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Because it's Veterans Day:


http://www.nzherald.co.nz/world/news/article.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10542300

Back in white 63 years after war's most famous kiss

4:00AM Tuesday Nov 11, 2008

Edith Shain says she is the nurse kissing a sailor in Times Square on V-J Day, athough the photographer Alfred Eisenstaedt was not sure. Photo / AP
NEW YORK - A 90-year-old who says she's the woman being kissed by a sailor in Times Square in one of World War II's most famous photographs reunited in town with the Navy yesterday - days before she is to serve as grand marshal of the city's Veterans Day parade.

Edith Shain of Los Angeles, donning a white nurse's uniform like the one she wore back in 1945, went to see the revival of South Pacific and posed for pictures, being hoisted off her feet by five of the actors in Navy whites.

Tomorrow, she'll ride in the parade at the head of a contingent of World War II veterans.

The South Pacific event was a touching reminder of history, but very different from August 15, 1945, the day Shain recalls that she joined thousands of people whooping it up after Japan surrendered. Right there on Broadway and 45th Street, a sailor suddenly grabbed and kissed her, and the moment was caught by Alfred Eisenstaedt, a Life magazine photographer.

His picture from V-J Day became one of the 20th century's most iconic images. But Eisenstaedt did not get the names of either party, and efforts years later by Life to identify the pair produced a number of claimants, says Bobbi Baker Burrows, a Life editor with deep knowledge of the subject.

About 1980, Shain recalls, she wrote a letter to Life, identifying herself as the woman in the nurse's uniform. Eisenstaedt wrote back and later visited her in California and gave her a copy of the photo. But Eisenstaedt, who died in 1995, was never sure that Shain was the woman in the photo, Burrows said.

Shain said she could not identify the bussing boy in blue.

"I went from Doctors Hospital to Times Square that day because the war was over, and where else does a New Yorker go?

"And this guy grabbed me and we kissed, and then I turned one way and he turned the other. There was no way to know who he was, but I didn't mind because he was someone who had fought for me."

At least three veterans still lay claim to being the kissing sailor, and at least one other woman has claimed to be the nurse. But Shain, who left nursing to become a kindergarten teacher in Los Angeles for 30 years, appears to hold the edge - by virtue of persistence, an effervescent charm and unabashed patriotism.

"As for the picture," she says, "it says so many things - hope, love, peace and tomorrow. The end of the war was a wonderful experience, and that photo represents all those feelings.

" AP

PING

Date: 2008-11-11 10:36 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dansr.livejournal.com
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