A brief history of jet airplanes leads to a discussion of the need for new jumbo jets, their design and construction, and their advantages and disadvantages for communities, airports, and passengers.
Lou Jacobs, Jr. (b.1921) grew up in Pittsburgh, PA and graduated from Carnegie Mellon University, a major in industrial design. After serving during World War II, he moved to California where he studied photojournalism at the Art Center College of Design, later working as an editorial photographer. Lou Jacobs describes himself as a designer/painter turned photographer/writer. Jacobs first began taking fine art photographs with a view camera in the 1940's. During this time he became friends with Edward Weston to whom he occasionally showed prints for criticism. Nature plays an enormous role in his work- his more recent collages are based on aerial photographs of land forms. Striving for simplicity in concept, Lou Jacobs hopes ‘that viewers can enjoy and appreciate the clear subjects in my photographs and the juxtapositions of forms and colors in my collages.’ During the 1940s and 50s, he began focusing his camera upon the faces of his fellow artist friends, catching glimpses of the creative genius within the vital atmosphere of time and place, turning ‘artist’ into ‘subject’.