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Is your kitchen counter beginning to look like the inside of your mailbox? Is Sunday your favorite day of the week? Is your mailman beginning to resemble the devil? Then you may have a mail organization problem.
If you haven't shipped Aunt Emily’s slippers or that Hokey Pokey Elmo for your nephew in New Jersey yet, there’s still time to get the gifts there by Christmas without forking over a fortune.
The telephone is ringing. There are e-mails to be answered. And there is a project due by the end of the day. How do you stay on track? Career experts said there are several ways to deal with different types of interruptions.
Scottsdale is the first East Valley city to send daily e-mails to its apartment buildings in an effort to deter crime at the complexes.
Do you recently remember reading or sending an e-mail that contained embarrassing grammatical errors?
NEW YORK - Cingular Wireless is introducing a service for nonbusiness users to get BlackBerry-like mobile access to their personal e-mail accounts from AOL, Yahoo and MSN Hotmail on a cell phone.
The investigation of a high-ranking Scottsdale official came on suddenly. It ended just as fast with his termination on his 20th anniversary.
June 21, 2004
Bomb dogs sniffing incoming mail at Scottsdale city offices Tuesday may soon be replaced by X-ray equipment, a city official said.
The Internet has become a crucial bridge for deployed troops and their loved ones, but the frequent contact also creates new worries about compromising military security.
Job title: Mesa Police Department Public Safety 911 Operator; How did you get your job? “I contacted the City of Mesa Human Resources division and they mailed the application to my home.
Dawn Laguado has a passion for teaching, and she is building on that passion by bringing a home-based program focusing on the Montessori teaching method to Ahwatukee Foothills.
Dawn Laguado has a passion for teaching, and she is building on that passion by bringing a home-based program focusing on the Montessori teaching method to Ahwatukee Foothills.
Dawn Laguado has a passion for teaching, and she is building on that passion by bringing a home-based program focusing on the Montessori teaching method to Ahwatukee Foothills.
It all comes down to the next eight days.
“Doozers” is the term that Dean and Andi Barness affectionately dub subscribers to their daily deal website.
“Doozers” is the term that Dean and Andi Barness affectionately dub subscribers to their daily deal website.
“Doozers” is the term that Dean and Andi Barness affectionately dub subscribers to their daily deal website.
Q: In Outlook Express what happens when you "compact all folders"? — Carol
June 7, 2004
This undated photo provided by The Macomb Daily shows former publisher Mark McKee. McKee can finally rest easy after revealing a “terrible secret” and returning the library book he checked out 76 years ago. In 1934, the 13-year-old McKee checked out “A Dog of Flanders” by English author Marie Louise de la Ramee from the Mount Clemens Public Library. The Macomb Daily’s former publisher recently rediscovered the book and mailed it to the library. The 89-year-old McKee says he “was entranced by the book” but always intended to return it. (AP Photo/The Macomb Daily)
A group aiming to oust the private Rural/Metro Corp. in favor of a Scottsdale-run fire department has indirectly violated state election law by sending campaign material to city employees, Scottsdale City Attorney David Pennartz said Wednesday.
In this 2010 photo, Library Director Donald Worrell Jr. holds a returned copy of the novel "A Dog in Flanders" at the library in Mount Clemens, Mich. The Macomb Daily’s former publisher recently rediscovered the book and mailed it to the library. The 89-year-old McKee says he “was entranced by the book” he checked out from the library in 1934 but always intended to return it. He’s now a winter resident of Chandler, Ariz., and says he recently rediscovered the book among his possessions. Worrell says he was thrilled to get the book and a letter from his friend and says he plans to put both on display. He’s waiving any fines. (AP Photo/The Macomb Daily, Craig Gaffield)
WASHINGTON - A broad international effort by government and industry is needed to stop the torrent of junk e-mail that threatens Internet commerce and correspondence, lawmakers were told Wednesday.
The root of a large bust that netted the arrests of eight people involved in identity theft goes deeper than the mail the suspects were accused of stealing, Scottsdale police are warning.
Guest Commentary by Michael Carroll
Guest commentary by Phil Kerpen
By Mark Heller, Tribune
By Mark Scarp, contributing columnist
By Jerry Brown, contributing columnist
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