fuel efficiency. Many motorists are unaware that simple routine maintenance can not only get you to your destination safely, but can help get the most out of your gas dollars.

To help motorists maximize their fuel economy on their summer road trips, AutoZone is offering these tips.

Switch to a Synthetic Motor Oil. Consider changing to a quality, synthetic oil such as Mobil 1 Advanced Fuel Economy. For the everyday driver, Mobil 1 Advanced Fuel Economy(TM) oils deliver up to 2% fuel economy improvement.*

Check and Maintain All Fluid Levels. These fluids include engine oil and transmission fluids. And be sure your antifreeze/coolant is up to the task for hot summer temperatures to prevent engines from overheating. Replace fluids if needed according to recommended service intervals.

Replace Spark Plugs, Oxygen Sensors and Air Filters as Recommended. Spark plugs can affect fuel efficiency, emissions and economy. As spark plugs wear, they do not burn fuel as cleanly, which is why it is important to change spark plugs at the proper interval. Motorists should purchase the correct type of spark plugs and replace them at the interval recommended by the manufacturer. If the owner’s manual has been lost, many websites, such as the National Car Care Council’s website
http://www.carcare.org/ , offer a recommended maintenance schedule for vehicles.

Replacing oxygen sensors can significantly improve gas mileage. Check and replace one-and two-wire sensors every 30,000-50,000 miles and every 60,000-100,000 miles for “heated” type oxygen sensors.

Replacing a clogged air filter can lead to increased performance and acceleration. Air filters should be checked at every oil change.

Be proactive. Proactive checks and preventative maintenance of critical engine components can be the difference between staying on the road and being stranded on the roadside.

Be prepared. Visit an automotive retailer such as AutoZone to purchase a roadside emergency kit. Also keep items such as a tire pressure gauge, spare serpentine belt and jumper cables handy.

Extreme Temperatures can mean battery failure. Corrosion caused by heat is the leading cause of battery failure, and batteries often do not give noticeable warning signs if they’re about to fail. Retailers such as AutoZone offer free battery testing in most states.

For a total budget-savvy summer travel solution reference AutoZone’s Trip Smart 2012 Travel Guide which can be found at
http://www.multivu.com/players/English/55025-autozone-protect-your-investment/ . The guide, sponsored by Mobil 1, lists the best U.S. vacation destinations to visit on a budget and incorporates AutoZone’s gas-saving and summer efficiency tips. Remember to take care of your vehicle before you hit the road, so your vehicle can take care of you!

Drivers seeking more information about taking a “Smart Trip” this summer can visit
www.autozone.com for car care tips and maintenance how-to videos.

*Comparison based upon 2% potential fuel economy improvement obtained by switching from higher viscosity oils to a 0W-20 or 0W-30 grade. Actual savings are dependent upon vehicle/engine type, outside temperature, driving conditions and your current engine oil viscosity. Check your potential fuel savings at
www.mobiloil.com/usa-english/motoroil/home/fuel_calc.html .

For more information, or to interview an automotive expert from AutoZone, please contact Aquinas Early at 901-260-4151 or email aearly@archermalmo.com

SOURCE AutoZone

Copyright (C) 2012 PR Newswire. All rights reserved

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Omega World Travel to Hold Luxury Travel and Cruise Tradeshow in Bethesda, MD Jun 06

FAIRFAX, Va., Jun 06, 2012 (BUSINESS WIRE) –
Omega World Travel, a fast-growing, award-winning leader in the travel
management industry, will hold a luxury travel and cruise tradeshow at
The Hyatt Regency in Bethesda, MD on Tuesday, June 19, 2012 from 4pm to
7pm.


        WHAT:   Omega World Travel's Bethesda Office Leisure Division will be joined
                by other friendly, seasoned travel and cruise experts to discuss the
                latest trends in popular and high-end leisure travel destinations.
                The tradeshow is free to the public and will have complimentary
                beverages for attendees as well as chances to win amazing prizes.
        WHEN:   Tuesday, June 19, 2012 from 4pm to 7pm.
        WHERE:  Hyatt Regency Hotel
                One Bethesda Metro Center
                Bethesda, MD 20814
                Direct access to/from the Bethesda Metro stop
        COST:   FREE to the public

ADDITIONAL DETAILS: There is plenty of parking below the hotel.
For additional information please visit Omega World Travel’s website at
www.owt.net
or contact Omega World Travel’s Bethesda Leisure Manager, Ellen Sisser,
by phone at (301)215-7169 or via email at esisser@owt.net.

About Omega World Travel

Omega World Travel is a woman-owned, diversity supplier, and the fourth
largest travel management company in the U.S. Headquartered in Fairfax,
Va., Omega World Travel services corporate, government, meeting, and
leisure clients throughout the U.S., Europe, the Middle East and Asia.
Omega World Travel also owns Cruise.com,
one of the largest sellers of cruises on the Internet, and TravTech,
a software development company. For additional information about Omega
World Travel please visit: OmegaTravel.com

About Cruise.com

Established in 1998, Cruise.com is one of the Internet’s largest cruise
specialists. Cruise.com offers comprehensive itineraries and ship
details for more than 70 cruise lines worldwide at the most competitive
prices and is one of the top sellers of cruises on the Internet.
Cruise.com was recently named Travel Agency of the Year by Vacation.com.
Cruise.com is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Omega World Travel, Inc.
Travelers interested in booking their cruise can contact Cruise.com at
866-401-0895 or visit their website at
www.cruise.com .

SOURCE: Omega World Travel


        RMR  Associates Inc.
        Laura Asendio, 301-230-0045 x 300
        lasendio@rmr.com

Copyright Business Wire 2012

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Royal Caribbean International Announces World’s Largest Travel Agent … Jun 06

Taking its support of the travel agent community to the next level, Royal Caribbean International is dedicating June 6 as the first-ever “World’s Largest Travel Agent Appreciation Day.” Today, hundreds of the cruise line’s executives and employees around the world will call on more than 7,000 travel professionals worldwide to re-affirm Royal Caribbean’s appreciation for travel agents, and showcase new agent support programs as part of the Loyal to You Always commitment, based on the cruise line’s history of unwavering support for the travel agent community.

Miami, FL (PRWEB) June 06, 2012

Taking its support of the travel agent community to the next level, Royal Caribbean International is dedicating June 6 as the first-ever “World’s Largest Travel Agent Appreciation Day.” Today, hundreds of the cruise line’s executives and employees around the world will call on more than 7,000 travel professionals worldwide to re-affirm Royal Caribbean’s appreciation for travel agents, and showcase new agent support programs as part of the Loyal to You Always commitment, based on the cruise line’s history of unwavering support for the travel agent community.

This single-day global event, the cruise industry’s largest global travel professional outreach, will engage travel agents simultaneously in the United States, Canada, United Kingdom, Ireland, Spain, France, Germany, Austria, Switzerland, Italy, Brazil, Australia, New Zealand, Mexico, China, Japan, Singapore and more. Throughout the course of the day, each regional office will express the cruise line’s appreciation for its valued travel agent partners in their own relevant ways.

Furthermore, the company’s senior executives will each lead on-site and in-agency surprise visits and recognize travel agents and their colleagues for their indispensable role in creating unforgettable Royal Caribbean vacations for their clients. Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd. Chairman and CEO Richard Fain will be visiting travel agents throughout South Florida. Royal Caribbean International President and CEO Adam Goldstein will visit travel agents in Miami, while Senior Vice President of Global Sales and Marketing Lisa Bauer will be in Mexico City, and Senior Vice President of Sales and Trade Support Services Vicki Freed in Los Angeles.

“Our travel agent partners are our most valuable industry asset and Royal Caribbean continues to emphasize the importance of personal and meaningful relationships with them,” said Ms. Bauer. “Loyal to You Always is our past, present and future commitment to travel agents. As Royal Caribbean International takes the world stage as the one true global cruise brand, the World’s Largest Travel Agent Appreciation Event is one of the ways in which we are showing our support for travel agents everywhere.”

Loyal to You Always is Royal Caribbean’s ongoing commitment to travel agents and is ushering in a wave of new programs in the United States and Canada, including Travel Agent Friends Family Rates, which offers more opportunities for travel agents to experience, and share with friends and family, Royal Caribbean’s most innovative cruise ships in the world, itineraries to exciting destinations, and friendly and engaging Gold Anchor Service, which together comprise the cruise line’s longstanding Royal Advantage. Delivering the Royal Advantage through the line’s current fleetwide revitalization program is one way that Royal Caribbean is always helping to drive even greater customer demand and superior guest satisfaction to generate more repeat business.

