FRONTLINE 1974 T ravelnews, October 10, 1974
O Laker Air Travel, the new name for Freddie Laker’s tour operation Lord Brothers, launched. Its other tour operation, Arrowsmith Holidays, retained its name. Travelnews published a special ‘Laker News’
supplement to mark the occasion. O Olympic Holidays announced it was offering agents the chance to earn 12.5% commission on bookings for the firm’s new 1974-75 year-round holiday programme if they did an agreed amount of business
for the operator. O Major tour operators opposed plans for Court Line clients to receive full refunds via the government-backed reserve fund, which was due to be set up. One operator said: “We are all totally opposed to paying back past
debts with future clients’ money.” O Inghams Travel bought the Clarksons Discovery Tours operation and said it would market the programme under its Inghams Discovery Tours programme.
T This
week in...
We take a look through the
ravel Weekly archives in our 50th year to find out what was making the headlines 10, 25 and 45 years ago . . .
T 1994 ravel Weekly, October 12, 1994
O Airtours was reported as wanting to buy 43-branch miniple Bakers Dolphin. The group was keen to increase its
552-branch Going Places shop network. O First Choice axed its 1,200-capacity charter programme to the Colombian island of San Andrés because of customer complaints about stomach bugs and boredom because there was little to do
during the rainy season. O Haven invested £20 million in its UK programme following growing confidence in domestic breaks, while the Artac consortium spent £50,000 on
a winter marketing campaign. O Letter of the Week went to Stuart Alderman of Ramblers Holidays who wondered what merit there could be for Greek destinations receiving tour operators’ rowdy British tourists. In reference to Sunvil boss Noel Josephides’ column on the same issue, he wrote: “I’ve often thought what an old whinger Noel Josephides is…but a TV programme brought home to me the cause of his distress.”
T
ravel W
eekly, October 16, 2009
O Travel Republic director Kane Pirie stood trial for breach of Atol regulations in a case that would test the legality of operations at many other firms and the ability of the Civil Aviation Authority to regulate the sector. In a case that Travel Republic went on to win, the prosecution alleged Pirie and Travel Republic sold packages without the
necessary Atol cover. O The CAA refused to comment on whether it was considering a franchise agreement to allow trade
organisations to manage their own Atol-holders. O Tourism Concern warned it might close before Christmas unless it received £40,000
2009
in emergency funding. O At the Travel Convention in Barcelona, former chancellor Norman Lamont said the industry should not expect a speedy economic recovery, while Tui Travel chief executive Peter Long described the summer as “scary”. However, the number of Brits who took a cruise in the first nine months of the year rose 5% compared with 2008, despite the recession.
36
10 OCTOBER 2019
travelweekly.co.uk
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