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One Couple Makes Living With Harvard and a Cab

Rita and Danny Hughes' 1985 Pontiac

By Jeffrey N. Gell

When they think of Cambridge taxis, many Harvard students and city residents--including members of the Cambridge License Commission--think of beaten-up, early 1980's sedans, with temperamental drivers who speak little English.

In Cambridge, many taxi drivers have fought city regulations requiring them to drive clean, new cabs and have asked the commission to be generous in annual inspections.

But in an industry where some drivers seem to care little about their customers' comfort, Brockton residents Rita and Danny Hughes have built a steady following of Harvard professors, students and local entrepreneurs by offering a clean, smoke-free car and on-call service.

"They probably like my service--I keep my cab clean, and I don't have a partition," Rita says. "I don't smoke, and I air out my cab and spray it with Lysol."

Rita says she and her husband began driving a taxi in 1978. Since then, the couple has developed a group of regular clients by working out of the same taxi stand at the Harvard Business School for 15 years.

"I have driven most of the Business School professors," she says. "Usually I take someone, and they come back."

Rita says developing a network of steady customers has several benefits--most notably guaranteed business and larger tips.

"They tip good," Rita says. "I mean, they're just like steady customers."

"Steady customers take the edge off," Danny says.

Although the Hughes subscribe to the Ambassador Brattle dispatching service, most of their business comes from calls to a cellular telephone they have placed in their 1985 Pontiac Parisienne, Rita says.

"The phone pays for itself," Danny says.

Rita says she even picks up lunch for some of her regular clients.

"Many times I'll pick [my customer] up a sandwich so that when he gets on the plane, he will eat it," Rita says.

The Hughes' commitment to basic business practices has attracted business from customers all over the country, they say.

"About once a year we have someone call where someone else had recommended us," Rita says. "It's nice because you know you're giving personal service."

Recently, an occasional client "from Michigan called me to wish us a Merry Christmas," Rita says.

Their list of regular clients includes Dean of the Business School John H. McArthur, who often hitches rides from the school's Allston campus to Harvard Square or Logan Airport.

"He's more like a friend," Danny says. "We talk anything but business--our kids, the weather. It's all small talk because they're usually short rides."

Although the Hughes won't say how well McArthur tips, Danny says, "He's a gentleman."

And Rita adds, "McArthur is very nice, very friendly."

The Hughes have also driven such luminaries as singer-actress Carol Channing and the late singer-songwriter Harry Chapin. In fact, they plan to wait outside the Hasty Pudding Theatre on February 22 in the hopes of landing Tom Cruise.

Danny says driving a taxi is a difficult business because one needs to earn $100 each day just to break even.

"It's not like the television program `Taxi' today," he says. "Most of the cabs are independently owned--it's hard work; it's long hours."

He adds: "Cab driving is the most dangerous business; I don't think there's cab driver that hasn't been robbed."

But Danny says he retired from his position with the MBTA, which runs the T, to drive a taxi and deliver packages because he could set his own hours.

"I like it because it's part-time for me," he says. "You don't have to punch a clock."

And Rita insists she has faith that taxi service, in general, will improve.

"No matter what's out there, cabs should shape up," she says. "Regardless of fancy cars, people always need a cab."

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