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Daily printout: April 24


Thursday, April 24, 2025

The four Powwows: Celebrating Native American Culture stamps showing dancers wearing traditional garb.
The Powwows: Celebrating Native American Culture stamps will showcase traditional dancers and the regalia they wear during these celebrations.

USPS celebrates Native American powwows

Four new stamps feature paintings of traditional dancers

The Postal Service will release its Powwows: Celebrating Native American Culture stamps on Friday, April 25.

Powwows are gatherings where Indigenous people celebrate through music, dance, art, pageantry and prayer. They also provide opportunities to socialize and introduce younger generations to tribal customs.

Powwows open with a grand entry parade with Native veterans, tribal elders, dancers and musicians. Events include traditional and competitive dancing, singing, arts and crafts, and the honoring of ancestors.

An important feature of any powwow dance is the dancer’s regalia — a mix of contemporary and traditional clothing chosen to reflect the dancer’s family, tribal origins and interests. Many have been passed down through generations.

The four stamps showcase paintings of Native American dancers by Mateo Romero, a Cochiti Pueblo artist:

• The first stamp shows a young woman in a teal dress and red scarf performing the crow hop against a blue and purple background.

• The second stamp features a woman dressed in brown and white regalia, performing the women’s traditional dance with an orange, yellow and green background.

• The third stamp depicts a women’s fancy shawl dancer in red, wearing a fringed cape — suggestive of a bird’s wing — against a background of turquoise, azure and gold.

• The fourth stamp shows a men’s hoop dancer in a blue vest with a matching headdress; fringed, multicolored breechcloth; and moccasins embellished with fur.

A large powwow drum — which is central to the celebrations — is showcased on the border surrounding the stamps.

Romero combined modern elements with a technique common among Native Americans from the northern coast of the Pacific Northwest. He photographed the dancers performing in traditional clothing, then painted over the photographs with brightly colored brushstrokes to create abstract expressionistic imagery that evokes both past and present.

Antonio Alcalá, an art director for USPS, designed the pane and selvage.

The Forever stamps will be available in panes of 20 at Post Offices and usps.com.

Email us your feedback. Your comments could be included in our “Mail” column.

A man wearing a blue jean jacket over a black T-shirt.
Ron Lantz, a mail processing clerk in Warrendale, PA, is a singer who writes his own songs
Off the Clock

He plays some of that rock ’n’ Ron music

This employee writes his own songs and has opened for several big names

My name is Ron Lantz and I’m a mail processing clerk at the Pittsburgh Network Distribution Center in Warrendale, PA.

When I’m not at work, I’m known as Rockin’ Ron. I’m one of the lead singers and bass guitarists for a band called the Honky Tonk Heroes. One of my fellow bandmates is Tony Lang, a retired letter carrier in New Castle, PA, who recruited me.

We play three or four nights a week and performed 100 gigs this year throughout Pennsylvania, Ohio and West Virginia.

While I love to play music and cheer people up, my Postal Service job is the most important thing to me.

I have worked for USPS for 42 years. Before that, I served in the U.S. Marine Corps, which is where I learned about postal careers.

I write and compose songs like “Nobody Loves You Like Your Doggie Do” that can be heard on my YouTube channel. I’ve opened for Merle Haggard, the Statler Brothers, Faith Hill, Boxcar Willy, 38 Special, Jerry Reed and Charlie Daniels.

I draw inspiration from Hank Williams Sr. as well as Ray Charles, renowned guitarist Danny Gatton, and Southern rock — but I love all kinds of music.

I also dabble in art and I love cartooning. I created the mural of an American flag, eagle and silhouetted soldier on the wall of the Pittsburgh Network Distribution Center.

I plan to retire April 30 and am excited to spend more time with my wife, Christine, and my kids — who range from 14 to 54 years old — but I’m going to miss working for USPS because it’s also a family.

I love working behind the scenes. If I could leave one message to my fellow Postal Service workers after 42 years, it would be to handle every package and piece of mail like it was going to Mama.

“Off the Clock,” a column on Postal Service employees and their after-hours pursuits, appears regularly in Link.

Mail

No yolk! These readers really liked our egg story

The feature on a teacher’s classroom mail project draws praise

Email us your feedback. Your comments could be included in the “Mail” column.

Brief

WestPac Area, Pennsylvania 1 District on top in scanning

A snapshot of Postal Service scanning data shows the national rating was 97.25 percent during the week ending April 18, down 0.23 percent from one week earlier.

The data was collected April 23.

WestPac led the four areas with a rating of 97.65 percent, while Central ranked last with a 97.07 percent rating.

Among the 50 districts, Pennsylvania 1, part of Atlantic Area, ranked first with a 98.42 percent rating, while Kansas-Missouri, part of Central Area, ranked last with a 94.44 percent rating.

Scanning data allows customers to track their mail and packages, which helps USPS deliver excellent service, boost loyalty and drive revenue.

To see the latest data, go to the Informed Visibility website and select “Customer Experience,” followed by “DES 2 Scan Performance.” Postal Service employees must request Informed Visibility access through eAccess.

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