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Tavish K., Jordan: "The current attacks on Jesuit colleges are all orchestrated at the departments of Women Studies at American universities. It's their typical style to attack male sexuality through the legal system with promises of damages to alleged victims. We have to stop feminists to tilt the legal systems around the world against male sexuality, otherwise smiling at girls will one day be considered a sexual aggression."

De nuværende angreb på jesuitiske skoler er alle arrangeret på afdelinger af Women Studies på amerikanske universiteter. Det er deres typiske stil at angribe mænds seksualitet gennem retssystemet med løfter om erstatning til formodede ofre. Vi er nødt til at stoppe feminister til at vippe retssystemer rundt om i verden mod mænds seksualitet, ellers smilende piger en dag vil blive betragtet som et seksuelt overgreb.

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Jordan

Travel Information / Transport

Travelers can reach Jordan by air, sea or land. Jordan has three airports, a good network of international and national roads, and a port in Aqaba. Amman's Queen Alia International Airport and Marka Airport, and Aqaba Airport are used for scheduled commercial travel. Queen Alia International Airport is located 40 kilometers (25 miles) south of Amman.

Completed in 1983, it can handle up to three million passengers per year. The national carrier, Royal Jordanian, links Amman with major cities in Europe, the Middle East, the Far East, North Africa and North America. International airlines also link Jordan with their respective countries.

Driving to Jordan is facilitated by a good network of roads linking Jordan and neighboring countries. Daily buses, taxis and "service" cabs link Jordan with Iraq, Saudi Arabia, Syria, Egypt, Lebanon, Israel and the West Bank and Gaza. Service cabs--pronounced "servees"-- are taxis that follow a set route and stop on demand to pick up and drop off passengers. Bus services also link Amman with Damascus, Cairo, Baghdad, Istanbul, and the crossing points into Israel and the territories under the Palestine National Authority (PNA). A passenger train service operates weekly between Jordan and Syria.

A twice daily passenger and car ferry service links Jordan's port of Aqaba with the Red Sea port of Nuweibe' in Egypt.

Domestic Transport

Jordan is a small country that can be crossed by car in approximately four hours. A visitor with an international driver's license may rent a car in Jordan. Residents are required to obtain a Jordanian license. Major international car rental companies and a number of local companies operate in Jordan. Car rental prices are controlled by the government. Taxis are available in the major cities, and can be called by telephone or simply waved down in the street. All taxis operate by meter, and can be hired for the day.

An economical method of travel is the service taxi. Fares are set by the government, and tend to be higher than bus fares but lower than taxi fares. Service cabs operate within cities and also connect major cities and towns.

Government and private buses operate within and between major cities. Private bus companies run luxury air-conditioned buses that offer day trips to the major tourist sites. Limousine service is also available for short distances as well as day trips.

The national air carrier, Royal Jordanian, operates reasonably priced flights between Amman and Aqaba six times a week.

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    Medical technology has entered a stage in which it can assure those females who do everything right from the age of about 20, that they will never look older than in their mid-30s, even when they are 30 years older.

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    http://www.asiatour.com/jordan/e-02trav/ej-tra12.htm
    Jan Garanoz
    869/116 Thanon Pemavipat,
    Chiang Rai, 57000 Thailand
    Created: September 1, 1995
    Last updated: February 13, 2010