Word: chartering
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...hard put to make ends meet these days," explains Luft hansa Spokesman Claus Dehio, "so fares will have to be kept to a reasonable level, probably just below the rates suggested at Montreal." Still, there is considerable feeling that IATA fares must come down to a level competitive with charter airlines, which are stealing a growing volume of North Atlantic passengers by offering fares as low as $90 one way. Though traffic between E rope and North America on the sched uled lines is normal this summer, many airlines are having trouble filling the additional seats on their newly acquired...
...Scalp, and soon spread to the U.S. where the charter club was organized at Milton, Mass., in 1897. In the intervening years, it had brief periods of popularity and was kept alive during its several down cycles largely through the efforts of the Aiken Preparatory School of Aiken, S.C., which uses it to help teach regulation polo. Explains Carlos Concheso, a New York banker and one of the founders of the U.S.B.P.A.: "It's a good way to develop a feel for the fundamentals, especially for the teamwork that is so necessary...
...tangle of transatlantic fares already in effect. Lufthansa officials also claimed that they want to lower some rates even below those now proposed by I.A.T.A. Should the high basic rates of scheduled carriers remain in effect, however, Lufthansa is in a strong position to become a major charter carrier. Its charter subsidiary Condor was the first such firm to buy a Boeing 747 jetliner, and it will soon have a second...
Taking another tack, the U.S. could introduce a separate procedural resolution declaring that Taipei is a U.N. member in good standing-despite uncertainties about what it represents-and thus could not, under the U.N. charter, be ousted without a two-thirds vote. If either version were successful, Taipei would stay in the U.N.-and Peking probably would, as it has promised, refuse to take its newly won seat...
Last week the first 46 of Hamburg's new teachers arrived via a charter flight paid for by the Germans. "It all sounded like a great adventure," said Newlywed William Woodcock III. "Neither my wife nor I had ever been outside the U.S." The teacher transplant idea is catching on fast. One neighboring German state has started U.S. advertising of its own. Two others have asked Hamburg for the names of the 400 applicants it rejected...