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#CARD
Congressional Directory
Capitol Telephone Directory, 244 3121
9; Dirksen Senate Office Building, SD ;
, 224
#ENDCARD
#CARD
PRESIDENT OF THE SENATE
Vice President of the United States and President of the Senate. Dan
Quayle.
The Office of the Vice President is S 212 in the Capitol. The Vice
President has offices in the Dirksen Office Building and the Old Executive Office
Building (OEOB) as well as in the White House (West Wing)
Chief of Staff. William Kristol, OEOB, Room 272, 456 6605.
Assistant to the Vice President for Political Affairs and Deputy Chief of
Staff. Spence Abraham, OEOB, Room 200, 456 6640.
Assistant to the Vice President and Director of Public Liaison. Greg
Zoeller, OEOB, Room 200, 456 6640.
Assistant to the Vice President and Press Secretary. David Beckwith,
OEOB, Room 280, 456 7034.
Assistant to the Vice President for Legislative Affairs. William
Gribbin, S 212, The Capitol, 224 8391.
Assistant to the Vice President and Director of Scheduling. Cecile
Kremer, OEOB, Room 279, 395 4245.
Assistant to the Vice President and Chief of Staff to Mrs. Quayle.
Denise Balzano, OEOB, Room 268, 456 7022.
Counsel to the Vice President. Randy Wilson, OEOB, Room 271, 456
2816.Assistant to the Vice President for National Security Affairs. Carnes
Lord, OEOB, Room 298, 395 4213.
Executive Secretary, National Space Council. Mark Albrecht, OEOB, Room
423, 395 6175.
Executive Director, Council on Competitiveness. Larry Lindsey, OEOB,
Room 214, 456 6402.
#ENDCARD
#CARD
PRESIDENT PRO TEMPORE
Room S 128, The Capitol. Phone, 224 2848
President Pro Tempore of the Senate. Robert C. Byrd.
CHAPLAIN
Room SH 204, Hart Senate Office Building. Phone, 224 2510
RICHARD C. HALVERSON, Chaplain of the U.S. Senate, born in Pingree, ND,
February 4, 1916; B.S., Wheaton College, 1939; Th.B., Princeton Theological
Seminary, 1942; LL.D., Wheaton College, 1958; assistant minister: Lynwood Presbyterian
Church, Kansas City, MO, 1942 44 and First Presbyterian Church of Coalinga,
CA, 1944 47; minister, First Presbyterian Church of Hollywood, CA, 1947 56;
associate, international prayer breakfast movement, Washington, DC, 1956
present; minister, Fourth Presbyterian Church, Bethesda, MD, 1958 81; Chaplain of the
U.S. Senate, 1981 present; member: Board of World Vision/United States, 1956
83 (chairman, 1966 83); advisory board for African Enterprise; Campus
Crusade for Christ; Navigators; Radio of Free Asia; Today's Hope for Every Youth,
Inc.; Christian College Consortium; married to Doris Grace Seaton; three children;
nine grandchildren.
A
Chaplain of the Senate. Rev. Richard C. Halverson, LL.D., D.D.
Secretary. Martie K. Wojtowicz.
#ENDCARD
#CARD
DEMOCRATIC LEADERSHIP
Majority Leader
Room S 221, The Capitol. Phone, 224 5556
Majority Floor Leader. George J. Mitchell.
Chief of Staff. John Hilley.
Executive Assistant. Pat Sarcone.
Special Assistant. Alice Aughtry.
Press Secretary. Diane Dewhirst, 4 2939.
Office Manager. Donna Beck, 4 5344.
Staff Assistant. Laura Young.
Democratic Whip
Room S 148, The Capitol. Phone, 224 2158
Democratic Whip. Wendell H. Ford.
Executive Assistant. Missy Smith.
Staff Assistant. Joe Hart.
Receptionist/Secretary. Terri Hickerson.
Press. Mark L. Day.
Counsel. Rob Mangas.
#ENDCARD
#CARD
REPUBLICAN LEADERSHIP
Republican Leader
Room S 230, The Capitol. Phone, 224 3135; FAX: 224 3163
Republican Floor Leader. Robert J. Dole.
Chief of Staff. Sheila P. Burke.
Deputy Chief of Staff. James Whittinghill.
Counsels to the Republican Leader: Jim McMillan; Dennis Shea.
Assistants to the Republican Leader: Kathy Ormiston; Daniel Stanley;
Mira Baratta; Bill Wisecarver.
Press Secretary to the Republican Leader . Walt Riker.
Deputy Press Secretary. Clarkson Hine.
Office Manager. Joyce McCluney.
Consultant. Bob Dove.
Staff Assistants: Jon Lynn Kerchner; Richard Quinn; Ellen M. Ryan;
Marilyn Sayler; Pat Wade; Judy Biviano; John Fellow; Diaman Takiou; Pam
Rucker.Deputy Director, Office of National Security. Al Lehn.
Fellow. Vick Stack.
Assistant Republican Leader
Room S 229, The Capitol. Phone, 224 2708.
Assistant Republican Leader. Alan K. Simpson.
Chief Counsel. Michael Tongour, 4 2708.
Executive Assistant. Gina Madia, 4 2384.
Scheduler. Laurie Birleffi, 4 2793.
Assistnat to the Chief Counsel. Sharon Eubank, 4 2575.
Conference of the Minority
Room SH 405, Hart Senate Office Building. Phone, 224 2764
Chairman. Thad Cochran, Senator from Mississippi.
Secretary. Robert W. Kasten, Jr., Senator from Wisconsin.
A
Committee Chairmen:
Campaign. Phil Gramm, Senator from Texas.
Committees. Trent Lott, Senator from Mississippi.
