A truly magical selection of photos. I think what makes such striking images so 
appealing is that one's fancy immediately starts to search for an imaginary 
back story for the people shown. And what poverty-stricken lives - compared to 
our affluent age - most of those shown had to live. A picture is worth a 
thousand words - how true. I was going to mention my favourites from those 
photos but really they're all gems. Thank you.
 

---In fairfieldlife@yahoogroups.com, <turquoiseb@...> wrote:

 I just came back from a wonderfully pleasant and relaxing lunch at Einstein, a 
cafe/restaurant here in Leiden. Einstein's name frequently comes up in 
conjunction with Leiden, of course, since he worked here at the university. 

Then when I came home, and relaxed even more by surfing the Net, one of the 
first things I stumbled across was this series of historical black and white 
photographs, "colorized" to render them in color. Some of them are beyond 
wonderful, such as the now-in-color portraits of Charlie Chaplin and Mark Twain 
and Walt Whitman. At least one is genuinely terrifying, capturing the look on 
Joseph Goebbels' face as he learned that the photographer taking his portrait 
-- Alfred Eisenstaedt -- is Jewish. 

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/11/09/colorized-photos_n_4242066.html 
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/11/09/colorized-photos_n_4242066.html 

But, synchronistically enough, one of the photos that most caught my attention 
was the portrait of Einstein. I found myself wondering who the other guy in the 
photo was, and whether it might have been a young version of my grandfather. 
The truth turned out to be much better. Some of the stories on this page are 
priceless:

http://www.sff.net/people/rothman/einstein.htm 
http://www.sff.net/people/rothman/einstein.htm 



 

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