January/February, 1980 page three Houston is our first new city of the '80s Barely two weeks into the new year and the new decade, Piedmont inaugurated the Com pany’s first service to Houston, Texas. A week before the nonstop flights between the fastest-growing city in Texas — maybe in the whole U.S. — and the Carolinas, Piedmont hosted a party for nearly 500 of its travel- W. L. Brackley, director of Houston’s Depart ment of Aviation, chatted with President Davis at the Company’s party at the Houston Oaks. Travel agents, from left, Gloria Patt, Janet IVIc- Ewan and Anita Reiner, helped President Davis blow out the candles and cut the cake in cele bration of Piedmont’s arrival at I AH. conscious friends in the West. If the warmth of their welcome is any indication, lAH will soon be a very important city on the Piedmont system. Some observations from some first-time visitors to Houston . . . It’s big! Word was the diameter of the city from city limit to furthest city limit is 64 miles. We believe it. The air port is equally enormous. It even has its own radio station, with road signs telling where to dial on your am radio for current information on which parking lots have space available. And you can’t even see from one parking lot to an other. They’re a long ways apart. Upon arrival, you head downtown and ride and ride and just when you think you can’t be far from the city, you look up to see a billboard saying, “You’re now leaving the Houston Intercontinental Air port.” From the untold miles of expressways, you see a city that must be an architect’s heaven. The landscape of buildings displays imagination Mother Nature could envy. Houston is a cosmopolitan, but far from cold, city. It’s fascinating, from the ships to the cowboys and sheiks on the streets. You never forget what is producing its prosperity. Perhaps only Winston-Salem residents who’ve grown accustomed to first-time visitors saying, “It really smells like tobacco here . . .” will I Traditional ribbon-cutting ceremonies in Char lotte marked the January 15th inaugural of the Queen City’s only nonstop service to Houston. Mayor Pro Tem Betty Chafin, left, and Airport Manager Josh Birmingham, right, wielded the scissors with a little help from Piedmont’s Bill McGee, center. notice that Houston really does have an air of oil about it. It is in no way an unpleasant air; rather, it seems very appropriate. The service station price signs at first appear nostalgic, but then you remember where you are. Houston — an exciting new Piedmont desti nation you should plan to see, soon! Senior Vice President Ken Ross, left, congratu lated Piedmont’s new Houston Station Man ager Jim Bailey during the reception. I Proper party attire in Houston ranges from cow boy hats and turbans to three-piece business suits. Piedmont’s District Sales Manager Jim Sheets, center, is shown here with travel agents Lee Eguia, left, and Nick Singhnarula, right. Continental’s Regional Vice President Jack Russell, left, and Regional Interline Man ager Paul Glaab, right, were also on hand to welcome Davis and the No. 1 Airline In The Middle East. Texas International President Frank Lorenzo, third from left, extended a warm Texas welcome to Piedmont executives Bill Howard, Zeke Saunders and Tom Davis during the Company’s first official function in Houston. Among the familiar faces seen at the Hous ton opening festivities were, from left, Bill McGee, Evelyn and Jack Brandon, for merly of Winston, now in Dallas, and Mike Plummer, from Atlanta.