Policy. Don Nickles, Senator from Oklahoma.
Staff Director. Will Feltus.
Staff Director for the Secretary. Bill Canfield, Room SD 513, 4
1326.
#ENDCARD
#CARD
OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY
Room S 208, The Capitol. Phone, 224 2115
WALTER J. (JOE) STEWART was elected and sworn in as Secretary of the Senate
for the 100th Congress, January 6, 1987, and was reelected for the 101st
Congress on January 3, 1989; previously served as Secretary to the Majority of the
Senate, 1979 81; Secretary for the Minority, January August 1981; joined Sonat
Inc., Vice President of Government Affairs, 1981 86; born in Waycross, GA, and
grew up in Jacksonville, FL; attended George Washington University
undergraduate school; LL.B., American University, Washington, DC; admitted to the District
of Columbia Bar, 1963; chairman, developmental committee, American University Law
School, 1982 present; named Distinguished Alumni at American University's
1986 commencement ceremony; member, Dean's Advisory Council.
06
Secretary of the Senate. Walter J. (Joe) Stewart, 4 3622.
Assistant Secretary of the Senate. Jeri Thomson (S 312), 4 2114.
Administrative Assistant to the Secretary. Michelle Haynes, 4
3626.Executive Assistants: Muriel A. Anderson, 4 3627; Dot Svendson, 4
3628.
Special Assistant for Information Systems. Ray Strong (S 312), 4
2020.
Executive Secretary. Linda L. Roberts (S 312), 4 7099.
General Counsel. Tom Gonzales, 4 8789.
Parliamentarian. Alan Frumin (S 132), 4 6128.
First Assistant Parliamentarian. Kevin Kayes.
Legislative Clerk. William F. Farmer, Jr. (S 312A), 4 4350.
Assistant Legislative Clerk. R. Scott Bates, 4 3630.
Journal Clerk. William D. Lackey, Jr. (S 220), 4 4650.
Assistant Journal Clerk. David J. Tinsley, 4 3629.
Bill Clerk. Vincent Del Balzo (S 220), 4 2120.
Assistant Bill Clerk. Kathleen Alvarez, 4 2118.
Curator of Art. James R. Ketchum (S 411), 4 2955.
Associate Curator. Melinda Frye.
Historian. Richard A. Baker (SH 201), 4 6900.
Associate Historian. Donald A. Ritchie, 4 8616.
Superintendent, Public Records Office. Pamela C. Brown (SH 232), 4
0322.
Assistant Superintendent. Alicia R. Fisher.
Lobby Registrar. Shirley S. Tucker, 4 0758.
Ethics Assistant, Public Records Office. Susan M. Casteel, 4
0763.Special Deputy, Federal Election Commission. David Gartner, 999 E Street
20463, 376 5130.
Director of Interparliamentary Services. Jan Paulk (SH 231B), 4
3047.
Assistant Director. Sally Walsh.
Director, Office of Senate Security. Michael P. DiSilvestro (S
406), 4 5632.
Deputy Directory. Albert W. Saffold.
Enrolling Clerk. Brian G. Hallen (S 139), 4 6250.
Assistant Enrolling Clerk. Thomas J. Lundregan.
Executive Clerk. Gerald A. Hackett (S 134), 4 4341.
Assistant Executive Clerk. David G. Marcos.
Financial Clerk. Stuart F. Balderson (SH 127), 4 3205.
Assistant Financial Clerk. Timothy S. Wineman, 4 3208.
Director of Printing Services. Barry Wolk (ST 41), 4 0205.
Superintendent of Document Room. Barbara Jean Bowles (SH B04), 4
7701.
Assistant Superintendent. Meredith J. (Joe) Feathers.
Keeper of Stationery. Stephen G. Bale (SD B43), 4 0581.
Librarian. Roger K. Haley (S 332), 4 2976.
Assistant Librarian. Ann C. Womeldorf, 4 7106.
Office of Conservation Director. Richard F. Young, 4 4550.
Special Assistant. Daniel W. Pelham (S 220), 4 6110.
Chief Reporter, Official Reporters of Debates. C.J. Reynolds (S
219), 4 3152.
Assistant Chief Reporter. Scott Sanborn.
Morning Business Editor. J. Mark Lacovara (S 220), 4 3960.
Daily Digest Editor. Thomas G. Pellikaan (SB 8), 4 2658.
Assistant Editor. Linda E. Sebold.
#ENDCARD
#CARD
OFFICE OF THE SERGEANT AT ARMS
Room S 321, The Capitol. Phone, 224 2341; FAX: 224 7690
MARTHA S. POPE, Sergeant at Arms, U.S. Senate, born in New Castle, PA; grew
up in Bethany, CT; graduate of University of Connecticut, 1967 (major:
Sociology/Anthropology, minor: art); art instructor, 1967 75; staff assistant, Senator
Gary Hart, 1975 77; professional staff, National Wildlife Federation, 1977
79; professional staff, Senate Committee on Environment and Public Works, 1979
85; legislative director, Senator George Mitchell, 1985 87; administrative
assistant, Senator George Mitchell, 1987 89; chief of staff, Office of the
Majority Leader, 1989 90; elected Sergeant at Arms, January 3, 1991.
06
Sergeant at Arms. Martha S. Pope.
Deputy Sergeant at Arms. Robert Bean.
Confidential Assistant. Casandra Bowman.
Executive Assistants: Loretta Fuller, Patty McNally.
Director of_
Facilities and Financial Management. Dennis Doherty (ST 56), 4
1962.
Human Resources. Kathy Ramsey (ST 47), 4 2889.
Senate Computer Center. Mary Ruth Alter, 4 1305.
