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| Washington D.C.
Washington D.C.
WASHINGTON, D. C.
general facts
- Washington is not a state and not in a state
--> independent federal district
- the population is about 630,000
(metropolitan area about 31/2 million)
- 3/4 of the population is
non-white
- since 1964 the people living in Washington
have the right to vote for the president
- was planned as a capital --> the streets
are organised in a special pattern; the National Mall is in the centre of the
town, other buildings are arranged around it
- the layout of the city reflects also the
system of government (White House is connected to the Capitol, where Congress
meets, and to the Supreme Court)
- the names of the streets are given in a
special way, too (the horizontal streets are named with letters; the vertical
ones with numbers)
- few factories, most of the people work in
offices
- government is the largest employer in the
city (345,000 people)
- more than 600 parks; Washington has a larger
variety of trees than any other city
- no skyscrapers because there is a rule, that
no building should be higher than 40 metres; this rule ensures that the Capitol
and the monuments can be seen from anywhere in Washington
Close Up Foundation
- founded in 1970
- aims are to learn something about the
political system and about Washington
- people should be involved in all that
happens around them
- the people learn what it means to live in a
democracy
- students and teacher from all parts of the
country are participants
- in one year there are 27,000
participants
- the programme is divided into political and
cultural information
sights
- the Capitol: it is the building where
Congress works
- the House of Representatives: the
representatives work here
- the Lincoln Memorial: memorial of Abraham
Lincoln (1732-1799)
- the National Mall: it is a promenade between
Capitol and Lincoln Memorial
- the Oval Office: this is a room of the White
House were the President works
- the Pentagon: here is the defence
office
- the Senate: here is the American
Senate
- the Washington Monument: a 170 metres high
obelisk for George Washington
- the White House:
* oldest public building in Washington; the
title was given later
* home of the most famous government people
and the official residence of the president
* every president, except George Washington,
lived in the White House
* until 1834 the White House had no running
water; gas lamps 1848 installed
* opened for two hours a day from Tuesday to
Saturday
* you can`t visit the president or the room
where he works
- Vietnam Veterans
Memorial:
* one of the most recent monuments; for many
people the most moving one
* it should remember, that this war divided
the country; also the many died people and many people, fighting in the war were
even still teenagers
* some people thought the war should not be,
others wanted this
* average age of the soldiers in this war was
19
* in this war 58,123 men died or are still
missing
institutions
- the Supreme Court: this is the most powerful
court in the USA
- the Smithsonian Institution:
* here are several
museums
* the money for the Smithsonian Institution
was from a wealthy Englishman, who gave all his money to the
USA
* today there are 13 Smithsonian museums in
the USA (12 in Washington and 1 in New York)
* the most popular ones are the National Air
and Space Museum where you can see the Apollo 11 spaceship
* here are also libraries and an
observatory
- FBI Headquarters:
* FBI means Federal Bureau of
Investigation
* FBI was founded in 1908 by J. Edgar
Hoover
* he founded the FBI because he wanted to
fight against crime throughout the nation, that`s why the name is
`Federal`
* in this building there are many laboratories
(hair, pieces of cloth, paint...); from a piece of paint they can say what make
and model the car is
* the agents watch the evidence and the other
information here
* often the work of the agents is not
dangerous and with guns, because often it is only a
paperwork
- Bureau of Engraving and
Printing:
* the money of the USA is made in this
institution since 1863
* 2,300 people work here day and night and six
days a week
* most of the money is made to replace old
money
* visitors can watch how money is made, and
they also can see a $100,000 bill
* every day $22,5 million are
printed
* the visitors also can learn that for the
printing of money no trees are cut down, because the bills are made of
cloth
* the $1 bill is used for only about 18
months, than the bill is destroyed an a new one is made
* there are many security guards watching the
people, that no money is stolen
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