To kick off the event, Royal Caribbean created the “World’s Largest Travel Agent Appreciation Incentive” – a bonus commission offer that rewards travel agents for bookings made on June 7 and 8, 2012. Applicable for all sailings departing on or after June 15, 2012, the offer recognizes travel agent partners with $25 per stateroom per booking up to five nights, $50 per stateroom for sailings from six to nine nights, $75 per stateroom for sailings 10 to14 nights, and $100 per stateroom for sailings 15 nights and longer. International markets also will introduce tailored initiatives to show support for travel agent as part of the cruise line’s Loyal to You Always commitment.

Royal Caribbean International is a global cruise brand with 22 innovative ships, calling on more than 270 destinations in 72 countries across six continents. The line also offers unique cruise tour land packages in Alaska, Canada, Dubai, Europe, and Australia and New Zealand.

Royal Caribbean provides a world-class vacation experience with a wide range of signature onboard amenities, entertainment, and award-winning family programming. The cruise line has a 40-year history of giving guests the Royal Advantage – the most innovative cruise ships, exciting itineraries to popular destinations, and world-renowned friendly and engaging Gold Anchor Service. Royal Caribbean has been voted “Best Cruise Line Overall” for nine consecutive years in the Travel Weekly Readers’ Choice Awards. For additional information or to make reservations, call your travel agent, visit http://www.RoyalCaribbean.com or call (800) ROYAL-CARIBBEAN. Follow Royal Caribbean on Facebook at http://www.Facebook.com/RoyalCaribbean or on Twitter, @RoyalCaribbean. Travel professionals should visit http://www.cruisingpower.com or call (800) 327-2056.

Royal Caribbean International is part of Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd. (NYSE/OSX: RCL), a global cruise vacation company that also operates Celebrity Cruises, Azamara Club Cruises, Pullmantur, CDF Croisieres de France, as well as TUI Cruises through a 50 percent joint venture with TUI AG. The company owns a combined total of 40 ships and has one under construction and two under agreement.

# # #

For the original version on PRWeb visit: http://www.prweb.com/releases/prweb2012/6/prweb9578182.htm

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Sojern Research Reveals National Travel Trends Jun 06

SAN FRANCISCO, CA, Jun 06, 2012 (MARKETWIRE via COMTEX) –
Sojern, the premier travel data and media company today released
their National Travel Trends, January – March 2012 report. The
report, based on national travel intent and purchase data, sheds
light on consumer travel trends and behaviors relevant to travel
marketers. Highlights include information about key US destinations,
trip duration, travel party size and travel class of service.

The data reveals that there are more male travelers than female (60
percent to 40 percent respectively); business travel (61 percent)
trumps leisure travel (39 percent); and the vast majority of
Americans travel alone (83 percent). When it comes to class of
service flown, First and Business combined make up only eight percent
of seats purchased. This type of data can be used by advertisers to
hone their message to an intent-based travel market thus increasing
their return on advertising spend.

“This research demonstrates our unique insight into travel behavior,
which ultimately helps our marketing partners reach travelers,” said
Mark Rabe, chief executive officer of Sojern. “Understanding patterns
of travel behavior, and making that information addressable, enables
us to provide targeted ad campaigns on behalf of travel marketers
with an unprecedented level of precision, relevance and performance.”

In addition to national travel trends, Sojern also examined the data
specific to seven major US cities to determine the picture of a
typical traveler’s behavior to each destination. For example, the
typical traveler to Dallas is a man (64 percent) from Atlanta (6
percent) traveling by himself (89 percent) in coach (93 percent) for
a business trip (66 percent) that is three to five days long (52
percent), with a typical booking window of three to seven days prior
to departure (22 percent).

As with all of the data in the report, the profiles are based on
aggregated data from Sojern. The data and insights included in this
report offer just a glimpse of the type of audience data available to
power targeted marketing campaigns that reach travelers.

Additional Resources

To further illustrate the findings of the Travel Trends research,
Sojern created an infographic and prepared a full report on the
finding. Both can be accessed at

http://www.sojern.com/nationalreport312 . Those interested in
additional details on Sojern, its data, insights, research, products
or services should visit
www.sojern.com or contact the company at
info@sojern.com.

