For three days traffic was banned from the streets, airports closed and business was forced to a standstill. |
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We are used to arriving at airports and being able to get on and off aeroplanes in very little time. |
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Flights from Gatwick are included, but connections from Scottish airports are extra. |
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Now the Government has set about building new roads and airports all over the shop. |
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The two airports are each served by one main runway, as are Aberdeen, Prestwick and Inverness. |
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He says that he writes in airports, on planes and trains and between meetings. |
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Each passenger's face would be scanned at airports and compared with the data in their passport. |
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Previously, passengers were forced to travel via Heathrow or other hub airports. |
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It was all about passenger landing rights at Heathrow and American airports. |
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Some carriers have already cancelled a series of flights from London airports. |
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It is worth checking, too, for seasonal charter flights from Scottish airports. |
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Empty planes, deserted airports and bankrupt airlines are a useful barometer of their fear. |
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In addition to primary airports there are a multitude of landing strips able to receive small planes. |
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Police are also thought to know the identity of a third man they are seeking and to have alerted ports and airports. |
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The airline mainly uses smaller airports and he admitted the size of Manchester Airport may be a factor. |
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Of course because of the incident all airports have stopped planes from taking off. |
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Sheer volume of passengers, particularly at London airports, lies at the root of the problem. |
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And all the hanging around in airports before and between flights is the worst bit of all. |
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Not everyone working in airports has to have an airside pass, just those who have to pass through security barriers. |
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He remembers planners using enlargements of his panoramic photos to model a contested expressway that would have linked the city's airports. |
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Somalia has hundreds of unmonitored airports and seaports where weapons and people can pass easily if enough financial incentive is applied. |
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Police are combing the streets, handing out flyers and watching airports and bus terminals. |
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But clearly, Gus Macdonald's airports review is the beginning of the end for unrestrained growth in air travel. |
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That is a natural extension to the existing role of regulator of civil transport and airports for safety purposes. |
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In the run-up to the finals, police at airports, rail stations and ports will be on the look-out for anyone trying to sneak to Portugal. |
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Several airports closed, leaving crews and jets out of position for onward journeys. |
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Of course, many a country is sensitive about having its airports, railway stations and bridges photographed. |
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Officials from these agencies are responsible for inspecting baggage and vehicles at airports and border crossings. |
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But US airports have only reopened to American carriers operating non-stop international flights from high-security foreign airports. |
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He was general manager of business development and marketing of JFK, La Guardia and Newark airports. |
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Today we see our soldiers being farewelled and welcomed at airports and docks and we also see their upset spouses and their confused children. |
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I can drown out local radio in the back of a taxi cab, and waiting around at airports is a positive pleasure. |
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Both airports claim they need a new runway to cope with increasing passenger numbers. |
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The ports and airports have been alerted in case he tries to leave the country. |
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Taiwan would use long-range missiles to strike China's inland military targets such as command centers, military supply stations, and airports. |
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Flights were scheduled into regional airports that were keen to attract new services and offered low landing and handling charges. |
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They liked our airports, our hotels and our eco-friendly sustainable Olympic village. |
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Like many airports, Charles de Gaulle uses sniffer dogs to try to detect plastic explosives. |
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Last-chance providers such as foreign-exchange desks in airports and ferry terminals tend to offer the poorest value. |
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Collared trench coats, foggy airports, Bergman's cheekbones, and Bogart's gun hardly seem the stuff of history. |
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Illegal aliens are working in airports, nuclear power plants, chemical facilities and military installations. |
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Power stations, airports and certain radio stations would have been blown up and key military installations would have been taken over. |
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You'll learn how to fly the airplane to other airports away from your local area, and you'll have time to refine your overall airmanship. |
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We are not prepared for snow so airports shut down and ungritted roads become lethal or impassable. |
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The majority of European airports which operate below capacity offer discounts to encourage airlines to use them. |
