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B. Platt D. Babbitt; Bachrach Studios; Baker Art Gallery; James Presley Ball; Thomas W. Bankes; George N. Barnard; Deloss Barnum; Jessie Tarbox Beals; Charles Milton Bell
In the mid-1960s, Conrad hosted a radio disk-jockey show called John Conrad and Max. Max was a fictitious studio turntable operator who made all sorts of trouble for Conrad, similar to Elmer the Elephant before. Conrad retired from broadcasting in 1968, and them moved to southern California to pursue other business interests. [6]
John Johnson graduated from Lincoln High in 1899 and studied at the University of Nebraska. He played football for the school but never graduated. Afterward, he worked as a janitor [2] and a drayman before beginning his photography career. Johnson married Odessa Prince in 1919; the couple had no children, and Johnson died in 1953.
Conrad was a 20-year-old bank teller at the Society National Bank in Cleveland when he walked out at the end of his workday on a Friday in 1969 with a paper bag containing $215,000, authorities said.
John Moore (born 1967) is an American photographer. He works for Getty images among others. His work has received several awards, including a Pulitzer Prize in 2005. His photograph of a two-year-old girl, crying as US Border Patrol officers begin to search her mother prior to taking both of them into custody for illegally crossing the US-Mexican border, was named World Press Photo 2018.
John C. Mack (born December 7, 1976) is an American artist, author, photographer, and founder of Life Calling. [1] In 2021 Mack founded Life Calling, a not-for-profit organization aimed at helping society to live fulfilled lives in the digital age while retaining our humanity and personal autonomy.
John Rivers Coplans (24 June 1920 – 21 August 2003) [1] was a British artist, art writer, curator, and museum director. A veteran of World War II and a photographer , he emigrated to the United States in 1960 and had many exhibitions in Europe and North America . [ 2 ]
Brook's photographs were published widely in magazines such as Time, Vogue, Popular Photography, [1] and ARTnews. [3] In 1959 he was featured in the New Talent issue of Art in America . [ 4 ] In 1966 he was one of 20 photographers whose work was featured in Life magazine's 30th Anniversary Photography Special Issue; others included Richard ...