Methodology

To obtain these numbers, Sojern analyzed data on national traveler
behavior between January 2012 and March 2012. This data was then
narrowed to seven destinations across the country to form
destination-specific profiles. The seven U.S. cities observed were
Boston, MA; Chicago, IL; Dallas, TX; New York, NY; Orlando, FL; San
Francisco, CA and San Diego, CA.

About Sojern

Sojern, Inc. is the premier travel data and media company. It has
strategic partnerships with the leading airlines and travel industry
organizations. Sojern combines the world’s most advanced media
platform with a proprietary data set from the company’s partners to
offer advertisers the ability to target high-value consumers. Sojern
is a privately held company with offices throughout the U.S. For more
information, please visit
www.sojern.com .

SOURCE: Sojern

Copyright 2012 Marketwire, Inc., All rights reserved.

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Make or break? Travel tests your love life Jun 06


Tom and Ashley Wilmes took a romantic trip soon after they started dating. The risk worked out for them -- they married in 2006.

Editor’s note: The Traveler’s Psyche is a five-week series focusing on travel scenarios that stir emotion. This week we’re looking at the relationships shaped by travel, whether they flourish or unravel on the road. Plus, a look this weekend at aviation enthusiasts who just can’t get enough of air travel.

(CNN) — When Tom Wilmes and Ashley Dye started planning a scuba diving trip right after they started dating, they ignored the raised eyebrows and questioning family members.

“Ashley and I took a way-too-early and probably inappropriately romantic trip to St. John in the Virgin Islands after dating just a few months,” said Wilmes, an editor at American Cowboy magazine who had been friends with environmental attorney Dye for years before they started dating. “More than a few people asked if we were on our honeymoon.”

“It could have been awkwardly disastrous, but instead, we fell in love over mudslides in the moonlight every night on a deserted beach. I told her I loved her for the first time, and now we’re married five years with a beautiful son and another on the way in two months!”

Having been on less successful trips with previous girlfriends, Wilmes knew that it mattered that they enjoyed traveling together.

They scuba dived in the morning, played on the beach in the afternoon and had drinks on the deserted beach at night. “We just really meshed,” he said. “We’re both real low key, and we’re not going to get bent out of shape if things don’t go exactly to plan. We’re compatible in that way.”

It’s the make or break travel experience.

Whether it’s your first trip together or the highly anticipated, much-romanticized honeymoon, travel ramps up the pressure and can tell you what you need to know about another person and how (or if) you’ll have fun and solve problems together. One high-stress trip can result in a relationship flameout or the discovery of true love.

“Your first trip will not only reveal your compatibility as a dating couple, but ultimately how you will relate as a married couple,” said Allison Pescosolido, co-founder of counseling service Divorce Detox in Santa Monica, California. “Traveling can be seen as a mini-test to see how your relationship works when you are together 24-7 and dealing with unpredictable circumstances.”‘

Lack of shared interests or willingness to explore each other’s interests can surface early, and it matters, said Pescosolido.

When traveling early in the relationship, she suggests a few key questions to ask yourself: Does your partner want to do the same things you do or trade off your choices with his choices? Does she roll with unexpected delays or does she complain when your plans go awry? Does he treat hotel and restaurant staff with respect or does he have temper tantrums? Does he spend more time saving money than having fun?

People who crumble under the pressure of a vacation may exhibit that same behavior at home.

10 things to do on Oahu for $10 or less

Allow yourself to grow

If that first trip to St. John hadn’t gone well, the Wilmeses could have simply parted ways. That wouldn’t have been as easy for Pamela Skjolsvik of Bedford, Texas. She had already married the guy.

Skjolsvik met her future husband while bartending in San Francisco, and they started dating and married nearly two years after they met. They had taken short trips around the Bay Area before getting married, but they had never taken long trips.

When her fiance proposed that their honeymoon be a three-week road trip in his cargo van, she said yes to not spoil his vision of her “so soon in our marriage.” Truthfully, she dreaded driving in a van without air-conditioning, bathrooms or a hair dryer for her frizzy hair and feared bugs — and possibly serial killers — attacking their van.

