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» Cruise Talk   » Cruise Ships   » Incident on Adventure of the Seas

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Author Topic: Incident on Adventure of the Seas
CruiseBrief
Just Boarded
Member # 3230

posted 07-26-2002 03:50 PM      Profile for CruiseBrief     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
I read in the "St Thomas Source" that a man described as a stowaway died aboard the Adventure of the Seas on Saturday 20 July after being tranquilized and restrained. Does anyone know what happened? How could someone like this get on board?
Posts: 9 | From: UK | Registered: Jul 2002  |  IP: Logged
cruiseny
First Class Passenger
Member # 2928

posted 07-26-2002 04:14 PM      Profile for cruiseny     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
Hello,

This is very interesting to say the least... But I have heard nothing of it... However these things often do not get out.

I was on Voyager (identical ship to Adventure) in February and the security was generally quite tight. However I did find some safety procedures lacking IMHO (and maybe in the not-so-humble opinion of international law too).

Does what you have read imply that he died because of the way he was tranquilized and restrained?

Happy Cruising,
Cruiseny


Posts: 4730 | From: New York, USA | Registered: Mar 2002  |  IP: Logged
CruiseBrief
Just Boarded
Member # 3230

posted 07-26-2002 04:47 PM      Profile for CruiseBrief     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
According to the story in the paper the gentleman became violent in the cell, and security officers tried to restrain him. A medical officer on board tranquilized him, and he died shortly afterward. An autopsy was to have been (and maybe has been by now) conducted.

The administration of a tranquilizer strikes me as a fairly extreme measure.


Posts: 9 | From: UK | Registered: Jul 2002  |  IP: Logged
Malcolm @ cruisepage
Cruise Director
Member # 301

posted 07-26-2002 05:10 PM      Profile for Malcolm @ cruisepage     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
quote:
Originally posted by CruiseBrief:
The administration of a tranquilizer strikes me as a fairly extreme measure.

I’ve no idea how accurate this story is, but on the information given:

I can’t imagine that ships staff has the right to tranquilize anyone! However, they will probably argue that it was administered to protect him from injuring himself?


Posts: 19210 | From: Essex (Just Outside London) | Registered: A Long Time Ago!  |  IP: Logged
Steve Read (sread)
First Class Passenger
Member # 788

posted 07-26-2002 07:43 PM      Profile for Steve Read (sread)   Author's Homepage   Email Steve Read (sread)   Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
What's the betting that as a result of this, some decent people's careers will be blighted?
Yet the family of the "gentleman" who stowed away, and then became so violent in the brig that the staff felt this was the only way to restrain him, will probably file some multi-million lawsuit and live in luxury for ever.
In my view, the medics chose the wrong needle...!

[ 07-26-2002: Message edited by: sread ]


Posts: 926 | From: Locksbottom, Kent, England | Registered: Jul 99  |  IP: Logged
CruiseBrief
Just Boarded
Member # 3230

posted 07-27-2002 11:13 AM      Profile for CruiseBrief     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
quote:
Originally posted by sread:
[QB]In my view, the medics chose the wrong needle...!
QB]

Maybe. But I still wonder how he got on. Isn't security fairly tight?


Posts: 9 | From: UK | Registered: Jul 2002  |  IP: Logged
Malcolm @ cruisepage
Cruise Director
Member # 301

posted 07-27-2002 06:07 PM      Profile for Malcolm @ cruisepage     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
Steve, how about these headline for your paper:

"Ships Doc Murders Cruise Passenger"

or

"Hero saves cruise passengers from Maniac"


Posts: 19210 | From: Essex (Just Outside London) | Registered: A Long Time Ago!  |  IP: Logged
Steve Read (sread)
First Class Passenger
Member # 788

posted 07-28-2002 04:28 AM      Profile for Steve Read (sread)   Author's Homepage   Email Steve Read (sread)   Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
Absolutely not the first headline, Malcolm! We're with Dear Leader Tony on this one, "Tough on crime, tough on the causes of crime." Or as a local councillor once said more eloquently, getting himself headlines in the local paper, "Thrash 'em, bash 'em and make 'em pay."

To my mind, ship rage is just as unacceptable as air rage (or anywhere rage for that matter) and the penalties should be equally severe.

If the stowaway was kicking up to such an extent that the staff had to even consider sedation, then if it went wrong he brought it on himself.

