Showing posts with label airline tickets new zealand. Show all posts
Showing posts with label airline tickets new zealand. Show all posts

Tuesday, 4 October 2011

New Zealand Aviation News, New Zealands only Aviation News Blog

http://newzealand-aviation-news.blogspot.com








1.  Young Napier pilot gets the chance at the big time


Young Napier pilot gets the chance at the big time with Jetstar’s advanced cadet programme

Hamilton, New Zealand - Twenty-two-year old pilot Hamish Taana of Napier is about to have his dream come true after being accepted as a cadet pilot for Jetstar through its specialised training programme.

The graduate from the CTC Aviation Training (NZ) Limited airline pilot training school in Hamilton will now start his training with Jetstar within the next month.

Hamish has been accepted as part of Jetstar’s Advanced Cadet Programme that, all going well, will see him graduate to a First Officer in 12 months. The training will take place at CTC’s training centres in the UK and at Jetstar in Australia.

“The amazing thing about the programme is that I have the certainty of knowing I can become part of a flying crew for an Airbus A320 if my training goes well. Even though I currently only have 225 hours flying time, the opportunity for me is very significant.

“Part of Jetstar’s philosophy in taking people like me, is that they get the chance to bring me into their systems and processes without the need to have me make a change from any other airline procedures I may have learned. Obviously they are investing in my potential rather than my experience, which is a fantastic opportunity for me.

“I feel very well prepared going into the Jetstar programme because my training at CTC Aviation has been completely airline-focused from the first day I started. That’s what makes CTC unique in the way they train pilots. I feel confident I have the very best grounding possible for what is ahead of me.”

Jetstar is a leading low fares international airline that is expanding its flying operations world-wide, particularly across Asia. Their latest training programme has been developed in association with CTC and has been operating for just over a year.

Hamish says the news that he had been accepted into the programme was quite overwhelming, especially for his parents who have been such strong supporters of their son’s desire to make a career as an international airline pilot.

“Mum and dad were pretty emotional when I told them. It is completely understandable given the fact that thousands and thousands of people want to make it as an airline pilot. I’m fortunate to be making my dreams come true.”

Hamish grew up and went to school in Napier and left there as an 18 year old to complete his training as a commercial pilot with CTC in Hamilton. He’s been working at CTC in Hamilton prior to being selected for the Jetstar Advanced Cadet Programme. Hamish will be bonded to Jetstar for a period of time once he has his A320 type rating as a First Officer.

2.  Kuwait Stock Exchange falls the second day straight

The KSE Market Index (off 0.13% at 5,804.3 points) saw once again losses across all sectors, while the largest lender National Bank of Kuwait (NBK) advanced 1.88% to reach KD1.080. Logistics specialist Agility posted the second largest gain, closing 8.2% higher at KD0.330.

3. Frederick Douglass Church plans 3-day celebration


The Frederick Douglass AME Zion Church, 400 Madison Ave. in Elmira, will hold a three-day celebration this weekend to honor its history and heritage.

The occasion, dubbed The Struggle Continues, will take place Friday, Saturday and Sunday.

A special guest during the celebration will be Frederick Douglass IV, the great grandson of Frederick Douglass, an escaped slave and leader of the abolitionist movement.

At 7 p.m. Friday, the church will host an All-Star Gospel Extravaganza, featuring Collette Evans and local choirs. The event is free, and donations will be accepted.

At noon Saturday, the church will host a luncheon featuring an address by Frederick Douglass IV. The cost of the luncheon is $15, and tickets will be sold at the door.

The weekend will wrap up with an 11 a.m. worship hour Sunday, with a talk by Douglass’ wife, evangelist B.J. Douglass.