The turning point came a few days into the trip, when they found a campground at Carlsbad Caverns, a National Park in New Mexico with many bats. “I just realized as I watched the bats, ‘this is fun,’ ” she said. “I wasn’t worrying about what I looked like, in the moment. After that, it was a lot more fun. I work myself up so much.”

She also got to see her husband in a new light and allowed herself to get even closer to him.

“He was capable of doing things I didn’t know anything about, like building a fire,” she said. “Here’s a guy who knows how to get places and knows how to adapt to his surroundings,” she says. “I really did get to know him and appreciate him as a person. It was probably a turning point for me.”

That’s a significant benefit of traveling together. “Traveling can be a lot of fun because you get to spend a lot more time with your partner,” said Dr. Amir Levine, a psychiatrist, neuroscientist and co-author of “Attached: The New Science of Adult Attachment and How It Can Help You Find — and Keep — Love.”

“Take it as an opportunity to learn how to really be there for one another. That’s what a good relationship is all about, the give and take. And it’s an opportunity to get closer.”

People can change

In retrospect, technical editor Paulette Baker says she should have walked out after her honeymoon. Baker, who grew up hiking in the woods near her home in Connecticut and had developed a passion for photography, thought her future husband shared her interests.

Before she married, Baker had started traveling solo because a former boyfriend preferred going to New York and Newport and staying in elegant hotels. She broke up with him and married her husband in part because she thought he also liked hiking and photography.

“If I’ve caught bloom season right, it might take me twice as long to complete a trail as the time suggested in guidebooks,” said Baker, now living in East Lyme, Connecticut.

Sometimes it takes a while for negative traits to emerge. Her husband’s lack of interest in her interests became apparent right before the wedding, she said.

“He informed me that I was to take no more than five rolls of film on our honeymoon so that I wouldn’t spend more time with my camera than with him,” she said. “To him a hike was something to be accomplished rather than experienced. He would sigh and fidget if I spent too much time, in his opinion, taking pictures.”

And sometimes it’s about compatibility. Baker didn’t mind having different interests or traveling alone. But her husband didn’t share her interests, didn’t want to trade off exploring their different interests and wasn’t comfortable with her pursuing them by herself. The couple divorced after nine years of marriage and were separated for the last three.

Not wanting to try your interests is definitely a red flag, according to Pescosolido.

“This could be a sign of self-centeredness or unwillingness to do things that aren’t familiar,” she said. “Unless you love routine, this could lead you to ending up with a rigid or boring partner.”

Using travel to find oneself

Heather enjoyed camping and exploring the United States with her husband and two dogs when they first got together, more than 22 years ago.

But as they got older, Heather (an English professor who didn’t want her last name used to protect her family’s privacy) realized that difficult and long flights to Asia were worth it so she could explore the places she wanted to explore. Her husband, from whom she is now separated, preferred shorter trips closer to their home in Denver.

So they traveled apart. “At the end of our marriage, we used solo travel to escape each other and the pain our relationship caused us,” Heather wrote from Bali, where she now lives.

“Whichever one of us was away, we were happier than we were together. I think he was happier when I was away and he had the comforts of home all to himself. For me, I preferred to be away from home alone; the comforts of home aren’t that important to me.”

While happy couples can travel separately, they have to work on their relationship in other ways.

That’s not what happened with Heather and her husband.

“We used our time apart to grow as individuals, which definitely did not help us grow as a couple. But it was a necessary progression we had needed to make for a long time.”

The no-pressure travel experience

And then there’s the travel experience that turns your life upside down.

The night train from Florence to Vienna was packed, and Mariana Lamaison of Argentina and her friend were lucky to find a compartment occupied by just one young American man, Zachary Sears.

“As we began to talk, we realized we had planned the same trip: Vienna, Prague, Berlin,” said Lamaison, who had recently graduated from college. So the three young people decided to travel together during that summer of 1997.

“We could tell right away that we were interested in the same things,” she said. “We wanted to see classic art and history. The first night we went to a Mozart concert in Vienna, a traditional concert where everyone in the orchestra dressed classically.”

They became fast friends. When they parted a week later, Lamaison and Sears missed each other and wrote letters for three years. When they both got e-mail addresses, they quickly realized they wanted more. Lamaison flew to the United States, ostensibly to study English. The couple married in 2001 and now live outside Philadelphia with their three children.