But I still bet there was a queue of loathsome "no win, no fee" ambulance-chasing lawyers at the quayside when Adventure docked.

Malcolm: Heard of the Headline Of The Year award which went to a story about a escapee from a psychiatric home who raped two women in a laundromat and then ran away? Nut Screws Washers And Bolts.


Posts: 926 | From: Locksbottom, Kent, England | Registered: Jul 99  |  IP: Logged
CruiseBrief
Just Boarded
Member # 3230

posted 07-28-2002 08:42 AM      Profile for CruiseBrief     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
quote:
Originally posted by sread:
We're with Dear Leader Tony on this one, "Tough on crime, tough on the causes of crime." Or as a local councillor once said more eloquently, getting himself headlines in the local paper, "Thrash 'em, bash 'em and make 'em pay."

To my mind, ship rage is just as unacceptable as air rage (or anywhere rage for that matter) and the penalties should be equally severe.

If the stowaway was kicking up to such an extent that the staff had to even consider sedation, then if it went wrong he brought it on himself.


At this stage we don't know whether the man who died was a victim of his own misfortune. Other than the press report, no information has been provided about what happened. Perhaps this man lost it and had to be restrained, with unfortunate and unanticipated consequences. Or, perhaps, one or more of the security people got carried away....

While the punishment should fit the crime, the punishment should be dished out by a court, not a security guard, copper, bouncer etc. Before we all get whipped up into a "Thrash 'em, bash 'em and make 'em pay" frenzy, it would be instructive to hear from some people who have a better idea of what actually happened.


Posts: 9 | From: UK | Registered: Jul 2002  |  IP: Logged
CruiseBrief
Just Boarded
Member # 3230

posted 07-28-2002 01:54 PM      Profile for CruiseBrief     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
Here's the latest press information - from yesterday's online edition of The Virgin Islands Daily News

Royal Caribbean, police continue probe into death of tranquilized stowaway
CHRIS LARSON Daily News Staff
The Daily News, Saturday, July 27, 2002

ST. THOMAS - The investigation continues into the death a week ago of a 31-year-old man on board a cruise ship docked at the West Indian Co. dock.

O'Neil Persaud, a Guyana native who was carrying a Canadian passport, died in a holding cell aboard Royal Caribbean's Adventure of the Seas after being tranquilized by crew members.

Officials believe Persaud boarded Adventure of the Seas while it was docked at St. Maarten the day before its call on St. Thomas. How he got on board is the subject of an internal Royal Caribbean investigation, spokesman Michael Sheehan said Friday.

"We are cooperating with Virgin Islands police," Sheehan said. "And we have an investigation ongoing. We're trying to nail down exactly what happened."

Police spokeswoman Sgt. Annette Raimer said police investigators interviewed several members of the ship's crew who took part in tranquilizing Persaud.

Sheehan declined to comment on whether Persaud breached the ship's security when he boarded at St. Maarten. "We're looking into it," he said.

Typically, nonpassengers who board a docked ship must go through a fairly stringent security procedure that includes registration, leaving a photo I.D. with a security guard and passing through a metal detector. The identification is returned to the visitor when he or she leaves the ship.

Police said Peraud was a Guyanese businessman who was living in Canada and vacationing on St. Maarten. He may have boarded the ship with a man and woman who were passengers, Raimer said.

During the ship's overnight sail to St. Thomas, Persaud was discovered and taken to a holding cell.

A cruise line spokeswoman earlier this week said Persaud was behaving erratically, became violent with ship personnel and had to be physically subdued.

The ship docked at St. Thomas early on the morning of July 20. Shortly before 8 a.m., WICO personnel contacted police, informing them of a possible stowaway on board.

Persaud was alive when the ship docked, officials said. Crew on the ship tranquilized Persaud, crew members told police. But it remains unclear whether he was tranquilized before or after the ship arrived at St. Thomas.

What is clear is that Persaud died after being tranquilized. About noon, WICO called the 911 emergency hotline to report a death on board.

WICO spokesman Calvin Wheatley said Friday that WICO personnel played no role in subduing or tranquilizing Persaud.

"We responded to the ship's request to call an ambulance," Wheatley said.

"We typically don't get otherwise involved in situations like that."


Posts: 9 | From: UK | Registered: Jul 2002  |  IP: Logged
Malcolm @ cruisepage
Cruise Director
Member # 301

posted 07-28-2002 05:18 PM      Profile for Malcolm @ cruisepage     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
quote:
Originally posted by sread:
Malcolm: Heard of the Headline Of The Year award which went to a story about a escapee from a psychiatric home who raped two women in a laundromat and then ran away? Nut Screws Washers And Bolts.