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Congested airports are putting tremendous strain on existing methods of air and ground control. |
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Pickpockets gravitate to such high-traffic areas as airports, vacation resorts and county fairs, Foley says. |
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You know, most accidents occur in and around airports when you're close to the ground. |
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He issued an edict that there will be no flight training at any of the Chicago-owned airports. |
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The voice was preceded with the sort of chimes you get at airports before a public announcement. |
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For example, TSA has already replaced walk-through metal detectors at airports across the country. |
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This will substantially reduce the congestion at the customs counters in arrival halls of international airports. |
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Despite signing the protocol, the Turkish government is refusing to open up its ports and airports for travel to and from Cyprus. |
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At major airports a multi agency response was put in place for people returning from the disaster area. |
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The international airports in Dallas, Houston and Los Angeles are also major way stations affected by the new rules. |
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Computer systems, bag conveyors and airport jetways operated at some airports, but not at others. |
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Ryanair is expanding its fleet, adding base airports and increasing its routes in Europe to take advantage of demand for budget travel. |
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But the regulator also rapped her over the knuckles about inefficiencies at Dublin and Shannon airports. |
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After training, these professionals are posted to the aerodrome section of various airports. |
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Commercial nuclear power reactors are clearly terror targets, particularly those near airports. |
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Ms Kapwepwe aims high when she talks about changing the out-look of airports to compete equally in the region to boost the tourism industry. |
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Most airports have a segmented circle, usually in the center of the airport, often lighted at night and typically containing a windsock. |
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An automated alert went out to airports and main airlines, including British Airways. |
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Which airlines and services need to operate in the London airports network? |
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They should worry about the public flying on commercial airliners out of these commercial airports. |
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We are condemned to spend hours and money waiting for connecting flights in foreign airports. |
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The spokesman added Ireland insists aircraft overflying national airspace or using its airports for refuelling cannot carry weaponry. |
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The first ones were located not at airports, as they are now, but along airways, spaced 15 to 25 miles apart. |
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Starbucks plan to roll out coffee kiosks at airports and supermarkets to meet this ambitious target. |
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And in both airports, the Swiss army knife on my key chain in my purse went through without a murmur. |
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The carriers were accused of fixing prices on fares through 34 hub airports. |
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Inland airports are havens for other species like Canada geese and red-tailed hawks. |
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Historically, major hub airports have grown up all over the world on the back of airlines which were dominant national flag carriers. |
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These include keeping an eye out for suspect bags, packages or vehicles, or people acting suspiciously in airports or stations. |
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These birds are common nesters at airfields and airports throughout their range. |
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No more long waits to hop planes at busy European or South-east Asian airports. |
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Before booking airfare, remember to research all your options, including alternate airports. |
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Other public places include airports, now have you tried to find the smoking area in one lately? |
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Travelers across the country saw delays and long lines at airports as a major storm system moved into the Great Lakes region. |
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However, smaller airports were let down by the quality of their facilities, such as shops and food outlets. |
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Such large quantities mean that airports cannot simply release antifreeze with storm water into nearby rivers and streams. |
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Until now, holidaymakers have been forced to travel a day earlier via Heathrow or other hub airports to get to Florida. |
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Granted, there are many who argue that the company is now the biggest predator on the landscape and is squeezing smaller carriers and airports. |
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Her intentions for airports are also likely to include improved public transport access. |
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Roads, ports and airports were today coping well with the wave of holidaymakers making Easter getaways. |
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It is only an hour or so from Rome's major airports, but once within the confines of the grounds it is unlikely that you will stray too far. |
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In a ripple effect, delays and cancellations reached many other airports that never lost power. |
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The range of conventional radar, the kind you see at airports with its rotating dish, is limited to direct line of sight. |
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In the new age of heightened risks and tightened security, who will keep our airports safe? |
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So we are not looking into who is on the apron of these airports and around these airplanes. |
