Portrait of photographer Walter B. Lane with his camera around his neck. (Photo by Alice Heidel /The LIFE Images Collection)
During World War II, his local draft board gave Walter Lane (1913-1996) a three-month reprieve to take a freighter to Iceland for a LIFE assignment on American soldiers based there. Then it was off to the Navy for almost four years. He returned to cover Washington, D.C., and recalled how President Harry Truman, posing with a gift crate of strawberries, asked Lane if he liked them, and then tossed one into Lane’s mouth: “He peels one and popped it. The other photographers just stood there. Darn it—not one of them took a picture.”