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Cutting The Wait
The Stamp Collecting Report, I'm Lloyd de Vries.
Under present rules, most people have to be dead ten years before they can appear
on a U-S stamp.
Ten years isn't a law, it's a Postal Service rule. And now Linn's Stamp News
reports it may be changed to FIVE years. By the time a decade has passed, people
have forgotten who some celebrities were. Postal officials want to repeat their
biggest stamp success story, says reporter Bill McAllister, the phenomenal sales of
the Elvis Presley stamp.
"More contemporary designs might be this secret."
RUNS :03
Of course, there are celebrities whose fame was long gone before they died. How
many times have you heard of the passing of an entertainer and said, "I didn't
even know he was still alive!"
"The public memory of celebrities fades fast."
RUNS :03
The Postal Service is also under pressure from two fronts, says McAllister:
Personalized postage, where anyone with the rights can create a stamp, and
Capitol Hill.
"There's pressure building in Congress for a Rosa Parks stamp to honor the civil
rights leader. That would require breaking the ten-year rule, because the sponsors
wanted this stamp right away."
RUNS: :12
And, after all, the thinking goes, stamps for Rosa Parks and Bob Hope and other
superstars are inevitable. Why wait?
I'm Lloyd de Vries of The Virtual Stamp Club. For more about stamps and stamp
collecting, visit virtual-stamp-club-dot-com
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