That first trip showed Lamaison (now Sears) who her new friend (and future husband) is today. It wasn’t just that they liked the same things. Crossing borders and going through customs, clearing security and changing money, Lamaison saw the man she would later marry: calm, respectful and organized.

“I just liked the way he handled himself,” she said. “You can see the values of a person in those situations.”

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Songtsan Travel Announces 5-Day Lhasa Explore Tour Jun 06

From June to November Lhasa is the premiere travel destination for Tibet tourism. Songtsan Travel announces a 5-day tour of the most important sights in the city, encompassing historical, religious and cultural monuments and institutions. Songtsan Travel is a locally-owned and operated agency, committed to customer service and improving the livelihood of Tibetan children through education initiatives.

Lhasa, Tibet (PRWEB) June 06, 2012

From June to November Lhasa is the premiere travel destination for Tibet tourism. Songtsan Travel announces a 5-day tour of the most important sights in the city, encompassing historical, religious and cultural monuments and institutions. Songtsan Travel is a locally-owned and operated agency, committed to customer service and improving the livelihood of Tibetan children through education initiatives.

Highlights of the Lhasa tour include:

  •     Potala Palace—Potala Palace is the symbolic center of Tibetan life. Most visitors will recognize this iconic building from depictions in photos and paintings. It was built by the 5th Dalai Lama in the 17th century, and is named for Mt. Potalaka, the heavenly home of Chenrezig, the Buddha of Compassion. The palace has over 1,000 rooms in 13 stories and is the traditional home of the Dalai Lama and the seat of Tibetan government.
  •     Sera and Drepung Monasteries—Not far from the city are the Sera and Drepung monasteries, which are two of the three most important religious and scholastic institutions of the Gelugpa sect of Tibetan Buddhism.
  •     Ganden Monastery – Ganden monastery, located about 45km east of Lhasa, is a monastery of the Geluk order. It was founded in 1409 by Tsongkhapa on the Gokpori ridge of Mount Wangkur. After later additions, the monastery came to support more than 5,000 monks. During the Cultural Revolution of the 1960s the monastery was destroyed. In the 1990s, the buildings of the monastery were rebuilt and renovated, and 1,660 square meters of murals have been restored over the last four years.
  •     Jokhang Temple and Barkhor Circuit— In Lhasa’s old town travelers will discover the ancient Jokhang Temple surrounded by a famous circumambulation route that passes through the bustling Barkhor market.

Songstan Travel is a Lhasa-based tour operator with more than 20 years of experience leading Tibet tours. The agency uses part of its proceeds to provide education to disadvantaged children. Songstan Travel seeks to promote Tibetan culture and help Tibetans improve their livelihood.

For the original version on PRWeb visit: http://www.prweb.com/releases/prweb2012/6/prweb9574968.htm

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GlobalStar Travel Management Launches VirtualStar by GVN at Their 10th Annual … Jun 06

/PRNewswire/ –

At GlobalStar’s 10th annual conference held between 23rd and 25th May in Bucharest, Romania visited by over 120 delegates worldwide the company launched its latest addition to the ‘Star Suite’ of client saving solutions; VirtualStar. The Global Videoconferencing Network (GVN) is providing the backbone of the VirtualStar solution for all current 89 GlobalStar partners. GlobalStar will have access to 3000+ public rooms and further, management of their customers’ private videoconferencing rooms.  A key advantage is the ability to help customers in the local language and with respect to the local processes, regulations and culture.

“GVN puts the business traveler first,” said Steve Hartwell, President of GlobalStar. “They understand that not all travel can be substituted; yet virtual travel is merely a cost-saving substitute that is best delivered through the existing travel channels. The travel agent is the only point-of-sale which can bring added value and full service to the customer. GlobalStar selected GVN because they are the only player that has thought of all the pieces of the puzzle and put them together in a comprehensive solution.”

“We are very proud to be the partner of choice by GlobalStar, for the VirtualStar product,” explains Glenn Wastyn, President and CEO of GVN. “GVN connects with strategically-thinking partners in the business travel industry and GlobalStar is one such partner. They are focused on comprehensive, best in class service for their customers today and in the future.”

GlobalStar will be exhibiting at BTM ExCel Londen in booth 525. You are invited to visit us for a demo and further explanation.

