Atlanta Management

 

  • Golden Tulip Redesigns (Hospitality Design)
    MAY 30, 2006 - -- Golden Tulip Hospitality has launched its redesigned website www.goldentulip.com . The site includes a booking tool, corporate information, information on promotions, loyalty programs, special tools and services for both business and leisure guests.


  • Air Arabia, Emirates Post deal (AME Info)
    Air Arabia has expanded its partnership with Emirates Post. Customers can now pay by cash at any Emirates Post outlet if they have already made their flight booking through the Air Arabia Call Centre.


  • Tourists await Mayon?s big bang (Malaya)
    Richard Paraguya was burning up the phone lines, booking foreign and local tourists keen to see Mayon Volcano that began spewing lava, ash and rocks the size of cars in mid-July.


  • Jazeera begins Assiut flights (AME Info)
    Kuwaiti carrier Jazeera Airways yesterday launched its three times a week service to Assiut in Egypt. Travellers to the city can utilise the airline's online booking and payment facility.


  • Elderly feel stranded, Those most in need are being let down by our cabs (Canberra Times)
    ELDERLY people say they are missing doctors' appointments because Canberra Cabs' new automated booking system cannot get them a taxi in time or at all.


  • Gray Power: Good tips for booking travel packages (The Shelby County Reporter)
    Many seniors participate in group tours. These tour packages could be at risk of losing their money if the operator goes out of business.


  • Canadian tourists still flock to Cuba despite political doubt (AFP via Yahoo! News)
    Canadians have not been dissuaded from booking vacations to Cuba by political uncertainty in the Caribbean island over the health of leader Fidel Castro, travel agents said.


  • Indian tours provide unique view of (The Wichita Eagle)
    Go to Montana's Glacier National Park and you'll want to drive the scenic, winding Going-to-the-Sun Road or hike its ice-sculpted peaks and alpine valleys. But for a different experience, some visitors are booking tours that view the park through the eyes of the people who originally called it home -- the Blackfeet Indians.