I have quite a few readers in Japan.  If you scanned and posted a few
I could shoot off some flares and see if any expressions of interest
came in.  -Tim

On Mon, Apr 25, 2011 at 9:43 PM, Stan Halpin
<[email protected]> wrote:
> I suspect that that sort of personal history would be quite low on the 
> priority scale for most of the Sendai "officialdom" but a potentially useful 
> anchor for those in the photos. Which is probably what you are thinking as 
> well. The only way I could imagine to make a connection would be via an 
> American living in Japan, a true test of the six-degrees-of-separation 
> notion. Our friend from sunny Brighton moved to Japan to be closer to his 
> wife's family as I recall, but I have no idea how to contact him. There must 
> be other links like those that could be pursued. Is there a Japanese 
> consulate or Interest Section in Chicago? You could contact them.
> One other thought - if you have contact information for those your father 
> served with, if any survive, maybe one of those maintained connections with 
> the people they worked with?
>
> As part of our moving process I have been trying to downsize. As part of this 
> I have gone into the boxes of stuff that came from my father or from my 
> mother when they passed away. I have thrown away numerous photos my dad took, 
> mostly related to his work; every time I feel a twinge of regret, knowing 
> that someone out there in Greece or Bolivia or Argentina or Nigeria or 
> wherever might be thrilled to have a copy of the photo. But he was terrible 
> at taking notes, and he didn't need to since he knew who the people were . . 
> . Because it is Sendai I would put a bit more effort into it, but the 
> potential benefit is so low, with the potential "cost" (time investment to 
> chase down connections, etc.) so high, that I would probably write it off 
> pretty quickly as a nice but horribly impractical notion. And I hope to hear 
> a report back from you that you were able to connect the dots and find a 
> receptive and appreciative new home for your photos.
>
> stan
>
> On Apr 25, 2011, at 9:03 PM, Bob Sullivan wrote:
>
>> We went to dinner at my sister's yesterday.
>> She showed me pictures that my dad took in 1946.
>> He was a dentist in the US Army and spent most of '46 in Sendai.
>> I haven't seen the pictures since childhood, but wonder what could be
>> done with them.
>> The pictures of his buddies and fellow doctors are nothing special, but
>> the pictures of people and places might be interesting.
>> I suspect some of these folks are still living, especially the children.
>> Any suggestions?
>> Regards,  Bob S.
>>
>
>
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