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Daily printout: Aug. 15


Friday, August 15, 2025

A woman stands next to a blue U.S. Mail box holding a batch of envelopes.
Ellen Webster of Hoboken, NJ, loves to send thank-you notes.

She’s mailed more than 10,000 thank-you notes

This prolific customer is also a fan of stamps, their artists and USPS

At 10,000-plus and counting, Ellen Webster may have set the record for most handwritten thank-you notes penned by one person.

The Hoboken, NJ, resident said that her notes are an exercise in “intentional noticing” as much as one of gratitude.

“It’s about being able to identify what lifts, expands and connects us,” she said. “Even a warm smile can result in a note, if it feels sincere.”

Webster drew inspiration for her project from “A Simple Act of Gratitude: How Learning to Say Thank You Changed My Life,” a 2011 memoir in which author John Kralik set a goal of writing a thank-you letter every day for a year.

“This project gives me the chance to choose to see beauty all around me. Goodness is everywhere. Even in the hardest times and places,” Webster said.

She is also passionate about stamps, calling herself “a raving fan” of their artists and designers.

Among her favorites are Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Tomie dePaola, and Total Eclipse of the Sun, as well as the Protect Sea Turtles and Bioluminescence stamps.

“I’m a scuba diver so I value the attention these stamps bring to our oceans,” she said. “And who doesn’t just love the wonderful Betty White stamp drawn by Dale Stephanos?”

Webster is also a fan of USPS.

She remembers receiving a torn-up eight-year-old letter in a plastic bag delivered with apologies from the local Post Office. It found her even though her address had changed several times in that eight years.

“My awe of USPS was sealed,” she said.

“If I had the addresses of every postal worker, you’d each get a note of gratitude. It might take a while, but that’s how important I know your work to be.”

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

A pale green moth with a spot on each wing that resembles an eye
The Luna Moth stamps will be for irregularly sized items, such as square greeting cards and invitations.

This stamp makes a graceful landing

The nonmachineable release features a pale green luna moth

The Postal Service will release Luna Moth, its latest nonmachineable surcharge stamp, on Saturday, Aug. 16.

Nonmachineable stamps are used on irregularly sized envelopes, such as square greeting cards, invitations or announcements.

The stamp features the luna moth (Actias luna), also known as the American Moon moth.

Noted for their green coloring, the moths were named after Luna, the Roman goddess of the moon because of the moon-like eyespots on each of their four wings.

With wingspans of around 3 to 6 inches, luna moths are some of the largest moths in North America. They dwell in the hardwood trees of the eastern United States and southern Canada with a habitat range spreading as far as eastern Texas and North Dakota.

Adult luna moths live for about one week — just long enough to reproduce.

The stamp shows an image of a pale green luna moth in sharp focus. With darker edges and eyespots on all four wings, the moth has a white and yellow body with feathery brown antennae between its forewings.

Derry Noyes, an art director for USPS, designed the stamps using an image by artist Joseph Scheer.

Scheer used a high-resolution scanner to capture multiple layers of a preserved luna moth before stitching them together.

The stamp will be available in panes of 20 at Post Offices and on usps.com.

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

A cat dressed like a postal worker
TigerJoJo dons his USPS uniform.
People

Purrfectly postal

A feline fan dresses the part, a job fair targets automotive positions and a postmaster takes office

A cat with a big social media following is showing his affection for the Postal Service.

Tiger JoJo — a male orange tabby with more than 500,000 followers on Facebook, Instagram and TikTok — was shown wearing a USPS uniform and “driving” a toy LLV in a recent post that was later shared on the Postal Service’s social media pages.

“JoJo loves being a mail carrier so much. His LLV is definitely one of his favorites. It’s the only vehicle he has that has a roof,” said Christine Johansson, a Fairfield, CA, resident and Tiger JoJo’s owner.

Born in 2020 and adopted from foster care by Johansson when he was 9 weeks old, the cat is often featured in costume near one of his 23 electric vehicles.

He is leash trained and knows many tricks, including wearing sunglasses that he can shake off on command.

He’s also a bit of a clotheshorse.

“JoJo loves costumes and always crawls right into his outfits. He’s very serious about being a postal carrier. He absolutely loves being a cat in uniform,” Johansson said.

Under the hood

USPS recently held a two-day job fair in Seattle that was unusual because it highlighted automotive technician positions.

“Most people in the general public think that working for the Postal Service means being a clerk, a carrier or mail handler,” said Steve McMullen, a local workforce planning and development manager. “They don’t realize that we have hundreds of specialized jobs in other categories.”

Several attendees applied for jobs on the spot, including one certified auto mechanic.

“He said he responded to the job fair ad because he was interested in putting his skills to work for an organization that makes a difference,” McMullen said.

New postmaster

The new postmaster in Ramona, CA, is Diana Gutierrez, who brings more than 20 years of experience to the job, including stints as a rural carrier and officer in charge.

In Ramona — a community of about 22,000 residents in San Diego County — Gutierrez will oversee more than 35 employees, 1,500 PO Boxes and 19 delivery routes.

“My goal is to provide exceptional service to our customers while creating a supportive environment for employees to grow and succeed,” she said.

“People” appears regularly in Link. Got news to share? Email us.

A mail delivery truck stops at a mailbox along a rural road
Do you know how much total operating revenue USPS reported last quarter?
News Quiz

On the money

How much do you know about the Postal Service’s third-quarter financial results?

“News Quiz” is a weekly feature that lets you test your knowledge of recent Link stories. The correct answers appear at the end.

1. How much total operating revenue did the Postal Service report for the quarter that ended June 30?

a) $1.8 billion

b) $18.8 billion

c) $188 billion

d) None of the above

2. In its 10 months of use in the Dulles, VA, Processing and Distribution Center, how many packages has the new parallel induction linear sorter processed?  

a) 7 million

b) 9 million

c) 12 million

d) 14 million

3. The actor who voices the character of Mr. Krabs appears in a USPS video promoting the new SpongeBob SquarePants stamps. Who is he?  

a) Bill Fagerbakke 

b) Clancy Brown

c) Rodger Bumpass

d) Tom Kenny

4. What did Customer Services Supervisor Brittany Bennett present to her USPS colleagues after her U.S. Army National Guard deployment to Syria?

a) A poem

b) Her boots and beret

c) The recipe of her favorite Syrian dish

d) A U.S. flag that had flown above her military base

5. What happed to a customer while she was greeting Weiser, ID, Letter Carrier Casey Roubidoux?

a) She had a seizure.

b) She tripped over her cat.

c) She twisted her ankle.

d) She was stung by a wasp.

Answers: 1) b. 2) c. 3) b. 4) d. 5) a.

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