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Albert L. Cole; ‘Business Brains’ of Reader’s Digest

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Albert L. Cole, the founding general manager of Reader’s Digest and the acknowledged “business brains” behind the publishing empire founded by DeWitt and Lila Wallace in a Greenwich Village basement in 1911, has died at his home in Greenwich, Conn.

The executive credited with expanding the largest-selling magazine in the world into the fields of books, records and international circulation was 94. He died Tuesday.

In 1940, a year after joining the Digest after a successful career with Popular Science Publication Co. and other publishing firms, Cole prevailed upon the Wallaces to start a Spanish edition. Ten years later, in 1950, he was credited with expanding the burgeoning Digest empire into condensed books, and in 1959 into recordings.

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He was chairman of the Digest’s executive committee from 1965 to 1969 and a member of the board until 1983.

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