Word: saarinen
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...collecting. J. Paul Getty, one of the richest and most successful of all collectors, tells how the game is won-while Texas Oilman Algur Meadows, victim of one of the greatest art frauds in history, explains how easy it is to lose. Correspondents Edwin Newman and Aline Saarinen report from art centers in the U.S. and abroad...
...Saarinen's Models. In the U.S. and Canada, Lego's line is turned out under a licensing agreement with luggage-building Samsonite Corp., whose Lego
Last week, acting as producer, director, researcher, writer and narrator, Saarinen took her NBC camera team to Concord, Mass., to make a Today-show film on the town's 19th century authors. After poring over encyclopaedias, biographies and the writings of Emerson, Thoreau, Hawthorne and Louisa May Alcott, she spent one afternoon tramping around the countryside, across the graveyards and through the centuries-old houses. Then she retreated to her hotel room to write her script and fill the margins with meticulous directions for the cameraman...
Female Fellini. Aline Saarinen, nee Bernstein, keeps her work bright, light and informative, without ever making the highbrow seem high-blown. A Phi Beta Kappa from Vassar, whose girlhood goal was to be "intelluptuous," she got a job on Art News "because I could spell Pollaiuolo,"* rose to managing editor in 1944, a year later joined the New York Times as an art critic. While on an assignment in 1952, she interviewed and later married Finnish-born Architect Eero Saarinen (it was her second marriage). After his death eight years later, she appeared on a 1962 CBS special on Lincoln...
...Saarinen succeeds not only because she is an expert on art, but also because she is a versatile reporter. In addition to covering the cultural scene, she has turned her critical eye on medical care in Viet Nam, hippies, even space shots. Perhaps her most attractive gift is her ability to handle any story without appearing to be obtrusively feminine. As Aline puts it, intelluptuously: "I'm a woman but not a chick...