They are probably trying to get you to sign up. Unless you already are a member, I would consider it a spam message. If you are a member, they should be able to tell you who it is.
2007-10-06 14:14:59
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answer #1
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answered by Otto 7
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You can always go to www.reunion.com and see if your school is listed (a trial membership is free), and if so, look at the names of the people listed. If any one "rings a bell", that could be the one looking for you. However, if they show an "email me" notice by their name, reunion.com will want you to join in order to find out the email address. They keep telling me that "60 searches for Jan" this week and the people listed I don't even recognize, they live in states I've never been to, and most of the time they are 30 years younger than I---all in an attempt to get me to "upgrade to premium membership".
2007-10-06 17:20:02
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answer #2
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answered by jan51601 7
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Having coordinated a high school reunion in the last year, I can assure you there's no one truly looking for "you". There's someone who listed the same junior high as you when the put their profile up and the system is telling you that they're there. By making it sound like you personally are being sought, they're trying to get you to pay for a membership to find out who it is.
18 months after my reunion, I'm still getting the same emails you're getting. They absolutely have nothing to do with someone actually looking for you personally.
2007-10-06 14:54:47
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answer #3
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answered by GenevievesMom 7
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All those cities are extremely comparable in terms of severe high quality-of-existence concerns, yet i think of of Mountain View has the main living house properties, living house complexes and shops/cafes in close proximity to a Caltrain station. San Jose is the sole city on the checklist that has some thing like a extensive-city downtown nightlife.
2016-12-14 09:35:07
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answer #4
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answered by ? 4
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You can pay to join the site and probably be disappointed to find out that was just a come-on.
You can look for an online alumni group from your school.
You can even stick a personal ad in the local paper there.
2007-10-06 14:16:08
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answer #5
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answered by Tom 6
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your options...
a- it is really not someone looking for you, it is a creditor for that bill you did not pay.
b- it is a wrong number/ email address
c- it is a legitimate message through reunion, and their policy is that you have to join to get contact from the person. If the details match (right school) and it does not cost, you might just go for it.
2007-10-06 14:29:24
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answer #6
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answered by wendy c 7
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It's just a ploy to get you to sign up for membership, I would just ignore it. If there really is someone who is desperate for news of you they will find you, we have a saying here in the UK, it's this 'if it's meant for you it wont pass by you'. meaning if someone wants to see you so bad they will find a way, save your money, and ask around your old school friends.
2007-10-06 14:26:02
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answer #7
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answered by itsjustme 7
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Spam Spam Spam....how did reunion.com FIND YOU (and your e-mail address) and know that you are the person this mysterious other person is looking for. Think about it.
2007-10-07 03:44:45
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answer #8
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answered by Mind Bender 5
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Is there any high school person you REALLY want to see?, if not, forget it. love jo xx
2007-10-06 14:15:05
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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