Are you serious?

Off topic I know, but I like the Sun's headline about the Westland Helicopter lie: "Who told Chopper Whopper"! Of course "Freddie Star Ate My Hampster" was another milestone.

I also recall that the Falklands war generated several very frank headlines!

[ 07-28-2002: Message edited by: Malcolm @ cruisepage ]


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Steve Read (sread)
First Class Passenger
Member # 788

posted 07-28-2002 07:02 PM      Profile for Steve Read (sread)   Author's Homepage   Email Steve Read (sread)   Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
My two personal favourite Sun headlines:

Princess Diana on tour, wears a similar dress two days running. Fashion-conscious Italians notice immediately and think it's the same dress. Headline: Did Di Diddle The Ities?

Fourth Division Caledonian Rovers beat First Division Celtic: Super Cally Go Ballistic, Celtic Were Atrocious.


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Blue Rinse
Just Boarded
Member # 3246

posted 08-03-2002 09:10 AM      Profile for Blue Rinse     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
I can't believe that you guys seem to think this is so trivial. An article in one of our Toronto papers today suggests that there's a lot of explaining for someone to do about the man who dies on the Adventure on the Seas.
Posts: 2 | From: Toronto | Registered: Aug 2002  |  IP: Logged
ocngypz
First Class Passenger
Member # 1555

posted 08-03-2002 09:43 AM      Profile for ocngypz   Email ocngypz   Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
There seems to be alot of information left out of the article posted here. I read another news account online which stated that the stowaway ripped plumbing and a mirror from the walls and tried to hang himself... as well as attacking crew members.

It appears this fellow was under the "influence" of something... more than likely illegal.


Posts: 343 | From: Newport, RI USA | Registered: Sep 2000  |  IP: Logged
CruiseBrief
Just Boarded
Member # 3230

posted 08-03-2002 09:44 AM      Profile for CruiseBrief     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
quote:
Originally posted by Blue Rinse:
An article in one of our Toronto papers today suggests that there's a lot of explaining for someone to do about the man who dies on the Adventure on the Seas.

This must be the article you're talking about. I agree, itleaves a lot of unanswered questions. There seems to be a lot more to this incident than meets the eye.

Cruise ship death puzzles man's kin

Royal Caribbean's version of events doesn't ring true, grieving family of Canadian says

By WALLACE IMMEN


Saturday, August 3, 2002 – Print Edition, Page A6


Esther Persaud's nightmare began when she went to Toronto's airport to welcome her son back from a Caribbean vacation and he didn't arrive.

After nearly two days of dread, the worst fears of Ms. Persaud and her family were confirmed.

A Toronto Police officer came to the door to tell her that her son O'Neil Persaud, 31, had died on board a cruise ship bound for St. Thomas in the U.S. Virgin Islands.

But O'Neil hadn't gone on a cruise. He was supposed to be staying at an all-inclusive resort on the island of St. Maarten.

And that was only the beginning of the mystery.

Two weeks later, the Persauds do not know how O'Neil died or even when his body will be returned so they can arrange a funeral.

"We have already lost our son and now we are being tortured by the waiting," Ms. Persaud said yesterday.

Worst of all, every day has brought new and conflicting reports about how O'Neil might have died. None of them are consistent with the happy and stable man the Persaud family and friends knew.

The official statement from Royal Caribbean Cruises said Mr. Persaud began to "behave erratically and violently" on the evening of July 19, after the 3,100 passenger ship Adventure of the Seas sailed from Dutch St. Maarten. The cruise line considered Mr. Persaud a stowaway from Guyana.

The report said that they handcuffed him to put him in a holding cell, he knocked out one of crew members and kicked another in the face. Locking himself in a bathroom, he pulled plumbing from the wall and smashed a mirror.

He "withstood two cans of pepper spray with no effect," then "attempted to set a fire," then "placed a rope around his neck and attempted to hang himself," the cruise line's statement said.

According to the cruise line, Mr. Persaud died while crew members were trying to hold him down so the ship's doctor could give him a sedative.

"This makes him sound like the Incredible Hulk. O'Neil was not aggressive," Lionel Persaud, his father, said. Mr. Persaud believes "they are trying to hide this so it doesn't have an impact on tourism. We don't believe the story that they are giving the media."