NEWZEALAND AVIATION NEWS

AME Info
Replication or redistribution in whole or in part is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of AME Info FZ LLC / Emap Limited. The information comprised in this section is not, nor is it held out to be, a solicitation of any person to ...
Middle East North Africa Financial Network
Oct 03, 2011 (AME Info - McClatchy-Tribune Information Services via COMTEX) -- EMIRATES A380 MAKES FIRST FLIGHT TO JOHANNESBURG: Emirates Airline has launched its first scheduled A380 service from Dubai to Johannesburg, to meet the growing demand on ...
Elmira Star-Gazette
The Frederick Douglass AME Zion Church, 400 Madison Ave. in Elmira, will hold a three-day celebration this weekend to honor its history and heritage. The occasion, dubbed The Struggle Continues, will take place Friday, Saturday and Sunday. ...
Market Intelligence Center
Ametek (NYSE:AME) closed Monday's negative trading session at $31.43. In the past year, the stock has hit a 52-week low of $31.35 and 52-week high of $47.00. Ametek (AME) stock has been showing support around $30.06 and resistance in the $34.02 range. ...


Aviation NEWS By
Neha Jain
Aviation NEWS Reporter





       
   

              



            
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Saturday, 1 October 2011

New Zealand Aviation News, New Zealands only Aviation News Blog

http://newzealand-aviation-news.blogspot.com


Emergency+evacuation.jpg
ANZ+safety+briefing.jpg


1.  Following the Leader in Airline Emergencies

First of all, let’s set aside the myth that an aviation accident  =  everybody dead. It’s not the case though it leads some people adopt the fatalistic and passive view that if anything goes wrong there’s little they can do about it.

But at a hangar at London’s Heathrow Airport, British Airways is giving select passengers a dare-I-say crash course in accident survivability. It’s a one-day class offered for the frequent-flying employees of companies who are customers of BA. Scott writes that the airline is considering whether to offer the training to the public for a fee or in exchange for frequent flier miles.
I’ll admit on first reading I was perturbed by Andy Clubb, the flight attendant who runs the class, who told Scott, "We teach people to react faster than anyone else so they are in the aisle first and down the slide first," but Clubb goes on to explain that when a confident passenger demonstrates the correct way to respond, others will follow.
Passengers as exemplars is a fabulous idea, a safety spin on the lesson of United Airlines flight 93 that once the door to the plane is closed the folks inside are a self-contained and necessarily self-sufficient community. In a crisis, survival depends on how well the community works as a whole.

Evacuating a 777 is a little frightening
The last time I traveled by air, I sat at the over wing exit row and when the flight attendant asked me if I was willing to handle the door in an emergency, I answered confidently that I was. After all, I’d just spent a week in flight attendant training at Emirates reporting a story for The New York Times. Can I remove the door if required? Yes, indeed. (I could even sell duty free perfume if push came to shove.)

What’s a tad bit troubling is that British Airways is considering charging tuition of $220 for the school. If better safety on the plane becomes another source of ancillary revenue like better service at the airport  well, that would be wrong.

A crazed rugby fan in Air New Zealand's safety briefing
Passengers deserve some of the blame for being blasé about safety, but with a few exceptions such as Air New Zealand, Southwest and Cebu Pacific  (see their videos below) the airlines have done little to make the safety briefing relevant or interesting to passengers. For the most part, their flight attendants are up there droning on and on - boring us to death with information that could save our lives.

So my proposal is this; how about all the airlines join BA in this innovative new program and invite their most frequent travelers to take a safety course for free? Then, in return, and "in the unlikely event of an emergency" these trained passengers would follow instructions text-book style and show the rest of us how its done.



Dalton Nevil ran behind the Pine Tree Inn near Rough River State Park after a plane had crashed into it and rescued Tyonie Bruner from her burning house. Bruner and her husband own the motel. Sept. 30, 2011




2. Pilot killed, woman injured as plane crashes into Grayson motel, house

Smoke was everywhere, except where there were flames.

That’s how Dalton Nevil, 15, described the aftermath of a small plane crashing into a motel and adjacent house in Grayson County Friday afternoon.

Nevil was outside his girlfriend’s apartment when the plane crashed into the Pine Tree Inn next door in Falls of Rough.

Nevil said he ran to the house house attached to the rear of the motel and found the complex’s co-owner Tyonie Bruner dazed in her bedroom as fire and pitch-black smoke filled the house, the hotel and the nearby space outdoors.

