Tuesday/ the V&A Waterfront

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The Victoria & Alfred Waterfront is on the Atlantic side of the Cape Peninsula, and offers restaurants, shops, hotels, condominiums, the Two Oceans Acquarium to visitors.
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We’re at the south western most point in Africa, but the South Pole is still 6131 km (3,809 miles) away. The North Quay warehouse in the background has been there for a long time, but the Ferris wheel in the lower right corner is new.
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Ferrymans is a pub and the revelry this afternoon had a Octoberfest-ish quality to it with a loud lively band and lots of beer served up in the beer tent.  P.S.  Check out the Santa and the little snow-flake decals in the window, the images of snow clashing with the blazing African sun.
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The clock tower used to be red, but now it is yellow. Why? It signifies the implementation of the Cape Town World Design Capital 2014 initiative. It is basically a call for design projects that are dedicated to using design for social, cultural and economic development.
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Here is the Two Oceans Aquarium mascot (a seal? a SEAL*?) walking around in the V&A waterfront mall. *United States Navy SEAL
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Beautiful wire-and-bead artwork for sale in a shop at the V& A waterfront.

My brother’s family and I ran out to the Victoria & Alfred waterfront in Cape Town this afternoon.  We spent some time at a Leonardo Da Vinci exhibition.  It consisted of wood constructions of his designs, and electronic displays of his anatomy drawings and of the Mona Lisa* and The Last Supper.  Then we had a beer and fish and chips at Ferrymans pub to bid 2013 good-bye.

*Of course : the real Mona Lisa was still safely ensconced in the Louvre!

Monday/ Cape Velvet Cream

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Cape Velvet cream liqueur mixes well with milk and coffee, and makes a refreshing summer drink when served on the rocks. It has 16.5% alcohol and is made with brandy (Bailies Irish Cream is made with whiskey).

I stopped at the liquor store on Monday to buy some wine, and spotted some Cape Velvet cream on the shelf as well.  A brandy-based creamy aperitif, the stuff has been around a long time, at least since I was a student.  I believe the label shows the landing of Jan van Riebeeck’s three ships (Dromedaris; Reijger and Goede Hoop) at the future Cape Town on 6 April 1652.   Van Riebeeck volunteered to undertake the command of the initial Dutch settlement in the future South Africa. He oversaw a sustained, systematic effort to establish an impressive range of useful plants in the novel conditions on the Cape Peninsula – in the process changing the natural environment forever. Some of these, including grapes, cereals, ground nuts, potatoes, apples and citrus, had an important and lasting influence on the societies and economies of the region. [Information from Wikipedia’s post for ‘Jan van Riebeeck’].

Sunday/ the house that Portchie built

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Stellenbosch artist ‘Portchie’ (49) at one of his paintings. [Picture from http://www.rapport.co.za/ website].
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Here is the house. The price tag is a secret. It is not ugly, but it towers somewhat over its surroundings.  I assume the louvred panels slide into the walls to reveal window panes. And the main entrance is a very odd form : very narrow and very tall. Why is that?

There is a flap over an enormous house and art studio that is nearing completion here in Stellenbosch, one being built for a local – very successful – artist that goes by the name Portchie (real name Jan Hendrik Viljoen).  The local taxpayer association contends it is too big and that the style does not fit in with its surroundings.   ‘Wait until it’s done’ says the artist, and ‘One cannot please everyone’.

 

Saturday/ book stores and coffee

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I love this picture, taken from a children’s book by artist Philip de Vos. The lion was taking a nap, and is opening one eye to answer a question from the zebra.  The zebra had inquired about a magical tree called Bojabi.  The tree bears mangoes, melons and pomegranates.

It rained this morning and so Marlien and I went to check out some book stores and to have coffee. I can buy books here off the shelf that I would still not be able to get through Amazon in the USA : those from local publishers, or those in Afrikaans.   (There is a South African website that offer these for sale on-line, though.  They will ship it overseas, but of course at an additional cost, and it takes 6 to 8 weeks).

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There are no Starbuckses in South Africa, but plenty of coffee shops. The Vida e Caffe franchise is one that is well represented in the Western Cape.

