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The organized legislative discussions continue throughout the year with the Wilson Seminar series. Begun in collaboration with the Library of Congress' Office of Scholarly Programs, the seminars are designed to enlarge Fellows' understanding of Congress beyond what they would be expected to learn in their office assignments. They are held twice a month in the U.S. Capitol. Guest discussants are drawn from such support entities as the Office of Legislative Counsel, General Accounting Office, Congressional Budget Office, the House Parliamentarian, and the leadership of congressional caucuses. To supplement the program's limited international participation, up to a dozen senior Fulbright scholars in the D.C. area are invited to the seminars as guests. The seminars are held twice a month in the U.S. Capitol, courtesy of the office of Advisory Committee member Senator Richard Lugar. The following represents a typical schedule. WILSON SEMINAR SCHEDULE *Indicates a former Congressional Fellow Congress in an Election Year Order in the House Legislative-Executive Branch Relations Where Politics Meets the Press - The Press Galleries Prospects for Reform in an Election Year The Role of the House Committee on Standards of Official Conduct The Role of the Congressional Budget Office Breaking the Vicious Cycle: Preserving our Liberties while Fighting Terrorism U.S.-Canada Bilateral Relations The Role of the General Accounting Office Transforming Ideas into Law: The Role of the Legislative Counsel The Political Landscape in 2005 The Bush Presidency The State of the Country from a Journalist's Perspective The Press, the Public and Politics in a Primary Season "'Mr. Smith Goes to Washington' and His Progeny" - Congress on Film |