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THANKSGIVING: Living Family and Fun Portal http://groups.google.com
vctinney@sbcglobal.net (vctinney@sbcglobal.net) 2007/11/17 11:27

THANKSGIVING: Living Family and Fun Portal
with Genealogy and Family History Ties
http://www.academic-genealogy.com/livingfamilyfun.htm
Strengthen family ties with fun times, shopping,
finances, home life, working, education, recreation
and social interactions.  The genealogy and history of
products and services used in the various aspects
of daily family living are included throughout this site.

Eating and Food includes The FOOD Museum
and Food History-Science Tracer Bullet.
http://www.academic-genealogy.com/livingfamilyfun.htm#Eating

Auto Resources & Vehicles includes
Automotive History and Driver's License.
http://www.academic-genealogy.com/livingfamilyfun.htm#Auto

Consumer concerns includes Underwriters Laboratories Inc.,
trusted source across the globe for product compliance.
http://www.academic-genealogy.com/livingfamilyfun.htm#Consumer

Marriage & Family Ties includes retirement and extended
family (links that bind), from the beginning (true love).
http://www.academic-genealogy.com/livingfamilyfun.htm#Marriage

Pets and Animals includes AnimalSearch, the Macaulay
Library Catalog and World Animal Net; animal related
search sites and networks for families.
http://www.academic-genealogy.com/livingfamilyfun.htm#Pets

And, in the United States, for  Black Friday (shopping)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Friday_%28shopping%29
the day after Thanksgiving, use:
(1)  Apparel & Department Stores (which includes
lists of Department stores from around the World)
http://www.academic-genealogy.com/livingfamilyfun.htm#Apparel

(2)  Shopping & Savings, which includes world wide
lists and histories of the art of Shopping, the
Shopping Mall, a List of leading Shopping streets
and districts by City, as well as a List of Superstores.
http://www.academic-genealogy.com/livingfamilyfun.htm#Shopping

In the British Isles, around two thousand years ago,
"to buy a clothing outfit at auction, an average Roman
soldier would have paid 8 percent of his yearly income
(25 denarii).  He would have had to fork out another 10
percent for a cloak to protect him from Britain's hostile climate."
http://www.abc.net.au/science/news/stories/s253805.htm

SEE ALSO:  History Specialties: History of. . . .
http://www.academic-genealogy.com/historysocialstudies.htm#Specialties

Respectfully yours,

Tom Tinney, Sr.
Who's Who in America,
Millennium Edition [54th] through 2004
Who's Who In Genealogy and Heraldry, [both editions]
Family Genealogy & History Internet Education Directory
http://www.academic-genealogy.com/

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