Word: fax
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...call the Yankees. I hunt down a phone number, and soon I'm talking to a man in the team's media relations office. I begin to explain my interest in a few minutes of phone time with Zimmer, but the guy cuts me off. They only take faxed requests, he says, and immediately his tone tells me that I'm not the first person to call about scheduling an interview. Once he receives my fax, he explains, he'll forward it to the media liaison who is on the road with the team in Seattle...
...have finally met their match: PhoneMiser. The palm-size PC adapter, below, links a personal computer to your telephone line and then uses software to calculate which of dozens of carriers offers the best deal at any given moment. All your phones on one line (and fax machines and Internet connections) can be simultaneously tied in to the program, which takes about a second to find the cheapest alternative and place the call. The system, due out this summer from Bedford, Massachusetts-based MediaCom www.phonemiser.com) should cost less than $100, plus a $4.95 monthly fee to keep the software constantly...
Powell wasn't an easy hire. Since his decision not to run, a lot of people have wondered what it would take to get the general out of semiretirement, off the phone (he is a well-known phone and fax abuser) and away from the mail (he answers every letter). Even his wife Alma was thinking he ought to get out of the basement more. He had a stack of offers from corporate boards, foundations and academia that if laid end to end would circle the Pentagon and make the Republican who actually did run weep. Then Ray Chambers...
Besides, Ickes may have good reason to limit his legal exposure in the fund-raising mess. One of the most damaging documents in his trove was the one he reportedly faxed to a Florida businessman listing accounts to which more than $1 million could be wired, including three nonprofit groups and the Democratic National Committee. Although he could engage in political activities, Ickes was barred, like all other federal employees, from soliciting contributions. The fax reads more like an order than a solicitation, but even Ickes told the New York Times the memo was "just blind-pig stupid...
...very sad for Harvard, but I can't fault UCLA's judgment," Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences Jeremy R. Knowles said in a fax...