Photos: A Look Back At <em>PM</em>, NYC's Finest Moment In Photojournalism
14 photos
More Coming, Pearl Reep, Belle Dodds, and Ruth Hassen, All of Flushing, Covering Their Heads as They Walk Along Chambers St., February 1946 // Bernie Aumuller<br/>
Camille Dumas After Standing in Line for 15 Minutes, Finally Emerges From the Dairy Store With Her Daughter's Milk Ration-About Half a Pint, July 1946 // Al Taylor<br/>
Men Searched the Job Boards on Sixth Avenue as Unemployment is Rising Again, June 1940 // Margaret Bourke White<br/>
42 Employees of The Day, a Yiddish Newspaper, Are On Strike to Protest Against Alleged Wage Cuts And Discriminatory Firings, May 13, 1941 // Gene Badger<br/>
Third Ave., Upper East Side, Offers no Trees or Cliffs for Kids to Climb, but Porch of Abandoned Building is Excellent Substitute, July-August 1940 // Helen Levitt<br/>
Off to Sing Sing: The Beginning of the End. Pittburg Phil Strauss And Buggsy Goldstein, Ertswhile Pals of Abe Reles in Murder, Inc., Caught The Noon Train Today for Sing Sing Prison, Doomed to Die in The Electric Chair, September 1940 // Irving Haberman<br/>
Political Handbills Litter Southern Blvd., February 1948 // Irving Haberman<br/>
Two Members of Gang Known as The Mott Street Terrors Waiting to be Interviewed for Admission, Madison Settlement House, New York City, March 1941 // Martin Harris<br/>
The Esposito Episode. Heroitic Taxi Driver, Leonard Weisberg, Lying Dead at Deadly "Mad Dog" Shoot-Out in Manhattan, January 14, 1941 // Max Peter Haas<br/>
Coney Island Embrace, 1938 // Morris Engel<br/>
Bosun of U.S. Lines' American Importer Tells his Men, Most of Them in Their 20s, How Much Liberty They'll Rate in London, March 1946 // Morris Engel<br/>
Adam Clayton Powell, Running for the U.S. Congress, at the Negro Freedom Rally, Madison Square Garden, June 26, 1944 / Anonymous<br/>
Phillip J. Stazzone is on WPA and Enjoys his Favorite Food as He's Heard that the Army Doesn't Go In Very Strong for Serving Spaghetti, October 1940 // Weegee<br/>
The Critic, Opening Night at the Metropolitan Opera, November 22, 1943 // Weegee<br/>