Senate Service Department. Russell Jackson (SD G84), 4 2705.
Senate Telecommunications. Robert McCormick (SD 180), 4 4300.
Senate Recording Studio. James Grahne (ST 71), 4 4977.
Photographic Studio. Alan Porter (SR B31B), 4 0184.
Postmaster. Gayle Cory (SD B17), 4 5353.
Chief of_
U.S. Capitol Police. Frank A. Kerrigan, 4 9806.
Capitol Guide Service. Thomas Nottingham (S 102), 5 6827.
#ENDCARD
#CARD
OFFICE OF THE MAJORITY SECRETARY
Room S 309, The Capitol. Phone, 224 3735
Secretary for the Majority. C. Abbott Saffold.
Assistant Secretary for the Majority. Martin P. Paone.
Administrative Assistant to the Secretary. Sue Ann Spatz.
Executive Assistant to the Secretary. Jerri Davis.
Assistants, Democratic Cloakroom: Katherine Drummond; Art Cameron;
Patrick B. Hynes; Lenny Oursler.
OFFICE OF THE MINORITY SECRETARY
Room S 337, The Capitol. Phone, 224 3835
Secretary for the Minority . Howard O. Greene, Jr.
Assistant Secretary for the Minority . John L. Doney, S 226, 4
6191.Administrative Assistant . Constance M. Angus.
Republican Cloakroom, S 226. Phone, 4 6191
Cloakroom Assistants: Mary E. Arnold; Brad Holsclaw; David J. Schiappa;
Cynthia J.O. Mannucci.
Republican Legislative Scheduling, S 123. Phone, 4 5456
Floor Assistant. Elizabeth B. Greene.
Legislative Assistant: Barbara Holsclaw.
A
#ENDCARD
#CARD
OFFICE OF THE LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL
Room SD 668, Dirksen Senate Office Building. Phone, 224 6461; FAX: 224
0567
Legislative Counsel . Francis L. Burk, Jr.
Deputy Legislative Counsel . Hugh C. Evans.
Senior Counsels: James W. Fransen; Robert C. Louthian.
Assistant Counsels: Cornelia A. Burr; William R. Baird; Anthony C.
Coe; Polly W. Craighill; Gary L. Endicott; William F. Jensen; Mark J. Mathiesen;
Arthur J. Rynearson; Gregory A. Scott; Mark S. Sigurski; Thomas A. Streitz;
Timothy D. Trushel.
Staff Attorneys: Elizabeth Aldridge; Charles E. Armstrong; Carmen S.
Giordano; Laura J. McNulty.
Office Manager: Suzanne Pearson.
Assistant Office Manager: Joanne T. Cole.
Senior Staff Assistants: Donna M. Erwin.
Staff Assistants: Dona L. Deanell; Susan Gonzales; Tammy S. Hughes;
Laura T. McCarthy.
File Clerk. Tate Jones.
#ENDCARD
#CARD
OFFICE OF SENATE LEGAL COUNSEL
Room SH 642, Hart Senate Office Building. Phone, 224 4435; FAX: 224
3391
Senate Legal Counsel . Michael Davidson.
Deputy Senate Legal Counsel . Ken U. Benjamin, Jr.
Assistant Senate Legal Counsel. Morgan J. Frankel.
Assistant Senate Legal Counsel. Claire M. Sylvia.
Administrative Assistant . Nancy L. Bradshaw.
Systems Administrator . Barbara L. Thoreson.
Legal Assistant . Sara Fox Jones.
Congressional Directory
Capitol Telephone Directory, 225 3121
House room prefixes: Capitol, H ; Cannon House Office Building, CHOB;
Longworth House Office Building, LHOB; Rayburn House Office Building, RHOB;
O'Neill House Office Building, OHOB H1 ; Ford House Office Building, FHOB H2 .
House telephone numbers are prefixed, 225 and 226
#ENDCARD
#CARD
SPEAKER OF THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
SPEAKER'S OFFICE
Room H 204, The Capitol. Phone, 225 5604
The Speaker. Thomas S. Foley.
Chief of Staff ( unpaid). Heather S. Foley.
Executive Assistant. Werner W. Brandt.
Press Secretary. Jeffrey R. Biggs.
Scheduler. Mary Beth Schultheis.
Assistants: Thomas R. Nides; Michael J. O'Neill.
Legislative Assistants: Maxine Cooke; Elisabeth Brown, Judy Crowe,
Melinda Lucke, Casey Miller; Kathy Momot; Allan Kupperman.
Press Aide. Robin Haynes.
SPEAKER'S ROOMS
Room H 209, The Capitol. Phone, 225 2204
Staff Director of Democratic Steering and Policy Committee. George
Kundanis.
Deputy Director. Mimi McGee-O'Hara.
Legislative Assistant. Kathleen Miller.
SPEAKER'S CONGRESSIONAL OFFICES
Room 1201, Longworth House Office Building. Phone, 225 2006
Administrative Assistant. Susan Moos.
Deputy Administrative Assistant. Bonnie M. Lowrey.
Legislative Assistants: Nick Ashmore; Michelle Denton; Dorothy Gibson;
Dana Gjelde; Temora Jones; Lionel Lawson; Sandy Mathieson; Dwayne Malloy; Bryce
Quick; Patrick Ormsby; Carolyn Scott; Jeff Swedberg; Andrew Valuchek; Nancy
Virtue.
DEMOCRATIC STEERING AND POLICY COMMITTEE
Room H 324, The Capitol. Phone, 225 8550
Staff Director. George Kundanis.
Deputy Director. Mimi McGee-O'Hara.
Legislative Assistants: Kenneth M. Ballen; John Brandolino; Steve
Charnovitz; Lorraine C. Miller; Maureen Thibodeau.
