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#111
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On Thu, 25 Jan 2007 00:13:16 -0800, "G. Sylvester"
wrote: First off, the mother called the Flight Attendants as stewardess. She might as well had called them whores. Ok, maybe not that bad but it is demeaning and the term steward/ess has been out of use for a couple of decades. She should learn the right name. It is. I've been flying since they had fans on the front. They will always be stews and stewardesses, just Oshkosh will always be "Oshkosh and not Airventure Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair) www.rogerhalstead.com |
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#112
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On Wed, 24 Jan 2007 17:51:57 GMT, "Steve Foley"
wrote: "john smith" wrote in message ... Everyones problems were solved. While the parents may not have been happy, they received sufficient time to get the child under control before the next one. But...... They were not permitted to board another flight within 24 hours, and the airline did not return their luggage or carseat. They should have charged them storage. Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair) www.rogerhalstead.com |
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#113
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On 24 Jan 2007 11:56:46 -0800, "george" wrote:
On Jan 25, 7:18 am, "Jim Macklin" wrote: It is the best news I've heard about airline travel. But why did they refund the money after they boarded the flight and caused the disruption. "Kingfish" wrote in oglegroups.com... | Can't get your kid to behave on a plane? There's always Trailways... | |http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/16773655/?GT1=8921 | Our national carrier won't allow children to be seated anywhere close to unrelated males.... I think that's unaccompanied children OTOH I'd prefer they put them on the other end of the plane. I've raised two batches of kids and the grand kids are almost out of highschool. I've paid my dues. And for a minute there some people were unhappy with such a good idea Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair) www.rogerhalstead.com |
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#114
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On Wed, 24 Jan 2007 15:16:57 -0500, Jake Brodsky
wrote: Kingfish wrote: Can't get your kid to behave on a plane? There's always Trailways... http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/16773655/?GT1=8921 I'm appalled at how many of you were cheering AirTran on for their behavior. I'm a father of three typically well behaved children. snip I'd have given the parents a few minutes to calm the kid down. It makes for better press... They had already given them 15 minutes. That is far more than I'd give. The airline has a responsibility to the passengers to get them to the next stop and make connections if possible. If said kid causes a delay and some one misses a connection that costs a lot of money and more agrivation. The airline did the right thing althoug I agree they could have used a bit more tact. As I said in another post. I'm almost to the grand kids stage. I paid my dues and should not have to listen to some one elses kid misbehaving no matter how much energy they have. Jake Brodsky Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair) www.rogerhalstead.com |
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#115
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On Wed, 24 Jan 2007 15:30:52 -0800, C J Campbell
wrote: On Wed, 24 Jan 2007 12:16:57 -0800, Jake Brodsky wrote (in article ): Kingfish wrote: Can't get your kid to behave on a plane? There's always Trailways... http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/16773655/?GT1=8921 I'm appalled at how many of you were cheering AirTran on for their behavior. I'm a father of three typically well behaved children. Perhaps most of you prefer not to remember, but kids have energy: LOTS of energy. Yes, my kids do sit still on aircraft. I've taught them very well how to behave in airports and on board an airplane. They also have practice from long road trips. They've done well --even my three year old. The parents had a few minutes. They also were given a refund, a free flight the next day, and free round-trip tickets to anywhere the airline goes. And still the father acts like a spoiled brat who believes that everyone else should wait on him. Well, you see where the daughter gets it from. Don't forget the part where he told the gate attendent she should stop talking now. She should have said, no, I'm just getting started. Heck, you get all that for a 3 year old's tantrum, flying my grandkids to Orlando might be profitable... :-) Good Gawd no. Mine are teen agers. The passengers and crew might handel it well, but I don't know if I could. :-)) Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair) www.rogerhalstead.com |
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#116
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It's a really incredible coincidence that all the FAA's careful
scientific research produced figures that always came out to nice round numbers of hours. Who would have thought that the ideal limitation for a year would just happen to be exactly 1000 hours? -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
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#117
