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Daily printout: May 22


Thursday, May 22, 2025

A pane of stamps showing illustrations of cute baby animals
The Baby Wild Animals stamps will feature digital images of 10 American animal species as babies.

Wild animals on stamps? Oh, baby!

The digital designs include young versions of foxes, deer and rabbits, among others

The Postal Service will release its Baby Wild Animals stamps on Friday, May 23.

The stamps feature illustrations of 10 familiar American animal species as babies.

The animals — fox, owl, deer, seal, rabbit, raccoon, bear, skunk, bobcat and chipmunk — range widely across the United States.

Tracy Walker created the digital illustrations, layering colored shapes on a solid-color background in a palette of rust orange, cornflower blue, pale ecru, black and white.

Each animal appears with details of its habitat — flowers, leaves, water and other natural elements.

Greg Breeding, an art director for USPS, designed the stamps, which will be available in booklets of 20 at Post Offices and on usps.com.

The Forever stamps will debut at the Rocky Mountain Stamp Show in Aurora, CO.

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

A younger man and an older man wear T-shirts and stand in a hallway holding large bells
Jonah Alexander, left, and Thomas Alexander are USPS retail associates and bell ringers
Off the Clock

This father-son duo bond over bells

Both retail associates stay connected through their music

THOMAS ALEXANDER: I’m a retail associate at the Rush, NY, Post Office.

JONAH ALEXANDER: I’m a retail sales associate at the Medina, NY, Post Office. Thomas is my dad. We both began our Postal Service careers as seasonal employees in the Northwest Rochester, NY, Processing and Distribution Center.

THOMAS: Playing music is something our family has long shared together. We played folk music for a while. I mainly played guitar and bass, my wife played the hammered dulcimer and Jonah played drums.    

Back when I was in grade school, my mom’s church had a small set of handbells that nobody was using, so my four siblings and I borrowed them. We only performed one time, but it left me with a special memory that I would think of from time to time.

Then, a few years ago, I was looking for a way to get back into music. That’s when I learned there was a bell choir looking for ringers. I went and gave it a shot and then encouraged my wife and Jonah to join.    

Our choir, the Erie Canal Ringers, has 13 bell ringers. I’m responsible for three or four bells; Jonah handles six or seven.

JONAH: I mainly play the bass bells, which are larger in size.

THOMAS: Some are larger than your head.

Our music varies. We’ll play movie themes, old and new popular music, and we even did a Macedonian folk piece in 7/8 time.

While performing, bell ringers read the music, pick up the correct bell, ring it and then place it back down — often in rapid succession. It’s challenging, but it’s also fun.

JONAH: We have music sheets in front of us that look a lot like piano sheet music but with a lot more notes. A piano player would understand the notes but would say, “I don’t have that many fingers.”

THOMAS: The family aspect of this is the best part. Jonah lives 60 miles away, but we rehearse every Tuesday night in Brockport, NY, which is halfway between my home and his. That lets me see him every week, which has been special.

JONAH: Ringing bells gives me the chance to hang out with Mom and Dad, and to get a little taste of home each week. You don’t know how much you’ll miss something until you don’t have it anymore.

Also, we get to travel for performances and perform in interesting places.

THOMAS: We serve the community through this hobby as well. Our last concert raised $1,400 for a local historical building damaged by a major fire.

We get together, make a little music and bring some good to our community.

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

A man wearing a red, white and blue vest — his back to the camera — stands with his head bowed before an array of flags.
A man stands before an array of American flags at the Soldiers and Sailors Monument in Boston on Memorial Day last year.

Memorial Day is May 26

The annual observance honors those who died defending the U.S.

Memorial Day, a time to honor the men and women who gave their lives in service to the country, will be observed on Monday, May 26.

The first national commemoration was held in 1868, after Gen. John A. Logan of the Grand Army of the Republic, an organization of former Union soldiers and sailors, called for May 30 to be set aside “for the purpose of strewing with flowers or otherwise decorating” the gravesites of those who died defending the country in the Civil War. This is why the holiday is sometimes referred to as Decoration Day.

One hundred years later, Congress changed the date from May 30 to the last Monday in May as part of the Uniform Monday Holiday Act.

The Postal Service has long paid tribute to military service and sacrifice through its stamp program. This month, the organization released Armed Forces stamps to honor the 250th anniversaries of the Army, Navy and Marine Corps.

Fearing that the holiday was becoming more associated with barbecues and shopping than honoring the fallen, Congress passed the National Moment of Remembrance Act in 2000.

The act calls for Americans to pause at 3 p.m. on Memorial Day for a moment of silence to remember the fallen.

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

Brief

WestPac Area, Pennsylvania 1 District on top in scanning

A snapshot of Postal Service scanning data shows the national rating was 97.03 percent during the week ending May 16, down 0.39 percent from one week earlier.

The data was collected May 21.

WestPac led the four areas with a rating of 97.43 percent, while Southern ranked last with a 96.85 percent rating.

Among the 50 districts, Pennsylvania 1, part of Atlantic Area, ranked first with a 98.34 percent rating, while Georgia, part of Southern Area, ranked last with a 94.03 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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