The third in this series on the history of British airlines since the Second World War this volume starts with the return of Harold Wilson in 1964 & continues through the Thatcher years to deregulation in 1992. As the government the state-owned airline corporations & the independent airlines all jostled for position in a demanding & unforgiving world Guy Halford-Mac Leod explains how the airlines made & remade themselves ducking & diving in a slippery & difficult ring & records the exploits of some well-known heavyweights Harold Bamberg Richard Branson & of course Freddie Laker. This readable book offers both structure & expert analysis of the dramatic events of the time: the collapse of Court Line; the rise & fall of Laker & his Skytrain; the protracted saga of the governments attempts to privatise British Airways; the demise of the second force airline British Caledonian; & the passing from the scene of a few favourites like Air Europe British Eagle BUA & Dan-Air. This book concludes with a chapter that tells what happened to the players new & old as they tried to adapt to the new freedoms that deregulation gave them. Guy Halford-Mac Leod a veteran of twenty-five years in the airline industry & four British airlines now works as a researcher in the Smithsonians National Air & Space Museum in Washington DC.