Word: harr
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Harr...
...School professors, Alan M. Dershowitz, and Charles M. Harr, also say they are advising the transition team, but again, there seem to be no solid job prospects there either...
...other type is a STOL (for short takeoff and landing) plane for brief hops between urban airports. France's Dassault-Brequet Mercure craft should be providing STOL-type service by year's end, and no U.S.-built STOL will be available anywhere near then. Says Karl G. Harr Jr., president of the Aerospace Industries Assoc. of America: "The Europeans are developing and flying aircraft for which no U.S. counterpart exists...
...other major aerospace customer, the airline industry, has been set back by the general economic slump and is contracting for almost no new equipment. A confidential White House study estimates that airlines will suffer a $134 million loss on operations in 1971. Says Karl G. Harr Jr., president of the Aerospace Industries Association of America, in painful understatement: "We've got a severe weather problem...
...idea is also attractive because it has already shown glimmerings of success in some cases. The Aerospace Association's President Harr estimates that the industry now handles $2.5 billion worth of non-aerospace business annually, including urban studies, pollution control and housing. For example, the Rohr Corp., a subcontractor of airplane parts, two years ago began studying rail-transit problems and has since won a profitable, $66.7 million contract to construct cars for San Francisco's new rapid-transit system. Railroads of all kinds are the projects most often mentioned as possible conversion targets for the aerospace industry. Says...