ROOTSWEB REVIEW: Genealogical Data Cooperative News Vol. 2, No. 8, 24 February 1999; Circulation: 270,000+ (C) 1998-1999 RootsWeb Genealogical Data Cooperative. Editors: Julia M. Case and Myra Vanderpool Gormley, CG * * * * * CONTENTS. News and Notes from RootsWeb (CGI Server Will Be Down; RootsWeb in January); The Full Moon Never Sets; Connecting through RootsWeb; New Mailing Lists; New Home Pages; New GenConnect Boards; Tips on Citing Internet Sources; Humor; Reprint Policy; Unsubscribe Instructions. * * * * * NEWS AND NOTES FROM ROOTSWEB PLEASE NOTE: RootsWeb staff members, RootsWeb HelpDesk volunteers, and ROOTSWEB REVIEW's editors are unable to respond to requests for genealogical research help. * * * THE CGI SERVER (cgi.rootsweb.com) will be down for an overhaul for a few days. This is the server that houses GenConnect, the HelpDesk, and some smaller areas of RootsWeb such as the form to request Web space. Access to these areas may be intermittent until the work has been completed. Thanks for your patience. * * * ROOTSWEB IN JANUARY -- 85 Million Hits and 154 Million E-mails. HOW BIG IS BIG? Dr. Brian Leverich explains: RootsWeb made "The Wall Street Journal" recently, though only a mention in passing. In a sidebar to an article titled, "Hi-Tech Rivals Search for 'Sticky' Web Sites," the top 10 "sticky" sites were listed. RootsWeb was #10. Also on the list were Yahoo!, eBay, Charles Schwab, and Hotmail. The article (but not the sidebar, and so no mention of RootsWeb) is online at . We continue to be amazed by what the genealogical community has built with us here at RootsWeb. Below are the detailed statistics on our January operations. We reached an important milestone: we've comfortably passed one million page hits per day. o 3,802 independently authored Web sites hosted by RootsWeb o 85,389,232 total Web hits: - 21,695,506 were HTML pages. - 13,857,814 were cgi-bin database searches and such. - 49,591,630 were graphics (GIF, JPEG, etc.). o 1,187,119 file downloads from the USGenWeb Archives and the ROOTS-L Library o 5,846 independently operated mailing lists hosted by RootsWeb o We shipped 154,184,249 pieces of e-mail to our mailing lists. Support from the Internet genealogical community has been and continues to be crucial to RootsWeb's operation. By making a financial contribution to RootsWeb, you can help us provide more mailing lists, more searchable data files, and more GenConnect boards for the whole community to use. For details about support levels/benefits and payment options, visit: or send e-mail to: . RootsWeb's address is: RootsWeb Genealogical Data Cooperative, P.O. Box 6798, Frazier Park, CA 93222-6798. (Please include your e-mail address on all correspondence and checks.) Are your contributions (for U.S. users) tax deductible? We regret that the answer to that question is still no. We've been working with two firms of attorneys since late last year to obtain status for RootsWeb as a non-profit corporation (it's currently a "sole proprietorship" in Kern County, California). Progress has been slow because the procedure is complicated, both by the fact that we already exist (it'd be easier to do if we didn't), and by the fact that we at RootsWeb are spread so thin that we've not been as timely as we wanted in providing the attorneys with the information they need to proceed. Still, we hope the paperwork will be done in the next several weeks, after which there is a wait of up to 270 days, we've been warned, although it is usually less than that, before final approval is received from the Internal Revenue Service. Please don't wait until that day to help, or we won't necessarily still be here. We're as frustrated as can be by how long this is taking, but felt keeping the servers running to be our highest priority. * * * * * THE FULL MOON NEVER SETS by Karen Isaacson Every year, after Christmas, usage of RootsWeb mailing lists and Web sites jumps by as much as 50%. I don't know if it's that everyone got a new computer, or if second cousin Tillie shared that important clue over