
WOW founder wants to try again
With perhaps more optimism than is called for, the founder of failed discount airline WOW hopes to return to the air by June.
With perhaps more optimism than is called for, the founder of failed discount airline WOW hopes to return to the air by June.
The end was sudden but predictable for one of the splashiest ultra-discount carriers.
Low fares to Europe must be purchased as part of a roundtrip.
Continuing cash crises force the struggling airline to drop four more North American cities.
With cash short and fleet shrinking, WOW’s future looks bleak at best unless new investors can save it.
Iceland’s upstart discounter flies into financial troubles and an aborted merger with Icelandair, but new financing appears in the works.
Perhaps easing pressure on both, Iceland’s two discount airlines will continue as separate operations but with one ownership.
If you’ve always had a yen to see nature’s most spectacular light show, the Northern Lights, or if you prefer, Aurora Borealis, now’s the time, according to experts cited by The Telegraph (UK).
Dropping service in some Midwest cities, Icelandic discount airline WOW insists it still plans to be a big player in U.S. markets.
With perhaps more optimism than is called for, the founder of failed discount airline WOW hopes to return to the air by June.
The end was sudden but predictable for one of the splashiest ultra-discount carriers.
Continuing cash crises force the struggling airline to drop four more North American cities.
With cash short and fleet shrinking, WOW’s future looks bleak at best unless new investors can save it.
Iceland’s upstart discounter flies into financial troubles and an aborted merger with Icelandair, but new financing appears in the works.
Perhaps easing pressure on both, Iceland’s two discount airlines will continue as separate operations but with one ownership.
If you’ve always had a yen to see nature’s most spectacular light show, the Northern Lights, or if you prefer, Aurora Borealis, now’s the time, according to experts cited by The Telegraph (UK).
Dropping service in some Midwest cities, Icelandic discount airline WOW insists it still plans to be a big player in U.S. markets.