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Word: postally (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...hasten to point out, a zero when it comes to digits: I've dealt for years with postal code numbers, telex codes and apartment-block addresses like 99-34 67th Road (#6D). But now, all of a sudden, I have to list extension numbers for voice mail, fax numbers for home (thus doubling the number of numbers to list and, in the process, often extending the length of each number, to cope with a digital dearth) and http://'s. To reach a friend a few blocks away, I have to type 38 letters that mean nothing, a numeral, two underlines...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE INCREDIBLE SHRINKING ADDRESS BOOK | 11/3/1997 | See Source »

...Hunter S. Thompson) began more insistently including four extra digits and a dash. Suddenly, the 213 area code for Los Angeles had sprouted seven alternatives, and French phone numbers were 10 digits long, and my friends were stockpiling spouses' names upon their own. Here in Japan, my three-digit postal code spawned two extra digits, and even as I was writing this, a circular arrived to inform me that, as of next February, my tiny rural neighborhood will get 17 new postal codes, all seven digits long...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE INCREDIBLE SHRINKING ADDRESS BOOK | 11/3/1997 | See Source »

This explosion of numbers has, of course, dramatically increased the cachet of living number-free; one of the luxuries of having a house in the English countryside is that, omitting the postal code, you can have an address made up entirely of words (viz. "Mr. Toad, Toad Hall, nr. Rat's Hole, Grahame's Head, Oxfordshire, England"). Yet somehow the figures always catch up with you in the end: villages in the Cotswolds have local phone codes five digits long--as long, in fact, as the numbers themselves. And it must be confessed that one of the only "analog" addresses...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE INCREDIBLE SHRINKING ADDRESS BOOK | 11/3/1997 | See Source »

...privately owned stamp company, sells a block of nine for $12.95. The company, based in Maryland, is appointed by post offices around the world to help market and distribute special-interest or collector stamps, which are legal for postage in the country where they are produced and recognized by postal authorities worldwide. i.c.s. buys the stamps from the government, usually paying above face value, and covers distribution costs. The country takes a cut from the company's profits...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Notebook: Aug. 25, 1997 | 8/25/1997 | See Source »

National publishing and college store associations have asked President Clinton to intervene in the strike, which he has refused to do. The Associations of American Publishers has asked Clinton to direct postal workers to give the delivery of educational materials special attention...

Author: By Matthew W. Granade, | Title: UPS Strike Threatens Academic Bookstores | 8/15/1997 | See Source »

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