“It was horrible,” he said.

He helped her from burning building and into the parking lot.

But the pilot of the single-engine plane died after crashing into the rear of the small motel near the Rough River Dam State Resort Park, Grayson County Coroner Joe Brad Hudson said. Much of the plane was destroyed in the crash.

The pilot’s name had not been released as of Friday evening.

Just after 12:30 p.m., the plane struck a corner where the hotel and house to its rear are attached, Grayson County Sheriff Rick Clemons said. A witness told authorities that the plane took off from an airfield at the state park, circled, sputtered and crashed into building, Clemons said.

The cause was under investigation.

The Federal Aviation Administration was investigating Friday at the motel. National Transportation Safety Board investigators were traveling from Atlanta to investigate.

Bruner was treated by emergency medical personnel on scene, Clemons said.

She suffered burns to her hands, said Shavonne Jones, her daughter. The hotel had customers, but none were in the building at the time of the crash, she said.

Bruner was lying in bed when she heard the plane approaching, just before it crashed through a wall in her bedroom Jones said.

“She said all she’d seen was a big ball of fire,” Jones said.

Jesse Burton, Bruner’s son, said he rushed from his home nearby after hearing of the crash and found flames leaping from back of the motel.



Tea & Empathy & Display 004.jpg


3. Church happenings | October 1, 2011


COURTESY OF SUE LEWIS - From left, Dean Smith, Jeanne Hood and Jo Dozier, with Margaret Fralix seated, attend the 15th anniversary celebration of Tea and Empathy, a spousal-loss support group at First Baptist Church in Rock Hill. The group meets at 11:45 a.m. Wednesdays and is open to the public. For information, call 803-327-7181.
China Grove AME Zion Church, Mount Gallant Road, Rock Hill: DVDs of the 2011 revival are $10 per night or $25 per set of three nights. For information or to order, email chinagrove46@yahoo.com.
Liberty Hill AME Zion Church, Lake Wylie: Lay Day is Oct. 9. Appreciation weekend for the Rev. Thelma Gordon, Oct. 15-16. Tickets for Oct. 15 banquet at City Club in Rock Hill are $20.
Mount Calvary AME Zion Church, Neely's Creek Road, Rock Hill: Pastor's appreciation service, 10 a.m. Sunday. 50 States fellowship and fundraiser, 3 p.m. Oct. 8.
New Mount Olivet AME Zion Church, Dave Lyle Boulevard, Rock Hill: Appreciation service for the Rev. Alvin McLamb, 12:30 p.m. Oct. 9. Dinner after.
Rock Grove AME Zion Church, Margaret Street, Rock Hill: Pastor appreciation day, 2 p.m. Sunday.
Union Ezell AME Zion Church: Gospel Fest, 7 p.m. Friday with various church choirs and praise teams. Donation is $5.
BAPTIST
Big Calvary Baptist Church, Lando: Steven Howard will deliver his licensure service at 2 p.m. Sunday.
Boyd Hill Baptist Church, Glenn Street, Rock Hill: Gospel Extravaganza, 5 p.m. Oct. 9 in the family life center, featuring Joseph Wilson and All in the Family, The Stars of Zion and Phyllis Wilson and One Faith. Tickets are $10 in advance and $12 at the door.
Ebenezer Baptist Church, South Herlong Avenue, Rock Hill: Inspirational Choir praise and worship celebration, 3 p.m. Oct. 9.
First Baptist Church, South Congress Street, York: Grandparents were honored Sept. 11 with a concert by the Black Brothers. Myrtis Neely was the oldest grandmother; Robert Adams, the oldest grandfather and Mary Bailes had the most grandchildren.
Hillcrest Baptist Church, S.C. 49, York: 52nd homecoming celebration, 7 tonight with a singing by His Anointed of Clover. Former Pastor Michael Faulkner will lead 10:30 a.m. worship Sunday. Dinner after. No other Sunday activities.
New Covenant Missionary Baptist Church, Hampton Street, Rock Hill: Women's Mission Union program, 11 a.m. Oct. 9.
Oakland Baptist Church, Oakland Avenue, Rock Hill: Ministry center clothing distribution, 9 a.m. Monday and Oct. 8.
Old Wilson Baptist Church, Pleasant Grove Church Road, Chester: Women's Day, 10:30 a.m. Oct. 16. Wear pink and white for Breast Cancer Awareness Month.
Park Ridge Baptist Church, Trotter Ridge Court, Newport: Benefit yard sale for Dean Shugart, who has been diagnosed with a brain tumor, 7 a.m. today. Proceeds will help pay medical expenses. For information, call the church at 803-366-3313. Benefit ride by the Carolina Faith Riders, Oct. 15.
Second Baptist Church, Mount Holly Road, Rock Hill: 40th anniversary homecoming, 11 a.m. Sunday. Special music by Ken Turner, who sang bass with the Blackwood Brothers for 25 years. Covered-dish lunch after.
Temple Baptist Church, Celriver Road, Rock Hill: Gospel singing with Carrie Twitty, 6 p.m. Oct. 8. Dinner after.
Weeping Mary Baptist Church, Bowling Green: Pink Tea Luncheon, 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Oct. 8 at Gaston Memorial Hospital auditorium, Court Drive in Gastonia, N.C., to celebrate breast cancer survivors.
Woodhaven Baptist Church, Marett Boulevard, Rock Hill: Spanish classes, 6:30 p.m. Monday; Men's Ministry Rally, 7 p.m. Monday. Mission groups, 6:30 p.m. Wednesday. Hearts of Gold poor man's supper, 5 p.m. Oct. 8 with Charis performing.







