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In-cabin screens normally showing the plane's location and flight path were switched off on an Air France flight Saturday from San Francisco to Paris -- as a "security measure," flight attendants said. There were minor delays at Paris' Charles de Gaulle International Airport, where officials said security backlogs for flights to the U.S. early Monday had delayed overall traffic by an average of one hour. But by Monday evening, the backlogs had cleared up. Jason Iglesias, a 30-year-old service industry worker from New York City, said he received an e-mail Monday that urged him to get to his gate as early as possible. He did -- only to breeze through security and languish at the gate for two hours. Elsewhere in Europe, security measures did not cause significant delays. Travelers were divided about the effectiveness of new security checks. Richard Brandt, a 36-year-old resident of Ireland, said it didn't make sense to ban passengers from using the bathroom an hour before the plane landed. "I can't see what kind of difference that would make. If it's an eight-hour flight they could still have seven hours to blow up the plane if that's what they want to do," he said in Poland. For 24-year-old Sylwia Cieplak, who was returning to Milan from Poland, the attempted Christmas-Day attack only intensified her fear of flying. "I really hope there will be more security on my flight," she said, rushing outside for a cigarette to help calm her nerves. "They can check everything; that's no problem for me."
[Associated
Press;
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