 

About GlobalStar Travel Management:

GlobalStar is a worldwide travel management company owned and managed by local entrepreneurs. Over 85 market leading enterprises, representing over US$13 billion in sales, combine their local expertise, strength and commitment to deliver cohesive, multinational travel management solutions through an innovative technology platform.

About Global Videoconferencing Network:

Global Videoconferencing Network (GVN), the virtual airline and headquartered in Belgium, provides an end-to-end videoconferencing solution integrated into the travel industry channels for corporate customers. GVN manages the hardware, financing, service while fully supporting the commercial model and structure of the travel industry. The GVN business goals include deploying 20,000 end points by 2016, exponentially spread over the four deployment years.

SOURCE GlobalStar Travel Management

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Travel Business Owner Allyson Catanzaro Talks Summer Travel Trends Jun 06

 

People are starting to travel again. That’s the good news according to Allyson Catanzaro, owner of All Destinations Inc., the Ridgefield-based travel business. “There are so many deals out there, it is all subject to the traveler’s budget and interests,” Catanzaro said.

All Destinations is a full service travel agency that specializes in the Caribbean and Europe. Catanzaro launched her business twenty-one years ago when she and her husband Michael Catanzaro, General Manager of Rolling Hills Country Club in Wilton, moved with their two young children to Ridgefield. Her children, son Louis (2003 RHS grad) and daughter Catherine (2004 RHS grad), have long since grown-up and moved out, but her home-based business is still running strong—in spite of some challenging economic times.

Catanzaro said she saw a slowdown in leisure travel from 2008-2010, “It has picked up  and people are traveling, despite the doom and gloom news on the economy. Folks are looking for value and unique travel opportunities.” Toward this end, the Caribbean is extremely popular with people looking for a great deal she said.

She said other hot travel trends to consider as you ponder your summer travel plans include multi-generational travel (defined as travel vacations that can include a mix of kids, parents, grandparents, and even aunts and uncles), active travel, and luxury travel. “Asia is quite popular now,” she added.

As a board member of the Ridgefield Chamber of Commerce, a member of the Ridgefield Business Development Exchange, and an incorporator at Fairfield County Bank, Catanzaro is passionate about local businesses. 

The best way that Ridgefield can help support small businesses is to shop and buy local. “It is so easy to buy online, but Ridgefield in general needs to support the local small business owners by buying from the local small businesses,” she said.

As for her travel business, Catanzaro doesn’t see the online travel companies (such as Priceline.com and Travelocity) as a huge threat. “If potential clients have the time to search hours on a trip online, I applaud them for doing so. Time is money and clients are searching for good deals and we can offer destinations with travel deals that they may not consider.”

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US To Accept Status-neutral Travel Document From Abkhazia, South Ossetia Jun 06

(RTTNews) – U.S. Embassies and Consulates around the world will shortly accept the status-neutral travel document for any resident from Georgia’s breakaway regions of Abkhazia and South Ossetia, who chooses to use them for travel or study in the United States.

This was announced by visiting U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton after talks with Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili.

This would be a strong step toward reconciliation that supports a peaceful and just resolution of the conflict, she said at a joint press conference with Saakashvili in the Georgian city of Batumi on Tuesday.

The two leaders discussed ways Georgia can reach out to the people of Abkhazia and South Ossetia regions, including providing status-neutral travel documents and identification cards.

Georgia, which is actively seeking NATO membership, has been getting staunch support from the West during and after the brief war in August, 2008 that led to Russia recognizing the breakaway regions of South Ossetia and Abkhazia as independent states.

But most of the world, including the United States, do not recognize these erstwhile Georgian provinces, making its citizens’ travel to those countries difficult.

The unresolved conflict with Georgia is a burden for the future development of these tiny Caucasus republics, which highly depend on Russian support and currency.

“Let me also say, as both President Obama and I have repeated many times before, the United States remains steadfast in our commitment to the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Georgia within its internationally recognized borders,” Clinton told reporters.

She said a new High-Level Trade and Investment Dialogue launched last week “will explore a range of mechanisms to continue strengthening trade relations between our countries, including the possibility of a free trade agreement between Georgia and the United States, an updated investment agreement, and other measures that could facilitate trade and investments.”

