Good point, Andy. I had always thought there were many. BUT! Cappa was the FIRST of the landings. His were the greatest in number, remember these photogs were being shot at. Yes, some other photographs were recovered, the tv show brought up the earie fact that just about all the photos ended up on one duffle that went into the sea, because the officer carrying it was shot, and dropped it. Oh, well. Take two? Steve Shapiro, Carmel, CA ----- Original Message ----- From: "ADavidhazy" <andpph@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> To: "List for Photo/Imaging Educators - Professionals - Students" <photoforum@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Cc: <andpph@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent: Saturday, June 05, 2004 6:03 AM Subject: Re: Nightline--WWII > While Capa's film may have been ruined in processing there does seem to be some > motion picture footage of the landing. Maybe not much but even if it is only 10 > seconds worth that is about 240 frames. The question I have is Who made those > motion pictures? - we seem to dwell on Capa's films but there were some > dedicated photographers carrying motion picture cameras who deserve a lot of > credit for having produced that record of the landing. No? > > Andy > >