a family dinner that might break the brick wall, and got everyone fired up to do research again, but, anyhow, it happens. No matter how carefully we've added capacity to cope, it's never enough, or never in exactly the right places. One of our two mailing list servers, in particular, is slowly drowning, although with luck we'll have accrued enough contributions soon to upgrade it. (That is, don't panic!) But it is the server we've used for shipping the RootsWeb Review (RWR), and there have been hitches and stalls and problems almost every Wednesday night. So, last Wednesday, a bit closer to press time than was really responsible, safe, or sane, I moved the RWR to the more lightly loaded server, and then sat and watched for upward of four hours, as it was shipped to more than a quarter of a million genealogists around the world. The entertainment value of so watching is on a par with sitting in front of the dryer at the laundromat, paying close attention to your clothes as they dry. Not recommended! The move to the more lightly loaded server was a success: the program didn't give up the ghost before reaching the end of the list of addresses. Meanwhile, I learned things, like in what order SmartList (our mailing list software) distributes mail. If you've never wondered, skip a few paragraphs. I'm about to wax totally boring. The first thing it does is essentially reverse every address on the list: karen@rootsweb.com becomes moc.bewstoor@nerak, Julie_Case@prodigy.com becomes moc.ygidorp@esaC_eiluJ, etc. Then it sorts those reversed addresses: gro.dnar@nerak moc.bewstoor@nerak moc.ygidorp@esaC_eiluJ ude.ogacihcu@ecreipwt That's the order in which RWR is shipped: sites that end in "a" before sites that end in "b" before sites that end in "c" ... before sites that end in "z." Start at the top, with the .ba addresses, which are Bosnia and Herzegovina, work to and through the .de addresses (Germany), the .org addresses, the .uk addresses, .com addresses, the .net addresses, the .edu addresses, etc., and finish up at the bottom, the .sz addresses that go to Swaziland. Swaziland? We send RWR to Swaziland? Indeed we do. And to lots of places other than just the United States. Here are the top ten top-level domains to which RWR is shipped: 154,713 com Worldwide, including more than 75,000 aol.com addresses. Primarily USA, but there are 485 bigpond.com (Australian) addresses. 75,625 net Worldwide. Primarily USA, but there are 464 virgin.net (UK) addresses. 8,244 edu Educational. Primarily USA, but some are non-USA. 5,658 au Australia 5,299 ca Canada 4,203 uk United Kingdom 3,235 org Organizations (originally non-profit). Primarily but not entirely USA. 2,524 us United States 1,458 nz New Zealand 831 no Norway RWR is sent to more than 125 additional domains, including: 656 de Germany; 517 gov United States Government; 510 mil United States Military; 467 nl Netherlands; 366 fr France; 307 za South Africa; 231 br Brazil; 191 ie Ireland; 160 se Sweden; 157 be Belgium; 140 dk Denmark; 106 ch Switzerland; 105 jp Japan; 76 il Israel; 68 es Spain; 64 at Austria; 63 pt Portugal; 53 it Italy; 43 ar Argentina; 42 fi Finland; 41 mx Mexico; 33 sg Singapore; 32 pl Poland; 25 ae United Arab Emirates; 20 ru Russian Federation; 18 bm Bermuda; 17 gr Greece; 17 cl Chile; 16 sa Saudi Arabia; 15 hu Hungary; 14 lu Luxembourg; 14 is Iceland; 14 do Dominican Republic; 12 th Thailand; 12 my Malaysia; 12 kr Korea; 10 pk Pakistan; 10 id Indonesia; 10 cz Czech Republic; 10 bs Bahamas; 9 int International (NATO, WIPO, etc.); 8 zw Zimbabwe; 8 ph Philippines; 8 cr Costa Rica; 8 co Columbia; 8 bh Bahrain; 7 ve Venezuela; 7 uy Uruguay; 7 tr Turkey; 7 cn China; 6 tw Taiwan; 6 py Paraguay; 6 cc Cocos (Keeling) Islands; 5 yu Yugoslavia; 5 vi Virgin Islands (U.S.); 5 si Slovenia; 5 ro Romania; 5 lb Lebanon; 5 cy Cyprus; 4 tt Trinidad and Tobago; 4 sk Slovakia; 4 pg Papua New Guinea; 4 pe Peru; 4 lv Latvia; 4 in India; 4 hk Hong Kong; 4 bg Bulgaria; 3 to Tonga; 3 pf French Polynesia; 3 om Oman; 3 ke Kenya; 3 eg Egypt; 3 ee Estonia; 3 ec Ecuador; 