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  2. Delta Shuttle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Delta_Shuttle

    Delta Shuttle. A Delta Shuttle Boeing 727-200 at Washington National Airport. Delta Air Lines purchased Pan Am Shuttle (including several Boeing 727s) for $113 million, thereby securing Delta's position as the third largest U.S. airline. [4] Delta relaunched the service under the Delta Shuttle brand on September 1, 1991.

  3. Here's What Delta Air Lines' Big News Means to Investors - AOL

    www.aol.com/heres-delta-air-lines-big-111000451.html

    Data source: Delta Air Lines presentations. YoY is year over year. Bp is basis points where 100bp=1%. Why investors should warm to the update. As alluded to earlier, the trading update was very ...

  4. Delta TechOps - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Delta_TechOps

    Delta Air Lines. Website. deltatechops.com. Delta TechOps (Technical Operations) is the maintenance, repair and overhaul (MRO) division of Delta Air Lines, headquartered at Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport in Atlanta, Georgia. [1] With more than 9,600 employees and 51 maintenance stations worldwide, Delta TechOps is a full-service ...

  5. DAL Group - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DAL_Group

    The DAL Group originated from the engineering company Sayer & Colley, founded in 1951 by two British partners when Sudan was under Anglo-Egyptian rule. Sayer & Colley later received Caterpillar 's franchise for the country. In 1966, ten years after Sudan's independence, Caterpillar transferred the franchise to the Sudanese Tractor Company ...

  6. History of Delta Air Lines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Delta_Air_Lines

    The company began doing business as Delta Air Lines, carrying mail from Fort Worth to Charleston, South Carolina. [9] [10] [3] The company's name was officially changed in 1945. [11] Through the 1950s and 1960s, Delta was the first airline to fly the Douglas DC-8, Convair 880, and McDonnell Douglas DC-9 aircraft. By 1970, it had an all-jet fleet.

  7. Extranet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extranet

    An extranet is a controlled private network that allows access to partners, vendors and suppliers or an authorized set of customers – normally to a subset of the information accessible from an organization's intranet. An extranet is similar to a DMZ in that it provides access to needed services for authorized parties, without granting access ...

  8. Airline alliance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Airline_alliance

    Star Alliance. SkyTeam. Oneworld. An airline alliance is an aviation industry arrangement between two or more airlines agreeing to cooperate on a substantial level. Alliances may provide marketing branding to facilitate travelers making inter-airline codeshare connections within countries. This branding may involve unified aircraft liveries of ...

  9. Dalhousie University - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dalhousie_University

    www.dal.ca. Dalhousie University (commonly known as Dal) is a large public research university in Nova Scotia, Canada, with three campuses in Halifax, a fourth in Bible Hill, and a second medical school campus in Saint John, New Brunswick. Dalhousie offers over 200 degree programs in 13 undergraduate, graduate, and professional faculties. [6]