NEWZEALAND AVIATION NEWS

Tucson Citizen
The woman told the 911 operator that her niece, Ame Deal, was found in a box after she had gone missing while playing hide-and-seek. “We were playing hide-and-seek last night and didn't find her. She was in a box today,” the woman said, crying, ...
AME Info
Replication or redistribution in whole or in part is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of AME Info FZ LLC / Emap Limited. The information comprised in this section is not, nor is it held out to be, a solicitation of any person to ...
The Herald | HeraldOnline.com
Rock Hill District: Presiding Elder appreciation and district fellowship dinner, 6 tonight at White Hill AME Zion Church in York. York-Chester District: District conference, 9 am today at Mount Zion AME Zion Church in Hickory Grove. ...
Sydney Star Observer
Australian Marriage Equality (AME) spokesman Rodney Croome said that when the Marriage Act was reformed, Catholic celebrants would not be compelled to marry them in the same way that they were already not compelled to marry non-Catholics or Catholics ...


Aviation NEWS By
Neha Jain
Aviation NEWS Reporter





       
   

              



            
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Friday, 30 September 2011

New Zealand Aviation News, New Zealands only Aviation News Blog

http://newzealand-aviation-news.blogspot.com/


Wellington Airport's new international terminal, The Rock, was developed in preparation for the Rugby World Cup. Photo / Mark Mitchell
Aviation NEWS By
Neha Jain
Aviation NEWS Reporter





       
   

              



            
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1.  Virgin stake a step in Air NZ's global march
AIRLINES: Air New Zealand says it is eager to further develop its relationship with Virgin Australia as part of a wider strategy to extend its global reach through partnerships.

Air NZ chairman John Palmer told the airline's AGM in Auckland yesterday that it was pursuing a long-term strategy of extending its global reach without extending its balance sheet.

"In future, partnerships will continue to be a core part of our strategy as we continue to enhance our reach and attract customers on to our services," Mr Palmer said. "The recent formation of the trans-Tasman alliance with Virgin Australia and the purchase of the shares in Virgin Australia demonstrates this strategy in action."

Air NZ announced this week it was taking up an equity derivative in Virgin shares that allows it to increase its stake by up to 5 per cent, subject to foreign ownership limits.



This would take its holding to 19.99 per cent, just below the trigger for a full bid.

The airline has said it does not intend to go beyond this point. However, it is understood it will seek board representation on Australia's second-biggest carrier.

