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虽然艾森豪威尔将军是以军人身份而闻名,但是他却是美国20世50年代,国内一片祥和时期的使用温和管理手段的总统。
艾森豪威尔纪念馆的设计方案重点强调:艾森豪威尔总统是来自肯萨斯州牧区的年轻人,而战争和总统任职期间的情景都背景挂毯的方式展现。该设计方案受到艾森豪威尔后裔和一些建筑评论家质疑。
Washington, D.C., is full of grand tributes to U.S. presidents who are judged to have made remarkable contributions to the nation and the world.
They include monuments or memorials to George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Abraham Lincoln, and, most recently, Franklin Delano Roosevelt.
Over the past few years, plans have progressed to honor the nation’s 34th president, Republican Dwight D. Eisenhower, as well. “Ike,” as his friends - and the nation - liked to call him, served from 1953 to 1961. He was immensely popular, thanks to his U.S. Army exploits in which he led Allied forces to victory over Germany in World War II.
Eisenhower got more recent acclaim in 2002 when the huge Old Executive Office Building, next door to the White House, was renamed in his honor. But a group of supporters worked to get him his own memorial as well, and a commission was appointed to make it happen.
It chose a location just across Independence Avenue from the Washington National Mall - and incidentally, next door to our Voice of America headquarters building. And it approved a park-like design by modernist architect Frank Gehry, which emphasizes Eisenhower’s pastoral youth in rural Kansas.
Scenes from the war and Ike’s presidency appear on a series of tapestries in the background, near the U.S. Department of Education Building.
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But some architectural critics and some of Ike’s descendants roundly criticized the design.They want to put a halt to what they call the “fast track” to getting the monument built by 2015.
In a letter to the National Capital Planning Commission, the family members argue that the design does not adequately recognize Eisenhower's military and national leadership. They maintain that it dwells far too much on his roots as a “barefoot boy from Kansas.”
The family also argues that Gehry’s tapestries would "not likely be sustainable over the centuries.”
Congress heard about all this, loud and clear. And next Tuesday at the U.S. Capitol, down the street from the proposed Eisenhower Memorial, a committee of the House of Representatives has scheduled hearings on the controversy. |
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