Former WWE wrestler-turned-fitness model Eva Marie says her husband was allowed into the Qantas business lounge while in gym attire but she wasn’t.
Author: Jayme Deerwester, USA TODAY
Amtrak reverses course on charging wheelchair users $25,000 to reconfigure train car
Amtrak had told an accessibility advocacy group that it would have to charge them $25,000 to reconfigure its trains to take two extra wheelchairs.
Qantas passenger says airline’s negligence led to dog’s ‘100% preventable’ death
A Qantas passenger is calling out the Australian airline, saying her dog Duke, a 6-year-old boxer, died from heat sickness as a result of negligence.
Close call: Air Canada Express flight loses wheel after takeoff, lands safely in Montreal
“2020 is starting off rather well,” cracked one passenger on the regional flight. The Air Canada Express plane safely returned to MontrĂ©al.
State Department urges all Americans to leave Iraq after US embassy attack
The State Department says it has suspended consular services at its embassy in Baghdad following the New Year’s Eve attack by Iranian-backed groups.
USA TODAY’s top 10 Travel stories of 2019: Hurricane, scorpion on plane, jetway births
From the scorpion aboard a United Airlines flight to the baby born on an American Airlines jetway, these were the stories readers clicked on in 2019.
Flight attendants sue Frontier Airlines, allege discrimination against new moms
Flight attendants have accused Frontier of making them go on unpaid leave well before giving birth and being unaccommodating to breastfeeding moms.
The strangest items stolen from hotels: Grand pianos, bathroom fixtures, sauna benches
Forget about taking those mini bottles of shampoo or even the hotel robe. This is some next-level hotel thievery. We’re talking mattresses and TVs.
Honolulu World War II museum fights to remain open for more Pearl Harbor anniversaries
Gentrification is pricing the Home of the Brave Museum out of an increasingly tony Honolulu enclave.
Six Carnival cruise ships have been certified as sensory-inclusive. Here’s what that means
Carnival Cruise Line says its full fleet will be certified by March 2020, with employees trained to assist people with sensory disorders like autism.