Family friend Elaine Richardson remembers O'Neil's enthusiasm as he planned the vacation and also doubts the cruise line's story.

"They're saying this is an accidental death but, I'm sorry . . . It just does not add up. He was the kind of guy who would always have a laugh and a joke even when he was having a bad day," Ms. Richardson said.

At 5 feet 7 inches tall, O'Neil was hardly an incredible hulk, although he had a penchant for adventure.

A photo in the family's printing store shows him next to a Formula One racing car. A sponsor who does business with the Persauds' Lasting Impressions printing company let him test drive in a promotion for a race a year ago.

The Persauds came to Toronto from Guyana in 1975, when O'Neil was 4. They started a screen printing business that became a family concern, with O'Neil becoming the graphic designer and his brother Nigel the accountant.

"We depended on him," Mr. Persaud said in the office of the small shop in an industrial strip in Scarborough, where the smell of printing ink mingled this week with the fragrance of memorial flower bouquets sent by many family friends.

It was not unusual for O'Neil, who was single and lived alone, to travel by himelf, Ms. Persaud said.

"He just takes off," she said. He had toured Europe and been to other Caribbean islands. He had also lived for a year in Korea teaching English and trying to learn Korean. Ms. Richardson said O'Neil told her he was happy to get a chance to relax before the typically hectic fall business season. He signed up for the week at the all-inclusive Great Bay Resort because it was offering a room upgrade and no single supplement because summer is the off-season in St. Maarten.

A spokesman for the resort said Mr. Persaud had arrived on July 14 and had last been in his room on the afternoon of Friday the 19th. His clothes were still on hangers, a pair of sneakers was in the closet and his duffel bag was still in the room.

At that point certainty ends.

A report in the local newspaper St. Thomas Source a said the cruise line has video surveillance tapes of Mr. Persaud boarding the Adventure of the Seas with an unidentified couple on Friday afternoon.

"As a rule passengers can't bring guests on board," said Michael Sheehin, spokesman for Royal Caribbean in Miami. He said newspaper reports about the case have been inaccurate.

Royal Caribbean has heightened security since Sept. 11 and issues all passengers photo identification cards they must swipe through a reader before they can board the ship, Mr. Sheehin said.

The ship sailed for St. Thomas at 6 p.m. During the night, crew members found O'Neil; he was handcuffed and taken to a holding cell.

Although local newspapers in St. Thomas reported crew members held Mr. Persaud down while a ship's doctor injected a tranquillizer into his buttock to calm him, the cruise line disputed the reports.

St. Thomas deputy police chief Theodore Carty said the police have closed their investigation. The results of an autopsy said the death was accidental, but there was no official statement on the cause of death.

The police case has been turned over to the island's attorney-general's office to determine whether charges should be laid.

Police spokeswoman Sergeant Annette Raimer said yesterday that police had investigated the theory Mr. Persaud had died from a reaction to the tranquillizer and a narcotic he had taken earlier. Sgt. Raimer said there would be no further statement.

The Virgin Islands administration notified the Canadian government yesterday that it is opening a criminal investigation in the case, Foreign Affairs spokesman Reynaud Doiron said in Ottawa.

He said the autopsy done in St. Thomas found that the cause of death was "asphyxiation caused by compression of the chest."

Any prosecution, if a suspect is identified, would be the responsibility of the island's officials, Mr. Doiron said.

Virgin Islands medical examiner William Fogarty went on vacation immediately after the autopsy on Tuesday and was not available yesterday to answer questions.

Dr. Fogarty was quoted in the Virgin Islands Daily News as saying he was puzzled because neither of the two ship's doctors recorded in their reports on the incident what dosage of tranquillizer was given. "It's good medical practice to document your actions. It's sort of standard medical practice."

Dr. Fogarty added it was possible the man died of asphyxiation while being held down by crew members. It was also possible that he had a previous medical condition such as abnormal heart beat that could have caused a heart attack.

While toxicology tests were taken during the autopsy, they had to be sent to a laboratory in the United States and results were not available yesterday, said a spokesperson for the medical examiner's office.

"We don't believe the story. We don't believe anything we have read," O'Neil's mother said yesterday. She fears a cover-up is under way.

Ms. Persaud said she has sought legal advice. "I was told there is so much corruption on the island, it is doubtful we will ever get the truth."

