No More Printed Linn’s Stamp News

Linn’s Stamp News, the major weekly news publication of U.S. philately, is now only available as a digital (online) product. In a “Philatelic Forward” lead article, editor-in-chief Jay Bigalke announced that issue No. 5000 [right], with a cover date of August 26, 2024, and which went online about two weeks earlier, was the last printed issue. Sister publication Scott Stamp Monthly, which only resumed as a separate publication last year, will continue to be available as a hard-copy (that is, a printed magazine), as well as digitally.

Amos Media CEO Rick Amos, in a memo to staffers quoted in Linn’s, attributed the decision to the shift in readership from print to online and to increasing costs, which Amos called “unsustainable.” He promised that Linn’s would continue to report philatelic news, although some Linn’s features may move to SSM. He also said that new options and features are being developed for the Linn’s website.

Take our polls asking Print subscribers if they will continue to subscribe.

There is currently no mention of the change on the non-subscription part of the website, other than the lack of a printed-copy option in subscriptions.

Linn’s had currently been producing some issues as digital-only while others were available in both formats.


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Stotts, Reinhard, Trettin Get Top APS Honor

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APS Honors Stotts, Reinhard, Trettin with Luff Award

The American Philatelic Society honored Jay Stotts, Steve Reinhard and Ken Trettin with its 2024 Luff Award [left to right in the photo]. Since 1940, the Luff Award has been the most prestigious award that the American Philatelic Society can bestow upon living philatelists. The Luff Award was established in memory of John N. Luff, APS president from 1907 to 1909, who was considered the most prominent American philatelist of his era.

The APS Luff Awards are available annually for:

  • Distinguished Philatelic Research
  • Exceptional Contributions to Philately
  • Outstanding Service to the American Philatelic Society

Recipients sign the Luff Award Scroll and are presented with engraved rings. The 2024 Luff Award winners will join a distinguished company of 157 prominent philatelists.

For Distinguished Philatelic Research, Kenneth H. Trettin:
Kenneth H. “Ken” Trettin is one of the hobby’s quiet giants.
Trettin is a 50-year-plus APS member and has been a member for more than 40 years in several other groups, such as the American Revenue Association, Collectors Club of New York, U.S. Stamp Society, U.S. Philatelic Classics Society. He has served on several boards of directors, exhibits revenues and was an early exponent of special studies and display class exhibits.

Trettin is an accredited chief philatelic exhibit judge, but has especially offered his expertise and knowledge in the area of literature, for which he is a philatelic literature judge.

“Since 1965, Ken has been one of the low-key giants in organized philately, and especially, philatelic literature,” wrote Hal Vogel, a 2022 Luff Award winner who nominated Trettin. “He is not only a prolific prepress advisor and varied author, but he has also been the longtime scholarly editor of several publications, including The American Revenuer and the American Philatelic Congress Book.

Trettin’s prepress work includes everything from offering directions, editing, and layout to writing articles and copyreading. (He’s written more than 150 articles, many without bylines.) He pioneered the use of desktop publishing for philatelic literature and became a mentor to many other editors who needed guidance in the area when it was new.

“One cannot be in his presence long without recognizing how his soft, professional personality has enabled him to be both a wise, accomplished author and a research-writing mentor to many,” wrote Vogel.

Among the books and journals he has had a hand in are The American Revenuer journal (1976-2011); The Congress Book (2006-2019); several publications for the American Revenue Association, including Catalog of US Revenue Stamped Documents – Civil War Era; Second Federal Issue 1801-1802; Third Federal Issue 1814-1817; Colonial New Sweden and its Postal Communications, 1638-1655 (2023, by John Barwis; and North Atlantic Non-Contract Steamship Mail (2022), by Barwis and Dick Winter.

Trettin has contributed significantly to several generations of APS literature evaluations and has served on numerous literature evaluation competitions and committees.

Trettin’s past awards include the Charles J Peterson Philatelic Literature Lifetime Achievement Award (2015); the Chicago Philatelic Society Newbury Award for significant contributions to Chicago area philately (2010); the USPCS Distinguished Philatelist Award (2001); the Diane D Boehret Award (1999) from the American Philatelic Congress; and induction into the Writer’s Unit #30 Hall of Fame (1999).

