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Someone, for example, may see a list and say, hey Josie, don you go to that meeting on thursdays in town X?

josie list meeting Thursdays town
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Someone, for example, may see a list and say, hey Josie, don you go to that meeting on thursdays in town X?

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• It helps to catch mistakes. It shows the person who asked to have the meeting deleted that it was indeed deleted. • It helps to catch mistakes. What if the meeting got deleted by an organization by mistake? What if someone gave the wrong information to the organization? What if an Intergroup made a mistake and called it deleted? Maybe a member of a meeting will see it as deleted. • I think it’s important for folks to see (if they used to go to a meeting) that it no longer exists. Not showing the meeting won’t convey that message. People might think, “gee, maybe I could have helped to keep it going, it was a good meeting”. Or they might say “hey, that meeting should still be going on!” After all, what if someone says a meeting is deleted, but it really wasn’t. Maybe they had all chosen to take a month off, or one night? Strikeout highlights important changes. • It makes a statement. Meetings are great, but to keep them going people need to help out just a little bit. • One thing to re

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