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1956-03-05 Life Magazine Contents

1956/03/05 — Cover photograph featuring Kim Novak is credited to Leonard McCombe

Contents of this issue are as follows:
THE WEEK’S EVENTS:

  • The Golden Youth of Communism – An Exclusive Report on a Growing Army of Soviet Scientists – Photographed for LIFE by Edward Clark
  • A Look at the World’s Week
  • Despite Arrests Montgomery Negroes Carry On Their Bold Bus Boycott – Includes small photos of Rosa Parks and Martin Luther King
  • Greek Voters Stave Off Communist Comeback in Close Win for the West
  • A 16-Story Scoop, World’s Largest, Rolls to Work in Ohio
  • Failure of Faith Leads a Florida Faith Healer to Trouble
  • EDITORIAL:

  • The New Communist Line
  • PHOTOGRAPHIC ESSAYS:

  • An Age of Guilded Opulence – Part 8 of “America’s Arts and Skills” Shows How Vigor Expanded Victorian Taste – Photographed for LIFE by Bradley Smith
  • A Lovely Girl Tries to Catch Up With Her Runaway Career – Kim Novak moves uncertainly in a new world of movie fame – Photographed for LIFE by Leonard McCombe
  • ARTICLES:

  • A Letter to the North – William Faulkner , the South’s foremost writer, warns on integration: “Stop Now, for a Moment”
  • The Agonizing Odyssey of Two People in Love – A Young Chinese Couple Battle U.S. Immigration Restrictions for the right to be Together Again by William Brinkley
  • FASHION:

  • Waists at new high: Empire silhouette breaks out again
  • SPORTS:
    Winter diver “saves” himself in an ice-covered lake

  • World champ at last, Skater Carol Heiss cries at Garmisch
  • ANIMALS:

  • Latchkey for bachelor cat leaves Wisconsin owner undisturbed
  • EDUCATION:

  • Westchester Grammar School Dramatists Invent Their Own Productions
  • THEATER:

  • David Wayne as an incorrigible saint in Broadway’s new “Ponder Heart” hilariously disrupts a community
  • MODERN LIVING:

  • Electronic oracle charts the value of home insulation
  • MUSIC:

  • New teen-tune hits are based on out-of-date styles
  • SCIENCE:

  • A Peeping Tom device makes light of the night
  • TRANSPORTATION:

  • Houston Has a One-Track Hanging Train
  • PARTY:

  • How to Give Children’s Parties: Part 2 – Using LIFE’s Part Rules, a Connecticut Mother finds way to success is to keep the guests moving – Photographed for LIFE by Walter Sanders
  • OTHER DEPARTMENTS:

  • Letters to the Editors
  • Speaking of Pictures: A Leap for Life, a Lunge for Lunch
  • Miscellany: Screams in the Sky
  • 2-page color ad — “Norman Rockwell Says Pan American Was My Magic Carpet Around the World” with 8 small color Rockwell illustrations surrounding the text on the pages
  • Filed Under: Life Magazine Tagged With: Life Magazine

    1956-03-12 Life Magazine Contents

    1956/03/12 — Cover photograph featuring Dwight D. Eisenhower is credited to Hank Walker

    Contents of this issue are as follows:
    THE WEEK’S EVENTS:

  • “After weeks of … devoutly prayerful consideration,” the drama of the President’s yes
  • Children for 17 Lands pay Homage to Pope Pius XII on his 80th Birthday
  • A Look at the World’s Week
  • Europe’s Bad Winter is Cruel to the End
  • No Sign of Peace for Autherine
  • A Mystery Monster Causes SOme Ripples in Henley-on-Thames
  • EDITORIALS:

  • Three Imports of Ike’s Decision
  • “Go slow, now”
  • PHOTOGRAPHIC ESSAYS:

  • The Sands of the Desert Turn Gold – Well-Heeled Visitors in the Southwest Enrich Scottsdale, Arizona, as native styles are embellished – Photographed in color for LIFE by Nina Leen
  • A Memo to the Girls – LIFE Shows leap-year husband-seekers some eligible specimens of U.S. bacherlorhood and places where they abound, such as Caspar, Wyoming
  • ARTICLE:

  • Confessions of a Master Jewel Thief – Arthur Barry, great second-story man, looks back on a $10 million life in crime by Robert Wallace
  • MILITARY AFFAIRS:

  • Set to strike in the shadows: the U.S. Army trains a special corps of many-skilled men to operate behind enemy lines
  • SCIENCE:
    Tiny plastic lens is promising new solution for eye cataracts

    MODERN LIVING:

  • In colorful models Cleveland shows how a city fights decay
  • NATURE:

  • Horace the housebroken hare enjoys his Dublin house
  • SPORTS:

  • The world’s biggest serve: smashing triumphs over Trabert prove Pancho Gonzalez is best in tennis
  • ART:

  • English sculptor uses menbers of his congregation as models for a church facade
  • THEATER:

  • Eugene O’Neill ‘s last tragedy, “Long Day’s Journey Into Night,” produced in Stockholm, tells the playwright’s own family story
  • FASHION:

  • U.S. Men Gets Recapped: Slimmed-Down Sports Headgear Shows Up in Town
  • MUSIC:

  • A 23-year-old Canadian, Glenn Gould, looms as the Continent’s most astonishing young pianist
  • PARTY:

  • Turnout for a top Italian – President Giovanni Gronchi whirls through four days in Washington
  • OTHER DEPARTMENTS:

  • Speaking of Pictures: Aerial Artistry by the Acre
  • Letters to the Editors
  • Miscellany: An Antigravity Goat
  • Filed Under: Life Magazine Tagged With: Life Magazine

    1956-03-26 Life Magazine Contents

    1956/03/26 — Cover photograph featuring Julie Andrews is credited to Leonard McCombe

    Contents of this issue are as follows:
    THE WEEK’S EVENTS:

  • Trouble to the east plagues the West – Troubles in the Middle East
  • The man who won Margaret Truman — Meet Clifton Daniel
  • Gas bill lobby’s tangled trail
  • Plots (including cemetery) full of poison
  • A Look at the World’s Week
  • Marooned passengers photograph their own ordeal as the “Washington Mail” sinks in Gulf of Alaska
  • EDITORIAL:

  • “A new vision playing on old facts”
  • ARTICLE:

  • The Norman Conquest – Part 2 of Volume 1 (“The Birth of Britain”) in Sir Winston Churchill’s “History of the English-Speaking Peoples”
  • PHOTOGRAPHIC ESSAYS:

  • Famous English battlefields – 8 pages of color illustrating the Churchill article – Photographed for LIFE by Dmitri Kessel
  • EDUCATION:

  • Blind for a day – An Arizona physics teacher blindfolds his students to dramatize the story of light
  • THEATER:
    Shaw’s “Pygmalion” with Rex Harrison and Julie Andrews makes a fine Broadway musical

    MEDICINE:

  • U.S. atoms for peace exhibit builds a Japanese archway to atomic moons
  • ART:

  • A German-born Yale professor trains art students with optical tricks
  • MOVIES:

  • Alec Guinness , as a prelate, a prince and a prowler, is good for three new films at once
  • AVIATION:

  • British “Droop Snoot” jet fighter sets world speed record
  • SCIENCE:

  • Old bones make a big stew: some think Italy’s Oreopithecus is ancestor of apes, some thing of man, some neither
  • YOUTH:

  • Kids with guns: drawing a bead on safety, Indiana Youngsters start at Age 6 learning how to handle firearms
  • SPORTS:

  • Larceny on the links: con men take “friendly” game of golf to a fatal financial hazard for the nation’s golfers – By Marshall Smith
  • FASHION:

  • The rustic bandanna gets down off the farm in spring and summer styles
  • PARTY:

  • Marching back to 1066 – British walker try to match the pace of King Harold’s Saxons and are too tired to fight
  • OTHER DEPARTMENTS:

  • Speaking of Pictures: A Bubbly British Billow Below Ground
  • Letters to the Editors
  • Miscellany: Dog’s Bath Without Wrath
  • Filed Under: Life Magazine Tagged With: Life Magazine

    1956-04-02 Life Magazine Contents

    1956/04/02 — Cover photograph featuring Teenage Telephone Tie-Up is credited to Grey Villet

    Contents of this issue are as follows:
    THE WEEK’S EVENTS:

  • Hand That Shook the Democrats – Estes Kefauver moves to front after defeating Adlai Stevenson in Minnesota Primary
  • A Look at the World’s Week
  • U.S. Breaks into the Frozen Continent of Antarctica – Photographed for LIFE by Fritz Goro
  • Snowfall Samaritans rescue a mailman in New York Storm
  • EDITORIAL:

  • The Resurrection – An event that beggars comment
  • ARTICLE:

  • Barons Against the King — Part 3 of Volume 1 (“The Birth of Britain”) in Sir Winston Churchill’s “History of the English-Speaking Peoples.” Plus a portfolio of paintings by contemporary artists on medieval life
  • PICTORIAL ESSAYS:

  • Skillful arrangements of simple flowers create grand effects – Painted for LIFE by Mary Faulconer
  • Tireless, Talky Teen-agers Keep Telephone Lines Toiling – Photographed for LIFE by Grey Villet
  • FASHION:

  • Designer Luis Estevez – A one-year wonder and his necklines
  • SPORTS:
    San Francisco Dons set a basketball victory record the easy way – Photos include Bill Russell and K.C. Jones

    RADIO AND TV:

  • Fans and Friends Mourn Fred Allen
  • RELIGION:

  • Catholics Revise Easter with ancient rites and modern notes
  • YOUTH:

  • Kansas City children cut capers in a shopping center zoo
  • OTHER DEPARTMENTS:

  • Speaking of Pictures: The Matching Poujades
  • Letters to the Editors
  • Miscellany: The Snow Also Rises
  • Filed Under: Life Magazine Tagged With: Life Magazine

    1956-04-16 Life Magazine Contents

    1956/04/16 — Cover featuring Berber Girls credited to David Douglas Duncan

    Contents of this issue are as follows:
    THE WEEK’S EVENTS:

  • As world worries about Middle East, new Egypt shows its strength – Photographed for LIFE by David Douglas Duncan – 8 pages including full-page b&w photo of Nasser
  • Nature triggers tornado season and man fights it
  • Salesman with understanding boss gives pros fits in the Masters featuring Ken Venturi
  • A Look at the World’s Week
  • Odyssey of a daft raft – landlubbers trying to outdo “Kon-Tiki” take a long Pacific voyage to nowehere
  • EDITORIAL:

  • Is the income tax just?
  • PICTORIAL ESSAY:

  • Man shapes his environment – the domestication of plants and animals gave man his greatest victory in battle against nature — Part 4 of “The Epic of Man” – Text by Lincoln Barnett, Photographs for LIFE by David Douglas Duncan and Frank Scherschel. Paintings by Alton S. Tobey
  • ARTICLE:

  • Glubb Pasha tells how our Middle East enemies work – Arab agitators abetted by Reds, says British general ousted from Jordan, imperil the West’s position
  • FASHION:

  • Bright spot on a bad day – spring brings a deluge of raincoats in new styles and gay prints
  • EDUCATION:
    Parents’ schooldays – a Maryland school puts mom and pop through three days of their children’s curriculum

    TRANSPORTATION:

  • From our horrible highways – Artist Basil Wolverton draws cars for maniac autoists
  • MOVIES:

  • Rotten business in the ring – a wallping film tells of the fixed fights and phony build-up of a boxer – About The Harder They Fall
  • SCIENCE:

  • A turkey that never had a father – Agriculture Department scientist studies hens that produce chicks without any assistance from toms
  • MODERN LIVING:

  • Strugn up for sitting down – a make-it-yourslf chair has a seat woven of clothesline
  • MEDICINE:

  • An official warning makes things hotter for Hoxsey’s cancer clinics
  • SPORTS:

  • Bulls baffle brave Bertha – Colombian girl takes a beating but keeps coming back for more
  • NATURE:

  • Cannibal snail gets a job – A tiny African mollusk is imported to fight a citrus pest
  • PARTY:

  • A wistful reunion at Pickfair – Mary Pickford gathers famous film figures of 1920s – Includes photos of Pickford with Francis X. Bushman, Antonio Moreno, plus the Duncan Sisters, Anna Q. Nilsson with Harold Lloyd and Annette Kellerman, William Boyd with Jack Oakie and Russell Simpson, Hedda Hopper and Marion Davies
  • OTHER DEPARTMENTS:

  • Letters to the Editors
  • Speaking of Pictures: a swimsuit that really gets around
  • Miscellany: Paddles and the poodles
  • Filed Under: Life Magazine Tagged With: Life Magazine

    1956-04-23 Life Magazine Contents

    1956/04/23 — Cover features Jayne Mansfield credited to Peter Stackpole

    Contents of this issue are as follows:
    THE WEEK’S EVENTS:
    Sensational secret behind Stalin’s damnation:

  • An ex-NKVD general discloses deeds so shocking the Reds must disown their old idol by Alexander Orlov – 8 pages
  • An authority on the Soviet presents a document implicating Stalin as czarist spy by Isaac Don Levine – parts of 4 pages
  • The tragic ordeal of Platoon 71 puts Marine training under fire
  • Peace comes at end of bloody week in Holy Land as U.N. envoy exerts West’s pressure
  • A British auto racer is spilled to fiery death
  • Monaco mania – Cartoonist Rowland Emett depicts the little country’s prewedding delirium
  • A Look at the World’s Week
  • EDITORIALS:

  • A letter to Khruschchev
  • Moral dilemma on campus
  • PICTORIAL ESSAYS:

  • Prodigous music maker – the world honors Mozart on his 200th Anniversary – Photographed for LIFE by Gjon Mili – 14 pages, most in color
  • Clubfooted boy from Dominican Republic gets new feet and a home in the U.S. – Photographed for LIFE by Joern Gerdts
  • ARTICLE:

  • Star’s legend in the making – Jayne Mansfield talks dumb but heads for the top by Ernest Havemann – 7 pages (5 are half-pages though)
  • THEATER:

  • Frank Loesser’s “The Most Happy Fella” is a musical landmark
  • SPORTS:
    Swimmer Orrin Nordstrom wear gloves, shoes while training

    ENTERTAINMENT:

  • Beauty for a big top – a French artist decks circus in flowery finery – 4 pages in color by Marcel Vertes
  • SCIENCE:

  • “In frogs…the universe” – Jean Rostand, son of the famous playwright, finds a rich life in his scientific studies
  • MOVIES:

  • Alfred Hitchcock does a hair-raiser in a concert hall
  • Marlon Brando makes up like an Okinawan for “Teahouse” role
  • RELIGION:

  • Church for the deaf conducts its services in sign language
  • ANIMALS:

  • Opo the dolphin has a brief summer of happiness taking New Zealand swimmers for a ride
  • MODERN LIVING:

  • New loot for children – a new book tells where and how to acquire 1,200 gifts for the asking
  • TELEVISION:

  • Man bites like dog as Lassie and Perry Como get TV awards
  • ART:

  • Cult of the kitchen sink – British emphasize the sordid
  • MUSIC:

  • Brother Matthew at the jam session – a great saxophonist leaves the monastery briefly for a jazz performance
  • MEDICINE:

  • A nbew technique for collecting blood plasma increases production by giving the corpuscles back to the donors
  • PARTY:

  • En route to Mexico for her wedding, Grace Kelly plays hard at The Game – Photographed by Howell Conant – 4 pages, b&w, of Grace Kelly playing charades, 13 photos total
  • OTHER DEPARTMENTS:

  • Letters to the Editors
  • Speaking of Pictures: three miffed misses yearn for other roles
  • Filed Under: Life Magazine Tagged With: Life Magazine

    1956-04-30 Life Magazine Contents

    1956/04/30 — Cover features Margaret Truman and husband Clifton Daniel credited to Arnold Newman

    Contents of this issue are as follows:
    THE WEEK’S EVENTS:

  • An extra special Saturday for Independence, Mo.
  • Her Grace of the movies gets a real life title – Grace Kelly marries Prince Rainier – 9 pages
  • A Look at the World’s Week
  • A reception that was no ball for Bulganin and Khruschchev in Britain
  • EDITORIALS:

  • How to be right AND President
  • The luck of the British
  • PHOTOGRAPHIC ESSAY:

  • Japan in the spring glows with a soft and subtle beauty – Photographed for LIFE by Eliot Elisofon – 16 pages, all color!
  • ARTICLES:

  • Athletes tell how illicit pay-offs destroy the amateur stock by Jack Newcombe – includes photos of Wes Santee – Elmore Harris – Roscoe Browne – Jim Herbert and Johnny Fulton
  • The end of a dark age ushers in new dangers – liquidation of Stalinism at Soviet’s 20th Congress underlines and insidious drive to win free men by Whittaker Chambers
  • SPORTS:

  • First big league game for eight boys – Seven rookies are nervous and to one it’s just a game – 3 pages include photo of rookies Luis Aparicio – Charley Neal – Frank Robinson – Tito Francona – Jerry Lumpe – Whitey Herzog – Don Buddin – Danny Kravitz
  • MUSIC:
    Howling Hillbilly success – Elvis Presley ‘s complaint becomes a top pop tune – 1 page, 2 b&w photos of Elvis

    ANIMALS:

  • High-flying haylift brings help to hard-luck horse stranded on the Continental Divide
  • MOVIES:

  • Kind dice and death – in “The Bold and the Brave” GI Mickey Rooney wins…and loses
  • EDUCATION:

  • Academic private eye – in Wisconsin school TV sites in as a disciplinarian
  • FASHION:

  • Barbard College sophomore Anne Morris advises the buyer at New York’s Bergdorf Goodman
  • SCIENCE:

  • The squared egg – new plastic shell is tougher and handier
  • INDUSTRY:

  • Drilling offshore, Britain finds a rich underwater source of coal
  • ART:

  • Jazz herlps sculptors dig that clay – a Hollywood art class models to music
  • MILITARY AFFAIRS:

  • Golden domes in the Arctic – DEW line radar stations spring up to defend the U.S.
  • MEDICINE:

  • Daily gift of life – student blood donors keep a California hemophiliac in school
  • OTHER DEPARTMENTS:

  • Speaking of Pictures: a massed bird migration is part of photographic display honoring Margaret Bourke-White
  • Letters to the Editors
  • Miscellany: Pigeon-toed Pavement
  • Filed Under: Life Magazine Tagged With: Life Magazine

    1956-05-14 Life Magazine Contents

    1956/05/14 — Cover featuring Gainsborough Look in Fashion is credited to Mark Shaw

    Contents of this issue are as follows:
    THE WEEK’S EVENTS:

  • Flying Feet Produce a Thrilling Day of Sports
  • A Look at the World’s Week
  • Alben Barkley, Great Campaigner – His Last Audience is the Nation
  • The Nation Learns That the Second Best Air Force Is Not Good Enough
  • Interior Secretary McKay, Who Quit to Fight Senator Wayne Morse, Finds Oregon Primary Fight Is Tough
  • Grace and Rainier’s Official Wedding Picture — In Color
  • EDITORIALS:

  • Danger – Pettifoggers At Work
  • Step Toward State of Alaska
  • PHOTOGRAPHIC ESSAYS:

  • The Grand Canyon ‘s Hidden Wonders Are Revealed on a Long Trek Into Places Few Have Ever Seen — Photographed for LIFE by A.Y. Owen
  • Mellon’s Miracle – The Head of Pittsburgh’s First Family Leads HIs City Into a Renaissance
  • ARTICLES:

  • Genteel Queen of Crime, Whodunit Writer Agatha Christie, Puts Her Zest for Life Into Murder by Nigel Dennis
  • Henry Wallace Describes HIs Thoughts on Communism and Peace and And Tells Why He Supports Eisenhower as the Man to Avoid and “Atomic Abyss”
  • MILITARY AFFAIRS:

  • What to Do About the Draft? LIFE Presents a Guide for Young Men Facing Military Service and For Their Parents
  • MOVIES:

  • New Star Cathy Dunn , 7, Sees Her Movie, “Lovers and Lollipops,” With Her Friend, Veteran Star, Richie Andrusco, 10
  • MEDICINE:

  • A 49-Year-Old Veteran Is Chief of a Salt Lake Nursing Service and Opens Up a New Career for Men
  • NIGHTCLUBS:

  • Ex-Movie Queen Constance Bennett, 51, Rocks and Rolls in Dungarees to Kid the Teen-Agers
  • SEQUEL:

  • Korean Orphan, “the Boy Who Wouldn’t Smile,” Finds a Happy Home in the U.S.
  • FASHION:

  • An Old Master Is Back In Style – Gainsborough Girls Grace Parties Again
  • MODERN LIVING:

  • A Pipsqueak Sailboat Costs $30 to Build
  • EDUCATION:

  • The Gifted High School Students Who Won Big Scholarships Display Varied Talents
  • SPORTS:

  • Crooner Frankie Laine and Golfer Gene Littler Hit the Jackpot in the Las Vegas Calcutta Golf Pool
  • HISTORY:

  • Biggest Collection of U.S. Swords
  • PARTIES:

  • Visit to Texas Ranch Gives Foreign Ambassadors An Unstarched View of the U.S.
  • OTHER DEPARTMENTS:

  • Speaking of Pictures: Big-Scale Manhattan Model
  • Letters to the Editors
  • Miscellany: Peggy the Portable Pony
  • Camel Cigarettes ad on back cover features small sepia headshot photos of 20 Baseball Stars including Ted Kluszewski, Richie Ashburn, Warren Spahn, Yogi Berra, Early Wynn, Harvey Haddix, and others
  • Filed Under: Life Magazine Tagged With: Life Magazine

    1956-06-11 Life Magazine Contents

    1956/06/11 — Cover features Carroll Baker credited to Peter Stackpole

    Contents of this issue are as follows:
    THE WEEK’S EVENTS:

  • Buddha’s 2,500th anniversary brings hosts of his half-billion believers to celebrations both pious and gay – 5 pages
  • Two eggs htch and now the small flock of U.S. whooping cranes numbers 31
  • A parliamentary row over helping U.S. financiers with pipeline challenges government of Canada
  • A Look at the World’s Week
  • Satchmo is a smash on Africa’s Gold Coast featuring Louis Armstrong
  • Communist stooge Nenni becomes a power in Italy
  • Segregated Negroes introduce bus stop protest into another city, Tallahassee
  • EDITORIAL:

  • Advice to and from writers
  • PICTORIAL ESSAY:

  • The story of the mighty Yangtze – John Hersey ‘s new novel “A Single Pebble” is born of a voyage that he and Photographer Dmitri Kessel made for LIFE on China’s Great River – 10 pages
  • CLOSE-UP:

  • Averell Harriman, the dark horse with the best handlers, by James Keough; Third in LIFE’s series on Democratic candidates
  • ARTICLE:

  • The mystery and misery of the aching back by Ernest Havemann
  • EDUCATION:

  • Wake Forest College moves 110 miles to a new $19 million campus
  • MOVIES:
    There are no words at all in Gene Kelly ‘s “Invitation to the Dance”

  • Girl on the eve of a triumph: Carroll Baker shows her dramatic skill in making “Baby Doll”
  • AGRICULTURE:

  • English Farmer rigs upa self-steering tractor that farms alone
  • MODERN LIVING:

  • An amphibious trailer is at home on the highway and in the water
  • THEATER:

  • Four-faced Hamlet – In a brilliant production by Baylor University drama students, Shakespeare’s hero is played by a quartet of actors
  • FASHION:

  • California style on the backlots – Clothes travel around film’s imitation world – Photographed for LIFE by Gordon Parks
  • ART:

  • Sculpture on the rocks – a Greek-born artist finds form and faces in orginary stones
  • MEDICINE:

  • New cigarette – cancer link – study shows that as smoking rate rises, so does lung damage
  • MUSIC:

  • “T-r-a-n-s-fusion” is a gruesome new song hit
  • PARTY:

  • Part IV in the LIFE series on how to give children’s parties; boys and girls of 12 whoop it up together
  • OTHER DEPARTMENTS:

  • Letters to the Editors
  • Speaking of Pictures: visual aids in think session help Navy men to be creative
  • Miscellany: A Propaganda Pup
  • Filed Under: Life Magazine Tagged With: Life Magazine

    1956-07-16 Life Magazine Contents

    1956/07/16 — Cover photograph featuring Gary Cooper and Anthony Perkins is credited to Don Ornitz

    Contents of this issue are as follows:
    THE WEEK’S EVENTS:

  • A Perilous Search Follows History’s Worst Commercial Air Disaster
  • A Look at the World’s Week
  • A Look at the World’s Week, Moscow Dept.
  • Bankrupt and Stranded, the King Brothers; Show Joins a Growing List of Circus Big Tops Which Have Been Struck
  • Pinch of Steel Strike Is Felt in Other, Varied Industries
  • Rome City Hall Has a Free-for-All Over a Mayoralty Election With Poor Giulio Near to a TKO
  • EDITORIALS:

  • Action Is Needed on Air Safety
  • Nixon is Making Sense and Friends
  • PHOTOGRAPHIC ESSAYS:

  • My Garden, by H.R.H. the Duke of Windsor – Photographed for LIFE by Frank Scherschel
  • A Weekend of Woe for a Father Named Joe – Joe Gordon Gives HIs Wife the Weekend Off and Bravely Takes Charge of Twin Babies – Photographed for LIFE by Joe Scherschel
  • ARTICLE:

  • A Debate, Pro and Con – Subject: Richard M. Nixon by Robert Coughlan
  • FASHION:

  • London Fashions, Models Wow Drab Russia
  • MODERN LIVING:

  • A Plate That Flies for Small Fry
  • ART:

  • Museum Director’s Choice – Denver’s Otto Karl Bach Picks the Carved Ancestor of an Indian Chief
  • MOVIES:

  • 24-year-old Copy of Cooper – Tony Perkins Takes After His Movie Father, Gary
  • ENTERTAINMENT:

  • Old Stars–New Steps – Actors Perform Out of Character in a London Revue
  • PARTY:

  • Wedding Wine for Marilyn – She Becomes Mrs. Miller in a Simple Religious Ceremony – 3 full pages of photos of Marilyn Monroe in wedding veil and gown as she marries playwright Arthur Miller, all black & white
  • OTHER DEPARTMENTS:

  • Speaking of Pictures: The Better Mice
  • Letters to the Editors
  • Miscellany: Face in the Raindrops
  • Filed Under: Life Magazine Tagged With: Life Magazine

    1956-07-23 Life Magazine Contents

    1956/07/23 — Cover features The Battle of Buena Vista by Chamberlain

    Contents of this issue are as follows:
    THE WEEK’S EVENTS:

  • G.O.P. Smiles Widen With Ike’s Decision
  • A Look at the World’s Week
  • Anguish Cruelly Compounded – The Mother of a Kidnapped Baby Is Tortured by the Hoaxers
  • Greeks Mourn 54 Dead in the Aegean
  • Sights and Smells of Moscow – A Visitor’s Report By the Chief of TIME-LIFE Washington Bureau
  • 5,000 Girls Scouts Rough It on First National Roundup at a “Primitive Encampment”
  • EDITORIALS:

  • The U.S. Spirit: A Moral Creed
  • The U.S. Spirit: A Will to Risk
  • PHOTOGRAPHIC ESSAY:

  • Everybody Gets In the Acting: Five Amateur Productions Of the Same Play in Five Cities Show How Footlight Fever is Sweeping the U.S. — Photographed for LIFE by Yale Joel
  • ARTICLE:

  • “My Confession” – The First of Three Installments on the Romantic Mexican War Memoirs of a Solider-Artist
  • RELIGION:

  • Cutting into Cryptic Copper – A Professor Saws Secrets Out of the 2,000-Year-Old Dead Sea Scrolls
  • FASHION:
    Mad Hats for Elegantly Simple Fall Dresses

    MEDICINE:

  • Artificial Suns for Surgery at St. Lo
  • ANIMALS:

  • New Deal for a Rare Seal
  • SPORTS:

  • A ‘Copter Ride in a Motorless Boat
  • ART:

  • A Cast Lady Cast Off – Texas Bank Rejects Zorach’s Sculpture
  • MILITARY AFFAIRS:

  • Fraternity of Valor – Britain Honors Holders of 100-Year-Old Victoria Cross
  • PARTY:

  • Fifth and Last in LIFE’s Series on How to Give Children’s Parties Tells Parents to Let 15-Year-Olds Run Their Own Show
  • OTHER DEPARTMENTS:

  • Speaking of Pictures: Castles in the Sand of Italy
  • Letters to the Editors
  • Sequel: A Black Friday for Whoopers
  • Miscellany: Cow’s Tongue ina Tap
  • Filed Under: Life Magazine Tagged With: Life Magazine

    1956-09-03 Life Magazine Contents

    1956/09/03 — Cover featuring Slave Auction is credited to Robert Riggs

    Contents of this issue are as follows:
    THE WEEK’S EVENTS:

  • G.O.P. convention stages a rousing rally for Ike and Dick
  • A Look at the World’s Week
  • A cringing kidnapper who left his infant victim to perish is captured and confesses
  • EDITORIALS:

  • Ike, Adlai and American ardor
  • The new Republican harmony
  • PICTORIAL ESSAY:

  • “The Background of Segregation” Part 1 – In the first of a new series LIFE shows how the Negro came from Africa to slavery in America and how he enriched and troubled his new land. Text by Robert Wallace – Includes 3-page fold-out illustration captioned “A Coffle of Freight for Yankee Slavers” by Stevan Dohanos, plus other artwork
  • ARTICLE:

  • Louis B. Seltzer , a great editor, tells of the poor but happy boyhood which formed background for newspaper career
  • FASHION:

  • A hint of hemline upheaval – newest length by Dior jogs the Paris showings
  • ART:
    A bath for a god – a Buddhist carving in Boston gets spruced up for TV

    SPORTS:

  • Lew Hoad ‘s bid for a rare grand slam in tennis
  • PARTY:

  • Skittish time for novice water skiers – young campers take only 14 minutes to learn fun of a trick sport
  • OTHER DEPARTMENTS:

  • Speaking of Pictures: history of an ostrich hatching
  • Letters to the Editors
  • Sequel: blind dog gets a plastic lens
  • Miscellany: silent sirens by the sea
  • Filed Under: Life Magazine Tagged With: Life Magazine

    1956-11-12 Life Magazine Contents

    1956/11/12 — Cover featuring Rosalind Russell as Auntie Mame is credited to Mark Shaw

    Contents of this issue are as follows:
    THE WEEK’S EVENTS:

  • Hungarian patriots strike ferocious blows at a tyranny – 10 pages
  • World opinion rallies for Suez peace – 5 pages
  • The reappearance of two cardinals
  • A Look at the World’s Week – includes b&w photo of Elvis Presley with Natalie Wood and another shot showing Marilyn Monroe shaking hands with Queen Elizabeth
  • Magnetic Margaret’s African mission: on a troubled continent Britain’s pretty princess finds colorful evidence of loyalty to the crown – Photographed for LIFE by Mark Kauffman – 7 pages
  • Junk jalopies form a jetty near Topeka
  • EDITORIAL:

  • Edne’s tragic blunder
  • ARTICLES:

  • A tribute to vaudeville’s golden era – a great comic in his last book fondly recounts the hilarious legends of the show circuit – By Fred Allen – 11 pages, mostly half pages of text, half of advertising
  • High Venture and Civil War by Sir Winston Churchill, Third Part of Volume 2 of “A History of the English-Speaking Peoples” – takes up all or part of 18 pages
  • TELEVISION:

  • A fast-rising schoolgirl – a Chicago 12-year-old is a hit as mistress of ceremonies on her own TV show
  • BOOKS:

  • An unpopular best seller “Peyton Place,” Grace Metalious’ novel, has made her unloved in Gilmanton, N.H.
  • ANIMALS:

  • Rare retriever – a hunting dog takes care of cripples
  • MOVIES:

  • In “The Ten Commandments” Cecil B. DeMille , Hollywood’s master showman, films anew the story of the Exodus
  • BUSINESS:

  • You too can blow up the world: manufacturers try new tricks to make globes more graphic
  • THEATER:

  • Wise, wacky “Auntie Mame” – Rosalind Russell is absolutely perfect in Broadway version of best selling book
  • FASHION:

  • Paris in a department store
  • ARMY:

  • The Army digs a faster foxhole
  • MODERN LIVING:

  • How to square flattop hair
  • A brainy toy’s tricks
  • CLOSE-UP:

  • A first lady minister in robes of a new role
  • MEDICINE:

  • Pets make a hospital happy
  • SPORTS:

  • Tennessee family has a potential All-American, a successful coach and four other stars
  • PARTY:

  • Gay gathering in a gallery at a Providence, R.I. museum
  • OTHER DEPARTMENTS:

  • Speaking of Pictures: Scenes by Dramatic Diva – Maria Callas
  • Letters to the Editors
  • Miscellany: Sure-Footed Scholarship
  • Pan-Am ad on inside front cover features color artwork Master Pilot John Mattis by Norman Rockwell
  • Filed Under: Life Magazine Tagged With: Life Magazine

    1956-11-19 Life Magazine Contents

    1956/11/19 — Cover featuring Wounded Egyptian Solider credited to Burt Glinn

    Contents of this issue are as follows:
    THE WEEK’S EVENTS:

  • How the British and French attacked canal — a small war in the shadow of a big-stick threat – 8 pages of the attack on the Suez Canal
  • A Split-Ticket vote for the historians to explain
  • Lost cause shocks the world – rioters rage at the rape of Hungary
  • After a watch by night, a miraculous mine rescue
  • A Look at the World’s Week
  • Celebration for Seretse – Bechuanaland chieftain and his white wife are home again as private citizens
  • EDITORIALS:

  • To the heroes of Hungary
  • What the voters said
  • PICTORIAL ESSAYS:

  • New vistas of the road – in America’s matchless autumn panorama a great highway program gathers speed
  • Country Music’s prosperity – Photographed for LIFE by Yale Joel – 8 pages of photos, 4 in color. Grand Ole Opry “family portrait” includes Johnny Cash
  • ARTICLES:

  • Names, places, and pay-offs – by Wes Santee. The miler whose suspension brought the year’s biggest sports controversy tells of the “brown envelope” system
  • The Curse of Cromwell by Sir Winston Churchill, in “A History of the English-Speaking Peoples” – Eight pages of color on an ardent King’s lovely conquests, court and courntry life and the great fire – takes up all or part of 19 pages, several in color
  • SCIENCE:

  • The oldest thing alive – bristlecone pines in California are 4,000 years old
  • ANIMALS:

  • Triple-decker doghouse for some high-living Afghans
  • MOVIES:

  • Fearful female on the run – “Julie” is a terror tale of flight from a fiend
  • AVIATION:

  • Russians build a better chute
  • A Navy balloon’s record rise and perilous drop
  • THEATER:

  • Eugene O’Neill ‘s autobiographical play “Long Day’s Journey Into Night” reaches the U.S. stage
  • SPORTS:

  • Soomething had to crack in battle of unbeaten football giants — Tennessee beats Georgia Tech
  • CLOSE-UP:

  • The hectic daily rat race of Master Cartoonist Herblock
  • FASHION:

  • Men’s shirts don bold and colorful fronts
  • PARTY:

  • A Stately welcome to society as Atlanta debutantes make their bow
  • OTHER DEPARTMENTS:

  • Speaking of Pictures: Hurdles from on High
  • Letters to the Editors
  • Miscellany: A Squirt for a Squirrel
  • Filed Under: Life Magazine Tagged With: Life Magazine

    1956-11-26 Life Magazine Contents

    1956/11/26 — Cover featuring Ingrid Bergman is credited to Robert Landry

    Contents of this issue are as follows:
    THE WEEK’S EVENTS:

  • Tanks and Yet More Tanks Raze Hungary
  • Testing Time for U.S. Caught in Two Crises
  • A Legacy of Anguist Haunts Truce on Suez
  • A Look at the World’s Week
  • Iroquois Rebury Ancient Bones to Soothe Dusturbed Ancestral Spirits
  • Marines Wail as Wives Sail – The Corps Bans Families from Japan
  • Bronze Honor for Justice Brandeis – A University Hails Its Namesake
  • EDITORIALS:

  • In a World Jungle, Uneasy Thanks
  • In Crisis, A Call for Greatness
  • PHOTOGRAPHIC ESSAYS:

  • Egypt’s Eras of Splendor – A Legacy of Art Reflects the Magnificence of Its Culture, The Genius of Its Thought, and the Power of Its Empire — Part 7 — “The Epic of Man” — Text by Lincoln Barnett and Photographed for LIFE by Walter Sanders, James Whitmore and Yale Joel
  • The Far-Off Site of the Olympics – The Handsome, Wealthy Metropolis of Melbourne Warms Up for the Games – Photographed for LIFE by John Dominis
  • ARTICLE:

  • Peril for Poland’s New Leader, Wladyslaw Gomulka by Jozef Swiatlo, who arrested him and was his jailer
  • TELEVISION:

  • TV Cameras Resort to Tricks to Get Jack Up the Beanstalk
  • That Awful Eloise Comes to Life – Kay Thompson’s “Eloise” Is Adapted for TV
  • MOVIES:

  • Brilliant Return for Ingrid Bergman in “Anastasia”
  • ANIMALS:

  • High-Flying Hybrid – AN Energetic Mule Crashes the Horsy Set
  • EDUCATION:

  • A Science Road Show Wows High School Pupils
  • SPORTS:

  • Twin Prize for Football – College Vie for Schoolboy Brothers Mike and Marlin McKeever
  • THEATER:

  • America Gets a British Feast of Shakespeare – Old Vic Players Act a Variety of Roles
  • FASHION:

  • Evening Chiffons Blow In
  • PEOPLE:

  • Candid Look for British Royal Children
  • CLOSE-UP:

  • Latest Quest of a Busy Educator, Harvard’s Pusey
  • ART:

  • Paintings in Planes – Roberto Fasola’s “poliepipedi” Have a New York Showing
  • PARTY:

  • Banjo Jam at Yale
  • OTHER DEPARTMENTS:

  • Letters to the Editors
  • Speaking of Pictures: Rhythmic Colors of a Symphony
  • Miscellany: Cake Sheds a Tier
  • Filed Under: Life Magazine Tagged With: Life Magazine

    1956-12-03 Life Magazine Contents

    1956/12/03 — Cover featuring Flag on Sunken U.S.S. Arizona is credited to N.R. Farbman

    Contents of this issue are as follows:
    THE WEEK’S EVENTS:

  • Tortured Exodus to Liberty – Thousands of Hungarians Forsake Their Ravaged Homeland
  • A Sudden Snow Snarls the East
  • Shaky Cease-Fire in Egypt
  • A Look at the World’s Week
  • EDITORIAL:

  • Toward a Better U.N.
  • PHOTOGRAPHIC ESSAYS:

  • The Long Trail to Winter Passage – A Montanan Moves His Herd 60 Stormy Miles
  • Shiny Showplace for Studies – At the Ancient University of Mexico Students Now Work on a Dazzling Campus of Color and Light – Photographed for LIFE by Eliot Elisofon
  • A Stockpile of Might for U.S. in Europe – Photographed for LIFE by Michael Rougier
  • ARTICLES:

  • What Drives Olympic Stars by Marhsall Smith with illustration by Willard Mullin
  • “Day of Infamy” – The Untold Story of Pearl Harbor Reveals How Japanese Admirals, Spies, Airmen and Sailors Sweated Out a Mission to Rock the World by Walter Lord – takes up all or part of 11 pages
  • SPORTS:

  • Old Passer Ha His Fling at Last – Giants Charlie Conerly with some Help Becomes a Football Hero
  • TELEVISION:

  • A High-Living Pooch is a Durable Star – Lassie ‘s Son, Lassie, Gets $100,000 a Year
  • FASHION:

  • Long, Vivid Wraps Glow on Till Dawn – Photographed for LIFE by Gordon Parks
  • SCIENCE:

  • A Plastic Igloo for an Eskimo
  • African Tribal Tribute to a Great Ethnologist
  • THEATER:

  • Double Helpings of Superb Acting – Leighton and Portman Are Magnificent in Four Roles in “Separate Tables”
  • RELIGION:

  • A Basilica for an Iowa Town – Energetic Congregation in Dyersville, Ohio Beomces a “Pope’s Church”
  • BUSINESS:

  • Giveaway Hideaway – A Brewery Offers Cash or Island to a Contest Winner
  • MEDICINE:

  • A New Device Gives Rare, Revealing Look Into a Beating Heart
  • CLOSE-UP:

  • An Eastern Star Looks West – Japan’s Most Popular Movie Actress, Machiko Kyo, Reaches the U.S. Screen
  • MOVIES:

  • A Rainmaking Rogue Brings Happiness to All in Fine Film
  • PARTY:

  • Revelry Celebrates a Royal European Match
  • OTHER DEPARTMENTS:

  • Speaking of Pictures: A Birth Under Water
  • Letters to the Editors
  • Miscellany: Restraint of Trade
  • Filed Under: Life Magazine Tagged With: Life Magazine

    1955-05-02 Life Magazine Contents

    1955/05/02 — Cover featuring Oklahoma! movie dancers is credited to J.R. Eyerman

    Contents of this issue are as follows:

  • Speaking of Pictures: Comparison for the world’s highest cataract
  • Letters to the Editors
  • Friends of the West Speak Up – Nehru and Chou Get a Rude Awakening at Asian-African Conference in Bandung
  • A Look at the World’s Week
  • Editorial: Can We Produce an Einstein?Sir Winston’s Hideaway – From Sicily Comes Word that Churchill’s New History Will Appear in LIFE
  • Fiesta Fun and Fire in Old Valencia – Spanish City Joyously Burns Statues It Built
  • Death of a Genius – His Fourth Dimension, Time, Overtakes Albert Einstein
  • Reading the Bible, Cover to Cover – Oklahoma Baptists Read Through Entire Scriptures in a 79-Hour Marathon
  • The Peak Year for Pink – Pastel Shows Up Stron in Male Wardrobes and Around the House
  • Precocious Planters – Camp Fire Girls of Wichita, Kansas Replace Their City’s Dying Trees
  • Ev’rythin’s Up to Date – “Oklahoma” Is Finall Filmed and in Todd-AO
  • Old Madonna Grows Older – Restorer Uncovers a Fifth Century Painting
  • Sequel – Little German Girl Befriended Three Years Ago by a Kindly Congressman Becomes American Citizen
  • Medical Discovery Is Put to Work – Mass Polio Inoculations Begin as Nation Pays Thanks to Dr. Salk
  • Otto, Real and Crazy – A Prankish German Pianist’s Ragtime Takes Over U.S. Juke Boxes
  • A Reptile That Really Gets Ruffled – The Australian Frilled Lizard Makes a Debut in the Bronx
  • Museum Director’s Choice – Frederick B. Robinson, of Springfield, Mass. Museum of Fine Arts Selects a Luminous Chardin Still Life
  • The Baronial Busches of St. Louis – The Brewery Family and Its Exuberant Way of Life – A Photographic Essay by Margaret Bourke-White
  • How Reds Wreck a Free University – Communists Thwart a Famous Scholar’s Effort to Set Up a Citidel for Liberty – LIFE’s Article by Lin Yutang
  • Pulling a Big Oar at Cornell – Overabundance of Manpower Gives Crew Coach a Pleasant Problem
  • Salute to “Sam” – U.S. Celebrates 200th Anniversary of Johnson’s “Dictionary”
  • Miscellany – Modern House? Or Fire Escape?
  • Full-page color ad for Post Toasties includes cartoon image of pitchman Roy Rogers
  • Filed Under: Life Magazine Tagged With: Life Magazine

