Jordan’s national airline, Royal Jordanian, will take part in the annual International Mediterranean Tourism Market for the first time in Israel later this month. The Israeli tourism fair, which bills itself as the biggest travel market in the Eastern Mediterranean, will host Royal Jordanian in Tel Aviv in the second week of February.
Rony Levin, a customer relations manager with Royal Jordanian in Tel Aviv, said this is the first year the airline has been invited to participate, and previously, only Israeli airlines like IsrAir and EL-AL were represented. Levin said that the main destinations of Royal Jordanian flights from Tel Aviv are fairly rare, but the carrier is participating in the fair for the publicity and to make contact with industry people. He said “We mostly sell to the Far East and America.”
Take an idiosyncratic visit to the ACMI to enjoy a completely exceptional outlook of the city of Melbourne. The place provides you the unique opportunity to enjoy some of the masterpieces of digital cinemas along with hundreds of short films in the highly interactive environment provided by lounge rooms of the future. Along with this the place also allows you to acquire exposure of some of the lar...
Beihai is Chinese for “northern sea” and the park is named for the manmade lake that covers most of its 170 acres. It is more than a thousand years old, dating back to the Liao Dynasty in the tenth century. Successive dynasties modified and renovated it into the park we see today. It was part of the Forbidden City until 1925, when the last emperor abdicated. The park has been open to the publi...
Chicago's Field Museum of Natural History was founded in 1893 during the Colombian Exhibition. It was moved to its current location in 1921 and is named for Marshall Field, the museum's first benefactor and retail giant Marshall Field. The magnificent Classical Revival building is located along Lakeshore Drive in Chicago's Museum Campus, along with the Shedd Aquarium and the Adler Plan...
It is at this point where Pakistan and India meet. Tourists must visit the Wagah Border where they will be treated to a history lesson in Pakistan-India relations. On either side of the border, the citizens of the two countries sit on concrete steps, singing patriotic songs. Half-an-hour before sunset, a little ceremony takes place where the Pakistani and Indian guards engage in different comp...