KF5JRV > TODAY 13.09.25 09:30z 26 Lines 1612 Bytes #197 (0) @ WW BID : 12637_KF5JRV Subj: Today in History - Sep 13 Path: ED1ZAC<ED1ZAC<IZ3LSV<IK6IHL<IK7NXU<HB9ON<DK0WUE<PI8ZTM<VK2IO<W0ARP< KF5JRV Sent: 250913/0919Z 12637@KF5JRV.#NWAR.AR.USA.NA BPQ6.0.24 On September 13, 1963, Texas-born entrepreneur Mary Kay Ash launches a cosmetic company in Dallas with her $5,000 life savings and the help of her 20-year-old son Richard Rogers. Mary Kay Inc. would become a cosmetic empire with revenue of more than $3.5 billion and salespeople in dozens of countries. Ash, a fierce advocate for women, quit a sales job in the early 1960s after a man had been promoted to a position above her at double her salary. "Those men didn't believe a woman had brain matter at all. I learned back then that as long as men didn't believe women could do anything, women were never going to have a chance," she told Texas Monthly magazine in 1995. America's first self-made female millionaire began her path to success with a dream and $1.50 to her name. Mary Kayâ€öone of the worldâ€Ös largest direct-selling companiesâ€öbecame renowned for an award system designed for women, including mink coats, diamond rings and pink Cadillacs. Ash once owned a 19,000-square-foot mansion with a gigantic pink marble bathtub. On the popular CBS show 60 Minutes, Morley Safer called her a “a pink panther… whose instinct for doing business and making money is as finely tuned as a jungle cat going for the kill.” Ash relished mentoring her saleswomen and referred to them as her “daughters.” "I want you to become the highest-paid women in America," she told them in company motivational speeches_._ Ash, who became one of the most recognizable businesswomen in America, died in 2001. She was 83. 73 de Scott KF5JRV Pmail: KF5JRV@KF5JRV.#NWAR.AR.USA.NA Email KF5JRV@gmail.com
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