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  2. Oxford (toy company) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oxford_(toy_company)

    Oxford Co., Ltd. (Korean: 옥스포드, romanized: ogseupodeu) is a South Korean toy company, based in Busan, that makes interlocking brick toys. It was founded in 1961 as Dongjin Industries Corp. and has used its current name since 1992.

  3. KX telephone boxes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KX_telephone_boxes

    KX100 telephone box with 1991 branding. The KX series of telephone boxes in the United Kingdom was introduced by BT (British Telecom) in 1985. Following the privatisation of BT in 1984, the company decided to create a newly designed and improved take on the British telephone box, which at this point consisted of only red telephone boxes which BT had recently acquired, the most common being the ...

  4. Blue box - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blue_box

    Another strategy would have been to purchase doorbells, remove the plungers, and mount them on a frame that could be set over the piano keyboard. Twelve DPDT pushbuttons, labelled KP, ST and the 10 digits, would operate pairs of plungers to play the phone company tones, after the E7 piano key had been pressed and released.

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    Get AOL Mail for FREE! Manage your email like never before with travel, photo & document views. Personalize your inbox with themes & tabs. You've Got Mail!

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  7. Pendaflex - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pendaflex

    Oxford Pendaflex shares had been trading on the New York Stock Exchange for between $13 and $14 a share, and Esselte offered $23 a share to take over the American company. The two companies announced an agreement in March 1976, and Oxford Pendaflex became part of the Swedish company's Esselte Business Systems group. [3]

  8. Oxford Instruments - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oxford_Instruments

    The original Osney Mead building of Oxford Instruments in west Oxford, now used as a church.. The company was founded by Sir Martin Wood in 1959, with help from his wife Audrey Wood (Lady Wood) [4] [5] to manufacture superconducting magnets for use in scientific research, starting in his garden shed in Northmoor Road, Oxford, England. [6]

  9. GPO telephones - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GPO_telephones

    Below the mouthpiece was a dial-mount, which either contained a dial (F or L - Figures only or with Letters - from about 1926) or a blanking plate (CB). This made it a true, one-piece telephone which was available either 'stand alone', mounted on a handsome, wooden, back-board, with integral writing desk or, as a Tele. 123, combined with the ...