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Although doomsayers predicted that the new baggage mandates would trigger chaos at airports, implementation went rather smoothly. |
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Should we expect hordes of eager Western tourists to start clogging up the arrivals halls at Bulgaria's airports? |
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Particularly troubling to business aviation is its proposal to restrict general aviation aircraft from using these airports altogether. |
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The company will continue to sell some film cameras in duty-free shops at airports, it said. |
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Such a force would bring together the local police with immigration and Customs officers at our airports and ports of entry. |
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Mac is the star of a project designed to chase birds away from the runways and landing strips of South Africa's airports. |
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Security has been stepped up at airports while Britons abroad have been warned to keep a low profile and keep an eye on news developments. |
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Parents, are you tired of lugging your child's bulky car seat through crowded, security-clogged airports? |
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A consumers report has declared that Stansted has the best check-in area of all UK airports. |
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At some small retail airports, some private planes that had been tied down were ripped loose from their moorings and flipped over. |
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Now, airlines are reaching the same point with check-in kiosks in airports. |
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Now, I am going issue the warning right now, that this is going to cause a backup in many airports. |
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Baggage handlers and check-in staff at 16 airports across the UK voted by four to one to accept a 4.2 per cent pay offer. |
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Passengers at airports and terminals across the country waited for hours for flights that did not materialise. |
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The virus has spread from airports and railway terminuses to the major cities now. |
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Fighter jets have been scrambled in the area and all three major metropolitan airports have been closed. |
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It is also right to focus its marketing strategy on niche retailing sites in underground stations and airports. |
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Unions are to ballot for industrial action from this week over fears that regional airports will not be able to survive on their own. |
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This has led to long security lines at airports and no screenings whatsoever at train stations and bus depots. |
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The biggest problem was matching cars with people, most of whom wanted one-way rentals out of airports. |
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The emphasis on infrastructure, airports, seaports and tourism will benefit the industry in general. |
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To maintain growth Ryanair will need to continue seeking out new routes to new secondary airports. |
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At five U.S. airports, some frequent flyers bypass lines by becoming registered travelers. |
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It operates a modern fleet of 21 aircraft, linking destinations in north and central Italy with airports in Germany and other European countries. |
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The truth is that the respective catchment areas of the three airports overlap to a vast extent. |
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At some airports, the cabin is sprayed with insecticides, the chemicals used probably being pyrethroids. |
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Engineering and management consultant Mott MacDonald, is partially interested in obtaining a concession for the two airports, Laden said. |
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Besides Hong Kong and Shenzhen, the area is served by airports in Macao and Zhuhai. |
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Security at Irish airports is tight enough to deal with any attempts to smuggle a handgun on board a plane, Aer Rianta said yesterday. |
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Friday is expected to be busiest of the Memorial Day weekend at both airports. |
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And as in Europe, airports should be free to hire certified private security firms to perform these services. |
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All tackle is provided, which avoids the bind of lugging rods and tackle around airports. |
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Yes, pilots can control the lights at some airports where the control tower is not always staffed or at those with no tower at all. |
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Committee member and Blackley MP Graham Stringer, ex-chairman of Manchester Airport, said it was seen as one of the most go-ahead airports. |
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And besides, the real reason you want a hard case is because of the unspeakable things that happen to cases in airports. |
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It could affect every one of the 5,000 general aviation airports in the country. |
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Nor does the Immigration Office know the whereabouts of dozens of foreign transit passengers who get lost at Korean airports every year. |
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The world's biggest airports operator rejected the transport company's 810p a share bid on Friday, saying it undervalued the firm. |
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The majority of booths will be in railway stations, airports, shopping centres and supermarkets. |
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It also encompasses the short-haul European services run from the regional airports. |
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Today, I look like a bearded, troublemaking professor, and I still get stopped occasionally, in airports. |
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Some 9,000 people lost jobs in aviation, for instance, but are ineligible for aid because they live near the airports, not in Manhattan. |
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Paris has two airports, which both operate a regular shuttle bus service to the Disney resort, taking 45 minutes. |
