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...Square-to-New York trips featuring wireless internet—has suspended service entirely as a result of a licensing hitch, just two weeks after the company’s buses began running. The company’s service has been halted since Nov. 26, Vamoose co-owner Florence Bluzenstein said, because the company failed to secure one of the two licenses required to operate out of Cambridge. The company had gotten a “stop-location” allowed Vamoose to stop in front of either the Charles Hotel or on Mt. Auburn St., in front of Lowell...

Author: By Frances Jin, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Cambridge Puts a Stop to Vamoose Bus | 12/13/2007 | See Source »

...Boston, Vamoose’s initial plan to start a service from Copley Square has met with a steady disapproval from Boston city officials. “We’re not going to Boston at all right now,” said company co-owner Florence Bluzenstein, adding that they are waiting for the city to change its position. Vamoose is a newcomer to Massachusetts, having operated between New York City and the Washington D.C. area. The $40 round trip ticket to New York allows Cantabrigians to travel from a more convenient location than South Station, which is used...

Author: By Michal Labik, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Vamoose Secures Cambridge Operating Permit | 11/13/2007 | See Source »

...Boston does not give Vamoose permission to operate off of a curbside, moving to South Station will not be an option because there is no space there, according to Bluzenstein...

Author: By Michal Labik, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Vamoose May Not Leave the Station | 11/2/2007 | See Source »

...Florence Bluzenstein, the co-owner of Vamoose, said yesterday that the lack of permission to park in Boston and Cambridge will have no impact on Vamoose’s services or prices...

Author: By Michal Labik, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Vamoose May Not Leave the Station | 11/2/2007 | See Source »

...Gate. Additional buses will run on Fridays and Sundays, with the exact number determined by customer demand and feedback. Vamoose, a Hasidic-owned company based in New York, is selling one-way tickets for $22 over the phone or at vamoosebus.com. In an interview yesterday, Vamoose co-owner Florence Bluzenstein pointed to guaranteed seating as an advantage over competitors. “We only book as many seats as we have available,” she said. “We have approximately 56 seats on every bus.” Competing bus companies Fung Wah, Lucky Star, and Greyhound...

Author: By Katherine L. Miller, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Soon: A Widener-NY Express | 10/30/2007 | See Source »

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