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Terry,<br><br>
I don't &quot;think&quot; Baldwin had anything to do with Wurlitzer back
then.<br>
At least I like to &quot;think&quot; not! :-) <br><br>
Avery <br><br>
At 09:29 AM 1/22/05, you wrote:<br><br>
<blockquote type=cite class=cite cite=""><font face="arial" size=2>
FWIW:<br><br>
Perusing Baldwin's piano history website page: <br>
<a href="http://www.baldwinpiano.com/about/history.html">
http://www.baldwinpiano.com/about/history.html</a><br><br>
I found the following (the culprit!):<br><br>
<img src="cid:6.2.0.14.2.20050122155605.03644840@207.218.192.46.1" width=150 height=138 alt="Spinet Piano">
In 1935 Wurlitzer introduced the world’s first spinet-sized piano. It
represented a historic breakthrough in style, tone and performance along
with the value so critical during America’s economic depression. Notable
among design innovations characteristic of Wurlitzer were larger
soundboard areas -- providing &quot;bigger&quot; sound from smaller piano
models.<br>
Arrrrgggggg!<br>
</font>&nbsp;<br>
<font face="arial" size=2>Terry Farrell<br>
</font><br>
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