Word: lincke
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...onto people's clothes. One downpour temporarily knocked out power lines in three boroughs and Westchester County, leaving nearly 10,000 families without electricity-and air conditioning. But most of the time, a dull, maddening haze obscured the sky. "It looked awful," said Pilot-Photographer Tony Linck, after he had helicoptered around Manhattan in midweek, on assignment for TIME. "It was like flying inside a yellow-gray cloud. We had to fly by compass at one point...
...paintings in ART, the key problem was correct lighting and precise checking of proofs to make sure that the results were true Pollock. The right angle and the right camera were basic to the MODERN LIVING pictures of Robert Moses' budding New York World's Fair. Anthony Linck took the two-page overall view of the Fair site from a helicopter with a camera built from parts of a Fairchild K-20, a Linhof and a Speed Graphic, with a hood made from a cooking pot off a restaurant steam table. Going to press with the RELIGION color...
...tell the story of Florida in the age of Canaveral, frozen orange juice and artificially filled-in waterfront lots. Photographers Ormond Gigli and Jim Langley began shooting in February in the south of Florida, working north "to give the vegetation and populace a chance to thaw out." Tony Linck piloted his own plane to get a bird's-eye view of changing Florida. For a pick of their 3,000 pictures, see color spread in BUSINESS...
...Janeiro Bureau Chief George de Carvalho, with New York Photographer Anthony Linck, traveled 10,000 miles for almost a month by motor launch, native dugout canoe, truck, jalopy and a variety of barely airworthy small planes, visited scores of river towns, oil and mineral exploration camps, pioneer farms, mines, missionary stations and Indian villages deep in the jungle. Once, to photograph a tribe of Mato Grosso Indians, De Carvalho and Linck hiked nine miles through thick jungle and at dusk hiked out again, preceded by a native guide armed with a flashlight and rifle. At the camp of a seismographic...
...magnificent operatic spectacles ever seen in Boston. The remarkable fact about the production is that the prices remain 25 and 50 cents for all seats, while the cost of staging the piece was twice that for any other Castle Square opera. These artists were engaged at enormous salaries: Mary Linck, Anna Lichter, Fatmah Diard, William Mertens, Charles O. Bassett, C. William Schuster, W. H. Clarke, John Beall. It is not surprising that the patronage of the week has been very large, and patrons have been enthusiastic in their praise of the manner in which Verdi's work is staged. Next...
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