Travel Briefs

The Australian government has outlawed “component pricing,” a practice in the travel industry whereby products are advertised as “free” without extra costs being disclosed. Now all ads for, say, a free flight or free tour must declare all taxes and hidden fees up front. The law applies to businesses based in and selling in Australia and covers hotels, rental car companies, airlines and others.

There are many online booksellers (Barnes & Noble, Borders, etc.). With search results on Amazon.com, you may have to sort through 30 pages of used copies to find that one useful book.

What sets GuideGecko.com apart is it pulls up manageable 2- to 11-page lists without all the repeats and older-edition clutter, AND it includes major publishers (Frommer’s, Budget, etc.) as well as smaller publishers with more esoteric and specialized guides.

There are multiple filters,...

CONTINUE READING »

The world’s most accurate topography map is a byproduct of the ASTER (Advanced Spaceborne Thermal Emission) project, a collaboration of NASA, Caltech’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory and Japan’s Ground Data System.

They used a satellite to make a minutely detailed record of Earth’s surface for scientific studies. The resulting topography map can be downloaded for free from NASA’s EOS Digital Archive. You need to register and follow some complex instructions, but it can be found at http://...

CONTINUE READING »

The Southern African Large Telescope (SALT), which saw first light in 2005, is the largest single optical telescope in the Southern Hemisphere. Its hexagonal mirror array spans 36 feet.

SALT is part of the Southern African Astronomical Observatories (phone 023 571 2436, fax 571 1413, www.saao.ac.za), a complex of more than 10 observatories on a flat mountaintop in Sutherland, South Africa, 223 miles north of Cape Town.

Visits must be booked in advance. Up to 20 people at a time...

CONTINUE READING »

A reader reported having been informed on June 12 that their June 17-24 Dalmatian Coast cruise with Elegant Cruises & Tours (Port Washington, NY; www.elegantcruises.com) had been canceled. ITN called the company and was told that all May, June and July cruises of the Monet had been canceled “due to a lack of bookings and interest” but that cruises would be running August to November.

The rep said that all refunds for canceled cruises were “in the accounting office for processing...

CONTINUE READING »

The new, 3-story Acropolis Museum, 1,000 feet southeast of the Parthenon in Athens, Greece, opened June 20. Hundreds of statues and artifacts from the old museum and around the Acropolis are displayed in one building for the first time.

The top floor holds the Athens fragments of the Parthenon Frieze, with white plaster copies in the spaces left for the rest of the fragments, the “Elgin Marbles,” currently and controversially in the British Museum in London.

Open 8 a.m.-8 p.m...

CONTINUE READING »

A Transportation Security Administration requirement that all airlines operating within the US collect the full name, date of birth and gender of each passenger began to be phased in on May 15. The Secure Flight program was put in place by the TSA to help prevent the misidentification of passengers who have names similar to those of people on the “terrorist watch list.”

Over the next few months, as airlines integrate the ability to include this information, passengers will be asked...

CONTINUE READING »

United Airlines (www.united.com) announced in May that “passengers requiring extra space” now must purchase a second seat.

United’s new policy reads, “For the comfort and well-being of all customers aboard United flights, we have aligned with other major airlines’ seating policies relating to passengers who: • are unable to fit into a single seat in the ticketed cabin; • are unable to properly buckle the seatbelt using a single seatbelt extender; and/or • are unable to put the seat’s...

CONTINUE READING »