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<P><FONT SIZE=2>After you have Googled, you can create a Google Alert on a specific search<BR>
and get daily or weekly summaries of new hits. So, Ellen you could watch<BR>
yourself weekly from now on.<BR>
<BR>
My sister, E Kirsten Peters, had a Google alert on me when she worked at the<BR>
DNews. She'd send me items from time to time, about other Nils Petersons<BR>
<BR>
<BR>
On 7/6/06 12:00 PM, "vision2020-request@moscow.com"<BR>
<vision2020-request@moscow.com> wrote:<BR>
<BR>
> Ellen Roskovich <gussie443@hotmail.com> wrote: Wow! What an eye-opening<BR>
> experience that is! I would have never thought of it until it was mentioned<BR>
> here on V2020. Not only have I "googled" myself, I've checked up on my kids,<BR>
> my friends, school friends from the past. . . . I've been doing some catching<BR>
> up!<BR>
> <BR>
> I am really amazed. . . I'll have to ask my more computer literate kid if<BR>
> he knows mom read his little blurb to his snowboarding buddies up in Canada.<BR>
> That should wake everyone up! Mom can check up on you. You can't trust mom<BR>
> when she gets her hands on a computer. . .she'll know. . . so talk nice.<BR>
> <BR>
> But all kidding aside, I can see how serious and humiliating it would be to<BR>
> find untrue statements about yourself. In my case I could just chuckle at my<BR>
> son's note and feel proud finding my daughter's silver medal mentioned and<BR>
> deeply saddened when I discovered a couple obituaries I didn't expect.<BR>
> <BR>
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