O'Neil had no medical conditions that she knows of and he was always healthy, Mrs. Persaud said.

Her husband added: "At the resort the booze is free. I have no doubt he drank there. But he was not on any medication and did not use drugs," his father said.

Ms. Persaud said she has asked the coroner's office in Toronto to do a second autopsy once the body is returned. Incomplete paperwork has kept O'Neil's body in the Virgin Islands, but Mr. Persaud hopes it will finally be flown to Toronto over the weekend.

O'Neil's sister, Michelle, said she considers this a criminal case. "I definitely want to know what happened. I want the people responsible to come to justice."

O'Neil's mother said the trauma of waiting has been compounded by the shifting stories the family has been receiving from officials and the gaps in the official statements. She added: "Every day I feel more proud to be a Canadian, because of the ways that things are handled -- in a humane and legal way."


Posts: 9 | From: UK | Registered: Jul 2002  |  IP: Logged
PamM
First Class Passenger
Member # 2127

posted 08-03-2002 09:45 AM      Profile for PamM   Author's Homepage     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
quote:
Originally posted by Blue Rinse:
I can't believe that you guys seem to think this is so trivial. An article in one of our Toronto papers today suggests that there's a lot of explaining for someone to do about the man who dies on the Adventure on the Seas.

No doubt there is, but all the news released is unclear as to what exactly happened and one can only speculate.
Why was he aboard, the mystery man & woman know, and preusmably know how he got aboard too. Why did he get violent, and need subduing. What was he hiding? He was tranquilised, was this a last resort or an easy way out? They don't even seem to know when he was tranquilised. Why did he die? Was he already ill? taking medication that clashed? hiding drugs in stomach that reacted?
All pure speculation, and anything could have really happened.
Newspaper reporters do not know any real facts, which is why the non serious attitude comes over.
I will await with interest the official outcome of the enquiry.
Pam

Posts: 12176 | From: Cambridge, UK | Registered: Jun 2001  |  IP: Logged
CruiseBrief
Just Boarded
Member # 3230

posted 08-03-2002 09:48 AM      Profile for CruiseBrief     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
quote:
Originally posted by ocngypz:
There seems to be alot of information left out of the article posted here. I read another news account online which stated that the stowaway ripped plumbing and a mirror from the walls and tried to hang himself... as well as attacking crew members.

It appears this fellow was under the "influence" of something... more than likely illegal.


And he did all of this while handcuffed?! There are a lot of inconsistencies in the story that has come out so far.


Posts: 9 | From: UK | Registered: Jul 2002  |  IP: Logged
CruiseBrief
Just Boarded
Member # 3230

posted 08-03-2002 09:53 AM      Profile for CruiseBrief     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
quote:
Originally posted by PamM:

All pure speculation, and anything could have really happened.
Newspaper reporters do not know any real facts, which is why the non serious attitude comes over.
I will await with interest the official outcome of the enquiry.
Pam

Absolutely right (about the press) although whatever happened, the incident was anything but trivial. In the meantime the USVI authorities aren't helping the tide of speculation over this incident. If there's no evidence of wrongdoing, why is the file on the DA's desk and the body still in the USVI while the grieving family waits in Canada. All very puzzling.


Posts: 9 | From: UK | Registered: Jul 2002  |  IP: Logged
Green
First Class Passenger
Member # 171

posted 08-04-2002 01:49 PM      Profile for Green     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
There is, it seems, much more to this story than has been revealed - long article in the weekend edition of The Toronto Star.
Posts: 2913 | From: Markham, Ontario, Canada | Registered: Jul 99  |  IP: Logged
CruiseBrief
Just Boarded
Member # 3230

posted 01-28-2003 12:21 AM      Profile for CruiseBrief     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
The latest from USVI still leaves many unanswered questions:

St. Thomas Source

STRIDIRON RULES CRUISE SHIP DEATH ACCIDENTAL
by Judi Shimel
Dec. 19, 2002 - A local investigation has determined that the death of a Canadian citizen aboard a Royal Caribbean cruise ship that had sailed from St. Martin to St. Thomas last July was accidental, Attorney General Iver Stridiron said on Thursday.
Stridiron said the victim, O'Neil Persaud, 31, was accidentally suffocated on July 20 by security officers on board the ship, Adventure of the Seas, as he experienced what Stridiron called "a psychiatric crisis."
At the time, cruise ship officials told authorities on St. Thomas that a Guyanese man holding a Canadian passport was being held in confinement as a stowaway when he became violent and irrational. Persaud, a resident of Toronto, had boarded the ship without authorization in St. Martin, they said, and when he became uncontrollable, security and medical personnel placed him in a holding cell.
"Five members of the ship's security crew accidentally smothered Mr. Persaud, and he died as a result of the method they used in restraining him," Stridiron said at a Thursday morning press conference where he also announced that his office would not prosecute any of the police officers involved in five shooting deaths.
"I've determined that Mr. Persaud, while on board ship, between July 19 and midday on July 20, exhibited psychiatric abnormalities, became violent and uncontrollable, which prompted the ship's crew and medical personnel to employ heroic methods to restrain him from seriously injuring himself," Stridiron said Thursday.
He said his conclusion was based on his review of the investigation carried out by the V.I. Justice Department and police on St. Thomas and in St. Martin, and statements made by members of the ship's crew.
Members of Persaud's family in Canada questioned the accounts given at the time of his death. His mother, Esther Persaud, speaking from Ontario on Thursday, said she was not surprised by Stridiron's conclusion because an autopsy report said her son had died of asphyxiation caused by compression of the chest. "I heard he was supposed to make the announcement today," she said of the attorney general.
She said the family has retained attorney Derek Hodge to represent them against the cruise line.


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SydneyBoy
First Class Passenger
Member # 2543

posted 01-28-2003 11:33 PM      Profile for SydneyBoy   Email SydneyBoy   Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
quote:
Origionaly Posted by Malcolm: I can’t imagine that ships staff has the right to tranquilize anyone! However, they will probably argue that it was administered to protect him from injuring himself?

This is not the case, the P&O Pacific Sky Brochure states "The captain, at all times, has the right to confine, have sedated or put ashore any passenger whose conduct seriously inconveniences or jeopardises the enjoyment, health or safety of any passenger or other persons. P&O Cruises shall not be liable for such actions or for any loss incurred (including repatriation expenses) and refunds are not payable. Any expenses incurred by us under this clause shall be payable by you to us on demand"

[ 01-28-2003: Message edited by: SydneyBoy ]


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Royal Caribbean - Bahamas Getaway from $129 per person
Description: Experience the beautiful ports of Nassau and Royal Caribbean's private island - CocoCay on a 3-night Weekend Getaway to the Bahamas. Absorb everything island life has to offer as you snorkel with the stingrays, parasail above the serene blue waters and walk the endless white sand beaches. From Miami.
Carnival - 4-Day Bahamas from $229 per person
Description: Enjoy a wonderful 3 Day cruise to the fun-loving playground of Nassau, Bahamas. Discover Nassau, the capital city as well as the cultural, commercial and financial heart of the Bahamas. Meet the Atlantic Southern Stingrays, the guardians of Blackbeard's treasure.
NCL - Bermuda - 7 Day from $499 per person
Description: What a charming little chain of islands. Walk on pink sand beaches. Swim and snorkel in turquoise seas. Take in the historical sights. They're stoically British and very quaint. Or explore the coral reefs. You can get to them by boat or propelled by fins. You pick. Freestyle Cruising doesn't tell you where to go or what to do. Sure, you can plan ahead, or decide once onboard. After all, it's your vacation. There are no deadlines or must do's.
Holland America - Eastern Caribbean from From $599 per person
Description: White sand, black sand, talcum soft or shell strewn, the beaches of the Eastern Caribbean invite you to swim, snorkel or simply relax. For shoppers, there's duty-free St. Thomas, the Straw Market in Nassau, French perfume and Dutch chocolates on St. Maarten. For history buffs, the fascinating fusion of Caribbean, Latin and European cultures. For everyone, a day spent on HAL's award winning private island Half Moon Cay.
Celebrity - 7-Night Western Mediterranean from $549 per person
Description: For centuries people have traveled to Europe to see magnificent ruins, art treasures and natural wonders. And the best way to do so is by cruise ship. Think of it - you pack and unpack only once. No wasted time searching for hotels and negotiating train stations. Instead, you arrive at romantic ports of call relaxed, refreshed and ready to take on the world.
Holland America - Alaska from From $499 per person
Description: Sail between Vancouver and Seward, departing Sundays on the ms Statendam or ms Volendam and enjoy towering mountains, actively calving glaciers and pristine wildlife habitat. Glacier Bay and College Fjord offer two completely different glacier-viewing experiences.

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