    1952-01-28 Life Magazine Contents

    1952/01/28 — Cover photograph featuring Phyllis Newell is credited to John Raymond

    Contents of this issue are as follows:
    THE WEEK’S EVENTS:

  • An Ancient Pass Traps a Modern Donner Party
  • Bomb Makes a Shambles of a Sunny Saigon Square
  • Family and France Pay Highest Honors to Be Lattre
  • A Gambler’s Luck Holds Out – Trial of Frank Costello with illustrations
  • America Honors A Doughty Skipper and A Doughty Orator
  • A Political Haymaker Goes Wide
  • Dutch Force Way into Church
  • Sweetness Rules Parade in Pasadena
  • Newly Opened Superroad Unravels Chronic Traffic Jam – New Jersey Turnpike
  • EDITORIAL:

  • The Schuman Plan
  • PHOTOGRAPHIC ESSAY:

  • The Everglades — Photographed for Life by Alfred Eisenstaedt
  • CLOSE-UP:

  • The Master Imposter – An Incredible Tale by Joe McCarthy about Ferdinand Waldo Demara
  • SCIENCE:

  • Measuring With Mercury
  • ENTERTAINMENT:

  • Too Many Talents
  • OTHER DEPARTMENTS:

  • Speaking of Pictures – Row of Barrels Makes Some Good Skaters Look Awkward
  • Letters to the Editors
  • People
  • Life’s Camera Solos With a Ten-Year Old
  • Miscellany – “Miracle of Stones”
  • Chesterfield Cigarettes ad on back cover features Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis
  • Filed Under: Life Magazine Tagged With: Life Magazine

    1956-05-28 Life Magazine Contents

    1956/05/28 — Cover features Deborah Kerr and Yul Brynner in “The King and I” credited to James Mitchell

    Contents of this issue are as follows:
    THE WEEK’S EVENTS:

  • In a Car Surplus Situation One Firm is In Real Trouble
  • The Mystery of Frogman Lionel Crabb’s Dive for Red Secrets
  • A Look at the World’s Week
  • Requiem for 11 Nuns Killed in Puzzling Canadian Air Crash
  • Assembly Line Methods Speed the Building of the World’s Longest Overwater Highway Highway Bridge, the 24-Mile Lake Pontchartrain Causeway
  • A Gentle Old Man and His Love for Two Doves
  • EDITORIAL:

  • The Law and Southern Schools
  • PHOTOGRAPHIC ESSAY:

  • Russians Pursue the Lively Arts – LIFE Looks at Russia’s Dogged Drive to Feed a People Famished for Culture – Part 1 of 2 — Photographed by Edward Clark
  • CLOSE-UP:

  • How Stumping Kefauver Stumps the Pros by Robert Coughlan — Second in Series on Democratic Candidates
  • DANCE:

  • Old Toes, New Pros – Retired 75-Year-Old Otto Krinke and His Wife Make a Lively New Professiona; Dancing Team
  • ART:
    The Art Acquired by Yalemen – 6 Pages of Color On an Alumni Show, Representing Classes from ’67 to ’51

    FASHION:

  • Designer-for-the-young Anne Klein Pares Down Lingerie to the Midsummer Minimum
  • POETRY:

  • “On This Wall, In This Town, In Their Own State” – Paul Engle’s Sonnets Salute Iowa’s War Dead on Memorial Day
  • MOVIES:

  • The King, His Camera and a Film Triumph – Yul Brynner Is a Masterful Monarch and a Deft Photographer for “The King and I”
  • ANIMALS:

  • Tot’s Tarantula – A 2-Year-Old Has Her Olwn Zoo at Home
  • SCIENCE:

  • Chivalrous Robot – G.E.’s New Machine Performs Elaborate Services at a Distance
  • RELIGION:

  • A Revolutionary New Church Shape in Mexico City
  • MILITARY AFFAIRS:

  • What It’s Like to Ride the “Nautilus” – LIFE Correspondent Clay Blair Tells About His Underwater Trip in the Nuclear-Powered Submarine
  • EDUCATION:

  • TV Teaches Foreign Language to First-Graders
  • MODERN LIVING:

  • Smothering Weeds With Plastic
  • PARTY:

  • Gala for a Great Friend from Indonesia
  • OTHER DEPARTMENTS:

  • Speaking of Pictures: Fanciful Flights During Cleanup Day on the Movie Lot
  • Letters to the Editors
  • Miscellany: Looks Like Horse Sense
  • Filed Under: Life Magazine Tagged With: Life Magazine

    1946-11-25 Life Magazine Contents

    1946/11/25 — Cover featuring LIFE’s 10th Anniversary is credited to Herbert Gehr

    Contents of this issue are as follows:

    TENTH ANNIVERSARY ISSUE:

  • Cartoons Kid Life
  • Letters to the Editors
  • The U.S. in 1946
  • The Balance Sheet by John Chamberlain
  • Dreams of 1946
  • The Movies
  • Ten Years of American Art
  • Life’s Girls
  • Life’s First Story
  • Popular Wartime Art
  • Controversies
  • The Ten Years
  • Our Times: 1936-1946 by Mark Sullivan
  • Where Are They Now/
  • Filed Under: Life Magazine Tagged With: Life Magazine

    1943-04-05 Life Magazine Contents

    1943/04/05 — Cover photograph featuring Montgomery Beret is credited to Philippe Halsman

    Contents of this issue are as follows:

    THE WEEK’S EVENTS:

  • US Faces Farm and Food Crisis
  • Editorial
  • Germans Mount 50-Ft. Gun to Guard English Channel Coast
  • Worried Followers Gather in Poona as Gandhi Survives Fast – 2 pages
  • Army Fighters Take Off for Front from Navy Carrier
  • Natives Build Runway on Mt. Kenya to Salvage R.A.F. Plane
  • Tory Lady and Labor Lady Contest British By-Elections
  • CLOSE-UP:

  • Irving Berlin by George Frazier
  • ARTICLE:

  • Tunis Expedition – African Battle in Film & Book by Colonel Daryl F. Zanuck
  • PHOTOGRAPHIC ESSAY:

  • The Kaiser Empire
  • THEATER:

  • “Harriet” starring Helen Hayes
  • SPORTS:

  • Alan Ford Breaks Swimming Record
  • ART:

  • Tom Lea Paints the Sinking of the “Wasp”
  • ART:

  • Montgomery Beret
  • How to Relax
  • OTHER DEPARTMENTS:

  • Letters to the Editors
  • Speaking of Pictures: Alfred Stieglitz Photographs
  • LIFE Goes on a Hayride
  • Pictures to the Editors
  • Coca-Cola ad “For Victory Buy United States War Bonds and Stamps” on back cover
  • Filed Under: Life Magazine Tagged With: Life Magazine

    1949-05-02 Life Magazine Contents

    1949/05/02 — Cover photograph featuring “Eight-Letter Man at West Point” with Arnold Galiffa is credited to Arnold Newman.

