Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/09/15
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]>From: D Khong <dkhong@pacific.net.sg> >> ... >> The aftermath was equally chilling. Cambodia ..the killing fields ... the >> boat people fleeing Vietnam... more loss of innocent lives. Much of what >> happended is recorded in REQUIEM, a book very precious to me. > >Speaking of which, REQUIEM retells the story of Huynh Cong La, a combat >photographer for AP, who was killed in the war, and how his younger brother >Huynh Cong Ut subsequently got a job with AP in Saigon, and went on to win >the Pulitzer with the picture of the little girl burnt by napalm. Ut, is of course >Nick Ut, mentioned on this list in the past day or two (Interesting that he should use >his given name as his Westernized family/last name). REQUIEM, as well as the >Vietnam war, was full of Leica lore, (e.g. Robert Capa) > >Another piece of Vietnam War/Leica trivia for you: (apologies to >longer-time Luggers - I mentioned this a few years back). > In John Eastland's Leica M Compendium, there is a photo by Tim Page >of Larry Burrows taking photographs of a funeral by the side of the >coffin, during the Vietnam War. According to the captions, Burrows was >using a Leica M3 and 50mm Summicron, which you can clearly in >the picture. The interesting thing is that Larry Burrows left index >finger was on the shutter release of the M3. > >Larry Burrows is a REQUIEM roster member - he died when his plane was shot >down in Laos during the ill-fated Lam Son 719 campaign; I remember because >another classmate of my father also died in the same plane. > >Tim Page is editor of REQUIEM, together with Horst Faas. I remember from >a previous LUG discussion of REQUIEM, some LUG members have met/knew >Tim Page. > >By the way, to my Vietnamese ears, 'Nam has a condescending sound to it. >I much prefer to hear Vietnam. And of course, I was one of those boat people. > >- Phong > I actually hesitated to use the word 'Nam but did so because it is so commonly used. It was not intended to sound anything less than "Vietnam." Dan K. - ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- The pursuit of wealth is ultimately futile. A shroud has no pockets. ============================================================================