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fr8doggie said:
Are we buying somebody? Atlas, Polar, Gemini? FWS retiring?

I have no idea if this is related to the postponment of the rally, but Sunday I heard some people talking in the hub about Fred retiring. I always figured Fred would leave his office in a body bag. Maybe he actually wants to enjoy what time he has left before his next heart attack. The other part of the rumor was that his replacement was pilot friendly. I'll believe that when I see it.
 
Edited. Was joking around about Fred leaving, but didn't see the posts about his daughter passing away, and it just wasn't all that funny anyway. Peace.....

P.S. What class the MEC has if this was it.
 
Last edited:
Just received this email from the FDXMEC:

Message Line

June 1, 2005

This morning the Commercial Appeal in Memphis carried a small story announcing the death of Wendy Rice, the daughter of our CEO and founder Fred Smith. We join all the employees of FedEx in extending our condolences to Mr. Smith and his family.

We understand and respect the depth of Mr. Smith's loss. Please keep Mr. Smith and his family in your thoughts and prayers during this troubling time.

 
JethroF15 said:
Just received this email from the FDXMEC:

Message Line

June 1, 2005

This morning the Commercial Appeal in Memphis carried a small story announcing the death of Wendy Rice, the daughter of our CEO and founder Fred Smith. We join all the employees of FedEx in extending our condolences to Mr. Smith and his family.

We understand and respect the depth of Mr. Smith's loss. Please keep Mr. Smith and his family in your thoughts and prayers during this troubling time.

Certainly our hearts go out to Mr. Smith and his family in their profound loss.



Wendy is honored in the National Air and Space Museum:

The inclusion of the Federal Express Falcon 20 in the collection of the National Air and Space Museum is important for a number of reasons. First, it is representative of a new category of airline, the exclusive air express carrier. Several other enterprising individuals and corporations, recognizing the essential logic of Fred Smith’s innovative idea, have gone into business with similar hub-based systems. The Falcon therefore reminds us that the development of air transport is as dynamic today as in previous decades, and that history is concerned with today’s events as well as yesterday’s.

Second, the Falcon was the first commercial jet to be placed in the Air Transportation gallery. Previous candidates for inclusion were too large to go into the building on the Mall. The Falcon. therefore, was a welcome addition, and makes a fascinating contrast with the Douglas M-2 mailplane. The M-2 inaugurated air mail service almost half a century before Federal Express took wing.

Third. the Falcon is a French design, built by Avions Marcel Dassault, headquartered at Vaucrosson, France. Most foreign aircraft are rare and difficult to obtain, and until recently the Museum has been unable to include a foreign-built commercial aircraft in its collection.

One of the customs at Federal Express is to name each aircraft after a child of one of the airline employees. The name is now chosen at random, but the Falcon in the National Air and Space Museum was the first, and is named Wendy, after Fred Smith’s daughter. The tail number, N8FE, does not mean that it was the eighth in the line. In fact, it was the first one delivered, but Smith felt that no harm would be done if the public assumed that the number on the tail indicated that Federal Express already had a fleet of eight aircraft when his enterprise first got under way.

Dassault Falcon 20, number N8FE, was donated to the National Air and Space Museum by Federal Express in 1983.
 

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