Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/09/14

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Subject: RE: [Leica] General Nguyen Ngoc Loan (Was: :E. Adams & Vietnam Photo)
From: "phong" <phong@doan-ltd.com>
Date: Tue, 14 Sep 1999 19:47:50 -0400

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