Word: exhibited
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Rare Buyer. More than 20 such fairs are now held yearly, from London and Milan to Basel and Budapest. The fairs have become more a matter of pride than pocketbook for image-conscious European firms, many of which try to exhibit at all of them, fearing that failure to exhibit might start a rumor that a company was in trouble. On such a scale, exhibitions can be very expensive; German companies allot $375 million yearly to fairs, or about half as much as they spend on all advertising. Such smaller companies as porcelain makers or optical works may hope...
Oddest structure will be the Meeting Center-looking like a mammoth radar dish from below and half a grapefruit from above-which will contain a 750-seat auditorium, a 300-seat conference room, plus several smaller conference rooms and exhibit space for state government units. At the south end will be a shrine: the Arch of Freedom, in which the original of Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation will be on display. In the same area will be a museum, a library, the state archives building, and an outdoor amphitheater. Automobiles will be banished to the nether regions. Vehicles will unload...
Last week five paintings were taken down from an art exhibit in University Gallery after some discussion between the administration and the artist, Mr. Ray Kerciu, assistant professor of art at Ole Miss. The paintings had been hanging for five days before they were removed...
Kennedy also gave a brief guided tour of his office, which features the proverbial football, an extensive exhibit of art work by his young children, a bust of Lincoln behind his desk, and on the desk a photograph of a son of Robert Kennedy starting at the White House. The photo, taken by Jackie Kennedy, was inscribed, "structure President surveys his property...
...view again. Joseph S. Trovato, assistant to the director of Utica's Munson-Williams-Proctor Institute, got the idea of reassembling as much of the show as possible back in 1956. It was a big job. Though the original show was probably the most famous U.S. art exhibition of all time, the 1913 catalogue was a masterpiece of vagueness; the paintings and sculptures have been sold and resold, titles have been changed, and some works have simply disappeared. Most of the artists represented are dead, and those who are still alive are not always sure about what they...