Word: carlson
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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AIRLINES are canceling more flights and stranding some passengers. United last week scratched 100 daily flights starting Jan. 7 and began an expected parade of layoffs by furloughing 950 employees, including 300 pilots. Eastern mailed layoff notices to 360 pilots. United President Edward E. Carlson, who once predicted a 4% rise in airline revenues next year, now expects "zero" growth. The effect on profits is a tossup: airlines will be helped by higher fares and the running of their remaining flights more fully loaded, but hurt by higher costs for jet fuel and ground maintenance of mothballed planes...
Dartmouth's Axtell, Carlson, Walker, and Tyler rounded out the top ten in the final finshings...
Number-three man Carlson and the fourth man, Walker, have provided good strength down the line for the Green all year. In Dartmouth's meet against Brown, the top four men placed within 34 seconds of each other...
...surprisingly, our cover story had its greatest impact in Minnesota. "We sold out better than four times the usual number of copies," said Roy Carlson of The Gopher News Co., "and we're still trying to get more." The Minnesota issue of TIME was in such short supply, in fact, that one barbershop chained its copy to the wall...
With beef cattle currently the scarcest commodity of all, some people-a tiny minority, to be sure-are willing to turn to the horse. Carlson's, a butcher shop in Westbrook, Conn., that recently converted to horsemeat exclusively, now sells about 6,000 Ibs. of the stuff a day. The cuts have the same names and shapes as beef but cost half as much. The savings will grow when beef prices shoot up again next month...