And, to remind us that philately has its place and can easily intersect with other pastimes, Cheryl Ganz offered this final note about Trettin: “Ken Trettin is well known as a revenue collector, great editor, and outstanding literature judge. He is smart and fun. But there is another side to Ken’s vast expertise. He brews his own beer and smokes his own sausages. Ken and his wife, Eileen, have hosted many beer tasting evening events at stamp shows. They often drive to stamp shows in their convertible, carrying their mascot Kermit along to be photographed at the sites on the back roads.”

For Exceptional Contributions to Philately: Jay Stotts
Jay Stotts, like many of us, has been a collector since childhood. His involvement in the hobby has escalated since his marriage, because his wife, Denise, was equally interested in the hobby. As a young married couple, they were both involved and encouraged each other’s interests. He joined the APS in 1978.

Stotts joined the Garfield-Perry Stamp Club of Cleveland after they changed their bylaws in the mid-1980s to allow women as members, and after getting involved, served the club in many capacities, including as a board member (1986-92) and as March Party chairman in 1992. In 1992, Jay and Denise were award the Garfield-Perry LaGanke Award for service to the society.

Stotts’ interest in the United States Fourth Bureau Issue led him to join the Bureau Issues Association (BIA). He contributed a 13-part series of articles for its journal, The Specialist, for which he was awarded the society’s 1989 Walter Hopkinson Award for Literature.

Stotts was appointed to the BIA Board in 1991, a position he has held continuously with the exception of his tenures as president of the society. He was appointed to the presidency of the BIA in 1992 and served in that capacity through 1997. After the society changed its name to the United States Stamp Society (USSS), he was appointed as the society’s president and served in that capacity from 2000 through 2002, when he was again appointed to the board, a position which he still holds. He planned and coordinated a series of 20 seminars on the history of U.S. 20th century philately for the PACIFIC ’97 international stamp show.

Stotts has been an avid exhibitor since 1980 and an accredited APS judge since 1989. He served on the national Committee on Accreditation of National Exhibitions and Judges (CANEJ) of the APS for eight years (1990-98) and he was a contributor to the seventh edition of the Manual for Philatelic Judging and Exhibiting. His Fourth Bureau Issue material has earned five national grand awards and the 1995 BIA Walter Hopkinson Award for Exhibiting. He was recognized for excellence in philatelic judging in 2019 when he was awarded the American Association of Philatelic Exhibitors’ Bernard Hennig Award.

After their relocation to Houston, the Stotts became active in both the Houston Philatelic Society and the Greater Houston Stamp Show Committee. Jay has served as the society’s secretary and as the newsletter editor for more than 25 years. He was awarded the Distinguished Philatelic Texan Award of the Texas Philatelic Association in 1999 for his contributions to philately and he was awarded the Nicholas G. Carter Volunteer Recognition Award by the APS in 2009.

With the approach of the 100th anniversary of the issue of the Fourth Bureau Issue in 2022, he and the Fourth Bureau Issues Committee of the USSS began work on a published legacy resource for the issue. Jay served as editor and the society published the 500-page book, The United States Fourth Bureau Issue 1922-1938, which earned grand awards for the literature competitions at both Chicagopex 2022 and the Great American Stamp Show 2023. The book sold out in 15 months.

In addition to the positions he fills with the USSS and the Houston club, he currently serves as the American Association of Philatelic Exhibitors’ director of its Exhibit Critique Service. Jay and Denise continue to support each other’s efforts in philately and understand that this is a hobby where the more you put into it, the more enjoyment and enduring friendships you reap from it.

For Outstanding Service To The APS: Stephen Reinhard
Four years ago, Newsday, the Long Island, NY, newspaper, presented an article about philately that started, “What keeps somebody glued to a hobby for 70 years?”

Stephen Reinhard, who then at 78 had just hit his 70-year mark in the hobby, answered easily, in both print and an accompanying video published by the prime newspaper where he lives.

“I’ve learned so much about history and geography, from where countries are located to what their capitals are,” said Reinhard in print and in an accompanying video. “I don’t have a talent for those subjects. I spend hours a day in my stamp room at home. I got interested when I was 8 years old, and it’s never stopped.”

Like many of our honorees, Reinhard’s contributions to the hobby are too many to include here, but we’ll give you a taste.