Air NZ chief executive Rob Fyfe said the Virgin trans-Tasman alliance was a key part of the Air NZ's strategy.
The airline a platform to allow it to participate more effectively in the entire Australasian market "with the most extensive network offering in the region".

"The relationship with Virgin Australia is developing well and the early feedback from customers has been positive," he said. "One of our priorities for the near future is to explore opportunities to develop this relationship further."

Mr Fyfe also emphasised the importance of the trans-Tasman market and noted that the success Air NZ was enjoying with its new Seats to Suit fares was far better than expected.

"Load factors have increased despite capacity increasing, which is a great result," he said. "Air New Zealand has captured all the growth in the market since its introduction."

Air NZ also remains confident of an improved result for fiscal 2012. Mr Palmer said: "The board has confidence in the company's ability to adopt through the current volatile conditions and return stronger profitability in the medium term."



2.  Air NZ, Wellington Airport named best in Australasia

Air New Zealand has been named the leading airline in Australasia for the third year running at the prestigious World Travel Awards.

Bruce Parton, Air New Zealand's Group General Manager Australasia, said it was great to be recognised again as "the airline that provides the best service in the Australasia region".

"It is a testament to the ongoing commitment to excellence shown by our people."

Also recognised as the best in the region at the awards were Wellington International Airport, Tourism New Zealand and two Queenstown businesses: Millbrook (leading golf resort) and The Spire (leading boutique hotel).

The annual awards are voted on by travel agents and by executives working within travel and tourism.

Winners are named across a number of regions, with the world's best in each category due to be announced at a gala dinner in Qatar later this year.


Wellington International Airport beat out Auckland, Melbourne, Nadi, Sydney and Tahiti Faa'a airports in being named Australasia's leading airport, though it's not been nominated in the 'world's leading airport' category, while Auckland and Sydney have.

Wellington airport has been nominated as one of the leading airports in Australasia each year since 2007, but this is its first win.

The airport's dual-use international and domestic terminal, The Rock, has been fully operational for a year and was developed in preparation for the Rugby World Cup.

"Our entire team can be very proud of this commendation," said the airport's CEO John Howarth.

"We put a lot in to delivering service at the highest possible levels and being recognised for doing so is incredibly satisfying for us all."

It's the second consecutive year Millbrook has been named Australasia's leading golf resort.

Millbrook's director of golf, Brian Spicer, said the accolade was "a reinforcement of what we've been doing for the last couple of years and certainly a prestigious award for us to retain".

The resort had yet to decide whether to send anyone to the announcement of the World Travel Awards in Qatar, he said.

Representatives from The Spire in Queenstown were on hand to collect their award when it was named Australasia's best boutique hotel at a ceremony in Thailand earlier this week.

Directors Amelia and Lucy Gain told an interviewer at the awards they were "very happy" with the result, especially as they'd only been at The Spire for ten months.

In addition to recognising accommodation, transport and travel experience providers, the awards give a nod to tourism boards, with Tourism New Zealand named the best in Australasia for the second year running.

NEWZEALAND AVIATION NEWS

New Zealand Herald
By Eveline Harvey Wellington Airport's new international terminal, The Rock, was developed in preparation for the Rugby World Cup. Photo / Mark Mitchell Air New Zealand has been named the leading airline in Australasia for the third year running at the ...
Radio New Zealand
Air New Zealand says it expects further delays for its order of Boeing's 787 Dreamliner aircraft. The planes are due to arrive in New Zealand in 2013, but Air New Zealand chief executive Rob Fyfe says it could be a year after that before they are ...
New Zealand Herald
Air New Zealand is preparing for an even longer delay in the delivery of the much awaited Boeing 787 Dreamliner. The national carrier had been indicating it expected to receive the high-tech aircraft, which consumes 20 per cent less fuel than other ...
TVNZ
The Commerce Commission's pursuit of airlines and freight forwarders is "capricious", and the regulator should be focusing on airports to limit over-pricing in freight services, according to Air New Zealand Ltd. The national carrier says the ...