3 bw Botswana; 3 bo Bolivia; 2 ua Ukraine; 2 tc Turks and Caicos Islands; 2 nu Niue; 2 nf Norfolk Island; 2 mt Malta; 2 lt Lithuania; 2 ky Cayman Islands; 2 kw Kuwait; 2 hr Croatia; 2 hn Honduras; 2 fm Micronesia, Federated States of; 2 et Ethiopia; 3 cx Christmas Island; 2 aw Aruba; 2 am Armenia; 1 zm Zambia; 1 vn Viet Nam; 1 tm Turkmenistan; 1 tj Tajikistan; 1 sz Swaziland; 1 sn Senegal; 1 qa Qatar; 1 pa Panama; 1 ni Nicaragua; 1 nc New Caledonia; 1 na Namibia; 1 mz Mozambique; 1 mu Mauritius; 1 ms Montserrat; 1 md Moldova; 1 mc Monaco; 1 ma Morocco; 1 li Liechtenstein; 1 lc Saint Lucia; 1 kh Cambodia; 1 jm Jamaica; 1 ir Iran; 1 io British Indian Ocean Territory; 1 gt Guatemala; 1 gm Gambia; 1 gl Greenland; 1 gi Gibraltar; 1 fj Fiji; 1 dm Dominica; 1 ck Cook Islands; 1 by Belarus; 1 bn Brunei Darussalam; 1 bb Barbados; 1 ba Bosnia and Herzegovina; and 1 ad Andorra. Is anyone here from Antarctica? I can't tell from the addresses. I know a RootsWeb Surname List submitter used to be there, but he came home a few years back. Proposed mottoes for RootsWeb include, "The sun never sets on RootsWeb" and (tsk!) "The full moon never sets..." As fascinating as this exercise was, I do hope we can afford an upgraded list server soon. See the plea elsewhere in this issue for financial support for RootsWeb. Save me from excruciatingly boring Wednesday nights! Save yourself from detailed explanations of how SmartList works and where we ship RWR. :-) * * * * * CONNECTING THROUGH ROOTSWEB. Thanks for sharing your stories. Our family owes GenConnect and RootsWeb in general a huge thank you. You see, we had a huge hurdle in our genealogy. My husband's surname only went back four generations and then there was a drastic name change. His great-great-grandfather, Jacob, apparently killed a local bully. His brother, Philip, was the local sheriff and told Jacob to change his name and get out of town. We know Jacob as Jacob HELVY, but the name he had before the altercation was supposed to be Holladay or Cassaday. There were several versions of the story. I felt I owed it to my children and my husband to take on this challenge. I tried censuses, but after Jacob left Kentucky he is supposed to have married a woman who was Cherokee, and lived on a riverboat that traveled between Memphis, Tennessee and southern Arkansas. He has been a nightmare to pin down. I have been researching his family off and on for the past 10 years. The story went that he was supposed to have taken his wife's maiden name as his new surname. When we wrote for the death certificate of his son, it showed Jacob had married a Mary Price and not Mary Helvy. I surmised that Jacob might have taken his mother's maiden name. I did know the county and state where all of this took place, but there were no queries that were related. That is where GenConnect came in. I pulled up every Soundex variant of the Helvy name in the surname search and wrote to them all with my story. It was a stab in the dark and I knew it, but how can you search for people when you don't know their names and maiden names don't show up? Do you know what? Within hours we had a possible match. Within two or three days we had proof that Jacob Helvy had been born as Jacob CASSADY. His father was Benjamin Cassady and his mother was Juliet Ann HELVEY. We learned who his parents were and additional information back to the Revolutionary War on both sides, even some immigration facts. We also hooked into a family research group and were even invited to come to the family reunion. We finally know where the name Helvy comes from! I suppose I might have found this information at some point in my life without GenConnect, the surname search engines, and RootsWeb, but I doubt it would have been so voluminous. It certainly wouldn't have been as easy. I've also recently found wills for someone else I'm researching and several other good pieces of real facts and data. Imagine! If every county used GenConnect, I might see some of those secondary surnames that are mentioned in people's queries that