In general, as summarized by a 2017 article in Linn’s Stamp News, “Reinhard is a longtime researcher and writer, an award-winning international exhibitor, and a philatelic judge. He has fulfilled numerous leadership roles in the stamp hobby while sharing his enthusiasm for his aerophilately specialty and promoting philatelic exhibiting as a foundation of the stamp hobby.”

Reinhard has more than a dozen years of service on the APS board of directors, including serving as president from 2013 to 2016.
Reinhard became an accredited national philatelic judge in 1989 and started judging internationally in the early 2000s. He’s judged at about 120 national and international exhibitions. He’s also served on national and international accreditation committees.

As with all other areas of his involvement, Reinhard has completed several roles for other organizations, particularly the Fédération Internationale de Philatélie (FIP), Collectors Club of New York and the American Air Mail Society.

For the FIP, Reinhard has served several times as U.S. commissioner and a judge to international shows. He has served as several positions for both the Collectors Club of New York (president, 2002-2004) and the Philatelic Foundation. He has served in several roles for the Air Mail Society (director for 35 years, president 1988-89). In other areas he served on the National Postal Museum’s Council of Philatelists (2013-2017) and was the creator and show chair of Aerophilately 2022.

Reinhard’s award-winning exhibits include “United States Pioneer Airmail, 1910-1916,” “United Kingdom Coronation Aerial Post, 1911” and “Swiss Pioneer Airmail, 1913.”

Reinhard served as managing editor for three volumes of The American Air Mail Catalogue (sixth edition) and written such articles for The Airpost Journal and other publications as “Chautauqua Lake Airmail – 1913-14,” “Miscalculated-Printed Matter to Mexico” and “Mexico Airmail to the U.S. was not Always the Fastest Way.”

Reinhard has garnered many of the hobby’s most prestigious honors, which include election to the Aerophilatelic Hall of Fame (2000); becoming a Fellow of the Royal Philatelic Society London (2001); FIP medal for service (2012); honorary life membership to the American Air Mail Society (2015, one of only seven in the society’s 100-year history); and the Collectors Club of New York’s Lichtenstein Medal (2017).

“Steve has given his time and talents to philately his entire adult life,” said the nominating petition from Cheryl Ganz. “I have worked with Steve on boards and committees for 40 years …He puts the good of the hobby first, and is a respected voice. Steve devotes his time and energy to philately out of his passion for this great hobby. He is a gentleman. He is very deserving of APS’s highest honor, having served in many roles for decades.”

FEPA Recognizes Boston 2026

[press release] [click on any of the pictures for larger versions]
Boston 2026 Receives FEPA Recognition

The Federation of European Philatelic Associations (FEPA) has granted Recognition status to the Boston 2026 World Expo.

FEPA is the continental European organization that supports 45 members (national philatelic federations, associations and unions) in promoting philately. Its activities are principally focused on sharing information, promoting innovation and cooperation, supporting exhibitions and rewarding achievements.

FEPA recognition is normally restricted to exhibitions on European territory. In granting its recognition to Boston 2026 World Expo, however, the FEPA Board is aware of the global importance of this exhibition and wishes to help the Organizing Committee to promote the show in Europe.

Recognition by FEPA grants Boston 2026 three privileges:

  • Marketing and promotion of the exhibition through its channels (magazine, website, newsletters, etc.)
  • Technical expertise as requested
  • Use of its logo and flag

FEPA information can be found on its web site at fepanews.com.

Boston 2026 World Expo takes place May 23-30, 2026, at the Boston Convention & Exhibition Center. Full show details may be found at Boston2026.org and on Twitter and Facebook. Sign up to be added to the Boston 2026 email list and receive updates when available.

Boston 2026 Releases 4th Label

[press release] [click on any of the pictures for larger versions]
Fourth Boston 2026 Label Now Available

Boston 2026’s newest collectible label was released at 1 PM today during a ceremonial presentation about the World Expo on the exhibition floor at the Great American Stamp Show in Hartford, Connecticut.

Award-winning stamp artist Chris Calle has once again shared his talents in support of America’s next international philatelic exhibition by creating the fourth in a series of yearly patriotic-themed promotional “The Road to Boston 2026” designs.

