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Federal Triangle Flowers is an outdoor 1998 sculptural work by Stephen Robin, installed in Woodrow Wilson Plaza, between the Ariel Rios Building and the Ronald Reagan Building and International Trade Center, in Washington, D.C., United States. The installation includes two pieces, one depicting a single stem rose and the other a lily.
A big thank-you to everybody who staged this event! You were all great! Some thoughts: The library was more interesting than the museum, which I found just as over-the-top as Ronald Reagan himself was. Of course, as with Reagan the man there were some genuinely affecting moments, but for the most part it was Hollywood glitz and exaggeration.
Reagan's casket lies in repose in the library lobby, June 7, 2004 The gravesite of Ronald and Nancy Reagan. Following his death, Reagan's casket was driven by hearse to the Reagan Library on June 7, 2004, from Point Mugu through a 25-mile-per-hour (40 km/h) procession down Las Posas Road to U.S. Highway 101. Many people lined the streets and ...
The 71-photo exhibition is co-curator William Ewing return to flower-based photography, a spiritual successor to his 1991's "Flora Photographica." "Flora Imaginaria" exhibit at Four Arts joins ...
By January 1995, the structure was two years behind schedule. [36] By September 1995, a tentative occupancy date of December 1996 had been set. [35] The building was named for former President Ronald Reagan in October 1995. [37] There were still occasional design glitches.
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The following other wikis use this file: Usage on es.wikipedia.org Biblioteca y Museo Presidencial de Ronald Reagan; Usage on fi.wikipedia.org Presidentin kirjasto
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