I'm sure I'm missing now. I love being able to go into a county and, within a matter of just a few minutes, look up a name and know that I'm seeing them all and not missing any. Queries are so much easier and quicker to search that way. I'm sure there are a few errors, but the good it has done far outweighs any of its shortcomings. I feel so strongly about this that in the next couple of months I am going to subscribe to RootsWeb as a Sponsor Plus and put all my information on the Internet too. I've received so much I need to give back! Thank you again to all who have anything to do with RootsWeb and GenConnect. Ruth Helvy * * * * * MAILING LISTS. For an index to most user mailing lists hosted by RootsWeb, visit . NEW MAILING LIST REQUESTS. USGenWeb and WorldGenWeb hosts may have FREE locality mailing lists for the areas they host and for that purpose may ignore the "Contributors-only" warning on the list request page. Please request new mailing lists at: TO SUBSCRIBE OR UNSUBSCRIBE from any RootsWeb-hosted mailing list, send an e-mail message with only the word SUBSCRIBE (or UNSUBSCRIBE) in the subject and the body of the message to [name of list]-L-request@rootsweb.com (for mail mode) or to [name of list]-D-request@rootsweb.com (for digest mode). For example, if you are interested in genealogy events worldwide, send a SUBSCRIBE message to: NEW SURNAME MAILING LISTS ANNING BAY (includes BAYS and BAIS) BOOTH-UK (Booth families of the United Kingdom) CARDEN (includes CARDIN) COCKE CRUM DRIVER (includes allied families) FLATER GODBY (includes GODBEY) GROSS HILARIDES (includes HYLARIDES, HIJLARIDES, and variants) HOCUTT (includes HOKET, HOWCOTT, HOCOT, and variants) HOUCK HUDSON-FAM-ASSOC (all Hudson researchers welcomed) JOHNSTON (not JOHNSON) KAYE (includes KAY; emphasis on those from Yorkshire, England) KEEVER KOBERNUSS (includes COBERNUSS, KUBBERNUSS, and variants) LAMBERT (includes LAMBERTH, LAMBETH, LAMBUTH, and variants) LILES LOUNSBURY (includes LOUNSBERY/BERRY/BURY/BURRY, LOWNSBURY) LUDLAM (includes LUDLUM) MAZZANTI MCMENEMY (includes MCMENAMY, MCMENAMIN, MCMENEMIE, MCMANAMY) MCMILLAN (includes MACMILLAN) MIZE (includes MISE, MYZE, MYSE, MIES, and variants) MURRELL PULLEN RAGLAND (includes RAGLAND, RAGLIN, and variants) REINEKER ROWELL SHIRK SIKES (includes SYKES) STOCKS (includes STOCK, STOX, STACKS, and variants) STRINGER SWEENEY (includes SWEENEY, SWEENY, SWINEY, and variants) TYLER-PETER (Descendants and ancestors of Peter TYLER, b. circa 1750 North Carolina) WILBURN WILLMON NEW REGIONAL MAILING LISTS UNITED KINGDOM ENG-LINCSGEN -- Lincolnshire, England history and geography U.S.A. ALDALLAS -- Dallas County, Alabama ALELMORE -- Elmore County, Alabama ALMARENG -- Marengo County, Alabama ALWILCOX -- Wilcox County, Alabama GATHOMAS -- Thomas County, Georgia IDBANNOC -- Bannock County, Idaho IDGEM -- Gem County, Idaho KSCHEROK -- Cherokee County, Kansas KSMONTGO -- Montgomery County, Kansas KYBUTLER -- Butler County, Kentucky KYJOHNSO -- Johnson County, Kentucky LALASALL -- LaSalle Parish, Louisiana MOJEFFER -- Jefferson County, Missouri NCCALDWE -- Caldwell County, North Carolina NMGUADAL -- Guadalupe County, New Mexico NYPUTNAM -- Putnam County, New York OHTUSCAR -- Tuscarawas County, Ohio OKMAYES -- Mayes County, Oklahoma PAPHILAD -- Philadelphia County, Pennsylvania TXBELL -- Bell County, Texas TXELPASO -- El Paso County, Texas TXLAVACA -- Lavaca County, Texas TXWEBB -- Webb County, Texas NEW ETHNIC, SPECIAL INTEREST, and MISCELLANEOUS MAILING LISTS EWANIDA -- Eastern Washington/Northern Idaho genealogy GEN-EVENTS -- Genealogy events worldwide, including conferences, meetings, conventions, seminars, etc. See also NY-MEMORIES -- New York memories PRA (sponsored by the Pennington Research Association for the surname PENNINGTON) TX-NACGSCIG -- Nacogdoches (Texas) Genealogical Society Computer Interest Group to discuss CIG activities * * * * * NEW WEB ACCOUNT REQUESTS. Please see the instructions at . NEW WEB SITES. Some of these might not yet be accessible. If one that interests you isn't