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It has alerted us to be continually on our guard hence security at airports and elsewhere. |
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They hadn't the concourses of most normal airports, or the monorails that would connect the terminals, or over-priced eateries. |
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Of course, you can avoid most of the hassle of airports by not checking or carrying any luggage. |
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Now checks at airports around the world are routine, costly and time-consuming. |
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The article had gone on to becry fat ugly Americans who infested the world's civilized airports in baggy sweatsuits and squeaky tennis shoes. |
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There were similar scenes at Aberdeen and Edinburgh airports where inward and outbound flights were delayed for up to three hours. |
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Over the past 30 years there has been a sixfold increase in the number of people using airports. |
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Black women are consistently targeted for strip-searches at airports, while black men are designated for searches at traffic stops. |
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Some Britons arriving at foreign airports to catch flights back to the UK were left stranded and others scrambled to book with other airlines. |
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The skittishness of an airline executive about the possibility of behavioral profiling at American airports should be a thing of the past. |
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However, hundreds of people were still stranded at British airports last night, queuing for limited places. |
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And in both airports, the Swiss army knife on my keychain in my purse went through without a murmur. |
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Services are operating normally at all airports, and the Heathrow and Gatwick Express services are running to their normal timetables. |
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The high prices at many airports have incurred many complaints and also drew unfavourable media attention. |
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When airports are built, there are grants for double glazing to windows of houses affected by the noise of planes. |
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Despite the short duration of the outage, restrictions on the number of aircraft entering UK airspace or taking off from domestic airports quickly created delays. |
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Elsewhere, the only restraint is the presence of coalition forces at the airports or in temporary bivouacs, and these troops are poised to leave at any time. |
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They built runways for airports, including the airstrip at Mt Cook. |
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French retaliation on Saturday for a bombing raid that killed French peacekeepers destroyed Ivory Coast's tiny air force and left its airports under French control. |
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While other air services quote cheaper prices for Dublin or Cork, travel cost and convenience to these airports should also be factored into the cheap air flight. |
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This should put a quick end to the delays and cancellations that have been plaguing the country's airports since last weekend. |
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For more than decade, flying has been made irksome rather than pleasurable by an ever-increasing fortress culture at airports. |
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The security upgrade includes new criminal investigation teams based at major airports, tougher screening of airport staff and boosts to customs and surveillance. |
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Some industry commentators fear the balance of trade will shift to airports such as Shanghai, reducing the importance of airports in Hong Kong, Singapore and Malaysia. |
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When you are on a story, you need to hit the ground running, and don't have time to wait around at those infuriating baggage carousels at airports. |
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Presumably a device based on this technology could provide full body X-rays of people at airports, something much more reassuring than a metal detector. |
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All these airports are in the process of upgrading their navigation aids to future international standards. |
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I love it because bartenders in airports ask you for ID even if you look 106 and the toilets seats dispense nifty plastic covers with the wave of your hand. |
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Since they have to be read regularly, they are placed in post offices, farms, radio stations, lighthouses, airports, etc and mostly in towns and cities. |
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That's how it was done at the Super Bowl and at the Olympic games, and how it is presently being done in airports and public places all over the world. |
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It simply means that those airports have to notify operators that standards do fall below desirables and those operators are aware of those noncompliances. |
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Snow and freezing rain have disrupted airports, highways and schools. |
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And don't even get me started on those massive people movers in airports. |
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Images have been provided to Interpol, and ports, airports and train stations have all been canvassed with images of the girl. |
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The private security companies did not have the capacity to adequately protect airports, particularly from syndicates targeting drugs, car thefts and cargo heists. |
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Still others lobby for new roads, new highway exit ramps or new airports. |
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Drivers also pick up passengers waiting at cabstands or in taxi lines at airports, train stations, hotels, restaurants, and other places where people frequently seek taxis. |
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At cabstands in many major airports like Chicago's O'Hare and New York's LaGuardia, there are special rates for people willing to share rides into the city. |
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Saudi Arabia, which is hosting some two million Muslims for the haj pilgrimage, deployed more than 10,000 troops at the holy sites and at key airports and sea ports. |
