Mason County Genealogical Society
P.O. Box 103
Shelton, WA 98584-0103
The Mason Log
Volume 9 Issue 2 November 2011
November meeting
• Thursday, November 3rd
• 7:00 p.m.
• 12th & Connection Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints
• Membership dues single: $15.00 Couple: $20.00-Pay up or else!
• Find us on the web at http://rootsweb.ancestry.com/~wamcgs/
The inside scoop
• Lethene Parks - Guest Speaker
• Seeing Forever
• Pity the spouse of a committed genealogist
• Letter from the editor
Our November speaker is Lethene Parks, current Library Director for the Clark
County Genealogical Society. Her educational background is in history and library
science. With over fifty years of research and thirty years of teaching and writing
about family history, she will share these skills and experiences to help us become
better at writing our own family histories. I’m looking forward to hearing her
presentation.
Most of us use computers and other electronic devices daily. I, for one, think
computers have been of great help as well as a great pain in the neck. The biggest
challenge for genealogists is that technology changes so fast. Keep this in mind as
you read this article from the 2011 April issue of Scientific American. It’s by David
Pogue.
, OCR Text: Mason County Genealogical Society
P.O. Box 103
Shelton, WA 98584-0103
The Mason Log
Volume 9 Issue 2 November 2011
November meeting
• Thursday, November 3rd
• 7:00 p.m.
• 12th & Connection Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints
• Membership dues single: $15.00 Couple: $20.00-Pay up or else!
• Find us on the web at http://rootsweb.ancestry.com/~wamcgs/
The inside scoop
• Lethene Parks - Guest Speaker
• Seeing Forever
• Pity the spouse of a committed genealogist
• Letter from the editor
Our November speaker is Lethene Parks, current Library Director for the Clark
County Genealogical Society. Her educational background is in history and library
science. With over fifty years of research and thirty years of teaching and writing
about family history, she will share these skills and experiences to help us become
better at writing our own family histories. I’m looking forward to hearing her
presentation.
Most of us use computers and other electronic devices daily. I, for one, think
computers have been of great help as well as a great pain in the neck. The biggest
challenge for genealogists is that technology changes so fast. Keep this in mind as
you read this article from the 2011 April issue of Scientific American. It’s by David
Pogue.
, Mason County Genealogical Society,Mason Logs,Mason Logs,2011,V9 I2 2011 MCGS Nov Newletter.pdf,V9 I2 2011 MCGS Nov Newletter.pdf Page 1, V9 I2 2011 MCGS Nov Newletter.pdf Page 1
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