CREDITS
Looking
at all of Houston is like watching a moving kaleidoscope. Into the bright
pattern come the people of many heritages who have joined together in
its citizenry. The changing colors show the evolution from its origins
as a tiny village of the early 1800s to an agriculturally-supported community,
to an oil boomtown, to a center of diversified commerce and industry.
Now it is emerging as a city of technology, science, highly-sophisticated
business and finance, a headquarters city of considerable renown, and
an international city.
It standsas a concentration of some of the greatest minds in medicine and in education, in engineering and in building, in marketing and in foreign trade. Cultural attractions server as scintillating highlights in this bright pattern.
It is the home of the control-center for the nation's manned explorations into space, and has seen in recent years a growing interest in probing the depth of the ocean to learn its secrets. Its laboratories are the skies above and the nearby Gulf of Mexico, but these also server as its passegers to and from the far reaches of the world.
Like any other city of similar size—now officially the nation's fourth largest—Houston has problems as well as advantages, and blights as well as beauties. Yet its problems—though similar to some in other urban areas-are problems of growth instead of stagnation. It is one oth the bright cities of the country, with its youth and energy and can-do attitude.
From its early beginnings, Houston has had one advantage which stands above all others: confidence. Whether threatened by disaster or peril, by disease or economic depression, this city's unflagging confidence—and its residents' confidence in their own abilities—brought it through in triumph. This confidence, evidenced in many ways throughout the years, has paved the path of all progress.
Confidence continues to push Houston forward into the future. Beginnng in the 1970s and on to present day Houston this confidence was reflected in the announcements of major developments within the Central Business District and in areas further from the central core of the city. Some of these were completed within a few years. Others were of such magnitude that their construction was projected over the next 20 to 40 years. They represent billions of dollars in investments now and in the future.






