News In Brief
this is out of my league
It's no secret that pricey real estate and California pretty much go hand in hand. Take San Carlos, at the northern end of Silicon Valley, where the median home price is a whopping $780,000. Obviously, not everybody can afford that, but you wouldn't expect one of them to be the city's mayor. But, in fact, Dave Buckmaster is quitting his post and moving to Sacramento. So he probably doesn't agree wholeheartedly with San Carlos's motto: "the city of good living."
It's 1,904; I'm sure of it
It isn't only comedians who are having a field day with the difficulty Americans seem to have in counting correctly - most recently in last week's presidential vote. In Berlin, for fun, the host of Germany's most popular TV game show picked three US exchange students from his audience and asked them to determine the number of seats in the auditorium. The answers - due an hour later - ranged from 1,860 to 2,077.
Coming up: another rise in the price of a postage stamp
When the Postal Service hikes the price of a first-class stamp to 34 cents, probably in early January, it will be the second one-penny increase in two years and the 18th change in first-class rates since a charge was instituted 115 years ago. Here is how first-class stamps have fluctuated in price through history:
July 1, 1885 2 cents
Nov. 3, 1917 3 cents
July 1, 1919 2 cents
July 6, 1932 3 cents
Aug. 1, 1958 4 cents
Jan. 7, 1963 5 cents
Jan. 7, 1968 6 cents
May 16, 1971 8 cents
March 2, 1974 10 cents
Dec. 31, 1975 13 cents
May 29, 1978 15 cents
March 22, 1981 18 cents
Nov. 1, 1981 20 cents
Feb. 17, 1985 22 cents
April 3, 1988 25 cents
Feb. 3, 1991 29 cents
Jan. 1, 1995 32 cents
Jan. 10, 1999 33 cents
- Associated Press
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