Word: traffice
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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Florida got ready for the biggest winter tourist rush in its history. Miami hotels are booked solid to mid-March, and incoming airline traffic is running 20% ahead of the 1956 peak. Altogether, 8,500,000 to 9,000,000 outstaters are planning to flock to Florida in the next twelve months-about 1,000,000 more than in the past year. To house the horde, the sun-blessed state is basking in her greatest building boom. In Miami alone, $75 million is going into new tourist facilities, including four new luxury hotels, nine Cadillac-class motels and 59 apartment...
Local fans will find Yale's mammoth Bowl much like more familiar Soldiers Field. Parking problems, heavy traffic, and huge crowds of spectators make the Bowl area a driver's nightmare...
Proportional Representation. In Hialeah, Fla., Mayor Henry Milander indignantly denied rival politicos' claims that he fixes $5,000 worth of traffic tickets a month, said he fixes less than $500 worth a month...
Into the Red. When Central's Chairman Robert R. Young came to the road* in 1954 after a bitter proxy battle, he was sure he had the cure for those ailments. He introduced time-and labor-saving centralized traffic control, installed pushbutton freight yards and increased dieselization. Last year he announced the beginning of a $500 million capital-improvement program, and early this year confidently crowed that Central's stock soon would be up to $100 and paying $8 a share. The stock climbed briefly, but Young saw his hopes dashed as Central's financial position deteriorated...
Directed Connection. In Los Angeles, a Metropolitan Coach Lines bus driver rolled six miles nonstop through morning rush-hour traffic, zoomed past red lights and waiting passengers after Rider Netti Appleton, 39, enraged over bus-stop delays, jammed a loaded .38 pistol into his side, barked: "Keep going-I'm late for work...