- 'U.S. plans 'travel cards' for trips to Mexico, Canada (San Francisco Chronicle)
The Bush administration, bowing to grumbling from U.S. border communities, announced plans Tuesday to enable U.S. citizens to cross U.S. borders with Canada and Mexico with a new $50 "travel card" similar to a driver's license rather than requiring a $97...
- 'U.S. to Issue New Card for Mexico and Canada Border Crossings (Bloomberg.com)
Jan. 17 (Bloomberg) -- The U.S. will issue new secure identification cards for land travel across the borders with Mexico and Canada by the end of this year instead of requiring travelers to have passports, Department of Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff said.
- 'Mexico Guadalajara aiming to make amends (FIFA)
Guadalajara, humbled by a miserable performance in last year's Apertura championship, will try to restore their reputation as one of Mexico's top clubs in the Clausura tournament which starts at the weekend.
- 'Top travel jobs: The world is her oyster with Dom Perignon (USA Today)
But as a travel director for the deluxe tour operator INTRAV, Nancy Jane Earnhardt gets paid to go along on 22-day global blitzes via private jet. And she packs enough goodies, not to mention personal travel savvy, to make the passengers happy that she's along for the ride.
- 'WorldTradeShow.com Launches New Travel/Tourism E-Commerce Website (Market Wire via Yahoo! Finance)
WorldTradeShow.com, Inc., a Nevada corporation, specializing in producing and marketing online tradeshows for the travel/tourism, import/export and convention industries, announces the launching of its newest travel/tourism website at www.WorldTradeShow.com.
- 'New Travel Cards Approved for Border Crossing (KGBT 4 Rio Grande Valley)
Traveling to and from Mexico and Canada might get easier by the end of this year under a new proposal announced recently by the Bush Administration.
- 'British travel agents win a legal claim over package holidays (eyefortravel.com)
The Association of British Travel Agents challenged guidance issued last year by the UK?s Civil Aviation Authority that broadened the definition of all-in-one package trips. Agents booking package vacations must hold special licences and insurance, managed by the authority.
- 'HOMELAND SECURITY: Border 'travel card' gets OK (Grand Forks Herald)
The Bush administration, bowing to grumbling from U.S. border communities and states, announced plans Tuesday to enable U.S. citizens to crisscross U.S. borders with Canada and Mexico with a new $50 "travel card" similar to a driver's license rather than requiring a $97 U.S. passport.
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