OFFICE OF THE PARLIAMENTARIAN
Room H 209, The Capitol. Phone, 225 7373
Parliamentarian. William H. Brown.
Deputy Parliamentarian. Charles W. Johnson.
Assistant Parliamentarians: Thomas G. Duncan; Muftiah M. McCartin; John
V. Sullivan.
Clerk. Gay S. Topper.
CHAPLAIN
Room HB 25, The Capitol. Phone, 225 2509
JAMES DAVID FORD, D.D., Chaplain of the House of Representatives, first
elected Chaplain by the 96th Congress, reelected by succeeding Congresses;
graduated from Gustavus Adolphus College, St. Peter, MN; M. Div. from Augustana
Seminary, Rock Island, IL; Doctor of Divinity from Wagner College, New York City; served
as pastor of Lutheran Church, Ivanhoe, MN and Cadet Chaplain of U.S. Military
Academy, West Point, NY for 18 years.
06
Chaplain of the House. Rev. James David Ford, D.D.
#ENDCARD
#CARD
OFFICE OF THE MAJORITY LEADER
Room H 148, The Capitol. Phone, 225 0100
Majority Leader. Richard A. Gephardt.
Chief of Staff. Tom O'Donnell.
Administrative Assistant. Robert P. Koch.
Press Secretary. Deborah H. Johns.
Communications Director. David E. Dreyer.
General Counsel. Michael R. Wessel.
Executive Assistant. Sharon Donaldson.
Domestic Policy Adviser. Dr. Andrea King.
Executive Floor Assistant. George Stephanopoulos.
Policy Director. Stewart Gamage.
Legislative Assistant, Budget Associate. Craig Hanna.
Legislative Assistant. James C. Hawley.
Floor Assistant. Marti Thomas.
Press Assistant. Karen Beimdiek.
Special Assistant. Matt Gelman.
Staff Assistant. Daniel A. Turton.
Staff Assistant. Bridget Hayward.
Senior Foreign Policy Adviser. Dr. Daniel Nelson.
#ENDCARD
#CARD
OFFICE OF THE MAJORITY WHIP
Room H 114, The Capitol. Phone, 225 3130; FAX: 225 0465
Majority Whip. William H. Gray III.
Chief of Staff. John Plebani.
Floor Assistant. Steven M. Champlin.
Deputy Floor Assistant. Eric Altshule.
Executive Assistant. Joann Gilbert.
Press Secretary. Michael Tucker.
Deputy Press Secretary. Mary Hager.
Director of Communications. Bob Lehrman.
Detective. Steven Wells.
Office Manager. Sarah Rasmussen.
Special Assistant. Angela Montez.
Staff Assistants. Tawanda Pegram; Marshall Mitchell.
OFFICE OF THE REPUBLICAN LEADER
Room H 232, The Capitol. Phone, 225 0600
Republican Leader. Robert H. Michel.
Chief of Staff. Ray LaHood.
Floor Assistant. William R. Pitts, Jr.
Special Assistant. William Gavin.
Press Secretary. Missi Tessier.
Deputy Chief of Staff. Linda Steele.
Administrative Assistant. Sharon Yard.
Legislative Director. David Kehl.
Counsel. Ted Van Der Meid.
General Counsel. Karen Burttaro.
Staff Assistants: Juanita Braxton; Karen Haas; Carol Goodwillie; Lee
Prouty; Kerri Satler; Miriam Wolff.
Room 2112, Rayburn House Office Building. Phone, 225 6201
Executive Assistant/Office Manager. Sue Bell.
Legislative Assistant. Kathleen Donohue.
Staff Assistants: John Blanco Losada; Dean Owens; Joan Mitchell; Kyra
Wostoupal.
District Office: Room 107, 100 Northeast Monroe, Peoria, IL 61602. Phone,
(309) 671 7027
District Assistant. Ray LaHood.
Staff Assistants: Kristen Emmert; Kristen Engermann; Carol Johnston;
Sheri Myatt; Shirley Ringness.
District Office: 236 West State Street, Jacksonville, IL 62650. Phone,
(217) 245 1431
Special Assistant. Craig Findley.
Staff Assistants: Earlene Castleberry; Sally Dahman.
#ENDCARD
#CARD
OFFICE OF THE REPUBLICAN WHIP
Room H 219, The Capitol. Phone, 225 2800
Room 1620, Longworth House Office Building. Phone, 225 0197
Republican Whip. Newt Gingrich.
Chief of Staff. Dan Meyer.
Floor Assistant. Leonard Swinehart.
Associate Director. Linda G. Nave.
Office Manager. Victoria Link.
Whip Assistant. Annette Thompson.
Scheduler. Hardy Lott.
Room 2438, Rayburn House Office Building. Phone, 225 4501
Administrative Assistant. Mary N. Brown.
Legislative Director. Greg Wright.
Suite E, 6351 Jonesboro Road, Morrow, GA 30236. Phone, (404) 968
3219Georgia Chief of Staff. Gary Crook.
Office Manager. Jeff T. Wansley.
Carroll County Courthouse, Carrollton, GA 30117. Phone, (404) 834
6398Georgia Administrator. Catherine Brock, (404) 331 4287.
Griffin Federal Building, P.O. Box 848, Griffin, GA. Phone, (404) 228
0389
Office Manager. Lisa Powell.
22 E. Broad Street, Newnan, GA. Phone, (404) 253 8355
Office Manager. Audrey Bray.
