Word: photographs
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...Before publishing its story, TIME interviewed Mrs. Leonski and her daughter Helen. They said that the News's Al Willard had lied to them about Private Leonski's true status, that as proof, they had a receipt for their photograph of the young soldier, which the News had published, and that the receipt bore Willard's name and address. TIME telephoned the News and was told that Willard was a reporter there. So TIME labeled Willard as the misinformer, but the Leonskis and TIME were wrong...
Only a few days before the Army's Lieut. General John Lesesne DeWitt, Chief of the Western Defense Command, had conferred at Sitka with the Navy's Commander A. J. Isbell-and the photograph, suddenly appearing out of the Navy's rigid Alaskan censorship, had been the only clue to an Alaskan action...
Died. Arnold Genthe, 73, famed photographer of the famous, of heart disease, at Lake Candlewood, Conn. Berlin-born, a classical scholar, he took notable pictures of the San Francisco earthquake, many a stage and literary personality. He took the photograph that got Greta Garbo her first U.S. movie contract...
...faced British colonel shifted his weight, stoically posed for his photograph. The man taking his picture was that cameraphile, Field Marshal Erwin Rommel. With some Indian troops in his command, the colonel had been seized during the confused fighting in the desert. His captors had hauled him in to exhibit him to the victorious Field Marshal of the Afrika Korps...
There may have been progress toward a United Command last week. The nation saw only one piece of evidence: a photograph, taken on the White House steps, of the three key military men of the U.S. (see cut). Closeted with Franklin Roosevelt had been his new personal Chief of Staff to the Commander in Chief, Admiral William D. Leahy. Also present were the Navy's Commander in Chief of the U.S. Fleet Admiral Ernest J. King; the Army's four-starred Chief of Staff General George C. Marshall...