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TROUT:  (CONT'D) Today, Newark, New Jersey, is the home of the world's busiest airport, where plane flights take off in sections like a railroad train and porters calmly carry baggage to and fro. In our studios sits Lt. Richard Aldworth, a man with twenty years of aviation experience, superintendent of Newark airport since 1929. Before you tell us how this amazing airport operates, how it handles its great daily load of traffic, incoming and outward bound. Lt. Aldworth, I'd like to ask you a question. It's  a question which illustrates, I think, the huge business which your airport conducts I have hard that fairly soon, the Newark Airport will be forced to forbid the use of its flying field to private plances because of congestion. Is this true?

ALDWORTH:  (ANSWER)




TROUT:  Perhaps you would tell us something about the growth of airport facilities.