The 2024 artwork features a portrait of John Adams, the Harvard educated lawyer from Massachusetts who eventually became the second President of the United States. Furthering his work as a delegate to the First and Second Continental Congresses, he was one of five men on the committee that drafted the Declaration of Independence. A view of Adams addressing the Congress is seen under his likeness. So, too, are two of the four U.S. stamps from the 1974 Bicentennial Era issue depicting Philadelphia’s Carpenter’s Hall, site of the first Continental Congress and later referred to as Independence Hall, and the quote, “We ask but for Peace, Liberty and Safety” from the Congressional petition to King George III.

As before, 3,000 water-activated sheetlets of nine labels were produced by the Portland Stamp Company. Prior labels depicted a Post Rider in 2021, Ben Franklin in 2022 and Sam Adams in 2023. All three are no longer available.

Both the unsigned and a limited edition of 450 artist-signed versions of the 2024 sheetlet are available. Orders are currently being accepted through the Boston 2026 web site.

Boston 2026 World Expo takes place May 23-30, 2026, at the Boston Convention & Exhibition Center. Full show details may be found at Boston2026.org and on Twitter and Facebook. Sign up to be added to the Boston 2026 email list and receive updates when available.

Dragon Cards at GASS 2024

Dragon Cards will have a double booth Saturday at the Cachetmakers Bourse of Great American Stamp Show in Hartford. I’m going to try to bring almost everything!

Order now at www.dragoncards.biz or the eBay Store www.ebay.com/str/dragoncardsfdcs and and pick up at the Bourse (Saturday only) and I will refund your P&H charges.

But today is the last day to order that I will be able to mail out orders before the show.

Lawrence Article Wins AFDCS Ward Award

You can click on the photographs for larger views.

“The Greatest American First Day Cover” by Ken Lawrence is the 2023 winner of the American First Day Cover Society’s annual Philip H. Ward, Jr., Memorial Award for

Excellence in First Day Cover Literature. The article appeared in the February 2023 issue of The Chronicle of the US Classic Postal Issues. It is the story of a July 2, 1847, cover sent from New York City to Indianapolis, franked with the 10-cent George Washington (Scott 2), one of the first two U.S. stamps. It was first discovered in 1972 and is currently on display at the National Postal Museum. [Photo here courtesy of the NPM.]

All articles in First Days, the official journal of the AFDCS, automatically are considered for this award, but articles and works in other publications may be submitted for consideration. A complete list of past winners can be found on the AFDCS website at www.afdcs.org/ward.html

Lawrence’s articles have won the Ward competition twice before and shared in a third. One of those articles also was awarded the U.S. Stamp Society’s Barbara Mueller Award. He is a recipient of the Charles J. Peterson Philatelic Literature Life Achievement Award, and served as a vice president of the American Philatelic Society and trustee of the American Philatelic Research Library.

Although he has been writing about FDCs for 40 years, “this article is probably the most important one I have written,” he says. Although the official first-day-of-issue for Scott 1 and 2 is July 1, there is no evidence they were placed on sale until the next day, when this cover was mailed.

Philip Henry Ward, Jr., began servicing first day covers in 1909. An electrical engineer by trade, he wrote on new issues for The American Philatelist, Mekeel’s Weekly Stamp News and The Weekly Philatelic Gazette in the early 20th century.

The American First Day Cover Society is a not-for-profit educational organization. In addition to First Days, the AFDCS also publishes handbooks and catalogues, and promotes the collecting of both modern and “classic” issues and cachets, as well as exhibiting FDCs. It offers awards for outstanding first day cover exhibits and an annual contest for cachetmakers, and is a co-host of the annual Great American Stamp Show.

For more information about the AFDCS, visit www.afdcs.org, e-mail afdcs@afdcs.org or write the AFDCS at Post Office Box 27, Greer, SC 29652-0027.

Americover 2024 Silent Auction List Online

The Americover 2024 Silent Auction has more than 250 lots this year! Americover is the American First Day Cover Society’s component of Great American Stamp Show 2024, which is being held August 15-18 in Hartford, Conn.

The lots may be viewed and bid upon in the AFDCS Hospitality Suite during GASS 2024, 8 p.m. to midnight Wednesday through Saturday nights, in the Marriott Hotel’s Capital Ballroom. Admission to the Hospitality Suite is free and open to the public. Some refreshments will be available.

