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- TRAVEL, Page 69They'd Rather Be in Philadelphia
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- The gulf crisis keeps tourists closer to home and to the ground
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- Although Saddam Hussein's invasion of Kuwait failed to keep
- George Bush away from Kennebunkport, prospects of war in the
- Persian Gulf are changing many other vacation plans. The crisis
- has sent the world travel industry into a spin. Vacationers and
- commercial travelers are hastily scrapping plans to visit not
- only the affected Arab states but also the entire Middle East
- and eastern Mediterranean. Major airlines are improvising
- detours for regularly scheduled flights, and airlines and
- airports have tightened security in anticipation of a possible
- rise in terrorism.
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- Debbie Grodd, 24, and Stanley Lee, 28, of Stamford, Conn.,
- reacted to the hostilities by junking plans for an Aegean
- honeymoon. "I know chances were slim that something would
- happen," said Grodd. "But Greece is close to Turkey, and Turkey
- is next door to Iraq. The last thing we needed was to wonder
- about it at all." Last week the Lees spent their honeymoon on
- the California coast.
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- Similar switches have been making life hectic for travel
- agencies everywhere. Olson-Travelworld Ltd., a large Los
- Angeles touring company, reports that cancellation rates for
- tours to Egypt and Israel have risen to 20%, while those for
- tours to Turkey have risen to 10%. Big British tour operators
- like Thomson Holidays report the same traveler reluctance:
- Thomson bookings to Israel, for example, are down 50% from the
- same period last year. British sun seekers who traditionally
- flock to beaches in Cyprus or Turkey have also begun shopping
- around for other roosts. French-owned Club Mediterranee reports
- that future bookings for villages in Turkey, Egypt and Israel
- have fallen significantly. So concerned is the Israeli
- government that the Tourism Ministry recently injected an
- additional $235,000 into a $940,000 British advertising
- campaign.
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- Airlines are proving just as cautious as individuals.
- Western airline flights to Baghdad and Kuwait City have been
- canceled as part of the international embargo against Iraq.
- Some carriers have gone further. Jet Tours, a major holiday
- carrier 70% owned by Air France, has simply shut down all its
- tours to Syria, Jordan and Yemen. Some regular commercial
- carriers are making costly detours around the entire Middle
- East region. KLM, for example, is rerouting long-haul flights
- that normally land in Dubai or Bahrain, cutting its weekly
- service to the region by more than half. Pan Am has rerouted
- its flights from Frankfurt to Pakistan and Saudi Arabia so that
- they fly farther from Iraqi airspace. Air France has canceled
- a stopover in the gulf emirate of Bahrain in favor of one in
- Djibouti, in northeastern Africa.
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- Airlines are understandably reluctant to discuss how the
- crisis has affected security arrangements. Typically, a Pan Am
- spokesman says only that security procedures at Pan Am have
- been "enhanced." At London's Heathrow Airport, travelers report
- that the beef-up can add 20 minutes to the already lengthy
- process of clearing security, while at New York City's Kennedy
- International Airport, extra police are on duty. At Paris'
- Charles de Gaulle Airport, 80 armed security police have been
- added to regular details, and an Interior Ministry spokesman
- says that "we are being vigilant toward all sensitive flights
- and passengers."
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- Despite all the soothing assertions, the threatening
- international climate, combined with a weak dollar, is going
- to keep many Americans closer to home and closer to the ground.
- That is good news for Tom Domenico, senior executive vice
- president of New Jersey-based Domenico Tours, one of the U.S.'s
- largest operators of escorted motor-coach tours. His business
- has jumped 8% since the Iraqi invasion. In fact, business is
- so healthy that even though fuel costs have climbed 20% as a
- result of the crisis, Domenico is planning no increase in fares.
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- By Frank Trippett. Reported by Nancy Seufert/London and Lisa
- Towle/New York.
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