Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Explore Vietnam War within the LIFE photography vault, one of the most prestigious & privately held archives from the US & around the World.
While the Vietnam War raged — roughly two decades’ worth of bloody and world-changing years — compelling images made their way out of the combat zones. On television screens and magazine...
Inside, across 10 funereal pages, LIFE published picture after picture and name after name of 242 young men killed in seven days halfway around the world “in connection with the conflict in Vietnam.” To no one’s surprise, the public’s response was immediate, and visceral.
In October 1966, on a mud-splattered hill just south of the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) in Vietnam, LIFE’s Larry Burrows made a photograph that, for generations, has served as the most indelible, searing illustration of the horrors inherent in that long, divisive war and, by implication, in all wars.
One of the most important stories that LIFE Magazine would ever cover was the Vietnam War. From sending photographers to the trenches to covering the stories of draft dodgers and deserters, LIFE Magazines during the 1960s explored every aspect of the most highly televised conflict in history.
Inside, across 10 funereal pages, LIFE published picture after picture and name after name of 242 young men killed in seven days halfway around the world “in connection with the conflict in...
Sudden Death in Vietnam: ‘One Ride With Yankee Papa 13’ By Ben Cosgrove | May 12, 2014 The War Within: Portraits of Vietnam Veterans Fighting Heroin Addiction
Fifty years ago, Life magazine stunned the country with photos of 217 men. All had died during one week in Vietnam. High school photos, graduation shots and formal military and battlefield...
One of the most important stories that LIFE Magazine would ever cover was the Vietnam War. From sending photographers to the trenches to covering the stories of draft dodgers and deserters, LIFE Magazines during the 1960s explored every aspect of the most highly televised conflict in history.
It featured the names and photos of more than 200 American troops who had been killed in just one week in the Vietnam War. On June 27, 1969, Life magazine published an issue that sparked ...