 

Friday/ shark cage diving anyone?

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Today’s edition of local newspaper ‘Die Burger’ (‘The Citizen’). ‘Beaches chock-a-block’, says the main picture.

I made a run to Cape Town IMG_9840 smInternational Airport today to pick up my friend Marlien that arrived to visit me for the weekend.  A sales poster inside the arrivals hall of the airport advertised shark cage diving.  Will it cost me an arm and a leg?  No, it’s US$ 135 per person.  ‘Free trip if no sharks were seen’ and ‘Boat maintenance is pre-scheduled and done regularly’ says the operator’s website.   But no, I still think I will pass it by!

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The facade of Cape Town International Airport terminal. The airport is the third busiest in Africa, and processes about 8 million passengers per year.

Thursday/ Boxing Day

So what do South Africans do on Boxing Day (officially changed to the Day of Goodwill in 1994)?  They relax, put away the left-overs (food and wrapping paper) from Christmas Day, and go to the beach if they are lucky enough to be close to one of the beautiful beaches here.  I watched a lot of BBC News yesterday, and I see that Boxing Day in the UK is a very, very big day for shopping there.

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A tweeted picture from London’s Westfield Shopping Center. INSANE, says the tweeter .. but people would not be there if they did not like it, right?

Tuesday/ a little Christmas shopping

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‘Have a wild Christmas’ and ‘Come in and get jolly’ says the rhinoceros at this store. On a serious note : it has been a BAD year for rhinoceros in southern Africa’s game reserves. The number killed in 2013 by well-organized and well-funded crime syndicates now approaches 1,000.  This number is far, far more than in previous years.

I did a little Christmas shopping on Tuesday here in the town of Stellenbosch where I stay with my family.  I am still adjusting to the new time zone and the summer temperatures!

With the students from the University of Stellenbosch gone for the summer break, there is less traffic and a lot more parking available.  (The academic year in South Africa runs from February through November).

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I had posted a picture of the Van Der Stel liquor store building before (June 22, 2012).   This picture shows the entire building its facade outlined against the blue sky.

Monday/ arrival into Cape Town

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This large Nelson Mandela sign is at the arrivals hall at Johannesburg’s Oliver Tambo airport.
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We’re boarding the South African Airways Airbus 340-300 for Cape Town. I’m squinting; not used to the bright sunlight of summer.

We left an hour late for Cape Town on Sunday, but made it in just fine on Sunday afternoon.  I was so warm and sweaty in Johannesburg that I replaced my heavy jeans with lighter pants .. and I stuffed the heavy winter jacket and scarf that served me so well in Iceland into one of my suitcases before re-checking it.  It is summer in Cape Town and here in Stellenbosch with  temperatures at 81°F/ 27°C.

Sunday/ landed in Johannesburg

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This uniformed bear is at the Harrod’s store in Heathrow’s Terminal 1. It is for sale, for about US $1,600 !
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We flew down to Johannesburg on an Airbus 340-600.   These aircraft are not popular with airlines anymore : the four engines use too much fuel.  (These days long haul flights and even trans-Atlantic flights are done with two engine aircraft). I’m standing at the top of the stairway before stepping down onto the tarmac where a shuttle bus was waiting to take us to the terminal.

We have landed in Johannesburg.  One more leg on my journey to make, to Cape Town.  I cannot write more; I have to run to the gate!

Saturday/ at Heathrow airport

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We are ready for take-off in our Iceland Air 757-200. Check out the golden yellow engine and their logo on the wingtip. I’m sitting in A9, by the window and getting squished by the protrusion of the aircraft’s door. Luckily there was another seat available for me that I could switch to.

I am at London-Heathrow airport’s Terminal 1, a little bleary-eyed.  It sounds great in theory to have a hotel room to catch a full night’s sleep but then there is jet lag, and rowdy young Icelanders at all hours outside the hotel at a popular all-night hot dog stand.  Were they celebrating the winter solstice? I wondered.  Or just a Friday night celebration?   With the daylight time so short, the distinctions of evening, night time and morning are completely blurred. Even so, I did get a few hours of sleep in a very comfortable bed.  Then at 5 am, I went downstairs to check out and get on the bus that picked me up.

