Browse Items (170 total)

It wasn't an easy matter to catch this expression on the little girl's face, and at the same time to have the calf 'breaking his neck' in the right directin. The set title, Mr. Cowherd explains, 'is possibly what the calf would have said if, under…

Snippet, a West Highland white terrier, was unusually friendly with the cows at an English farm home where Mr. Ware was doing a picture series. The cows reciprocated, but some of them nuzzled a bit too hard for the tiny ten-inch-long terrier and sent…

Snippet, a West Highland white terrier, was unusually friendly with the cows at an English farm home where Mr. Ware was doing a picture series. The cows reciprocated, but some of them nuzzled a bit too hard for the tiny ten-inch-long terrier and sent…

Lightweight Tommy Guerroro, outreached by Wilbur McCrorey, his taller opponent, combines a desperate lunge with a helicopter swing, during a Golden Gloves elimination series. Tommy 'swished' but missed. He lost the bout.

One boxer hitting another boxer in nose.

The all-white ships of the United Fruit Company maintain a strict schedule into Baltimore, a leading banana port. Often a boat must wait in the stream until there is room to dock. The packets make a round trip to Honduras in ten days.

First to complete the 242-mile run to Mackinac, the 72-foot yawl, Escapade, also led the 1947 fleet across the finish line. Mr. Spina shot from the blister of a PBY plane at an altitude of only 100 feet. His 'panning'--moving the camera parallel…

Both the sports editor and Mr. Preston were tired of 'the same old thing.' They decided there was a great need in basketball reportage for a picture that was different. 'This,' Preston admits, 'was the best of the 'unusual' pictures, and it involved…

Murray Wier, University of Iowa, made practically every all-American basketball team, and electrified crowds throughout the nation with his spectacular shooting. Don Padilla, picture editor of the Cedar Rapids Gazette, made this shot, part of a…

This is one of those rare instances of lucky timing,' says Mr. Siegel, 'that makes a photographer happy. It was a thrill when I pulled the negative out of the hypo to see the ball popping the base-runner on the chin.' Picture was taken in Minnesota…