This article also features illustrations of San Diego reservoir and aqueduct. The scheme of this interesting hydraulic work was conceived by T. This is an original 1890 two-page (1 page, double-sided) article about the Hydraulic Works at San Diego, California. The photograph is known under various titles, such as V-J Day in Times Square and V-Day.
Similar jubilation spread quickly-with the news. Kissing was a favorite pose encouraged by media photographers of service personnel during the war, but Eisenstaedt was photographing a spontaneous event that occurred in Times Square as the announcement of the end of the war on Japan was made by President Truman at seven o'clock.
A two-page spread faces three other kissing poses among celebrators in Washington, D.C., Kansas City, and Miami, Florida opposite Eisenstaedt's, which is given a full page display. The photograph was originally published a week later in Life magazine among many photographs of celebrations around the country that were presented in a twelve-page section called Victory. (From Wiki-pedia): V-J Day in Times Square is a photograph by Alfred Eisenstaedt that portrays an American sailor kissing a young woman in a white dress on V-J Day in Times Square on August 14, 1945.