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Keflavik International Airport at 6 am this morning. It’s a formidable fort-like structure, and I am sure I it is able to withstand a lot of snow and cold blustery weather.
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We’re arriving in London’s Heathrow airport. It’s just under three hours to London, from Reykjavik.

 

Friday/ Reykjavik in 24 hrs

Well, I made the best I could of a very short day here in Reykjavik!  We arrived at Keflavik International Airport around 7 am local time.  It is a 50 min bus ride into the city, and the bus driver dropped me in front of the Radisson Blu hotel in downtown. NO TIPPING in Iceland, said my quick look-up on my phone : everything is expensive and includes gratuities.   So after breakfast I set off with my Cossack-styled head cover, scarf and gloves.   I needed it!  The was a chilly breeze driving the freezing temperatures down.  I think I did well, getting a really good impression of the city, eating a meal at Cafe Loki, and buying a Tintin book in Icelandic for my collection.   Mission accomplished, right?

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The local currency is Icelandic kronas : 116 of them to the US dollar right now.

 

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We’re just coming in for our landing at Keflavik airport.
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Check out the Icelandic words on the signage .. on the way to passport control.
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The inside of the arrivals hall.
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I wash my hands in a LOT of airports. And this one gets my blue ribbon award for design. There is no touching. Squirt soap from the dispenser on your hands, and hold them under the middle of this faucet-in-disguise. The water comes out. Wash your grubby hands. Then just move them both to the outside and a violent blast of air comes out and downward and dries them. Voila ! Clean hands.
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I assume the 1919 means the hotel was built at that time. This is the Radisson Blue 1919 that was my overnight spot.
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Cute wall art describing what’s available inside in the cafe.
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This Timberland store looks just like a gingerbread house. Can I eat it?
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This is a church on a high point in the city : Hallgrímskirkja by Daniel Williams. That is Leif Ericson in the statue : a Norse explorer regarded as the first European to land in North America, nearly 500 years before Christopher Columbus did.
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The inside of the church.
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A great view from the top of the church, 8 stories up. It looks serene but it is in fact is very cold and blustery where I stood for this picture.
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This is Harpa. [From Wikipedia] Harpa is a concert hall and conference centre in Reykjavík, Iceland. The opening concert was held on May 4, 2011. Harpa was designed by the Danish firm Henning Larsen Architects in co-operation with Danish-Icelandic artist Olafur Eliasson.
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The side views of the Harpa building are pretty spectacular.
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Looking from the inside out towards the harbor.
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I love this ‘Koko mjolk’ milk carton packaging. The ‘supercat hero’  says ‘chocolate milk is best ice cold’.
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Beautiful display with cutouts of the iconic buildings in the city. And 5 days to go before Christmas, it says.
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Signage on a building that says to look at the mountains .. I couldn’t get to a spot to catch all of it, though.
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A red roof to brighten up the whites and grays of winter.
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This is the Danish embassy (fort?).
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Sign to the Danish embassy. I like the lions.
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More rainbow colors in the city.
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Better hurry with mail for Santa !
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Yes, you can get a burger, fries and a small coke. Will cost you US$8, somewhat more expensive than in the USA.
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This little lake in the city is simply called Tjörnin (the Pond). It has a fountain in summertime
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A gaggle of geese and ducks are crowding in for some FOOD. One sits on the wall and pesters the girl that feeds them.

 

Thursday/ ready for Reykjavik

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The hand luggage tags shows the black volcanic rock from Iceland. About half the country consists of a mountainous lava desert. The highest point: is Hvannadalshnúkur at 2,110 m (6,400 ft).
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Here’s a cool route map from icelandair.com with Iceland in the center. Our flight from Seattle will take us over Greenland.

