Amy Wachs Fellner to lecture on her eclectic genealogical interests and experiences at Conference 2010

Amy Wachs Fellner, shown here in Latvia, will speak on Saturday, May 15 and Sunday, May 16.
Google “Moldova”, “Fulbright Scholar” and “the Arizona State Board of Tax Appeals” and only one person in the whole wide world shows up in this eclectic search: Amy Wachs Fellner, J.D., a lawyer, university instructor and avid family historian with considerable hands-on research experience in Eastern Europe and the former Soviet republics. You’ll soon be able to add “OGS Conference 2010” to the list of applicable search terms.
Amy taught as a Fulbright Scholar in 2002 at the Riga Graduate School of Law in Latvia and more recently in 2006 and 2007 as a Fulbright Senior Specialist in Chisinau (formerly known by its Russian name of Kishinev and site of a violent pogrom in 1903), capital of the Republic of Moldova. She took advantage of these professional opportunities to do extensive genealogical research at state archives in Eastern Europe and will give two lectures on Sunday at Conference 2010 on topics related to this expertise.
Educated at the University of Rochester and the University of Michigan Law School, Amy is a trained mediator and arbitrator. Before relocating to Arizona, where she sits on the state Board of Tax Appeals, she served as in-house counsel to a Fortune 50 multinational corporation. She has been teaching at Arizona State University since January 1999, and developed and taught a full-semester course on the topic of “Eastern Europe: Law, Politics and Justice”. She has also taught genealogy seminars at Arizona State University and has spoken extensively on genealogy topics and taught genealogy workshops throughout the United States.
One of the talks for which Amy is best known is a case study using the example of screen legends Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall to demonstrate how American records provide helpful clues to identifying earlier generations in Europe. Attendees at Conference 2010 will have the opportunity to hear this fascinating lecture on Saturday afternoon.

