Word: expressing
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Both McCarroll and Alexander have mixed feelings about being a People Express customer. "It's an airline not many people like, but they fly it anyway because of the price," says McCarroll. Says Alexander: "It would be O.K. for me and my wife Cathy, but not for our sons, four-year-old Brian and six-month-old Kevin. With those long waits in the terminal, I think they're a little young to be People people...
...national campaign he was not exactly starting yet, while his wife Lee served coffee and cookies to TV crews in the kitchen. To some 250 supporters gathered at the nearby El Rancho Restaurant on Saturday, he said of his retirement from the Senate, "It is time for me to express my commitment to our state and to our nation in other ways, and perhaps on a farther horizon." That did not mean, he stressed, that he is an official candidate for the White House. But "does it mean I still have an interest in being President...
...spark for the latest skirmish is People Express, the fastest-growing airline in the annals of aviation. People is slashing most of its fares this week by 30% to 60%. Passengers can fly from the carrier's Newark base to Miami, Fort Lauderdale and other Florida cities for $69, to Los Angeles and San Francisco for $99, to Minneapolis for $49 and to Greensboro or Raleigh, N.C., for $29. By changing planes in Newark, People Express customers can fly from Chicago to Florida or from Boston to Houston for $99. People's biggest bargain of all is a nonstop flight...
...their customers. Ellen Farmer, a legal secretary in Elgin, Ill., plans to take a break from the cold weather later this month by boarding Midway Airlines' $99 flight from Chicago to Orlando. Says she: "I don't think Midway would have had such a low fare if People Express hadn't forced them...
Wall Street thinks that many airlines, including Eastern, Pan Am, Western and Ozark, are vulnerable to takeovers. But People Express is not on the hit list, Burr insists. Says he: "It would be nearly impossible to take over People. We're bulletproof." Burr points out that 62% of his airline's stock is controlled by employees, directors or other friendly investors...