Company Watch - American Airlines.American Airlines American Airlines Major U.S. airline. American was created through a merger of several smaller U.S. airlines and incorporated in 1934. It continued to buy the routes of other airlines, becoming an international carrier in the 1970s; its routes include South America, the American maintenance employees set cost-savings goal. Employees at American Airlines' Kansas City Kansas City, two adjacent cities of the same name, one (1990 pop. 149,767), seat of Wyandotte co., NE Kansas (inc. 1859), the other (1990 pop. 435,146), Clay, Jackson, and Platte counties, NW Mo. (inc. 1850). , Mo., maintenance facility hope to save the company $150 million by the end of 2007. They are trying to reduce expenses and generate revenue with outside contracts. February 10, 2006 American to remove rear galleys from MD-80s. American Airlines will remove rear galleys from some of its jets and replace them with seats, a move that will generate revenue, reduce weight, and lower fuel costs. Delta Air Lines also said it would add more seats this summer. February 9, 2006 Business travelers return to American: A fare restructuring restructuring - The transformation from one representation form to another at the same relative abstraction level, while preserving the subject system's external behaviour (functionality and semantics). program has helped American Airlines improve its financial performance, TheStreet.com's Ted Reed Ralph Edwin Reed (born October 18, 1890, in Beaver, Pennsylvania, died February 16, 1959) was a professional baseball player who played 1 season for the Newark Pepper of the Federal League. References
prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. Scott Nason, American's vice president of revenue management. February 9, 2006 American adds fee to compensate for Heathrow fuel shortage. American Airlines has added a fee to flights in and out of London's Heathrow Airport to make up for costs resulting from a fuel shortage. U.S. carries protest the fuel rationing rationing, allotment of scarce supplies, usually by governmental decree, to provide equitable distribution. It may be employed also to conserve economic resources and to reinforce price and production controls. system, which allows British carriers to fill up with more fuel than foreign airlines. American is "increasingly concerned" with the lack of progress in solving the problem, the airline says. February 6, 2006 |
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