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Snail mail makes this columnist positively postal
Louisville Courier-Journal, KY - 24 minutes ago
Am I the only one who’s having trouble sending mail these days, or is anyone else ready to begin spelling the last name of the US Postal Service with a

Post Office News »


Washington Post
WR Moss about to go postal
Boston Herald, United States - 15 hours ago
By Herald wire services Randy Moss is being honored with a commemorative envelope from the US Postal Service. Charleston, W.Va., Mayor Danny Jones plans to
Raiders close to deal for cornerback Hall Baltimore Sun
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USPS Stops Bette Davis from Smoking »

They did it before and they’ve done it again.
 
betty davisWho are ‘they,’ and what did they do? ‘They’ is the United States Post Office and what they’ve done is airbrushed a cigarette out of Bette Davis’ hand on the new stamp issue bearing her likeness.
 
The commemorative issue is the fourteenth in the Legends of Hollywood series and honors the 100th anniversary of the screen legend’s birth. The stamp features Davis in an iconic pose, but without her iconic smoke. A look at the image reveals that her hand looks awkward and unnatural and it is easy to see that her fingers were originally holding a cigarette.

Better Late Than Never »

It was not until 1995 that the USPS issued a block of 20 first-class letter stamps with the theme “Civil War, 1861-1865, The War Between the States.” The series honors men and women on both sides of the conflict including Confederate General Robert Edward Lee, Union Lt. General Ulysses S. Grant, Union Nurse Clara Barton, and Confederate Nurse Phoebe Yates Levy Pember. Famous places as well as famous faces are part of the historic issue with designs featuring Gettysburg and Shiloh. You can see the stamps at the USPS site: http://www.usps.com/images/stamps/95/civilwar.gif

The Presidential Issue - Prexies »

Nicknamed ‘the Prexies’ by collectors the Presidential Issue is a series of definitive postage stamps prexie stampsissued in the United States in 1938. The unique collection features all 29 U.S. presidents from George Washington through Calvin Coolidge. The Presidents are depicted as small busts printed on solid-color designs on stamps valued up to 50-cents. The designs are black on white with colored lettering for the $1, $2, and $5 values. Many irregular values were included simply to ensure so that each Commander-in-Chief had a stamp of his own. Additional stamps depicted Benjamin Franklin on a half-cent stamp, Martha Washington on a one-and-a-half-cent stamp, and the White House, on a stamp with a value of four-and-a-half cents.

Post Office Buzz »

Postal‘ movie to compete with ‘Indiana’
Digital Spy, UK - 1 hour ago
By David Gibbon, Gaming Reporter German movie producer and director Uwe Boll has announced his movie based on the hit video game Postal will go head-to-head
Release Date for POSTAL Movie: May 23, 2008 MCV
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Washington Not First Famous Face To Be Pictured On A Stamp »

And while George Washington may have been our nation’s first President, he was not the nation’s first famous face to be pictured on a stamp. Or, to be more accurate, he was not the ONLY first face to launch a thousand letters. The honor of being commemorated on those first stamps is shared by first President George Washington and first colonial Postmaster Ben Franklin.
 
U.S. Postmaster General Cave Johnson selected Franklin and Washington to be on the stamps and the firm of Rawdon, Wright, Hatch & Edson to create them.
 
Best known for their work engraving banknotes, they proposed printing engraved stamps in their best style of line engraving in a two-color process. The cost: 25-cents per thousand stamps. Johnson learned that a one-color process would reduce the cost-per-thousand by a nickel, and the frugal Postmaster General authorized the cheaper printing.
 
Government spending stayed low when rather than creating brand new dies for the Franklin and Washington images, the engraving firm used stock dies that were already on the presses for banknotes and engraved frames. After the dies were completed, several trial colors were prepared and submitted to Postmaster General Johnson. He chose brown for the five-cent stamp and black for the ten-cent.
 
On June 26, 1847, the printers advised Postmaster General Johnson that 200,000 Washington ten-cent stamps and 600,000 Franklin five-cent stamps were ready for delivery. On July 1, 1847, the first federal United States postage stamps were issued in New York City.
 
No cover is known to have been posted at New York on July 1. The earliest known cover bearing one of these stamps was postmarked at New York City on July 2, 1847, although the stamps were probably purchased on the first day of issue.

German postal worker stole 29000 letters in 15 years - AFP »

Stop dog’s aggressive acts toward postal carriers
The Coloradoan, CO - 5 hours ago
But if you really want to make a postal carrier nervous, try, "Don’t worry, he’s friendly.” Not only does that mean that the dog is loose, but the postal

Postal Service Offers New Larger Box With One Flat Price for Shipping - FOXBusiness »


Eastern postal vote marred by violence
Sunday Times.lk, Sri Lanka - 23 hours ago
The two-day postal voting for the Batticaloa district concluded on Friday. More than 95% of the 934 persons who are eligible to vote are reported to have

Celebrating Baseball’s Theme Song »

Anyone who’s attended a baseball game and stood up for the ubiquitous 7th inning stretch has probably sung along to one of the most popular baseball songs of all time. “Take Me Out to the Ball Game” has been part of baseball history for decades and a stamp celebrating the 100th anniversary of the tuneful ditty will be issued as part of the USPS 2008 commemorative series.
 
The 2008 commemorative stamp series “celebrates our greatest creative minds, our groundbreaking heroes, and the places, institutions and values that have made us who we are,” says Postmaster General John Potter in a USPS press release. “We’re proud to be able to highlight noteworthy parts of our shared American history on stamps that people will use every day to connect with family and friends.
 
According to baseball lore, “Take Me Out to the Ball Game” was created on a New York City train in the summer of 1908. Passenger Jack Norworth, an actor, singer and songwriter who had never attended a major-league ball game, is credited with writing the words after seeing a sign about an upcoming game at the Polo Grounds.
 
The graphic of the 2008 baseball stamp is based on a circa-1880 trading card. The rare card is in the personal collection of art director Richard Sheaff of Scottsdale, AZ. The original artwork is a baseball scene and contains advertising copy for a product made by a Michigan company. The USPS issue features the same scene, but replaces the ad copy with “Take Me Out to the Ball Game,” the stamp denomination, notes from the music, and the words “United States of America.