I think that was only a possibility we considered. Here's something else to look at, a note which appears to have been written at about the same time as the Seka letters, with GB's handwriting scribbled on top. Whatever it involved, it was clearly more than a casual encounter.I was thinking that Seka was a nurse who worked with GW? Do I have her mixed up with someone else?
Annasmom:
There also was a handwritten postcard (evidently from Seka's parents to Brody) with a Belgrade postmark.
Apparently so. From The Sacramento Bee, 2006:I think that was only a possibility we considered. Here's something else to look at, a note which appears to have been written at about the same time as the Seka letters, with GB's handwriting scribbled on top. Whatever it involved, it was clearly more than a casual encounter.
Just an FYI for newcomers: The repetitive nature of some of this analysis is because each comment is based on a small portion of the handwriting sample. When mutiple sections of the sample elicit a similar analysis, this means that the evidence for that trait is overwhelming. With that in mind, note how many times that Brody is described as immoral and having a "disturbed self-concept" (in other words, he thinks way too highly of himself).
Here is the only postcard I could find in the box. Note that something has been scribbled out. Whatever we have in these papers was either deliberately left or overlooked, and I would say that this card was deliberately left.Any recollection how the postcard was signed? That could be of great help.
Here is the only postcard I could find in the box. Note that something has been scribbled out. Whatever we have in these papers was either deliberately left or overlooked, and I would say that this card was deliberately left.
Thank you Annasmom.
This postcard tells me that Seka was from a well-to-do family. They had a beach house which very few people could afford back then.
The postal stamp indicates it was sent from the Belgrade post office located in the Zvezdara municipality in the SE part of the city: 11109 Beograd 14, Bulevar kralja Aleksandra 121, 2403-732. Seka's family lived in that area?
Seka wrote she had arrived to Belgrade at the beginning of June and would return to the US at the beginning of September. It sounds like a school vacation. Maybe she was studying in the US?
Not sure how meaningful this is but it does help in creating a picture of Seka and her family.
Obviously she was NOT a waitress at Denny's. There is nothing with an address on it...addresses had been removed from papers left in the BFH. I did check a date on the handwritten letter from GB to Seka's family, however. It was Nov. 15, so it would have been written some time after she returned to San Francisco from spending the summer in Yugoslavia. It does sound as if this was more than a passing acquaintance, doesn't it?
i forgot what thread post number it was on but someone did post a picture of a george spelled differently he was an olympic person of some sorts i totaly forgot what sport but there was talk about it not sure if it was checked out not checked out
Yes, indeed, I would approve. I will search for the Seka correspondence this morning. I remember one very long letter from Brody to either Seka or her parents which said something like "say hello to the Danube for me".
Obviously she was NOT a waitress at Denny's. There is nothing with an address on it...addresses had been removed from papers left in the BFH. I did check a date on the handwritten letter from GB to Seka's family, however. It was Nov. 15, so it would have been written some time after she returned to San Francisco from spending the summer in Yugoslavia. It does sound as if this was more than a passing acquaintance, doesn't it?
Classmates.com or Reunion.com are both good places to start, though you need a (paid) subscription to view profiles for both. Also many people register, but never complete a profile. I have found a couple long lost 1st cousins in Sacramento, CA this way. I have a subscription to classmates.com if you need a look up.Could anyone tell me how to go about finding a list of college graduates by year? I would like to try to identify Seka that way.
Thank you.
Is it possible that Seka sent the postcard for GW instead of GB? She addressed it to GW's PO Box. She signs the postcard with "Love". The letters to her family are handwritten by GB and were probably dictated by GB.
Obviously, my assumption about Seka being Croatian was wrong. The mention of Dunav river does suggest her parents lived in Serbia.
I gather from the letters she had a brother and her parents were upset with George's influence. Was there an address in Belgrade?
What leads you to believe Seka's name was Ingrid?
Thanks.