#ENDCARD
#CARD
OFFICE OF THE CLERK
Room H 105, The Capitol. Phone, 225 7000
DONNALD K. ANDERSON, Clerk of the House of Representatives, born in
Sacramento, CA, October 17, 1942, appointed Page in the 86th Congress, January 5, 1960,
by Representative John E. Moss, operated elevators in the Capitol and House
Office Buildings under appointments of Representatives George H. Mahon and James H.
Morrison, appointed assistant enrolling clerk and clerk in the Finance Office
by Representative Hale Boggs, appointed assistant manager of the Democratic
Cloakroom by Speaker John W. McCormack, appointed Majority Floor Manager by Speaker
Carl Albert in 1972, continued to serve under appointment of Speaker Thomas P.
O'Neill, Jr., nominated for Clerk by the House Democratic Caucus and elected Clerk
of the House for the 100th Congress on January 6, 1987, reelected Clerk for the
101st and 102d Congresses.
08
Clerk. Donnald K. Anderson.
Deputy Clerk. W. Raymond Colley.
Assistants to the Clerk:
Dolores C. Snow.
Dallas L. Dendy, Jr.
William R. Long.
Special Deputy for Federal Election Commission. Douglas J. Patton.
Administrative Assistant. Ann Fletcher.
Executive Secretary. Sharman Brown.
Senior Secretaries: Jeanne Mershon; Marie Higgs.
Secretary. Mary Kevin Tegler.
Receptionist. Debbie Braun.
General Counsel to the Clerk. Steven R. Ross.
Deputy General Counsel. Charles Tiefer.
Senior Assistant Counsel. Michael Leo Murray.
Assistant Counsel. Janina A. Jaruzelski.
Legal Secretary. Jane C. Aufdem-Brinke.
Secretaries: Kyle Jones Beatty; Dina Green.
Legislative Operations, Chief. John P. Jenkins (HT 13), 5 7925.
Enrolling Clerk. Charles Gary Bogart.
Assistant Enrolling Clerk. Eve Jarvis.
Bill Clerk. Joe Braun.
Assistant Bill Clerk. Mark Hoffman.
Journal Clerk. Hugh Hart.
Assistant Journal Clerks: A. Wayne Fowler; Trish Madson; Dorothy M.
Stukes.
Reading Clerks: Mary E. Goetz; Paul Hays.
Tally Clerk. Theron E. Morris.
Assistant Tally Clerks: Mark D. O'Sullivan; Kevin J. Kennedy.
Legislative Clerk. Thomas Kevin Hanrahan.
Assistant Legislative Clerks: Mary-Alyce F. Jones; Robert V. Rota,
Jr.; Barbara Shaffer; Leland AuCoin; Joanne Caldwell; David A. Schaefer.
Official Reporters of Debates, Chief Reporter. Charles Gustafson (HT
60), 5 5621.
Deputy Chief Reporter. Susan Hanback.
Chief Clerk. Edward White.
Official Reporters to House Committees, Chief Reporter. Ray A. Boyum
(1718 LHOB), 5 1617.
Deputy Chief Reporter. Dennis A. Dinkel.
Chief Clerk. Jo Ann Hooks.
Office of Employee Assistance, Director. Bernard E. Beidel, (FHOB H2
172), 5 2400.
Office of Fair Employment Practices, Director. William X. Baranowski
(OHOB H1 101), 5 0880.
Finance Office, Chief. Robert S. McGuire (263 CHOB), 5 6514.
Assistant Chiefs: Michael Heny, Jr.; Jane Mattoon.
Legislative Computer Systems, Chief. Thomas J. Hawk (2401 RHOB), 5
1182.
Legislative Information Office, Chief. Anne L. Bartlett (FHOB H2 696),
5 1772.
Assistant Chief. Deborah Jo Turner.
Library, Chief. Emanuel Raymond Lewis (B18 CHOB), 5 0462.
Office Equipment Service, Chief. Jacqueline Byrd (B215 LHOB), 5
3994. Assistant Chief. Mary Ann Wise.
Office Supply Service, Chief. Ray M. Young (B217 LHOB), 5 3321.
Assistant Chief. Nancy C. Glorius.
Placement Office, Chief. John A. McDermott (FHOB H2 219), 6
6731. Assistant Chief. Harry P. Anderson.
Office Furnishings, Chief. John M. Kostelnick (FHOB H2 105), 6
2421. Assistant Chief. Robert B. Jacobs.
Printing Services, Chief. S. Joseph Simpson (B26 CHOB), 5 1908.
Assistant Chief. Gail Ridgway.
Recordings Studio, Director. William C. Moody (B310 RHOB), 5 3941.
Assistant Directors: Christian L. Walker; Richard A. Van Winkle.
Records and Registration, Director. Patricia A. Bias (1036 LHOB), 5
1300.
Assistant Director. Robert A. Templeton.
Telecommunications, Director. Susan L. Zeleniak (FHOB H2 259A) 6
4101.
Assistant Director. William T. Kinter.
Telephone Exchange, Assistant Chiefs: Joan Ann Sartori; Patricia
Scott.
#ENDCARD
#CARD
OFFICE OF THE SERGEANT AT ARMS
Room H 124, The Capitol. Phone, 225 2456; FAX: 225 3233
JACK RUSS, Sergeant at Arms of the House of Representatives; Democrat;
appointed as Doorman, 1967; appointed as Chief Page by Speaker Carl Albert, 1972;
appointed Deputy Doorkeeper, 1976; elected Sergeant at Arms from the 98th to the
102d Congresses.
08
Sergeant at Arms. Jack Russ.
Deputy Sergeant at Arms (Director of Bank Operations). Charles A.
Mallon.
Executive Assistant. Tom Keating.
Pair Clerk to the Majority. Kevin F. Peterson.
Assistant to the Sergeant at Arms for Physical Security. Harold Joseph
Wills.
