Texas Jewish Post (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 29, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 21, 1977 Page: 6 of 20
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Pan Am Asks For New TransAtlantic Route Hearings
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WASHINGTON - Pan
American Word Airways
asked the Civil Aeronautics
Board July 7 to immedi-
ately reopen the Transat-
lantic Route Proceeding for
a speedy hearing to receive
evidence supporting Pan
Am as the carrier between
Houston, Dallas / Fort
Worth and London, and,
between Atlanta and Lon-
don.
In a motion filed with
CAB, Pan Am urged that
“highly expedited hearings”
with a “taut procedural
schedule” be held to insure
that U.S. - flag Transatlan-
tic service from Texas and
Georgia can begin in early
October to be fully competi-
tive with that planned, or
already announced, by the
British carrier.
Declaring that key ele-
ments in last year’s Trans-
atlantic recommendations
had become “unglued” as a
result of the new United
States - United Kingdom
bilateral air agreement,
Pan Am asked the CAB not
only to reaffirm its earlier
decision to award Pan Am
the Houston, Dallas / Fort
Worth to London route, but
also to name Pan Am as the
carrier to operate the
Atlanta to U.K. route.
^ On July 15, 1976, the
CAB recommended to the
White House that Pan Am
be given the Texas to
London routes and that
Delta Air Lines be awarded
Atlanta to London. How-
ever, the recommendations
were remanded to the CAB
pending outcome of the
U.S. - U.K. bilateral air
agreement which was initi-
ated on June 22.
“Whatever ‘plus’ Delta
may once have had from
the standpoint of the ability
to provide maximum public
service ... has now been
vitally eroded by the new
U.S. - U.K. agreement,”
“ Pan Am told the CAB.
A main point, Pan Am
said, is the limitation
arising from the new bila-
teral which pairs Atlanta
with Gatwick Airport ra-
ther than Heathrow.
“Gatwick is not Heath-
row. It is an airport some
27 miles south of London
which has far, far fewer
international flights than
does Heathrow. Delta could
thus provide service for the
people of Atlanta only to
this far more isolated
airport,” the Pan Am
motion said.
This would “significantly
restrict the public service
which Delta can offer
Atlanta. Pan Am, on the
other hand, can and will,
provide Atlanta with ser-
vice beyond Gatwick to
Amsterdam, thus compen-
sating for the loss of
connections otherwise
available at Heathrow.”
Noting that statictics
show that nearly 75 percent
of the Atlanta boarding
traffic goes beyond the
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AN ADVENTURE IN DINING
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Daily & Sunday : 11:00 a.m. to 10:30 p.m.
Friday: 10:00 a.m. to Midnight
Saturday: 11:30 a.m. to Midnight
11758 W. DIVISION - Arlington- 469-9641
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FOR THE MOST EXQUISITE
i CHINESE CUISINE
L and
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iNeasure
Compare your bread with 1*B Rare. You wfll make
a mart rewarding discovery. Treasured J*B it ihipped
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which numbered Charles Dickens among its patrons.
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Sat • 5 • 11 Sun ■ 12 noon • 9 pjtn.
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U.K. to other European
points, Pan Am said that
Gatwick would be a “dead
end” for Delta passengers.
On the other hand, Pan Am
service beyond Gatwick to
Amsterdam would provide
passengers and shippers
with some 469 weekly
connecting flights from
J
Amsterdam to 18 Europea
cities.
In asking the CAB to
reaffirm its recommenda-
tion concerning the new
Texas to London route, Pan
Am noted that the newt-1
bilateral would permit it to!
serve Heathrow from Dal-
las / Fort Worth.
On the other hand, any
other U.S. carrier selected
Continued on page 19
LUNCH - Sun. - Fri. 11:30-3:00
DINNER - Sun. - Thurs. 5:00-10:00
Fri. - Sat. - 5:00-11:00 N
BUFFET - Sun. - Fri. -11:30-3:00
- Cocktail Lounge -
5Q51 Old Gianbury Rd. 294-1600 M
f a w. ^ w E
AN ENDURING MOTIF in
Japanese are for centuries,
the seven autumn grasses
and an abundant variety of
flowers adorn this 17th -
century Karaori outer robe.
Although cool - toned colors
of blue and brown predomi-
nate, fully eleven different
shades of purple, blue,
green, red, yellow and
white are woven into the
intricate design. This is one
of the priceless robes
included in the exhibition,
“The Tokugawa Collection:
No Robes and Masks,” on
view at Fort Worth’s
Kimbell Art Museum July
27- Sept. 4.
THE
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‘V
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HAVING A PARTY!
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MAKE IT A SUCCESS
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Open Until 3:00 A.M..
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( HAPPY BIRTHDAY
23 Ben Luskey
23 Harry Sheam Railin
23 Mrs. Sherwin Rubin
23 Jimmy Rosenthal
23 Phyllis Cohen
24 Steven Luskey
24 Mrs. Harry Bernstein
24 Harriet Ha mill Anton
24 Linda Davidson
24 Marvin Schuster
24 Leroy Gilvert
24 Paul Nudleman
24 Larry Schectman
24 Donna Beckman
25 Glenn Bates
25 Tina Woodruff
25 Elliot Dworkin
25 Meyer Jacobson
26 Joel Sheinberg,
Corpus Christi
26 Larry Festenfeld
26 Rene Schwartz Brooksby
27 Jeffrey Stuart Tharler,
Leominster, Mass.
27 Reuben Cristol
27 Yvonne Gordon
27 Herbert Codes
27 Gayle Fogiel Mehl
28 Richard Allen Kutner, Jr.
29 Alan Gassman
29 Mrs. Mickey Goldman
29 Marty Shiffman
I
I
C
1 HAPPY
j ANNIVERSARY |
23 Mr. and Mrs. Max Rosenstein
26 Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Goldman
27 Dr. and Mrs. Larry Steinberger
27 Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Spigel
mfNAN
minimi
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FRIDAY thru SATURDAY
11:30 A.M.- 12:00 Midnight
iE
Tel. (817) 737-7285
4500 Bellaire Dr. South'
AT HULEN STREET
Ft. Worth, Texas 76109
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Wisch, J. A. Texas Jewish Post (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 31, No. 29, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 21, 1977, newspaper, July 21, 1977; Fort Worth, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth753262/m1/6/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .