National Anthems: Home | Africa | Americas | Asia | Australia&Oceania | Europe | Olympic Anthem |

 
Passports: Home [ Africa ] [ Americas, Australia & Oceania] [ Asia] [ Europe] [ Other documents
Travel:
[Europe] [ Asia ] [ USA-Canada ] [ Latin-America ] [ Africa ] [ Australia ] [ Carabben ] [ Air ] [Cruises ]
Forum
Live chat




Subject: Re: AA ends food service on ALL domestic flights (incl. Hawaii) Posted on: Thu, 30 Dec 2004 05:25:48 -0500

This is a multi-part message in MIME format.
--------------000803070608070402090706
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii; format=flowed
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit

KC wrote:

>Those cheap bastards!
>
>Oh well, doesn't affect me too much. I always travel with my Kim Chee.
>I'll just bring some extra.
>
>n ews wrote:
>
>
>
>>DALLAS (AP) - American Airlines says it will begin selling $3 snack
>>boxes in the main cabins of long U.S. flights beginning Feb. 1.
>>
>>American, which cut back on in-flight food after the industry downturn
>>of 2001, said Friday it would offer food in the main cabin on all
>>domestic flights longer than three hours.
>>
>>Food will be sold on more than 500 daily non-transcontinental flights
>>of three hours or more. That's about 300 more flights than currently
>>offer food, said Fort Worth-based American, the largest U.S. carrier.
>>
>>The snack boxes will replace current main cabin food service on about
>>120 other transcontinental and 40 Hawaii flights, which the airline
>>said would help it save about $30 million a year.
>>
>>The airline said it would continue to offer complimentary food for
>>first-class passengers.
>>
>>American had tested food on-board flights for main-cabin passengers
>>since September.
>>
>>American said Friday it would sell a "morning snack box" containing a
>>muffin bar, dried cranberries, bagel chips, cream cheese spread and a
>>mint from 6 a.m. to 9:59 a.m.
>>
>>
>>
>>From 10 a.m. to 7:30 p.m., the snack boxes will include crackers,
>
>
>>sliced salami, cheddar cheese, fruit mix and Oreo cookies, the airline
>>said.
>>
>>On some transcontinental and Hawaii flights, passengers will be able
>>to buy breakfast sandwiches or turkey wraps for $5.
>>
>>Shares of AMR, the parent of American Airlines, fell 21 cents, to
>>$9.95, in afternoon trading on the New York Stock Exchange.
>>
>>
>
>
>
I've never understood why people want to be fed on airlines. The food
is bad, and with the exception of international, the flights don't last
long enough that a meal (or even a snack) is needed.

Bubba

--
You wanna measure, or you wanna cook?


--------------000803070608070402090706
Content-Type: text/html; charset=us-ascii
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit








KC wrote:

cite="midrmc6t0lkip291gm37jj3qo0elmn49n6sam@4ax.com">
Those cheap bastards!

Oh well, doesn't affect me too much. I always travel with my Kim Chee.
I'll just bring some extra.

n ews wrote:



DALLAS (AP) - American Airlines says it will begin selling $3 snack
boxes in the main cabins of long U.S. flights beginning Feb. 1.

American, which cut back on in-flight food after the industry downturn
of 2001, said Friday it would offer food in the main cabin on all
domestic flights longer than three hours.

Food will be sold on more than 500 daily non-transcontinental flights
of three hours or more. That's about 300 more flights than currently
offer food, said Fort Worth-based American, the largest U.S. carrier.

The snack boxes will replace current main cabin food service on about
120 other transcontinental and 40 Hawaii flights, which the airline
said would help it save about $30 million a year.

The airline said it would continue to offer complimentary food for
first-class passengers.

American had tested food on-board flights for main-cabin passengers
since September.

American said Friday it would sell a "morning snack box" containing a
muffin bar, dried cranberries, bagel chips, cream cheese spread and a
mint from 6 a.m. to 9:59 a.m.



>From 10 a.m. to 7:30 p.m., the snack boxes will include crackers,


sliced salami, cheddar cheese, fruit mix and Oreo cookies, the airline
said.

On some transcontinental and Hawaii flights, passengers will be able
to buy breakfast sandwiches or turkey wraps for $5.

Shares of AMR, the parent of American Airlines, fell 21 cents, to
$9.95, in afternoon trading on the New York Stock Exchange.





I've never understood why people want to be fed on airlines.  The food
is bad, and with the exception of international, the flights don't last
long enough that a meal (or even a snack) is needed.



Bubba

-- 
You wanna measure, or you wanna cook?




--------------000803070608070402090706--