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You should not be seen on streets, but in airports, in big coats and sunglasses. |
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As well as offering individual customers personalised solutions it also works with businesses and government sectors, in particular, health trusts and airports. |
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They have pushed into just about every other corner of the Caribbean and Central America where airports exist. |
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Velchev said that only the duty-free shops at international airports and on flights, and at international railway stations and on trains, would be allowed. |
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In addition to more space and fewer companions, some carriers offer limousine or helicopter service to and from airports and separate check-ins speed the process. |
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Maybe we could do our touch-and-goes at several different airports. |
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With another tranche of listed buildings potentially being demolished at Gatwick, the severe impact of any proposals to extend airports in the South East has been underlined. |
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Earlier this year, security at major airports was tightened because of a tip that al-Asiri had been working on a cell phone bomb. |
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Wi-fi providers have targeted a growing number of potential venues within which to establish access points, including hotels, airports, phone booths and restaurants. |
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Armed and camouflaged individuals can get close to chemical, agricultural, business facilities, gas pipelines, electrical powerlines, substations, transformers and airports. |
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Who has access to the tarmac side of our airports and other aeronautical facilities? |
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Experts say that to be successful, public transit must be convenient and inexpensive, making it difficult to impose the types of strict security seen at airports. |
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But sometimes delays are indeed attributable at least in part to airports and airlines that overbook flights. |
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One tonne of items such as swords, hatchets and entire canteens of cutlery have been confiscated from passengers departing Irish airports in just one month. |
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Heavy snow and ice blanketed the Balkans on Christmas Day, blocking roads and closing airports as temperatures plunged to near minus 20 degrees centigrade. |
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La Guardia, JFK, and Newark airports have also intensified checking procedures for the weekend. |
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Dozens of tearful family members huddled at the Surabaya and Singapore airports, anxiously awaiting news of loved ones. |
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Canadian authorities use vapour detectors for bomb detection at airports. |
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Suddenly, every terminal at the two main London airports, Heathrow and Gatwick, was remodeled around the shopping mall. |
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The funds go directly to airports and will also cover noise barriers near runways and taxiways and improved systems to monitor engine sound levels. |
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But mica also wisely created a provision that allowed airports to opt-out of the TSA and use private screeners instead. |
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The memories of a hundred business trips came roaring back as I recalled the unctuous Cinnabon aroma that wafts through airports. |
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There is only so much scope for attracting more mobile business users into coffee shops, and keeping them busy in their otherwise idle moments in airports and hotel lobbies. |
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I realise as a major European city money is needed for such vital things as purchasing international airports. |
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He believes in belt and braces, booking flights from two different airports on different airlines for important trips. |
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He believes in a belt and suspenders, booking flights from two different airports on different airlines for important trips. |
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Each full-color city map features the latest updates on roads, public transit, airports, tourist sights and the city's most happening gayborhood. |
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Other large airports include Manchester Airport, London Stansted Airport, Luton Airport and Birmingham Airport. |
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For the purposes of border control, airports and seaports are also classed as borders. |
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Eight airports use the word London in their name, but most traffic passes through six of these. |
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Additionally, various other airports also serve London, catering primarily to general aviation flights. |
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Leeds Bradford Airport provides connections to most major European and North African airports as well as Pakistan and New York City. |
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It owns two of the country's four busiest airports and uses its earnings to fund local projects. |
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Passenger airports in the region include Bristol, Exeter, Newquay and Bournemouth. |
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London's six commercial airports form the world's largest city airport system measured by passenger traffic. |
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Preston has a choice of 3 airports with airline service within one hour of the city. |
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Carrying four passengers, the space jet would take off from regular airports using conventional jet engines. |
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The Wick Airport at Wick in Caithness, Scotland, is one of the few airports that still have real tarmac runways. |
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In the 1990s National Express moved into the privatisation of airports, purchasing East Midlands, Bournemouth, and Humberside Airports. |
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So is it not prudent to install metal detectors in airports to try to prevent Lockerbies and Oklahoma Cities? |
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Bangladesh has 3 international airports and several domestic and STOL airports. |
