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For the Savvy Traveler


Article # : 18444 

Section : LIFE
Issue Date : 9 / 1990  1,742 Words
Author : Theodora Nelson
Theodora Nelson has written for the Boston Globe, San Francisco Examiner, Atlanta Journal & Constitution, and THE WORLD & I.

       “It sounded like such a wonderful deal,” Ann Gray says ruefully, shaking her head. “Ten days in the capitals of Europe, first-class lodgings, meals included - for only $699. How could I turn it down?”
       
        She certainly would have done so had she known the hotels were “first class” only according to the tour company's standards, that breakfast was a dry roll and weak coffee, and lunches weren't among those meals included. “And the dinners! We were lucky the nights we were on our own because the dinners that were provided were nearly inedible.”
       
        The Back Page
       
        Although trips like hers give travel a bad name, and deservedly so, Gray herself should accept part of the blame. The tour company's brochure wasn't all glossy color pictures and enticing prose. On the back page, easily ignored, was the fine print. If she'd read it carefully, she would have learned which meals she'd have to provide for herself. She would have discovered the meaning of “breakfast.” And she probably would have found the tour company's statement that it may substitute hotels “compatible with” or “equivalent to” those listed in the brochure.
       
        Actually, she was spared some of the trade's crueler surprises. For example, most tour operators reserve the right to increase a tour's price - even after a customer has paid in full. They do this for their own protection, as hotels, restaurants, and airlines sometimes raise their prices despite the “firm” rates they initially offered the operator. Also, it's important to check the travel arrangements carefully - what looks like a nonstop flight could offer unexpected stopovers.
       
        But it's not always “traveler, beware.” Some tour companies gout of their way to provide complete information. Maupintour, for example, includes extensive “what-if” details in its literature and publishes Speaking Frankly, a brochure that takes much of the typical travel hype out of its destination descriptions. American Express warns candidly of health concerns, among other things, in its five pages of fine print. And Olson-Travelworld even prints its “Terms and Conditions” in type larger than that of the rest of its brochure.
       
        Its size notwithstanding, fine print can't cover everything. It's even possible that the company will go out of business, taking your money with it. And it's not only the fly-by-nights that today's traveler has to watch out for. Old-line
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