Assistants to the Sergeant at Arms : Harold E. Nichols; Robert
Fischer.Director, Members' Payroll Unit. George H. Chapin.
Auditor. Chris Downey.
Operations Officer. Robert H. Cooksey.
Assistant Operations Officer. Vernon Greenme.
Administrator, Finance and Payroll. Juanita Conkling.
Payroll Technician. Linda Miller.
Cashiers: Caroline Klemp; Donald T. Kellaher.
Assistant Cashier. Doris Boyd.
Data Processor. Patricia A. Schaap.
Assistant Data Processor. Melissa K. Franger.
Executive Secretary. Elaine M. Connolly.
Appointment Desk Assistants: Karen F. Forriest; Theodore Lancaster.
#ENDCARD
#CARD
OFFICE OF THE DOORKEEPER
Room H 154, The Capitol. Phone, 225 3505
JAMES T. MOLLOY, Doorkeeper, born in Buffalo, NY, June 3, 1936; son of
Matthew and Catherine Hayden Molloy; graduate of Canisius College, Buffalo; attended
St. John's Law School, Brooklyn, NY; married to Roseann Tonucci of Lackawanna;
one daughter, Amy; served as a Marine Fireman with the Buffalo Fire Department;
schoolteacher in Buffalo and Lackawanna; worked as a longshoreman, member of
International Brotherhood of Longshoremen, Local 1622, AFL CIO; administrative
assistant to the district attorney, Erie County; president, South Side Democratic
Club, 1966 69; chairman, second ward, city of Buffalo; appointed Chief, Office
of Finance of the House in 1969; elected Doorkeeper by Democratic Caucus, 94th
Congress, December 2, 1974; reelected 95th through 102d Congresses.
06
Doorkeeper. James T. Molloy.
Deputy Doorkeeper. Robert J. O'Malley.
Administrative Assistant. Ann H. Thornburg.
Legislative Assistant. James J. Kaelin.
Office Manager. Karen J. Soltys.
Receptionist. Susan Savits.
General Clerks: Sam Jeffries; Jeff Gans; Pat Gould; Jim Kolb.
Floor Assistant. Fred Gortler.
Director of Doormen. William P. Sims.
Chief Doorman, House Gallery. Jim Jenkins.
Assistant Chief. Gary Heuer.
House Floor Services:
Majority Manager. Barry K. Sullivan, 5 7330.
Majority Assistants: Charles Timothy Friedman, Timothy J. Keating, 5
7330.
Minority Manager. Timothy J. Harroun, 5 7350.
Minority Assistants: James A. Oliver, Joelle K. Hall, 5 7350.
Chief of Pages:
Majority. Lenore Donnelly, 5 7330.
Minority. Peggy C. Sampson, 5 7350.
Receptionists:
Congresswomen's Suite. Ann R. Murphy, 5 4196.
Members' Family Suite. Anna Christakos, 5 6369.
Docent-in-Charge of Chapel. Kathryn A. Hoye.
HOUSE DOCUMENT ROOM
Room FHOB H2 B16. Phone, 225 3456
Superintendent. Gerard P. Walsh, Jr.
Assistant Superintendents: Prentice Maxwell; Harry Parker, Jr.
Clerk. William Tolson.
#ENDCARD
#CARD
PUBLICATIONS DISTRIBUTION SERVICE
Room B 241, Longworth House Office Building. Phone, 225 4355
Chief. George F. Early.
Deputy Director. Patrick J. McDonough.
Executive Assistant. Helen Rose Elias.
Congressional Office Liaison. Eric Seehafer.
Chief of Operations. Robert Guiffre.
#ENDCARD
#CARD
OFFICE OF THE POSTMASTER
Room B 225, Longworth House Office Building. Phone, 225 3856
ROBERT V. ROTA, Postmaster of the House of Representatives, of Clarksville,
Greene County, PA; born in Clarksville, PA, March 19, 1935, the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Valentino G. Rota; married Shelva Jean Ricci, October 19, 1957; three
children: Sabrina, Bobby, and Danny; began employment in the House Folding Room;
served on the staffs of the Honorable Wright Patman of Texas and the Honorable Cecil
R. King of California; served on the staff of House Doorkeeper as Doorman,
Chief Doorman in charge of the House floor, and as Democratic telephone clerk;
appointed assistant manager of the Democratic Cloakroom and later as manager of the
Democratic Cloakroom by Speaker John W. McCormack; reappointed for the 92d
Congress as majority manager by Speaker Carl Albert; elected Postmaster, July 1, 1972,
to fill the vacancy created by the retirement of the Honorable H.H. Morris of
Kentucky; reelected as Postmaster for the 93d and each succeeding
Congress.06
Postmaster. Robert V. Rota.
Deputy Postmaster. Nancy Auerbach Collins.
Chief of Staff. Joanna O'Rourke.
Director, Accountable Papers. James Smith.
Assistant to the Postmaster for_
Security. William Lawson.
Operations. Paul Lozito.
Personnel. David Dunn.
Chiefs:
Congressional Services. David Robinson.
Employee Relations. Hedianne Grimes.
Transportation and Maintenance Services. Jerry Carter.
Payroll Clerk. Carlene Switzer.
Training Manager. Dean Barb.
Computer Systems Manager. Nick Tenaglia.
Secretary to the Postmaster. Kimberly Fulghum.
Secretaries: Peggy Hatcher; Lisa Lowder.
Receptionist. Grace Cohilas.
Passport Clerks: James Jenkins, Griff Williams.
Typist/Visa Clerk. Inga Lawson.
Mail Chiefs:
Early Morning Shift Cathy Braithwait.