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Grumman-581 wrote:
On Thu, 25 Jan 2007 16:50:27 +0000, in , B A R R Y wrote: Imagine how that kid might have acted for the entire flight? G Before or after the sweat sock and duct tape? New product idea! A kit, similar to a first aid kit, containing duct tape, ty-wraps, an old sock, and maybe a ball gag (in the first class version), neatly packed and mounted near each flight attendant station. You read it here first! |
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#118
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BOS has short runways
"Roger" wrote in message ... | On 24 Jan 2007 15:18:47 -0800, "Jay Honeck" | wrote: | | | I wonder if the pilots had to trim the aircraft to compensate for the | load. | | On an airliner? Nah. | | This *is* a serious issue, however. I spent several hours on a flight | to Atlanta seated in the last row of seats (the ones where the ceiling | curves over your head) next to a guy who was the size of two of me. | | I liked riding DC-9s and their climb rate, but I heard people complain | about noise and vibration. I couldn't figure out what they were | talking about on a "9". THEN I had the privilege of taking a wait | listing out of Boston for O'Hare. (I should have waited for the next | day as the stay would have been more entertaining) At any rate I had | the outside seat in the row with no window and the seat back wouldn't | move. One seat farther back and I'd have had a private room. I | thought I was on a Gray Hound buss. It sounded like one, it vibrated | like one, and it even smelled like one. | | But as to the W&B. I flew out of Boston this time on a DC10. This was | in the days before they limited carryon. Mine was a shoulder bag about | the size of a duffle bag and just as heavy. It would just fit in the | overhead if you worked really hard. I don't think there was an empty | seat. Of course being packed in like sardines IIRC, we were all | overjoyed to hear the announcement "You all will be glad to hear we | are number 57 in line to depart" This was out of Logan. At any rate | I was kinda glad we had to burn off fuel for over an hour when we took | off. It seemed as if we were getting light on the gear almost half | way down the runway. We finally started to bounce along on the gear as | we kept slowly accelerating. Finally the nose came up, but I could | feel the tail kinda tuck under. Any one who has ever felt over | rotation knows that feeling. At that point I must have grabbed the | arm rests as the guy beside me asked if I was OK. I squeaked out "I'm | fine" and then checked for finger prints in the arm rests. We went | between the cranes off the end of the runway as we cleared the | buildings. I have never seen a commercial flight clear the end of the | runway lower than that except for a DC-6 a longggg time ago. I was at | the end of the runway that time and saw his tires hit the tops of the | grass and weeds. I know they have checks on the weight of passengers | and baggage but I'll swear that DC-10 was overloaded. | | At any rate a couple minutes later the guy asked me something and I | replied that sometimes it's better not to know what's going on. He | didn't ask any more questions. | | When we got to Cleveland I was behind schedule due to the storm we had | just flown over, around, and through had knocked out the RADAR. One | nice young woman (pretty too IIRC) offered to help by getting my | carryon down. I hollered "don't" as I reached from behind her to catch | the bag just as she pulled the bag out of the overhead. We both went | over the armrest behind me with her ending up in my lap and the bag | over her lap. I sure was glad she though it was funny. Made the whole | trip worthwhile. (We had to wait until some kind soul helped move the | bag.) | | Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) | (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair) | www.rogerhalstead.com |
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#119
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"Grumman-581" wrote in message
news ![]() Now, on the other hand, if the problem that someone has is just a flat, I'm less likely to help them since I figure that if you own a car you should know how to change a flat... When my wife had a flat tire a few years back, on I-25 between Colo. Springs and Pueblo, four guys on motorcycles stopped to help. She was a bit freaked out and kept her 40S&W handy as they walked up. The head of the bunch took out his ID, and showed it through the window. It was four guys from 4th Infantry Division at Fort Carson. |
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#120
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"Grumman-581" wrote in message news ![]() On Thu, 25 Jan 2007 16:50:27 +0000, in , B A R R Y wrote: Imagine how that kid might have acted for the entire flight? G Before or after the sweat sock and duct tape? A few years back I was flying from Denver to Miami. Due to the miles I used to do on the airlines, I was on a first class upgrade. One row back and on the other side of the aisle was fellow, evidently named 'Josh', escorting his elderly father to Miami. The old man had Turrets Syndrome (or something) and spent the entire flight YELLING, "Josh, where are you?", "Josh, where is the (something or other)".... On and on, again and again, every six to ten seconds....for 1800 miles and four hours. |
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