Nothing beats seeing these amazing covers and cover lots in person, but you can also see the lot descriptions online here and send bids to silent@afdcs.org Bidding both at the Suite and online ends at 10:30 pm EDT Saturday the 17th.

AFDCS Goes to Plan B After GASS 2024

AFDCS Post-GASS Sunday Dinner: We’re going to Plan B. Literally. That’s the name of the restaurant, Plan b Burger Bar, about a five-minute walk from the convention center and Marriott. We’ll meet in the Marriott lobby at 6 p.m., and we will have a private room. You can find the menu here.

As always, the post-show dinner is “Dutch treat:” We’ll each get separate checks. Spouses, partners and friends are welcome, whether or not they are AFDCS members.
Want to check the location on Google Maps? It’s at 35 Front Street in Hartford. Its website is headlined, “burgers. beer. bourbon.” so make sure you have a Designated Walker!

Scott Catalogue U.S. Update (August 2024)

5855 (68¢) Carnival Nights – Wave Swinger Ride, Photograph by Annette Shaff
a. Imperforate
5856 (68¢) Carnival Nights – Midway Gondola Wheel and a Ring of Fire, Photograph by Annette Shaff
a. Imperforate
5857 (68¢) Carnival Nights – Gondola Wheels, Photograph by Aleff Gripp
a. Imperforate
5858 (68¢) Carnival Nights – Gondola Wheel, Photograph by Pamela Hennessey
a. Imperforate
5859 (68¢) Carnival Nights – Gondola Wheel, Photograph by Phil Roeder
a. Imperforate
5860 (68¢) Carnival Nights – Gondola Wheel, Wave Swinger and Midway Food and Game Booths, Photograph by Timothy Hughes
a. Imperforate
5861 (68¢) Carnival Nights – Gondola Wheel, Photograph by Joseph Sohm
a. Imperforate
5862 (68¢) Carnival Nights – Round-Up Ride, Photograph by Bob Davidson
a. Imperforate
5863 (68¢) Carnival Nights – Carousel, Photograph by Sarah Beard Buckley
a. Imperforate
5864 (68¢) Carnival Nights – Gondola Wheel and Wave Swinger, Photograph by Anthony Totah
a. Imperforate
b. Block of 10, #5855-5864
c. Imperforate block of 10, #5855a-5864a

5865 (68¢) Protect Sea Turtles – Kemp’s Ridley Sea Turtle
a. Imperforate
5866 (68¢) Protect Sea Turtles – Green Sea Turtle
a. Imperforate
5867 (68¢) Protect Sea Turtles – Leatherback Sea Turtle
a. Imperforate
5868 (68¢) Protect Sea Turtles – Loggerhead Sea Turtle
a. Imperforate
5869 (68¢) Protect Sea Turtles – Hawksbill Sea Turtle
a. Imperforate
5870 (68¢) Protect Sea Turtles – Olive Ridley Sea Turtle
a. Imperforate
b. Vert. strip of 6, #5865-5870
c. Imperforate vert. strip of 6, #5865-5870

