For broadcast on CBS Radio Network stations
October 16-17, 1999:
Dead or alive.
The Stamp Collecting Report, I'm Lloyd de Vries.
This year's winner of the Nobel Prize for Chemistry,
Ahmed Zewail, was the subject of two stamps issued last
year. And he's not dead...he's still leading research on
chemical reactions at Cal Tech.
Other countries, other rules: Those were EGYPTIAN stamps.
To be on a U-S stamp, the person being honored must have been
dead ten years. The exception is a former president -- stamps
for them usually are issued on the first birthday after their
deaths. But no living people have ever been honored by U-S
stamps.
That's not the case in other countries. The British Royal
Family appears on its stamp, and in Australia, living people
are honored with stamps, such as the ones earlier this year
for Olympic Gold Medal winners.
Living people DO sneak onto U-S stamps anyway: Artists will
use friends or relatives as the basis for their illustrations,
sometimes changing their features....sometimes not. But those
people aren't being honored on the stamps.
And that's stamp collecting this week.
I'm Lloyd de Vries, CBS News.
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