The Michigan Daily-Friday, December 12, 1980-Page 5 PAYMENT FOR OVERBOOKING Travelers getting 'bumped,' rich on airline plan KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) - The flight attendant's voice fills the plane as rassengers buckle their seat belts, eady to fly home to the folks for the holidays: "We're overbooked, ladies and gentlemen, and we need volunteers to take a later flight." For many air travelers, that announ- cement may signal a new chance to wheel and deal for coupons better than cash toward future plane tickets. Passenger "bumping," voluntary or not, is common especially around hristmas. A savvy bumpee can negotiate himself a deal worth 150 per- cent of his ticket price, maybe more - some airlines won't divulge their ceilings for the coupon payoff, MANY MAJOR air. carriers started offering the coupons, or "travel vouchers," earlier this year as a way to ease cash-flow problems. To get passengers to bite they upped the ante, offering as much as 50 percent more than what the bumped traveler would get in cash. "The certificates have been very popular, and people are willing to take them," said Don' Canalte, a United Airlines spokesman in Denver. "Our purposeis to reduce our cash outlay, and we, hope it will improve the passengers' perception of our com- pany." Added Frank Stephan, passenger services manager for Trans World Airlines in Kansas City: "By giving out coupons rather than cash, sooner or later we get it back. If it's cash, people can spend it at another airline or at the supermarket, for that matter." BUT THE coupons are new and relatively unregulated. Pat Kennedy, a consumer protection staffer for the Civil Aeronautics Board, suggests that passengers make sure they know what restrictions the airlines have put on the vouchers before they accept them. Questions she says to ask: Is it tran- sferrable? "Can you give it to your mother for Christmas?" she asked. Will it expire after jcertain period? Can you use it anytime, or is it void on holidays? Can you use it to buy a discount ticket? On an average day hundreds of travelers with confirmed reservations are told they can't get on their flights. Airlines routinely promise seats to 10 percent to 20 percent more passengers than a plane will hold because of the no- show factor, which increases dramatically during holiday periods, officials say. THE CAB requires airlines to pay cash penalties - they call it "denied boarding compensation" - to such passengers. The procedure came about as protection for passengers on those occasions when everyone who has reserved space on a flight shows up. The penalty is equal to the ticket price, with a minimum of $37.50 and a ceiling of $200. If the passenger has to wait more than two hours for the next flight, the amount is doubled. Last year, airlines paid out some $32 million to bumped passengers. Earlier this year the CAB approved a new wrinkle in compensation. The agency granted the airlines' request that instead of cash they be allowed to issue payment coupons good toward purchase of future airline tickets, if the passengers agreed. "IT'S THE same-logic as merchants who'll allow you to exchange something, but would rather not give a refund," said Dean Witt, the CAB's representative for 10 midwestern states, based in Des Plaines, Ill. "If they give you a voucher, maybe you'll be back in two weeks and fly with them." Among major airlines offering the coupons are United, TWA, and American. United, which claims credit for originating the idea, says the new practice has increased the number of voluntary "bumps." United will not say how much it's prepared to offer passengers for giving up their seats. TWA uses a ceiling of 150 percent of what the mandatory cash payment would be, 125 percent if the amount is more than $300. Because the coupon scheme is so new, there are no overall figures available on how passengers like it. Self-proclaimed witch boils male roommate l{ Now through January 4 Admission $2; Students/Seniors $1 Children under 12 with Adults Free. H ours : m:30 a..-5:30p.. I'usday throughSundaN A14911z7, CHICAGO (UPI) -- A self- proclaimed witch scalded, beat and starved her male roommate because he "twisted the little paws" of her four pet cats, a key prosecution witness at her murder trial said. The defendant, Yvonne Kleinfelder, 45, has been charged with the murder of John Comer, 46, who was found lying naked on the floor of her apartment May 1, critically burned over 50 percent of his body. Hermia Ruby Brewer, 28, testified Tuesday at a bench trial before Judge Frank Machala that the woman told her,. "I scalded him and beat him with belts. I was sick of his mouth and he twisted the little paws of my cats." "YVONNE BOILED me," police said Comer told them as they placed him in an ambulance. He died in a hospital the next day. Brewer said she found Comer lying on the floor of the apartment, moaning, when she went to visit Kleinfelder. Brewer said she asked permission to call an ambulance and was told by Kleinfelder to give her "time to clear out and get someone to take care of the cats." Comer had not been fed from the time he was scalded until authorities were called six days later, authorities said. Kleinfleder said she allowed the cats to climb all over the dying man, Brewer told the judge. Kleinfelder is a self-proclaimed "high priestess of a double coven of witches," and often held satanic Primitive people used obsidian, a lava resembling black glass, to make tools and weapons. a; - masses in her apartment, Assistant Cook County State's Attorney Nicholas Faklis said. UNIVERSITY CELLAR'S MEDICAL, DENTAL & LAW TEXTS.... 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