I made it to Sea-Tac airport, and checked in, through security.  I have a flight just under 8 hrs ahead of me to Reykjavik where I will sleep over one night. Then on to London and South Africa.  I get to Reykjavik on just about the shortest day of the year, with the winter solstice upon us. At this time the daylight in Reykjavik lasts all of 4 hrs and 7 mins!  The temperature is around freezing (0°C/ 32°F), so not ‘too cold’.  Still, I picked a hotel in downtown so that I don’t have to venture too far in the cold to see some of the city.

Wednesday/ packing for South Africa

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Aw .. a friendly little Seattle Seahawks ‘beanie ball’ from the airport bookstore smiled at me as I walked out to baggage claim.

I’m home from Denver .. a crazy day at work it was, squeezing in as much as I can before caught the cab downstairs.  At Seattle airport at 7 pm the cab driver gave me a big smile; he finally made it to the front of the line after he started his shift at 6 pm; so I was his first passenger for the night.  (Man! At least I don’t work the night shift, I thought).  He dropped me at The Chieftain pub on 12th Ave, and in I went luggage and all to join Bryan, Gary, Steve and Ken for their Wednesday night beer, and just to say hi and good-bye to everyone.  I leave for South Africa on Thursday with a stay-over in Reykjavik.

I see the Fed said it would start to taper their bond-buying to $75 billion a month from $85 billion.  And in the waning days of 2013, the US Senate approved a tiny two-person (Paul Ryan and Patti Murray) budget deal.  First time since 2009 the USA actually has an approved budget. There is a ‘doc fix’ in there : postponement of a nearly 24% cut in Medicare pay for physicians from Jan 1 until April 1 – in fact, they get a 0.5% raise during that period.  I guess we have to pay the doctors, right?  But extended unemployment insurance benefits are set to expire December 28, which will leave 1.3 million people without benefits and hit another 800,000 in the coming weeks.  Not good, but for how long should one get unemployment insurance?  More than 6 months?   This budget deal also has military retirees chip in a little bit of their existing benefits.  Is that fair?  Life is full of tough decisions.

Tuesday/ evening walk

It was so nice outside tonight that I went for a walk instead of sitting on the stationary bike in the hotel’s gym. Here are some pictures, of the Colorado Convention Center here in downtown Denver, and of the Denver City and County Building, dressed up in Christmas lighting.

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Here’s the view of the convention center from Welton St and 14th Ave. I’m not sure how popular the public bicycle rental program (front) has been. I certainly have not seen many bicyclists on the streets!
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Here’s the Convention Center’s ‘Big Blue Bear’ peering inside. Colorado does have bears in its national parks : black bears.
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A nice touch, the picture of a penny-farthing bicycle from the 1880s on a bicycle stand across from the convention center.
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Here’s the front of the Denver City and County Building, awash in Christmas colors and decorations.
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And here is a panorama view that I generated with my iPhone’s panorama picture function.

Monday’s done

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Here is the scenery from my airplane seat around 6 am en route to Denver. It is icy and snowy below, but the temperature in Denver is actually undergoing a big upswing, on the way to 64°F/ 17°C for Tuesday.

One last Monday to get up early, and then that’s it for 2013, I thought this morning as I got up.  And maybe TSA at Seattle airport knew that : they made me stand in the regular security line today (gasp) : the one where the traveler has to take his/ her computer and liquids out of carry-on bags, and take jacket and shoes off.  (Usually I get to go through the Pre-check line, where that it not needed .. but that designation has to appear on one’s printed boarding pass).  At least it has warmed up really nicely here in Denver.  The forecast calls for temperatures in the 60s here (15+ °C) on Tuesday and Wednesday.

Sunday/ Ada’s Technical Books

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Google dedicated a homepage doodle to Ada Lovelace some time ago. In 1843, Ada published extensive notes on the Analytic Engine which included the first published sequence of operations for a computer, which she would have input to the Analytic Engine using punch cards. It is this program for calculating Bernoulli numbers which leads some to consider Ada Lovelace the world’s first computer programmer, as well as a visionary of the computing age.programming language is named for.

Ada’s Technical Books and Cafe has opened right here on 15th Avenue, so I went to check it out this afternoon.  The place has a nice geeky vibe, with electronic gadgets and puzzles on display, and for sale, as well.  I wanted to buy one of the puzzles on display but alas, it was sold out.  They will get more of the handmade puzzles in by next Saturday, they said.

