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Wall Street's airline industry watchers agree. Says Analyst Julius Maldutis of Salomon Bros.: "We believe that the current schedule of fewer flights will become institutionalized. Load factors will rise sharply, fuel consumption will fall, and price wars and discount fares will become a fond and distant memory." Analysts estimate that airlines, which collectively earned only $75 million in 1980, could earn $400 million to $600 million this year, and perhaps as much as $1 billion next year...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Shootout in the Skies | 9/28/1981 | See Source »

...else performs for Jerry's Kids? Lesser Wayne Newtons, really. There's Julius LaRosa, who sang on Arthur Godfrey's radio show. And Tony Orlando, sans Dawn. Tony Orlando, Otis Elevator Co's favorite performer. Tony Orlando, who lives in that sapping--if profitable--wasteland reserved for performers with one smash record so monstrously huge that no one will ever forget their names, but, by the same token, so monstrously huge that they will never come close to matching it. It's a career built on the past, and thus that much safer for the audience; no surprises here. Orlando...

Author: By William E. Mckibben, | Title: Boston: 267-2200 | 9/14/1981 | See Source »

...company for whom Robert Fletcher designed costumes in the AST's first season was a little-known young Canadian actor who played Antony in Julius Caesar and Ferdinand in The Tempest. His name was Christopher Plummer. The next year he portrayed Henry V both in Canada and Scotland--a stint that catapulted him to stardom, and a performance I have always regretted missing. For the past two decades Plummer has merited inclusion on any list of Plummer has merited inclusion on any list of the dozen finest actors in the English-speaking world. Like Guinness and (for a time) Brando...

Author: By Caldwell Titcomb, | Title: More Than a Touch of Harry in the Night | 7/17/1981 | See Source »

...work or play, everybody emits wordless signals of infinite variety. Overt, like a warm smile. Spontaneous, like a raised eyebrow. Involuntary, like leaning away from a salesperson to resist a deal. Says Julius Fast in Body Language: "We rub our noses for puzzlement. We clasp our arms to isolate ourselves or to protect ourselves. We shrug our shoulders for indifference." Baseball pitchers often dust back a batter with a close ball that is not intended to hit but only to signal a warning claim of dominance. The twitchings of young children too long in adult company are merely involuntary signals...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Essay: Why So Much Is Beyond Words | 7/13/1981 | See Source »

...survivors' meeting after a fellow prisoner suggested that if they came out alive they might some day meet as free men. "We all laughed," Michel recalled. "But the idea stayed with those of us who made it." In Jerusalem, he tracked down three acquaintances from Auschwitz. When Julius Paltiel from Trondheim, Norway, threw his arms around Michel, the American said, "You see, we made it!" To criticism by some survivors who stayed home that the gathering would revive traumatic memories, Michel replied, "We are meeting because we want to see and touch each other again. We want to celebrate...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Israel: Commemorating the Holocaust | 6/29/1981 | See Source »

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