/»f piEomoninm From the Front Office See Page Four VOL. X, NO. 1948 — CELEBRATING OUR TWENTIETH ANNIVERSARY — 1968 FEBRUARY, 1968 BNA - MEM Service Is Inaugurafed I: / PRESIDENTS COME FIRST as evidenced by Mr. Davis' arrival in Memphis on the first Pacemaker flight. Cut ting the inaugural ribbon are Assistant to the Mayor Harry King, at left, and Carl Carson of the Chamber of Commerce on the right. BIG SMILES AND BIG SCISSORS v/ere the order of the day as Pied mont's first scheduled flight touched down in Nashville, Tennessee. Mayor Beverly Briley, center, assisted by Metropolitan Airport Director Homer Anderson, at left, prepare to v/ield the ribbon cutters. The story of Piedmont’s entry into Nashville and Memphis, Tennessee, is a long one. The original application for service by Pied mont to the City of Nashville was filed in the fall of 1955. This initial proposal was denied, as was a second try made several years later. The action on the Company’s third, and final ly successful application, was initiated in 1965, at which time the City of Memphis was included in the plan. After many years and much effort on the part of both Piedmont and the civic and aviation lead ers in Western Tennessee there was ample rea son for celebration on the day service was in augurated. It was a red letter day from most any point of view. Ceremonies befitting the occasion in cluded ribbon cuttings by city officials for the in augural flights to both cities. There were smiles for the photographers and comments for the newsmen. A luncheon at the Memphis Summit Club for area city, county and business leaders was the highlight of the day’s events. President Davis expressed the Company’s delight in starting serv ice to Western Tennessee and outlined the initial plan of operation. The direct daily flights to Nashville and Mem phis are operated with the FH 227B’s, from Ashe ville, Charlotte, Winston-Salem, Greensboro/High Point, Raleigh/Durham, Greenville/Spartanburg, Roanoke, Richmond and Norfolk. Off to the Opry Welcome fo Music City, U.S.A. Since Piedmont’s inagural of service to Nashville we’ve had nu merous inquiries and requests for information about the Grand Ole Opry. We hope the following article will he\p those of you who are planning a trip to Music City. Each Saturday night for over forty years, country music fans have faithfully turned their ra dio dials to channel 650 for WSM’s Grand Ole Opry. Owned and operated by the National Life and Accident Insurance Co., this Saturday night spectacle is the only radio program in the world that has never had a sum mer replacement, never had an intermission and never missed a performance since its inception on November 28, 1925. Further more, it features the largest cast of any radio show and plays be fore the largest and most recep tive audiences in the world. The influence of the Opry on Nashville is unmistakeable. This one single event brings over a quarter of a million persons to Music City annually. This flood of people fills motels, restau rants, parking lots and shops. It is the single most outstanding feature of this city. Average Fan The “average” Opry fan drives more than 500 miles each way to see the show. Chances are that he comes from a midwestern city of more than 10,000 and works in a factory. This “aver age” visitor is probably attend ing the event for at least the fifth time and has brought along his entire family. He either ar rived late Friday night or early Saturday morning, and probably without hotel reservations or re served tickets. Later in the day, he will stand in line at least an hour just to gain admittance to the auditorium where he will remain seated, reading his Opry books and line-up cards, for an other two hours until show time. While wating, he is joined by eager fans from every walk of life. On any given Saturday night, at least 35 states and two foreign countries will be repre sented in the audience. For those who wish to visit our city and see the “greatest show on radio,” we suggest that you secure reserved tickets well in advance. Tickets may be ob tained by writing: Grand Ole Opry Ticket Office, 116 5th Ave. N, Nashville, or by phoning 615— 747-9^88. Reserved tickets are $3.00, General Admission $2.00, and children (age 3-11) $1.00. One ticket allows you to see the entire Saturday night show from 1900-0000, through June. How ever, beginning the first Satur day in June and continuing through the last Saturday in Sep tember, you must request your choice of the first show (1930- 2130) or the second show (2200- 0000). If you obtain tickets for both shows, you will still be re quired to leave the auditorium after the first show and return for the second. Tickets for sum mer shows are usually sold out three to four months in advance, so write early. All reserved seat tickets must be picked up at the ticket office at least thirty min utes prior to show time. Make Reservations It is also wise to make hotel/ motel reservations well in ad vance. If you are driving, we suggest (1) the Capitol Park Inn (254-1651), 400 5th Ave. N; (2) Holiday Inn (254-1921), 710 James Robertson Parkway; (3) Continental Inns (244-6690), 300 3rd Ave. S; or (4) the Down towner Motor Inn (254-1401), 227 7th Ave. N. Rooms generally run $10.40 for a single and $15.60 for a double. Prices are subject to change. Sorry, no airline dis counts at this time. For those who wish to fly down, the airport limo, available on demand, will take you to either 1 or 2 above for $2.00. Both are within walking dis tance of the Opry House for the (Continued on Page Two) Board Grants SDF-CVG Route One of Piedmont’s nicer birth day presents came from the Civil Aeronautics Board in the form of the final authorization for service between Louisville and Cincinnati. Tentative approval from the Board had come in late Decem ber last year. But Lake Central Airlines appealed the ruling which delayed the final order. The new service will not only be more economical for the Company but also should prove more efficient for passengers. Flights will no longer have to be divided at Lexington to go two different ways. The new route will allow for express ser vice between the Carolinas and Virginia and Louisville and Cincinnati. A total of seven daily flights, to be operated intially with Mar tin 404’s, will be included in the April 1 schedule change. Congress Says Happy Birthday Representative Nick Galifiana- kis of North Carolina’s 5th Dis trict noted Piedmont’s 20th An niversary by praising the Com pany’s record in a brief state ment and inserting a history of Piedmont in the Congressional Record. He said Piedmont “continually sets the pace among local service carriers” and provides more ser vice for more people with less federal subsidy than any other regional airline.” “This was emphasized in 1966,” he said, “when Piedmont became the first regional airline to show a profit without benefit of federal subsidy ... an unprece dented achievement among the local service carriers.” Anders and Asher Appointed To Fill New Positions In Sales Roanoke Cit;/ Sales Manager Lionel F. Anders' has been nam ed to fill the newly 'Treated posi tion of District Sales Manager for Piedmont in Memphis, Ten nessee. A native of Little Rock, Ark ansas, Anders joined Piedmont as a Utility Agent in Roanoke in 1953. He subsequently served as Lead and Chief agent there be fore joining the Sales Depart ment in 1962 as Roanoke City Sales Manager. As District Sales Manager in Memphis Anders’ territory will include that city and the area west of the State of Tennessee. Anders is married to the form er Jean Brillhart of Roanoke. They have three sons and a daughter. Lionel Anders Bill Asher William R. Asher has been named Sales Representative for Piedmont in Washington, D. C. Asher, who is a native of Louisville, Kentucky, joined the Company as an operations agent at SDF in 1966. Prior to joining Piedmont he served in the U. S. Air Force and attended Bellar- mine College and the University of Louisville. In Washington Asher will as sist District Sales Manager O. E. Halsel. His appointment is effec tive March 1. While in Louisville Asher was Vice President of the Lakewood Hills Country Club and Presi dent of Shopper’s, Inc. Mrs. Asher is the former Mar lene Marie Fisher of Kenswick, Iowa. They have one son.