By: Paige Taylor | 2011-11-14 | Destinations The provisional new seven wonders of nature have been chosen after a series of votes by the "New7Wonders Foundation," based in Zurich, Switzerland. The Amazon rainforest, Vietnam's Halong Bay, Iguazu Falls, South Korea’s Jeju Island, Indonesia’s Komodo National Park, Philippines’s Puerto Princesa River and Table Mountain in South Africa are the newly voted wonders of the nature world. read more
By: articlenic | 2010-10-11 | Travel & Leisure By : Campbell Bevan The North Island of New Zealand is famous for both black and white sandy beaches, lush green native forest and rolling farmlands read more
By: thirtynyc | 2011-04-06 | Hotels Hotel Thirty-Thirty is located nearby the neighborhoods of Gramercy Park, Murray Hill and Union Square, the Hotel Thirty-Thirty is blocks away from Times Square, the Empire State Building, Macy's, Madison Square Garden, School of Visual Arts, Fashion Institute of Technology, NYU Medical Center, the Garment Fashion, the Toy District and many other New York City Attractions. read more
By: Holiday Armadillo | 2011-06-16 | Travel Tips March 2012 is the date for the Hong Kong Sevens so before the hotels book up get yourself booked in! read more
By: Ian Steger | 2010-03-30 | Adventure Tourism This article is about the places to see and visit when you travel to the Big Island of Hawaii. Looking for something different than your typical Waikiki experience? Learn about what the Big Island has to offer. I will tell readers what to expect and what to avoid when traveling to the Big Island. read more
By: Robert Kenneth Henderson | 2010-05-02 | Adventure Tourism We had discovered the bones after a landslide had exposed a cave, whose entrance had previously been covered by a cave-in. The Headmaster at St. Xavier's High School, Brother Patrick Howley, had immediately sent off the tags and some transcriptions of the Japanese writing we had found, but it was several months before we heard anything back about them. read more
By: Mary Rose | 2010-11-30 | News and society An island in South Korean was attacked, hundreds people died in a stampede in Cambodia, clashes broke out in Rio de Janeiro in Brazil, Winter has been coming to many countries, English students flooded streets in London for the demonstration against increasing tuition fees, China has a new town called Thames Town, Hot Air Balloons Festival took place in Leon, Mexico… are notable news in last week. Let’s know more about what are currently happening through the following photos: read more
By: gaga | 2011-01-19 | Business Origins and Development The first settlers arrived in Oyster Bay in the 1650s.[citation needed] Over the ensuing 350 years several important events in the religious, military, and social history of Colonial America and the United States occurred there. A few of these events and the people associated with them are celebrated in the History Walk. Seven of the sites included on the History Walk are also listed on the National Register of Historic Places read more
By: lan nguyen | 2011-12-27 | Destinations Vietnam’s Ha Long Bay listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site has been ranked the 2nd among the 10 best boat journeys by the UK’s Lonely Planet Travel Magazine. read more
By: gaga | 2011-01-12 | Business History A woman asking a sergeant for directions. On 30 April 1841, 12 weeks after the British had landed in Hong Kong, orders were given by Captain Charles Elliot to establish a police force in the new colony. The first chief of police was Captain William Caine, who also served as the Chief Magistrate. The Hong Kong Police was officially established by the colonial government on 1 May 1844, and the duties of the magistrate and head of police were separated read more
By: David Stanley | 2010-01-22 | Travel & Leisure The islands of Samoa are emerging as an exciting new South Pacific travel destination between Hawaii and New Zealand. This "Heart of Polynesia" is politically split into two distinct entities 80 miles read more
By: Thomas Mahar | 2010-03-29 | Business One of the men destined to join the ranks of Michigan's pioneer sugar barons was John C. Liken. He was nearly 70 years old when the idea struck him and already rich beyond the dreams he probably had when he carved barrel staves for a living as an indigent immigrant in New York more than fifty years earlier. By 1900, he operated a big business in a small town that referred to him as the town father because his enterprise created the jobs that brought people to the town. read more
By: Jane Shelley | 2011-07-27 | Travel & Leisure There are many countries on earth that are described as beautiful, exhilarating, mountainous or stunning. But there are not many that fulfil all of these categories, but New Zealand does. read more
By: frbiz2@163.com | 2010-10-10 | Online Business Shipping in the subantarctic The Clipper Route followed by ships sailing between England and Australia/New Zealand During the 19th and early 20th centuries read more