Margaret

Bourke-White :: Leipzig City Council deputy mayor Dr. Kurt Lisso, member of Nazi party since 1932, lying dead at his Town Hall desk [a suicide from cyanide], along with his wife and daughter, as American soldiers enter the city at the end of WWII. Leipzig, Germany, April 13th, 1945 

related post by Lee Miller, here / another related post, here

more [+] by this photographer

“Japs, hiding in a barge with rifles and grenades, took the lives of
these three American fighters who were mopping up on the last day of the
Buna Gona battle in New Guinea, last January. Beach and barge action
was the bloodiest and most fierce of any Buna action, and these boys are
among those who lost their lives but helped win the battle.” Published
Sept 13, 1943 for release on September 17, 1943. [LIFE Magazine] src: here

The photo, taken by George Stock in January 1943, was controversial
because it depicted the bodies of American GIs. It took nine months to
get the War Department to approve publishing the image. The decision
finally went all the way to President Roosevelt, who authorized its
publication because he was concerned that the American public was
growing complacent about the war and its terrible cost on human life. It
was the first image in World War II to depict American troops who had
died in combat without the bodies being draped, in coffins, or otherwise
covered.
The photo by George Strock for LIFE magazine is now acknowledged as a war classic. /

image source: nzgeo