Washington continues to work closely with Georgia both bilaterally and through the NATO-Georgia Commission to support the goals that Georgia has set for itself in its annual national program. “And we remain committed to supporting Georgia’s sovereignty and territorial integrity, and we strongly support the principle that all countries, including Georgia, should be free to choose their own alliances, including their security alliances,” Clinton said.

Saakashvili vowed that his government was committed to have free and fair parliamentary elections this October.

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Despite Fixes, W. African Air Travel Still Risky Jun 06

DAKAR – The crew of Dana Air flight 9J-922 from Abuja to Lagos sent out a mayday call on June 3. There was engine trouble, and minutes later the plane crashed into a crowded Lagos neighborhood, killing all 153 passengers and more on the ground.

The fourth plane crash to kill more than 100 people in Nigeria in the past decade, it occurred less than 24 hours after a Nigerian cargo plane missed the runway at Ghana’s Kotoka International Airport and crashed into a bus, killing ten.

Despite two deadly crashes, African aviation experts say air travel in some parts of the continent is getting safer, although aviation regulation and oversight remain a key challenge for most sub-Saharan African countries.

The most dangerous places to board

The U.N.-affiliated International Civil Aviation Organization says Africa had the fewest scheduled commercial flights between 2001 and 2010, but an accident rate that was four to five times that of other continents.

When disaster strikes, observers often look to factors like inclement weather, electricity cuts, decrepit infrastructure, old aircraft, and pilot error, but aviation experts say the root problem lies with the poor policing of African commercial aviation.

They also say West and Central Africa are particularly dangerous places to board a commercial flight.

“Frequently, the authorities that are charged with overseeing aviation have very little authority,” says William Voss, president of the Washington-based Flight Safety Foundation. “They have inadequate staffing, they are overridden frequently from political levels, and there are a lot of issues with political will. You will have politically influential operators appealing to higher levels of government, and that is the sort of thing that was corrected in Nigeria.”

Voss, who has worked extensively in West Africa, echoes fellow aviation experts who have described Nigeria as a “model of reform” since 2006, when the country reached a turning point. Following a series of crashes over a two-year period – including one in Port Harcourt that killed 107 people, many of them schoolchildren – the country revamped infrastructure and passed a civil-aviation law that created a relatively autonomous safety regulator.

Lagos-based Arik Air and Air Nigeria have since become members of the prestigious International Air Transport Association (IATA), which requires passing rigorous international safety audits, and in 2010 the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration awarded Nigeria category-1 standing, its top safety rating that allows domestic carriers to fly to the United States.

Such qualifications are essential for carriers that want to join the lucrative international market, and experts say the economic pressure has prompted reform in other African countries.

According to Tom Kok, director of the London-based AviAssist Foundation, Nigeria is now one of 10 African nations that rate higher than the global minimum standards for aviation safety.

“This unfortunate accident in Nigeria may lead to the simple assumption that things are not well-organized in Nigeria,” he says. “But it is very important to remember that in countries with stellar aviation-safety records, like Australia or Canada or the United States, accidents unfortunately still happen.”

In 2011, he adds, Africa saw a record-low in plane accidents.

Flying below the regulatory radar

But the problem is far from solved: In countries where political agendas are topped by healthcare and education concerns, aviation safety is often a low priority, and the EU blacklist of nations deemed too unsafe to operate Europe-bound flights remains dominated by African countries, including the Democratic Republic of Congo, Benin and Angola.

And even in Nigeria, which has seen a proliferation of regional and domestic carriers in recent years, the pressure to turn a profit in an increasingly crowded marketplace compels some companies to cut corners. Dana Air, for example, which was launched by a pharmaceutical company in 2008, purchased the 22-year-old Boeing MD-83 involved in Sunday’s crash from an American airline.

It is not uncommon for African airlines to purchase second-hand aircraft from more developed nations, and experts have said that even old planes, if properly maintained, can safely operate almost indefinitely. But lax, inadequate or financially under-resourced government regulation means that some carriers do not follow the kind of standard safety procedures that would require employees to report negligence and malfunctions, and government regulators often cannot afford to keep enough qualified inspectors to ensure compliance.

Unfortunately, experts say, a commitment to aviation safety tends to follow tragedy, rather than precede it.

Although an ongoing investigation has yet to determine exactly what caused flight 9J-922 to crash, the MD-83 model is currently being phased out of service in the United States due to poor fuel efficiency.

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