Assistant Chief. Ermine Cruikshank.
Day. Paul Tomasek.
Assistant Chief. Daniel Ertel.
Evening. Jerome Simala.
Assistant Chief. Gerard Schmelzer.
Ford House Office Building (Annex 2). Daniel A. Butler, Jr., 226
4119.
Chief, Platform. Joe Collins.
Assistant Chief. Brian Boyd.
POST OFFICE, LONGWORTH HOUSE OFFICE BUILDING
Clerk in Charge. Dorothea Risenhoover.
POST OFFICE, CANNON HOUSE OFFICE BUILDING
Clerk in Charge. Michael Lupo, CHOB 202, 225 3855.
POST OFFICE, RAYBURN HOUSE OFFICE BUILDING
Clerk in Charge. Trent Coleman, RHOB 2106, 225 6776.
POST OFFICE, CAPITOL
Clerk in Charge. June Ballard, H 101, 225 5460.
POST OFFICE, FORD HOUSE OFFICE BUILDING (ANNEX 2)
Clerk in Charge. Celia Gutierrez, 3118, 225 6543.
FLOOR ASSISTANTS TO THE MINORITY
Floor Assistants to the Leader:
William R. Pitts, Jr., H 228, 5 5555.
Walter P. Kennedy, HB 13B, Capitol, 5 2139.
Ronald W. Lasch, HB 13, 5 4768.
Jay Pierson, HB 13, 5 4768.
Gordon Jones, LHOB 1618, 5 6168.
#ENDCARD
#CARD
MAJORITY AND MINORITY ROOMS
Room WA 29, Rayburn House Office Building. Phone, 225 5371
Majority Clerk. David R. Ramage.
Room WA 26, Rayburn House Office Building. Phone, 225 2641
Minority Clerk. Thomas J. Lankford.
#ENDCARD
#CARD
OFFICE OF THE HISTORIAN
Room 138, Cannon House Office Building. Phone, 225 1153; FAX: 225
6178 Historian. Raymond W. Smock.
Associate Historian. Bruce A. Ragsdale.
Assistant Historian. Cynthia Pease Miller.
Research Assistant. Joel D. Treese.
Secretary. Carol A. Staszewski.
#ENDCARD
#CARD
OFFICE OF THE LAW REVISION COUNSEL
Room H2 304, Ford House Office Building, Second and D Streets SW. 20515
6711. Phone, 226 2411; FAX: 225 0010
Law Revision Counsel. Edward F. Willett, Jr.
Deputy Law Revision Counsel. Lawrence A. Monaco, Jr.
Assistant Counsels: Jerald J. Director; Jane W. Lawrence; Peter G.
LeFevre; John R. Miller; Kenneth I. Paretzky; Richard B. Simpson; Alan G. Skutt;
Deborah Z. Yee.
Staff Assistants: Mary A. Cannon; Debra L. Johnson; William M. Short;
Dulcie M. Violette.
Computer Systems Manager. James H. McGee.
Printing Editors: Wayne W. Grigsby; Robert A. Prather.
#ENDCARD
#CARD
OFFICE OF THE LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL
Room 136, Cannon House Office Building. Phone, 225 6060
Legislative Counsel. David E. Meade.
Deputy Legislative Counsel. Roger D. Young.
Assistant Counsels: Wade Ballou; Pope Barrow; Douglass Bellis; Timothy
Brown; John Buckley; Paul C. Callen; Sherry Chriss; Steven Cope; Robert Cover;
Ira Forstater; Pete Goodloe; Stanley Grimm; Edward Grossman; James Grossman; Curt
C. Haensel; Jean Harmann; Yvonne Haywood; Lawrence Johnston; Maureen King;
Gregory M. Kostka; Edward Leong; David Mendelsohn; William Mohrman; Elizabeth
Piekarczyk; Hank Savage; Willoughby G. Sheane, Jr.; Sandra Strokoff; Robert Weinhagen;
James Wert; Noah L. Wofsy; Joseph Womack.
Law Assistants: Rosemary Gallagher; Jean Ann Quinn; Mark A. Synnes; Judy
Wilkinson.
Office Administrator. Lynne Richardson.
Assistant Office Administrator. Renate Stehr.
Staff Assistants: Debra Birch; Betty L. Gibson; Nancy M. Hobson; M.
Elaine Sagman; Sybil T. Trader; Karen L. Dresden; Patricia A. Kennedy.
Assistant Clerks: Scott D. Anderson; Michael J. Gallagher; Craig A.
Sterkx.
Publications Coordinator. Frederick Dichter.
#ENDCARD
#CARD
ARCHITECT OF THE CAPITOL
ARCHITECT`S OFFICE
Room SB 15, The Capitol. Phone, 225 1200; FAX: 225 3167
Architect of the Capitol. George M. White.
Assistant Architect of the Capitol. William L. Ensign, 5 1221.
Administrative Assistant. William F. Raines, Jr., 5 1207.
Budget Officer. Emanuele Crupi, 5 1225.
Director of Engineering. J. Raymond Carroll, 5 4781.
Executive Officer. Herbert M. Franklin, 5 1206.
General Counsel. Ben C. Wimberly, 5 1210.
Supervising Engineer (Capitol). Ural T. Ward, 5 1218.
Landscape Architect. Paul Pincus, 4 6645.
Air Conditioning Engineer. Scott Birkhead, 6 3180.
Chief Engineer (Power Plant). Robert Husemann, 5 4380.
Electrical Engineer. Vinod K. Wadhwa, 6 3470.
Electronic Engineer. Richard Brandon, 4 9827.
SENATE OFFICE BUILDINGS
Room SD G45, Dirksen Senate Office Building. Phone, 224 3141; FAX: 224
0899
Superintendent. Lawrence Stoffel.
