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August 21, 2009

Old Elvis Stamp

Mark Stutzman's portait of Elvis

Mark Stutzman's portait of Elvis

Oddly Interesting National Postal Museum

Oddly Interesting

Oddly Interesting

Among the National Postal Museum's object collections are the types of things most people associate with postal systems: stamps, envelopes, mailbags, mail trucks, uniforms and other items that are part of the vast and varied history of the U.S. postal network.

But beyond these items that everyone would expect to see in a postal museum are some objects that raise eyebrows among the museum's staff, let alone the general public. In celebration of the National Postal Museum's fifteenth anniversary, the staff selected fifteen objects from the collection that they consider to be odd and out of the ordinary.

These quirky objects have been grouped into five categories. They are objects that have been used to carry or mark mail, objects that have traveled through the mail stream, and those worn by mail carriers. Finally, two of these items reveal a connection between animals and the mail.

Regulus 1 missile mail container

Things That Carried Mail

Perforating paddle

Things That Marked the Mail

Package of snuff

Things That Traveled Through the Mail

Handheld door knocker for letter carriers

Things Worn While Carrying the Mail

Arago: Exhibits

Federal Bureau of Investigation - Press Room - "FBI, This Week" Radio Show

Press Room
"FBI, This Week" Radio Show


Dogs Sniff for Explosives - I
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Mr. Schiff: The FBI Police have more than just weapons. Officer Joel Altman has a beautiful dog to help protect FBI Headquarters and employees.

Officer Altman: “ I am one of our Explosives Canine Detection Handlers, and I use Explosives Detection Canine Kurt and he is here with us today, also .”

Mr. Schiff: Tell us about Kurt.

Officer Altman: “Well he’s a black Labrador retriever; he’s a golden retriever black-lab mix, so he’s got a longer coat than most golden retrievers and Labrador retrievers .”

Mr. Schiff: Tell me about training.

Officer Altman: “ They’re introduced to different explosive odors to learn all the explosive families as well as firearms that have been fired and shell casings. And they are introduced to the odors and then as the handlers, we come in; we’re there for 10 weeks and we learn how to actually search with the dogs. So we’re the ones that actually the dog how to search and where to look for explosive odors; what areas on a vehicle or in a building would be productive to find the explosive odors. ”

Mr. Schiff: I’m Neal Schiff of the Bureau, and that’s what’s happening at the “FBI, This Week .”

Link: "FBI, This Week" ABC Radio Show Archives

Federal Bureau of Investigation - Press Room - "FBI, This Week" Radio Show

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