With the economy the way it is, I'm going to have to initiate word rationing. In the following column, instead of tackling one whole subject with some measure of continuity, I will instead provide only short postings of numerous items. You know, like combining a bunch of little errands in one trip instead of taking the Land Destroyer out each time. So you'll be lucky if you get full senten "... whoops, exceeded the limit there. That'll cost you in content down the road. But times are tough. We have to cut back where we "... whoops.
It'll cost you a lot more than 42 cents to drive it there yourself. And really, what can you get for 42 cents? That's not even half a Kit Kat bar in my office vending machine. It's maybe 1/10 of a gallon of gas. It might get you an organic olive at Chez Panisse, though you might have to share.
One device has a "neural net processor" that is said to be "highly effective" at correctly reading "almost all addresses." But if your handwriting is abominable, as is mine, then your letters and packages will be "separated for human intervention."
Wow. Actual humans. Intervening!
And if all that fails, your mail might end up on the annual Postal Service Unclaimed Parcel Auction, now done on eBay. I'm gonna have to try one of those. I love mystery packages. It's like Christmas!
Tell that to the Moores, who own the Penny Bar in McKittrick, population 160, off Highway 33, somewhere near a tumbleweed farm between Buttonwillow and Taft. Mike and Annie Moore literally have about a million pennies — calculated at 304 per square foot — glued to every wall, floor, ceiling and pool table. (It took Mike six years to glue them all on.) They considered retiring and tried to sell the place last year, putting it up for $899,999.98. Pennies included. No takers. Not even Mr. Paulson.
If nothing else, word is that the U.S. Mint might use cheaper metal to make pennies. The Mint makes — not breath mints, sadly — but up to 8 billion shiny new pennies each year. Officials say altering metal in pennies and nickels could save taxpayers $100 million. That's the equivalent of more that two tax rebate information letters!
Whoops, reached word count limit. Must go now. See you next "...
Reach Angela Hill at ahill@bayareanewsgroup.com.






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