5871 (68¢) Flag with Blue Sky at Top and Cloud at Bottom, serpentine die cut 9½ vert. coil stamp
5872 (68¢) Flag with Dark Clouds at Top and Bottom, serpentine die cut 9½ vert. coil stamp
5873 (68¢) Flag with Blue Sky and Clouds at Top and Bottom, serpentine die cut 9½ vert. coil stamp
5874 (68¢) Flag with Blue Sky and White Clouds at Top, serpentine die cut 9½ vert. coil stamp
a. Coil strip of 4, #5871-5874
5875 (68¢) Flag with Dark Clouds at Top and Bottom, serpentine die cut 11½ vert. coil stamp
5876 (68¢) Flag with Blue Sky and Clouds at Top and Bottom, serpentine die cut 11½ vert. coil stamp
5877 (68¢) Flag with Blue Sky and White Clouds at Top, serpentine die cut 11½ vert. coil stamp
5878 (68¢) Flag with Blue Sky at Top and Cloud at Bottom, serpentine die cut 11½ vert. coil stamp
a. Coil strip of 4, #5875-5878
5879 (68¢) Flag with Blue Sky at Top and Cloud at Bottom, serpentine die cut 10 vert. coil stamp
5880 (68¢) Flag with Dark Clouds at Top and Bottom, serpentine die cut 10 vert. coil stamp
5881 (68¢) Flag with Blue Sky and Clouds at Top and Bottom, serpentine die cut 10 vert. coil stamp
5882 (68¢) Flag with Blue Sky and White Clouds at Top, serpentine die cut 10 vert. coil stamp
a. Coil strip of 4, #5879-5882
5883 (68¢) Flag with Blue Sky and Clouds at Top and Bottom, 18¾x21½mm design size, serpentine die cut 11¼x10¾ on 2 or 3 sides booklet stamp
5884 (68¢) Flag with Blue Sky and White Clouds at Top, 18¾x21½mm design size, serpentine die cut 11¼x10¾ on 2 or 3 sides booklet stamp
5885 (68¢) Flag with Blue Sky at Top and Cloud at Bottom, 18¾x21½mm design size, serpentine die cut 11¼x10¾ on 2 or 3 sides booklet stamp
5886 (68¢) Flag with Dark Clouds at Top and Bottom, 18¾x21½mm design size, serpentine die cut 11¼x10¾ on 2 or 3 sides booklet stamp
a. Block of 4, #5883-5886
b. Convertible booklet pane of 20, 5 each #5883-5886
5887 (68¢) Flag with Blue Sky and Clouds at Top and Bottom, 18¼x21mm design size, serpentine die cut 11¼x10¾ on 2 or 3 sides booklet stamp
5888 (68¢) Flag with Blue Sky and White Clouds at Top, 18¼x21mm design size, serpentine die cut 11¼x10¾ on 2 or 3 sides booklet stamp
5889 (68¢) Flag with Blue Sky at Top and Cloud at Bottom, 18¼x21mm design size, serpentine die cut 11¼x10¾ on 2 or 3 sides booklet stamp
5890 (68¢) Flag with Dark Clouds at Top and Bottom, 18¼x21mm design size, serpentine die cut 11¼x10¾ on 2 or 3 sides booklet stamp
a. Block of 4, #5887-5890
b. Convertible booklet pane of 20, 5 each #5887-5890

5891 (68¢) Horses – Horse with Brown Spots Facing Left
a. Imperforate
5892 (68¢) Horses – Brown Horse with White Blaze Facing Forward
a. Imperforate
5893 (68¢) Horses – Half-Arabian Horse Facing Right
a. Imperforate
5894 (68¢) Horses – Brown Horse with Bridle Facing Left
a. Imperforate
5895 (68¢) Horses – Horse with Long White Mane
a. Imperforate
b. Vert. strip of 5, #5891-5895
c. Imperforate vert. strip of 5, #5891a-5895a

5896 Shaker Designs pane of 12
a. (68¢) Meeting Room, Hancock Shaker Village, Pittsfield, Massachusetts
b. (68¢) Tannery, Mount Lebanon Shaker Village, New Lebanon, New York
c. (68¢) Spinning Wheel, Fruitlands Museum, Harvard, Massachusetts
d. (68¢) Staircases, Pleasant Hill Shaker Village, Harrodsburg, Kentucky
e. (68¢) Dwelling House Hallway, South Union Shaker Village, Auburn, Kentucky
f. (68¢) Silk Neckerchiefs, South Union Shaker Village
g. (68¢) Rocking Chair, Canterbury Shaker Village, Canterbury, New Hampshire
h. (68¢) Bentwood Box Detail, Hancock Shaker Village
i. (68¢) Heater Stove, Hancock Shaker Village
j. (68¢) Cupboard With Oval Boxes, Fruitlands Museum
k. (68¢) Bentwood Boxes and Carriers, Fruitlands Museum
l. (68¢) Cheese Baskets, Hancock Shaker Village
m. As #5896, imperforate
n. As #5896a, imperforate
o. As #5896b, imperforate
p. As #5896c, imperforate
q. As #5896d, imperforate
r. As #5896e, imperforate
s. As #5896f, imperforate
t. As #5896g, imperforate
u. As #5896h, imperforate
v. As #5896i, imperforate
w. As #5896j, imperforate
x. As #5896k, imperforate
y. As #5896l, imperforate

RW91 $25 Northern Pintail Hunting Permit Stamp
RW91A $25 Northern Pintail Hunting Permit Stamp sheet of 1