Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Cayman Airways" ¶ 3
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

airline and struggled
The airline struggled financially and after attempts to reorganize and secure additional capital were unsuccessful, the airline ceased operations on October 14, 2005.
According to Rodger Whittle, Nationwide's corporate quality director, the airline struggled to accommodate the remaining holiday season traffic and revenue were under stress.

airline and throughout
The government airline, Imperial Airways / BOAC, which had operated Darrell's Island before the war, adopted its war time role, and its camouflaged flying boats maintained trans-Atlantic service through Bermuda throughout the war.
Western Airlines was a large airline based in California, with operations throughout the Western United States and Western Canada, as well as into Mexico.
The no-marriage rule was eliminated throughout the US airline industry by the 1980s.
On 4 December 2008, Cimber Air announced that it had purchased Sterling and intended to restore the airline as a separate company, with a gradual expansion throughout Europe.
Eastern ceased operations in 1991 due to labor issues and competition throughout the Eastern seaboard, leaving Delta with the only major airline hub in Atlanta.
It is the major air transportation center for the San Joaquin Valley, with major air carrier service to airline hubs throughout the Western United States.
As of June 2009, there were over 450 scheduled airline departures per day to 109 nonstop destinations throughout the United States, Canada, and Mexico, as well as daily nonstop service to Paris.
The airport continued to be served by commercial airlines throughout the regulated period of airline history, until the passage of the Airline Deregulation Act of 1978.
The new company provides services throughout Nunavut's Qikiqtani Region utilising First Air ’ s fleet .. Another airline, Sakku First Aviation, was started the same time in partnership with Sakku Investments Corporation in Nunavut's Kivalliq Region.
As described this sub-branding is pretty consistent throughout the airline industry of the United States, with all the regional airlines, mainline airlines, and the regional airline holding companies, as well as the mainline airlines holding companies participating.
The Braniff brothers started a new airline in 1930 as Braniff Airways, Inc. During the 1930s, Braniff Airways expanded its service throughout the Midwest.
During World War II the airline leased a portion of its fleet to the United States military, and its facilities at Dallas Love Field and throughout the country became training sites for pilots and mechanics.
Pacific Western Airlines was an airline that operated scheduled flights throughout western Canada and charter services around the world from the 1950s through the 1980s.
Pilots and airline personnel throughout the industry petitioned the NTSB to revise its report.
Civil Air Transport ( CAT ) ( 民航空運公司 ) was a Nationalist Chinese airline, later owned by the CIA, that supported United States covert operations throughout East and Southeast Asia.
The airline operated a network of regional routes throughout New South Wales.
Formerly known as Haile Selassie I International Airport, it is the main hub of Ethiopian Airlines, the national airline which has service to destinations in Ethiopia and throughout the African continent, as well as nonstop service to Asia, Europe, and North America.
Covert flights for the military were not uncommon throughout the airline's history, given its roots in Civil Air Transport ( CAT ), as with its sister airline Air America, originally owned by General Claire Lee Chennault, commander of the Flying Tigers fighter squadron in Southeast Asia.
Approximately 998 pilots worked for the airline based throughout the country.
This remained the core of the company's business throughout its history, although the airline also expanded into a number of other geographic areas over the years.
Quebecair grew to become a second tier regional airline, operating BAC One-Eleven jets and Fokker F27 Friendship turboprops on routes throughout the province of Quebec and into New Brunswick.
The airline prospered as it provided a vast network of medical, passenger and mail services throughout the Northern Territory ( NT ), although it would eventually collapse following a decision by then NT Chief Minister Paul Everingham, a political opponent of Calder, to give competing airline Ansett Airlines the rights to the Darwin-Alice Springs route.

airline and early
Transport in Sudan during the early 1990s included an extensive railroad system that served the more important populated areas except in the far south, a meager road network ( very little of which consisted of all-weather roads ), a natural inland waterway — the Nile River and its tributaries — and a national airline that provided both international and domestic service.
These types, and the DH. 9A, a developed version that served for many years with the postwar Royal Air Force, formed the basis of early de Havilland designed airliners, including the company's DH. 16 and DH. 18 types which were operated by Aircraft Transport and Travel Limited, the first airline established in the United Kingdom, also owned by George Holt Thomas.
This included the conversion of Handley Page Halifax bombers into freighters, six of which were sold to Bond Air Services, an early post-war independent British airline.
British Aviation Services ( BAS ), an early post-World War II airline holding company and air transport operator, became one of Silver City's shareholders, initially taking a 10 % stake.
Because the airline ’ s existing fleet of 12 airplanes is rapidly becoming outdated, in 2002 three new aircraft were leased for eight years, and in early 2006 the airline announced plans to acquire six new aircraft, with options for an additional four, beginning in 2012.
The airline was involved in several covert operations: In the early 1950s, El Al airlifted over 160, 000 immigrants to Israel from India, Iran, Iraq and Yemen as part of Operation Magic Carpet and Operation Ezra and Nehemiah.
In the early 1970s, Keel went on a blind date with airline stewardess Judy Magamoll, who was 25 years his junior and knew nothing about his stardom.
The group began operating package holidays and launched its own in-house charter airline, in the early 1980s.
In the early 1970s the Maltese government made a call for an international airline partner to help set up an airline.
On the other hand, an airline may also apply differential pricing to " the same seat " over time, e. g. by discounting the price for an early or late booking ( without changing any other fare condition ).
The airline previously served the city in the early 1990s.
LAB operated a limited number of charter flights during late 2007 and early 2008 on behalf of AeroSur, but has since fully gone out of business, with its airline license officially been revoked in 2010.
As a consequence to this abysmal publicity, in early 1995 the government of the Dominican Republic decided to shut down the airline.
But as the role of women in the air grew, and airline companies began to realise the publicity value of their stewardesses, more feminine lines and colours began to appear in the late 1930s and early 1940s.
Passenger air service began with one DC-3 and a C-46, and one of the early milestones was San Andres, where it was the first airline to provide service to the island.
During the early 1980s, Dorado was served by Dorado Wings, a small airline that operated commuter flights between Dorado Airport and Luis Muñoz Marín International Airport in San Juan.
Three Harbin Y-12s were added to the fleet in early 2009 and in October the same year the airline took delivery of a new ATR 72-500 aircraft to replace its ATR 42.
Court Line was a prominent British holiday charter airline during the early 1970s based at Luton Airport in Bedfordshire.
Although Eastern was a larger airline than Delta until airline deregulation in 1978, Delta was an early adopter of the hub and spoke route system, with Atlanta as its primary hub between the Midwest and Florida, giving it an early competitive advantage in the Atlanta market.
Its safety practices were called into question early in its life, and the airline was temporarily grounded after the 1996 crash of ValuJet Flight 592.

4.079 seconds.