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Archiver > Scotch-Irish > 2011-11 > 1322017330
From:
Subject: Re: [S-I] Volunteers to read a chapter in a book?
Date: Wed, 23 Nov 2011 03:02:10 +0000 (UTC)
In-Reply-To: <7EF3ACB23F1946CD85E069D3B2A7D4DA@DF57ZS51>
Hi folks, sorry that this is another off topic thread caused by me. I will send myself some emails and threaten to kick myself off the list if it continues <grin>.
Also I thought I asked this in September or some time ago..... Now is kinda late. Esp. since what I sent out earlier I got no responses from at all. So this isn't a useful way to get feedback, esp. with Christmas coming on. Probably not too many Jewish people on this list or ones who are so annoyed by the commercialization of a religious holiday that they got nothing to do but read a boring chapter in a very boring book. I even sent chapters to family members and they didn't return comments -- neither insults relating to my 'findings' nor corrections to awkward sentences <grin>.
Sorry again for no lookups, but trying to complete today's work (at 10 PM) due to spending whole morning taking cat to vet and back. He's mending but still consuming lots of time.
Manana, I hope.
Linda Merle
----- Original Message -----
From: "Karen" <>
To:
Sent: Tuesday, November 22, 2011 9:26:29 AM
Subject: Re: [S-I] Volunteers to read a chapter in a book?
I would be delilghtedly happy to read a chapter or so and to provide
feedback.
Thanks,
Karen
----- Original Message -----
From: <>
To: <>
Sent: Tuesday, September 21, 2010 4:16 PM
Subject: [S-I] Volunteers to read a chapter in a book?
> Hi folks,
>
> Is anyone willing to read about 40 pages, a chapter in a book, and give
> some frank feedback on the logic? It involves colonial Virginian families.
> The situation is familiar: there were 3 brothers who manifested in VA
> about 1770 and later moved to TN. No one has ever found any proof of their
> origins though various theories have been put forth. My task was to sort
> through it all, figure out what was probable and what wasn't, and to
> figure out where they came from. To accomplish this I vacuumed up a lot of
> data and then analyzed it (the hard part).
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