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The Shipper’s Dilemma is a puzzle invented by British mathematician John Horton Conway from Cambridge, England some 40 years ago. It is almost impossible to solve just by randomly packing the 17 pieces into the box, says the descriptions of it.  Sounds like a Rubik’s cube type of puzzle!
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The Ada Technical Books store has some really interesting geeky toys on display. Need a Geiger counter to measure radioactivity in your backyard? Want to build a very cool ‘I built it myself’ (OK, from a kit) electronic wrist watch?

Saturday/ sloppy joes, tater tots and Superman

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Here he is : the Man of Steel that also goes by Superman and Kal El, and Henry Cavill as a mortal human.

Bryan made sloppy joes and tater tots for Gary and me on Saturday night.  (It was very yummy. Check out the Wikipedia entries below . both are classic American ‘dishes’).  And then we watched ‘Man of Steel (2013)’ with Henry Cavill as the latest incarnation of the Superman character created 75 years ago by DC Comics.  I liked it, and thought the scenes between Kevin Costner as the dad raising young Clark Kent, were well done.  But I see there is criticism as well from long-time fans : there is an awful lot of destruction in the film and Superman (gasp!) kills the archvillain, general Zod in the end.  Apparently that is not in character for Superman as superhero.   The movie’s costume designers also did away with the ‘trademark’ red outerwear/ underwear over Superman’s blue costume. Oh well : the times and fashions change even for a superhero.. or not?

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Unlucky Friday the 13th

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Here is a cartoon depicting Jason from the ‘Friday the 13th’ American horror flick franchise that comprises twelve slasher films. (Source : http://www.divine-project.com/friday-the-13th).

(It is Saturday as I write this post). With the Friday the 13th drawing for the $425 million Mega Millions jackpot prize failing to produce any winner lucky enough to claim the fifth-biggest jackpot ever, officials raised the amount to $550 million for Tuesday’s drawing. Nine people did nab $1 million prizes for matching the first five numbers.  I guess I will keep my head down and work and not even go buy a ticket.  Is that what Samuel Goldwyn meant when he said ‘The harder I work, the luckier I get’? South African golfer Gary Player said something similar in his quote from long ago : ‘The more I practice, the luckier I get’.

Thursday/ the ‘good old days’ of flying

I felt right at home as we arrived into a wet and foggy Seattle tonight. No snow, no ice, and 45°F/ 7°C. My flights from Denver to Seattle are not too long, but sometimes I get ‘cabin fever’ and I cannot wait to arrive so that I can stretch my legs. And gone are the days that there is even one open seat on the plane (at the times of the day that I fly). There have been dramatic changes since the Airline Deregulation Act of 1978 was signed into law.

From Wikipedia : In 2011, Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer (who worked with Senator Kennedy on airline deregulation in the 1970s) wrote: What does the industry’s history tell us? Was this effort worthwhile? Certainly it shows that every major reform brings about new, sometimes unforeseen, problems. No one foresaw the industry’s spectacular growth, with the number of air passengers increasing from 207.5 million in 1974 to 721.1 million last year. As a result, no one foresaw the extent to which new bottlenecks would develop: a flight-choked Northeast corridor, overcrowded airports, delays, and terrorist risks consequently making air travel increasingly difficult. Nor did anyone foresee the extent to which change might unfairly harm workers in the industry. Still, fares have come down. Airline revenue per passenger mile has declined from an inflation-adjusted 33.3 cents in 1974, to 13 cents in the first half of 2010. In 1974 the cheapest round-trip New York-Los Angeles flight (in inflation-adjusted dollars) that regulators would allow: $1,442. Today one can fly that same route for $268. That is why the number of travelers has gone way up. So we sit in crowded planes, munch potato chips, flare up when the loudspeaker announces yet another flight delay. But how many now will vote to go back to the “good old days” of paying high, regulated prices for better service?

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As we were arriving at Seattle-Tacoma airport, the London-bound 747, British Airways Flight 48, was just making its way onto the runway for take- off.