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The nearest international airports to south Cumbria are Blackpool, Manchester and Liverpool John Lennon. |
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Several smaller airports exist throughout South Sudan, the majority consisting of little more than dirt runways. |
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Other notable airports are Billund Airport, Aalborg Airport, and Aarhus Airport. |
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Most airports including Nuuk Airport have short runways and can only be served by special fairly small aircraft on fairly short flights. |
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There are scheduled and chartered flights to numerous airports in the United Kingdom and Ireland. |
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The city's two airports have helped make the city one of the most visited weekend destinations in Europe. |
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Some airports, typically military airbases, have long runways used as emergency landing sites. |
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The civil airline industry is entirely privately owned and has been largely deregulated since 1978, while most major airports are publicly owned. |
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Poland has a number of international airports, the largest of which is Warsaw Chopin Airport, the primary global hub for LOT Polish Airlines. |
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There are also several smaller, domestic and private airports around the city. |
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The nearest international passenger airports are Glasgow Prestwick International Airport, Glasgow International Airport and Edinburgh Airport. |
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The nearest airports are Manchester, Doncaster Sheffield, and East Midlands. |
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Altogether, there are seven airports, located on each of the inhabited islands. |
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It is the world's largest passenger airliner, and the airports at which it operates have upgraded facilities to accommodate it. |
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In 2008 the A380 test aircraft were used to trial the modifications made to several airports to accommodate the type. |
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The airline started operations in June 2008, and now flies direct from Paris to New York's JFK and Newark airports. |
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The division operates an automated cargo centre at London Heathrow Airport and handles freight at Gatwick and Stansted airports. |
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The company has its own engineering branch to maintain its aircraft fleet, this includes line maintenance at over 70 airports around the world. |
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At airports in which BA does not operate a departure lounge, a third party lounge is often provided for premium or status passengers. |
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Dedicated British Airways 'Galleries First' lounges are available at some airports. |
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External border controls are located at roads crossing a border, at airports, at seaports and on board trains. |
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Passage between landside and airside is tightly controlled at all airports. |
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All airports use a traffic pattern to assure smooth traffic flow between departing and arriving aircraft. |
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There are a number of aids available to pilots, though not all airports are equipped with them. |
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Many airports have lighting that help guide planes using the runways and taxiways at night or in rain, snow, or fog. |
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Air safety is an important concern in the operation of an airport, and airports often have their own safety services. |
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That is to say, all airports are aerodromes, but not all aerodromes are airports. |
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Many small airports have dirt, grass, or gravel runways, rather than asphalt or concrete. |
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The rest of India's airports are managed by the Airports Authority of India. |
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Now most airports in Canada are owned and operated by individual legal authorities or are municipally owned. |
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Access from landside areas to airside areas is tightly controlled at most airports. |
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Due to their high capacity and busy airspace, many international airports have air traffic control located on site. |
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A growing number of airports are installing solar photovoltaic arrays to offset their electricity use. |
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Major airports in such countries as Russia and Japan offer miniature sleeping units within the airport that are available for rent by the hour. |
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At major airports, particularly those used as hubs, airlines may operate their own support facilities. |
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In the United States, many larger civilian airports also host an Air National Guard base. |
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Of the airports constructed during this early period in aviation, it is one of the largest and busiest that is still currently operating. |
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Some airports have unofficial names, possibly so widely circulated that its official name is little used or even known. |
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The busiest airports also have clearance delivery, apron control, and other specialized ATC stations. |
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Large airports have a frequency called Clearance Delivery which is used by departing aircraft specifically for this purpose. |
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Along taxiways, blue lights indicate the taxiway's edge, and some airports have embedded green lights that indicate the centerline. |
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Most airports have groundcrew handling the loading and unloading of passengers, crew, baggage and other services. |
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Aircraft noise is a major cause of noise disturbance to residents living near airports. |
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Sleep can be affected if the airports operate night and early morning flights. |
