This week's news includes: Alberta Martin [Oops, correction, this
should have been Maudie Hopkins], 93, the last widow of a Civil War
veteran, died Monday, 18 August 2008, in a nursing home in
Enterprise, Alabama; Footnote.com (
http://www.footnote.com) has
announced membership price increases effective 1 September 2008
($11.95 per month or $69.95 annual membership); American scientists
have studied 32 people who lived through the 1918 influenza
pandemic and have found that antibodies in their blood still
protect them against the virus; and The Genealogy Gems Podcast,
hosted by Lisa Louise Cooke, celebrated its
50th episode with an interview with NPR Radio's
Prairie Home Companion actor Tim
Russell, and featured comments from other podcast hosts, including
The Guys.
This week's listener email includes: the distinction between the
words "immigration" and "emigration"; Patti opines about a family
case in which mt-DNA testing might be used to refute the family
myth that a female ancestor had Indian blood (and high cheekbones);
more favorable comments about The Guys' newest episode of "Down
Under: Florida" at
RootsTelevision.com -- "The
Miltons"; the oldest family tree dates back 3,000 years in the
Lichtenstein Cave near Dorste, Lower Saxony, Germany, and Y-DNA
samples taken from some of the 20 skeletons there have produced a
match with 2 local villagers; Rich shares an interesting way of
digitizing your photos in an article by David Pogue from the New
York Times (
click
here to access the article); Kay asks George about his
Cleveland (Bradley County) Tennessee connections; in the UK, a
government-sponsored contracted project with German company Siemans
to scan all of the birth, marriage, and death records in the
GRO has collapsed less than half way through; Sharon asks for
suggestions on how to better organize and focus her research; Gus
asks for suggestions for finding his grandfather's burial location
in or near Virginia, Minnesota; and Jason believes that, at age 26,
he may be our youngest listener, and he is interested in career
opportunities in Genealogy.
Drew discusses his research into an Italian immigrant and his
family members, and spelling variations that he uncovered.