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New stamps in 2006: History and superheroes, bikes and baseball
WASHINGTON (AP) — Motorcycles and skiers, baseball players and lovers, a 40-stamp series featuring America’s biggest, tallest and deepest, from sea cliffs to bison to waterfalls and lakes. They’re all commemoratives planned for next year by the U.S. Postal Service.
Comic book superheroes brighten one set of stamps. Others feature Benjamin Franklin, explorer Samuel de Champlain, Florida wetlands and snowflakes.
With the price of a first class stamp climbing to 39 cents on Jan. 8, most of the new issues will carry that rate.
But the first to be released won’t have a price on it, since it had to be printed in advance to be ready for distribution in early January. That’s the latest Love stamp: Entitled True Blue this year, it depicts two birds on a branch looking devotedly at each other with the space between them forming a heart. A revised version with the 39-cent price will be issued in March.
Love, of course, often leads to marriage and the post office is prepared.
A white dove is featured on a set of wedding stamps in one- and two-ounce rates designed for sending wedding invitations and reply envelopes. They are due in March.
And, not yet done with matters of the heart, in April there will be a set of romance stamps featuring Disney characters such as Mickey and Minnie and Lady and the Tramp.
On Jan. 11, a stamp featuring a downhill skier will commemorate the Olympic Winter Games in Turin, Italy.
It’s the first of several sporting stamps planned for the year.
Boxer Sugar Ray Robinson will be featured on a stamp in April, and during the summer there will be a set recalling baseball sluggers Roy Campanella, Hank Greenberg, Mickey Mantle and Mel Ott.
At the end of January, Hattie McDaniel, who won the 1939 Academy Award as best supporting actress for her role in “Gone with the Wind,’’ will be honored in the Black Heritage series.
Maintaining the entertainment theme, the post office’s annual Legends of Hollywood stamp, scheduled for June, will feature Judy Garland, the 1940 Academy Award winner for her performances in “Babes in Arms’’ and “The Wizard of Oz.’’
Also entertaining is a January set of stamps featuring favorite children’s book animals such as The Very Hungry Caterpillar, Curious George and Fox in Socks....
Much more: http://www.dhonline.com/articles/2005/12/01/news/nation/nat14.txt
WASHINGTON (AP) — Motorcycles and skiers, baseball players and lovers, a 40-stamp series featuring America’s biggest, tallest and deepest, from sea cliffs to bison to waterfalls and lakes. They’re all commemoratives planned for next year by the U.S. Postal Service.
Comic book superheroes brighten one set of stamps. Others feature Benjamin Franklin, explorer Samuel de Champlain, Florida wetlands and snowflakes.
With the price of a first class stamp climbing to 39 cents on Jan. 8, most of the new issues will carry that rate.
But the first to be released won’t have a price on it, since it had to be printed in advance to be ready for distribution in early January. That’s the latest Love stamp: Entitled True Blue this year, it depicts two birds on a branch looking devotedly at each other with the space between them forming a heart. A revised version with the 39-cent price will be issued in March.
Love, of course, often leads to marriage and the post office is prepared.
A white dove is featured on a set of wedding stamps in one- and two-ounce rates designed for sending wedding invitations and reply envelopes. They are due in March.
And, not yet done with matters of the heart, in April there will be a set of romance stamps featuring Disney characters such as Mickey and Minnie and Lady and the Tramp.
On Jan. 11, a stamp featuring a downhill skier will commemorate the Olympic Winter Games in Turin, Italy.
It’s the first of several sporting stamps planned for the year.
Boxer Sugar Ray Robinson will be featured on a stamp in April, and during the summer there will be a set recalling baseball sluggers Roy Campanella, Hank Greenberg, Mickey Mantle and Mel Ott.
At the end of January, Hattie McDaniel, who won the 1939 Academy Award as best supporting actress for her role in “Gone with the Wind,’’ will be honored in the Black Heritage series.
Maintaining the entertainment theme, the post office’s annual Legends of Hollywood stamp, scheduled for June, will feature Judy Garland, the 1940 Academy Award winner for her performances in “Babes in Arms’’ and “The Wizard of Oz.’’
Also entertaining is a January set of stamps featuring favorite children’s book animals such as The Very Hungry Caterpillar, Curious George and Fox in Socks....
Much more: http://www.dhonline.com/articles/2005/12/01/news/nation/nat14.txt