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Due to the risk of collision between birds and aircraft, large airports undertake population control programs where they frighten or shoot birds. |
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The construction of airports has been known to change local weather patterns. |
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Some airbases, known as military airports, provide facilities similar to their civilian counterparts. |
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Most airports welcome filming on site, although it must be agreed in advance and may be subject to a fee. |
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Each national aviation authority has a source of information about airports in their country. |
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At airports, those not having compliant licenses or cards would simply be redirected to a secondary screening location. |
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At airports, customs is the point of no return for all passengers, once a passenger has cleared customs, they cannot go back. |
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There are about a dozen important commercial airports and many more general aviation airports throughout the state. |
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Oulu Airport is the second largest, whilst another 25 airports have scheduled passenger services. |
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The nearest major commercial airports are Edinburgh Airport, Glasgow Airport and Aberdeen Airport. |
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Stirling has no airport but there are international airports at Glasgow and Edinburgh which can be reached within an hour. |
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In 1991 the newly privatised British Airports Authority, BAA Limited, consolidated their portfolio of UK airports. |
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The company also operated Gatwick Airport and London Stansted Airport, plus several other UK airports under its former name. |
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It owns airports, electricity generators and retailers, and a public transport business, with operations in New Zealand and Australia. |
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It sold flights and services from several airports in the UK with bases in Belfast City, Blackpool, Cardiff and Isle of Man. |
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Glamorgan was served by several airports and airfields, with Cardiff Airport being the county's chief airport. |
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Several other airports and aerodromes have serviced Glamorgan, but usually for private flights. |
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The airport offers a short and medium haul network, as well as domestic services to several regional airports in Ireland. |
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The nearest passenger airports are Liverpool John Lennon Airport and Manchester Airport. |
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Tenerife has two airports, Tenerife North Airport and Tenerife South Airport. |
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The island of Tenerife gathers the highest passenger movement of all the Canary Islands through its two airports. |
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There are also direct flights to over 30 other airports in Europe and nearby islands. |
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Each of the nine islands has an airfield, although the majority are airfields rather than airports. |
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Lisbon's geographical position makes it a stopover for many foreign airlines at several airports within the country. |
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The island has three significant airports, Nikos Kazantzakis at Heraklion, the Daskalogiannis airport at Chania and a smaller one in Sitia. |
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Finally, the company AirPlus provides a shuttle service to the train stations and airports of Paris. |
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However, most passengers across the South East use the larger Heathrow, Gatwick, Stansted and Luton airports. |
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The Brussels Region does not have airports on its territory and its institutions do not manage any. |
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The peculiarity of the Region is that it is served by two airports located outside its administrative territory. |
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These same schlieren can be observed when hot air rises off the tarmac at airports or desert roads and is the cause of mirages. |
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Some examples include airports, diving sites, popular beach sites, marinas, natural reserves or marine sanctuaries. |
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The airport offers a range of scheduled flights to British and Irish regional airports and charter flights. |
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Surveillance displays are also available to controllers at larger airports to assist with controlling air traffic. |
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Many airports have a radar control facility that is associated with the airport. |
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Where there are many busy airports close together, one consolidated terminal control center may service all the airports. |
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Up until the 1990s, holding, which has significant environmental and cost implications, was a routine occurrence at many airports. |
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However, the airports should either set their own price ceilings or allow for price competition by altering the queue system. |
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In July 2014, Newquay was one of 8 airports shortlisted by the Civil Aviation Authority as a possible site for a UK commercial spaceport. |
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The shortlist was reduced to 6 airports in March 2015, with Newquay still a candidate. |
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Their use gradually trailed off after World War II, partially because of the investments in airports during the war. |
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The Islander is known for servicing the two airports joined by the shortest scheduled flight in the world. |
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Most international visitors arrive via air and New Zealand has six international airports, but currently. |
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A total of 41,089,675 passengers passed through Norwegian airports in 2007, of whom 13,397,458 were international. |
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