Word: maile
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...Ford Motor Co. (TIME, Nov. 14). To Funston, this was a "landmark in the history of the ownership" of American business. To brokers, it was the biggest stock pie they had ever seen ($400 million). And everyone seemed to want to buy a bite. Orders flooded in by mail and phone; thousands of people who had never ventured inside a broker's office got ready to shell out their savings at the magic name of Ford. Even the U.A.W.-C.I.O., which had flatly turned down an offer from Ford last May to permit members to buy stock at half...
...written report to the Student Council, Strasser said that the present total represents dormitory collections in the College and the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences only. He added that no figure was yet available for mail solicitation or collections in the other graduate schools...
...that raised and lowered his back and legs or gently oscillated. After 15-minute morning huddles with Sherman Adams, he received official callers, among them Postmaster General Summerfield and Labor Secretary Mitchell. Summerfield later told reporters that he had talked to the President about legislation to raise first-class mail rates to 4?, airmail...
...mail he got from his fans and old cronies was all that kept the little post office of Peoli going. It was enough to keep Cy Young's memories of baseball alive until he died in his rocking chair last week...
...table, an executives' dining room with television and canned music, a coffee room, private shower baths for top officials, wood-paneled offices for all bigwigs. There were oil paintings, lobbies walled in Aurisina Fiorito marble, ashtrays costing $7.50 apiece on the conference tables, and bronze boxes for outgoing mail ($17.50 apiece) on the executives' handcrafted desks. Cost: $5,000,000, paid in cash out of the teamsters' $35 million treasury...