up yet, please check again in a few days or a week. . Note that the ~[tilde] before the account name is required and will work for most. If not, you'll find most of them at USGenWeb or WorldGenWeb . For example, to visit the CentralEuropeGenWeb page, go to: . CANADA nshalifa -- Halifax County, Nova Scotia nsmshs -- Mainland South Heritage Society, Nova Scotia onhhgg -- Haliburton Highlands Genealogical Group, Ontario EUROPE ceneurgw -- CentralEuropeGenWeb easeurgw -- EastEuropeGenWeb GREENLAND grlbalti -- Greenland, BalticSeaGenWeb MALTA mltwgw -- MaltaWorldGenWeb U.S.A. cofremon -- Fremont County, Colorado macmarsh -- Marshfield (city), Massachusetts meccranb -- Cranberry Island (city), Maine mecswhar -- Southwest Harbor (city), Maine mectremo -- Tremont (city), Maine mnpolgs -- Polish Genealogical Society of Minnesota mswebst2 -- Webster County(2), Mississippi nemigrat -- Migration Project - Nebraska nmhardin -- Hardin County, New Mexico nmrcs -- Roosevelt County (New Mexico) Searchers tnjohnso -- Johnson County, Tennessee txbcgs -- Brewster County (Texas) Genealogical Society vavbgs -- Virginia Beach (Virginia) Genealogical Society WALES wlsrad -- Radnorshire, Wales HOME PAGES AMERICAN Colonial Ancestors. Surnames include BARTLETT, BOWLES, COATS, CURTIS, DUTTON, ENGLAND, GRAHAM, HEARST, PATTON, ROGERS, ROWE, STARR, and WILLIAMSON. BARTLETT Family Research. C.A.T. Southern Genealogy. Surnames include AKINS, BERRY, BOWERS, BROOKS, DANIEL, JOHNSON, MANN, ROBERTS, and WOOD. Damon M. FLOYD's Genealogy of My Ancestors. FLOYD, SHIELDS, STANLEY, and BRAGG. ROMBERG Genealogical Search. Also ARHELGER, BALLARD, BAUCH, BRIM, BUCHLER, CURRENT, DANNENBERG, DUPUY, ELLINGSON, GIBSON, GIESECKE, HALVERSON, HAMES, HAST, JAHN, KETTLESON, MAGER, MARTIN, MONTGOMERY, PERLITZ, PETERSON, PIERCE, SANDERS, SCHLEEF, SINNER, SPOTTS, STARENBERG, STEVENSON, TATUM, THOMPSON, WARMEYER, and WILLIAMS. SIDWELL Genealogy and Family History Site. Descendants of Hugh SIDWELL I and his wife, Elizabeth GOLDING. * * * * * NEW GENCONNECT BOARDS. 83 new regional GenConnect boards were activated 14 February to 20 February 1999, as follows: POLAND 1 USA Co 1 Fl 1 Ga 2 Il 2 Ky 2 Md 6 Mi 3 Mn 5 Ms 7 NC 4 Ne 14 Oh 2 Pa 1 SC 14 SD 1 Tn 13 Va 2 WV 1 SURNAME BOARDS. 246 new surname boards include the following : Alderman, Bess, Betterley, Bidwell, Brake, Bratvold, Brewer, Bundy, Bussard, Cetnor, Chesebrough, Corley, Dahling, Daughtry, Faulkner, Finerty, Flannigan, Flock, Frederick, Gerard, Gombert, Hill, Houck, Kelly, Kinnick, Lambert, Layzell, Lester, Lindberg, Lohmann, Maddox, Markum, Mize, Obryant, Pless, Ragland, Rainford, Riffe, Roy, Schwechten, Sensenbach, Shingleton, Shurtz, Stocks, Swope, Tackett, Thaxton, Trobaugh, Tubb, Tyler, Vaught, Wasson, Whitington, Wiedenfeld, Wilburn * * * * * A WORD FROM THE SPONSOR: TIPS ON CITING INTERNET SOURCES by Brian Mavrogeorge, The Learning Company Source citation basics include identifying who wrote the information, the form in which the information appeared, and who the publisher and/or repository of the information were. Provide enough detail to permit some evaluation of the source and to enable yourself and others to find the exact source you used. In EVIDENCE! CITATION & ANALYSIS FOR THE FAMILY HISTORIAN, Elizabeth Shown Mills, CG, CGL, FASG, FNGS, applies these basics to the Internet. To make it easy to follow her guidelines, Ultimate Family Tree (UFT) contains source templates authorized by Mills. UFT users can document sources easily by selecting a fill-in-the-blanks template and answering these questions: 1. Who wrote the information? This is the author, the compiler, Webmaster or creator of the Web page. Because electronic mail addresses such as JohnSmith@fastsurf.com and URLs (universal resource locators) -- addresses of Web sites -- change frequently, Mills recommends that you also provide a postal address of the originator. 