NEW $50 DEBUTS IN PITTSBURGH Öffentlichkeit Deposited

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  • The E-Sylum: Volume 7, Number 36, September 5, 2004, Article 14

    NEW $50 DEBUTS IN PITTSBURGH

    Lost among the blockbuster rare coin exhibits at the recent
    American Numismatic Association convention in Pittsburgh
    was the first public display of the new U.S. $50 bill at the
    Bureau of Engraving and Printing booth.

    From a local news story headlined "The new $50 bill has
    more hidden features than James Bond's watch.":

    "The Treasury plans to begin circulating 140.8 million bills
    Sept. 28, said Antoinette Banks, numismatic coordinator for
    the Bureau of Engraving and Printing.

    This denomination accounts for less than 7 percent of all the
    money in circulation, Banks said.

    Like the latest version of the $20 bill released last year, the
    most striking feature of the new $50 bill is its abandonment
    of the venerable monotone color scheme.

    The bill is colored at both ends in blue, red and purple. The
    center portrait is still Ulysses S. Grant, but the border around
    the 18th president is gone and his shoulders extend to the
    bill's bottom border."

    "With 66 percent of U.S. currency circulating outside the
    nation, American money is the most counterfeited in the
    world, said Edward Arrich, 56, of Houston, Texas, who
    is in town for the gathering.

    Most developed nations have switched to colored ink
    because it's tougher to copy, and it's about time the United
    States caught on, said Arrich, a numismatist since he was
    12.

    "There are countries where shopkeepers won't take $50 or
    $100 bills older than 1991" because they've been
    counterfeited so much, he said. On this new $50 bill, there
    are 26 anti-counterfeiting measures, he said, adding
    conspiratorially, "that are known, anyway."

    To read the full article, see: Full Story

Quell-URL Veröffentlichungsdatum
  • 2004-09-05
Volumen
  • 7

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