    Contents of this issue are as follows:
    THE WEEK’S EVENTS:

  • Irish Become a Free Nation
  • Editorial: Health by Compulsion
  • Sewell Avery Keeps His Job
  • CIO Party-Liner Wins Election
  • Madrid Observes the Parade of Silence
  • Air Force Knocks Out Navy’s Super Carrier
  • Ingrid Bergman Holds Hands With New Director – Roberto Rossellini
  • Heresy Is Charged to Church Leaders
  • Woman is Swept Off Schooner
  • A Bonapartist Protects His Honor
  • Soviets Use Cpaitalistic Advertising Campaign
  • CLOSE-UP:

  • The Great Packager by John Kobler — Raymond Loewy
  • PHOTOGRAPHIC ESSAY:

  • Small-Town Television
  • SCIENCE:

  • Tuberculosis Vaccine
  • NATURE:

  • In Texas Almost Everybody Paints Bluebonnets
  • MOVIES:

  • Replacement for Rita? — Corinne Calvet
  • Bayou Boy — J.C. Boudreaux
  • ART:

  • G. Braque
  • FASHION:

  • Tops for Shorts
  • INDUSTRY:

  • “Shoe Wizard’s” House
  • HOUSING:

  • World’s First Sun-Heated Home
  • SPORTS:

  • Galiffa of West Point
  • MUSIC:

  • Princeton’s Bellmaster
  • THEATER:

  • “Detective Story”
  • OTHER DEPARTMENTS:

  • Letters to the Editors
  • Speaking of Pictures: These Show What 300 mph Wind Does to Human Faces
  • LIFE’s Reports: Contented Ceylon by Robert Lubar
  • Miscellany: Fancy Napkin-Folding
  • Notable advertising includes: Robert Ryan in The Set-Up, 2-page ad for Chesterfield features the “Top Men in America’s Sports” — Ben Hogan, Joe DiMaggio, Frankie Albert, Jack Kramer, and Lou Boudreau, half-page ad for ASR Lighter features Humphrey Bogart *, Brian Donlevy for Blatz Beer on the inside back cover, and a Coca-Cola ad on back cover. NOTE: An * denotes ad is smaller than a full-page.

    Filed Under: Life Magazine Tagged With: Life Magazine

    1949-05-09 Life Magazine Contents

    1949/05/09 — Cover photograph featuring Missouri Co-Ed Jane Stone is credited to Peter Stackpole

    Contents of this issue are as follows:
    THE WEEK’S EVENTS:

  • Nanking Is Looted
  • Orphaned Puppy Finds New Home
  • F.D.R. Jr. Turns On the Old Roosevelt Charm
  • Editorial: Peace in Berlin?
  • “Peace” Road Show Hits Snag
  • The ECA Helps Georges
  • Burmese Visit Great Gold Pagoda in Annual Festival
  • The Atomic Age Comes to Arco, Idaho
  • CLOSE-UP:

  • Josh Logan by Lincoln Barnett
  • PHOTOGRAPHIC ESSAY:

  • Missouri vs. Smith – Photographs for LIFE by Peter Stackpole
  • MOVIES:

  • “The Stratton Story” starring Jimmy Stewart and June Allyson
  • TELEVISION:

  • Ike’s “Crusade” on TV
  • SPORTS:

  • Argentina Wins World Polo Championship
  • SCIENCE:

  • A Building Supported by Air
  • ANIMALS:

  • Persecuted Pigeons
  • Moth Catcher
  • THEATER:

  • College Do Classics
  • OTHER DEPARTMENTS:

  • LIFE’s Reports: Apotheosis of Adolf Hennecke by R. Hanser
  • Speaking of Pictures: Inhabitants of a “White Collar Zoo”
  • Letters to the Editors
  • LIFE Goes to a Directors’ Meeting
  • Miscellany: Twins Marry Twins
  • Camel Cigarettes ad on back cover features baseball pitchers Gene Bearden and Johnny Vander Meer
  • Filed Under: Life Magazine Tagged With: Life Magazine

    1949-05-16 Life Magazine Contents

    1949/05/16 — Cover photograph featuring “Little Boxer” is credited to Rue Faris Drew.

    Contents of this issue are as follows:
    THE WEEK’S EVENTS:

  • The Russians Back Down in Germany
  • Loss Is $6 Million in Race Track Fire
  • 19 Pigs Are Born in One Letter
  • Prices Collapse in War Between Chains
  • Labor Takes on Two Big Battles
  • Editorial: Cats and Freedom
  • Princess Margaret Goes In Swimming
  • ARTICLE:

  • What’s With the Movies? by Eric Hodgins
  • CLOSE-UP:

  • The Aga, The Aly and The Rita by Robert Coughlan – 10 page article opens with full-page b&w photo of the Aga Khan and his wife with smaller photo of his son with Rita Hayworth on the facing page. Article takes up all or part of 10 pages
  • PHOTOGRAPHIC ESSAYS:

  • The Atom
  • Shooting the Salmon
  • EDUCATION:

  • How to Treat Professors
  • SPORTS:

  • Kids in the Rings
  • Vicki Draves
  • BUSINESS:

  • Adhesive Bras
  • MOVIES:

  • Astaire and Rogers Dance Again – includes color photo of Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers in The Barkleys of Broadway
  • Tenth Tarzan – large photo of Lex Barker and then 8 small pics over a half page showing various Tarzan’s from Elmo Lincoln through Johnny Weissmuller with Buster Crabbe and others in between
  • BOOKS:

  • Happy Bibliophile
  • PEOPLE:

  • Madame Ambassadress – (Helle Bonnet)
  • OTHER DEPARTMENTS:

  • LIFE’s Reports: Rugged Individualist by Joe McCarthy
  • Speaking of Pictures: A Frog Produces Babies From Pouches on Back
  • Letters to the Editors
  • Miscellany: Breakfast Faces
  • Notable advertising includes: Jennifer Jones and John Garfield in We Were Strangers, half-page ad for Vitalis featuring 3 illustrated images of Joe DiMaggio, US Brewers Foundation ad with color illustration by Douglass Crockwell

    Filed Under: Life Magazine Tagged With: Life Magazine

    1949-05-30 Life Magazine Contents

    1949/05/30 — Cover photograph features “F.D.R. at 2”

    Contents of this issue are as follows:
    THE WEEK’S EVENTS:

  • Warsaw Rises From Its Wreckage
  • Editorial: The Roosevelts
  • FDR Jr. and Mother Display Victory Smiles
  • Monaco Buries Its Sprightly Old Prince
  • Chinook Pass Has Snowdrifts in May
  • The Hawkings Hold Last Outpost of Empire
  • John McCloy Takes on Job as Germany’s Boss
  • ARTICLE:

  • Holy Man by Winthrop Sargeant is about Sri Ramana Maharshi
  • PHOTOGRAPHIC ESSAY:

  • The Early Life of Franklin D. Roosevelt – 10 full pages of mostly photos
  • SPORTS:

  • Scout’s Dream – Johnny Groth
  • MOVIES:

  • Mr. Belvedere & Mr. Webb by John Bainbridge
  • SCIENCE:

  • Gastric Geography
  • ART:

  • Gustave Courbet – 4 pages of color reproductions
  • INDUSTRY:

  • Model Factory
  • EDUCATION:

  • Syracuse Spring Weekend
  • NIGHTCLUBS:

  • Artie Shaw ‘s Bop Flop
  • OTHER DEPARTMENTS:

  • Letters to the Editors
  • Speaking of Pictures:These Are All the Survivors Of the Civil War
  • LIFE Goes to the Arapahoe Hunt
  • Notable advertising includes: Jane Greer and William Bendix in The Big Steal, half page ad for Cream of Kentucky is illustrated by Norman Rockwell, Coca-Cola ad on the back cover

    Filed Under: Life Magazine Tagged With: Life Magazine

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