2. What is its form? This might be "e-mail to author," "family file," or "Stanton Family Association Web site." 3. Who published the information or in what repository is it located? This should identify the e-mail user, the Webmaster's name, or the name of the organization. It also could be the page's URL. 4. When was it received? Because of the issue of permanence (or lack thereof) of information found on the Internet, indicate the date the information was downloaded or received. To facilitate evaluating the reliability of the source, cite not only the Internet source, but also the source on which it is based. Has the Webmaster done a partial or full extraction from the original record? Are these simply random bits and pieces of information from unidentified original or secondary sources? This is important because most of the information on the Internet originated in some other medium and is simply being published on the Internet by someone other than the original creator. * * * * * HUMOR. Pat Bennett writes: "This one says it all when it comes to the various chains we all find floating through our mailboxes. You must now forward this to 24,918 people you know or you will run out of gas on your way home tonight." THE MOTHER OF ALL URBAN LEGENDS I know this guy whose neighbor, a young man, was home recovering from having been served a rat in his bucket of Kentucky Fried Chicken. So anyway, one day he went to sleep and when he awoke he was in his bathtub and it was full of ice and he was sore all over. When he got out of the tub he realized that HIS KIDNEYS HAD BEEN STOLEN, and he saw a note on his mirror that said "Call 911!" But he was afraid to use his phone because it was connected to his computer, and there was a virus on his computer that would destroy his hard drive if he opened an e-mail entitled "Join the crew!" He knew it wasn't a hoax because he himself was a computer programmer who was working on software to save us from Armageddon when the year 2000 rolls around. His program will prevent a global disaster in which all the computers get together and distribute the $600 Neiman Marcus cookie recipe under the leadership of Bill Gates. (It's true -- I read it all last week in a mass e-mail from BILL GATES HIMSELF, who was also promising me a free Disney World vacation and $5,000 if I would forward the e-mail to everyone I know.) The poor man then tried to call 911 from a pay phone to report his missing kidneys, but reaching into the coin-return slot he got jabbed with an HIV-infected needle around which was wrapped a note that said, "Welcome to the world of AIDS." Luckily he was only a few blocks from the hospital -- the one, actually, where that little boy who is dying of cancer is, the one whose last wish is for everyone in the world to send him an e-mail and the American Cancer Society has agreed to pay him a nickel for every e-mail he receives. I sent him two e-mails and one of them was a bunch of x's and o's in the shape of an angel (if you get it and forward it to 20 people you will have good luck but 10 people you will only have OK luck and if you send it to less than 10 people you will have BAD LUCK FOR SEVEN YEARS). So anyway the poor guy tried to drive himself to the hospital, but on the way he noticed another car driving along without his lights on. To be helpful, he flashed his lights at him and was promptly shot as part of a gang initiation. And it's a little-known fact that the Y1K problem caused the Dark Ages. * * * * * PERMISSION TO REPRINT articles from ROOTSWEB REVIEW is granted unless specifically stated otherwise, PROVIDED (1) the reprint is used for non-commercial, educational purposes and (2) the notice below appears at the end of the article: Written by Previously published by RootsWeb Genealogical Data Cooperative, RootsWeb Review, Vol. 2, No. 8, 24 February 1999. Please visit RootsWeb's main Web page at . * * * * * ROOTSWEB REVIEW is e-mailed on Wednesdays to all subscribers to RootsWeb-hosted mailing lists, submitters to the RootsWeb Surname List (RSL), and other RootsWeb users. DOWNLOAD BACK ISSUES FROM . UNSUBSCRIBE INSTRUCTIONS: Send an e-mail message that says only UNSUBSCRIBE to: RootsWeb-Review-L-request@rootsweb.com