Assistant Superintendents: Peter Huber; Jerry Shaw.
HOUSE OFFICE BUILDINGS
Room B 341, Rayburn House Office Building. Phone, 225 4141; FAX: 225
3003
Superintendent. Robert Miley.
Assistant Superintendents: Margaret Donnelly; Robert Gleich; Bill
Wood.OFFICE OF THE ATTENDING PHYSICIAN
Room H 166, The Capitol. Phone, 5 5421
(If no answer, call Capitol Operator 4 2145)
Attending Physician. Dr. Robert C.J. Krasner (after office hours, (202)
364-8806).
Administrative Assistant. Robert F. Moran (after office hours, (703) 521
0641).
Congressional Directory
#ENDCARD
#CARD
U.S. CAPITOL POLICE BOARD
Marha S. Pope, Sergeant at Arms, U.S. Senate.
Jack Russ, Sergeant at Arms, U.S. House of Representatives.
George M. White, Architect of the Capitol.
U.S. CAPITOL POLICE
119 D Street NE. 20510. Phones, Office of the Chief: 224 9806;
Communications: 224 5155, Emergency: 224 0911
OFFICE OF THE CHIEF
Chief of Police. Frank A. Kerrigan.
Administrative Assistant. Sgt. Timothy J. Connors.
Assistant Chief of Police. Harry B. Grevey.
Administrative Assistant. Lt. Frank M. Ziemba.
General Counsel. John T. Caulfield.
Administrative Assistant. Lt. Joseph M. Alukonis.
Internal Affairs/Inspections Commander. Inspector Michael E. Hupp.
Assistant Commander. Capt. Richard W. Micer.
Watch Commanders. Inspector Michael J. Boyle; Capt. Joseph R.
Luteran.Court Liaison. Sgt. Joseph A. Oechello.
Administrative Services. Inspector Franklin C. Shelton.
Employee Development. Terry Eisenberg.
Protective Services. Deputy Chief Roy C. Bell.
Uniform Services. Deputy Chief Robert K. Langley.
ADMINISTRATIVE SERVICES BUREAU
Fiscal Management/Procurement. Inspector Johnnie R. Gross; Lt. Joseph S.
Parisi.
Division of_
Information Management. Kevin D. Collins.
Planning and Research. Lt. Raymond L. Carson.
Property Management. Lt. Paul L. Lund.
EMPLOYEE DEVELOPMENT BUREAU
Personnel Division. Lt. Stanley J. Grochowski, Jr.
Training Division Commander. Capt. Stephen W. Ring.
Federal Law Enforcement Training Center. Lt. James A. Cook.
In-Service Training Unit, Washington, D.C. Lt. Dale J. Monno.
Range Officer. Lt. James I. Hooe.
PROTECTIVE SERVICES BUREAU
Assistant Bureau Commander. Inspector John E. Daniels.
Division of_
Criminal Investigations: Lt. Christopher M. McGaffin; Lt. Mack A.
Kennedy.
Personal Security. Capt. Stephen D. Bahrns.
Gallery Security Section. Lt. Benjamin J. Moore.
Special Investigations. Lt. Price S. Goldston.
Technical Security. Capt. Rickey L. Stephens; Lt. Gilman G. Udell.
UNIFORM SERVICES BUREAU
Commander:
Capitol Division. Inspector James G. Dameron.
Capt. Lawrence R. Hill.
Capt. Ronald F. Reginaldi.
Lt. Kenneth W. Harris.
Lt. Robert V. Howse.
Lt. Michael A. Jarboe.
Lt. William E. Uber III.
Lt. Alan J. Yaworske.
House Division. Inspector Charles R. Parks.
Capt. Carlson B. Daniels, Jr.
Capt. George R. Salyer.
Lt. William G. Kaval.
Lt. Michael G. Komara.
Lt. Kenneth D. Riggin.
Lt. Myma L. Saunders.
Patrol Division. Inspector Robert R. Howe.
Capt. David A. Curry.
Capt. James P. Rolan.
Capt. Fentress A. Hickman.
Lt. Mark G. Herbst.
Lt. John T. Mattingly.
Lt. Lawrence K. Morgan.
Lt. Charles L. Shelton.
Lt. Joseph L. Whittington.
Lt. Patrick J. Kerrigan.
Senate Division. Inspector Michael P.E. Morrison.
Capt. Charles T. Kindsuatter.
Capt. Rayburn O. Jenkins.
Lt. Caroline J. Fields.
Lt. Stephen P. Istuan.
Lt. Ronald L. Curtis.
Lt. Peter F. Mattaliano.
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES PAGE SCHOOL
Room 311 LJ, Library of Congress 20540. Phone, 225 9000
Principal. Robert F. Knautz.
Administrative Assistant. Shirley A. Alexander.
English. Randall R. Mawer.
Guidance. Patricia A. Caulfield.
Languages. Linda G. Miranda.
Mathematics. Barbara R. Bowen.
Science. Robert S. Nelson.
Social Studies. Ronald L. Weitzel.
SENATE PAGE SCHOOL
Jefferson Building, Third Floor, Library of Congress 20540. Phone, 224
3926.
Director. Blanche E. Williams.
English. Elissa Y. Cohen.
Mathematics. Zachary C. Jeffers.
Science. Launcelot C. Redway.
Social Studies. Jerry Ainsfield.
#ENDCARD
#CARD
CONGRESSIONAL DAILY DIGEST
Editor. Charles Gary Bogart.
Editor. Thomas G. Pellikaan.
Assistant Editor. Linda E. Sebold.
COMBINED AIRLINES TICKET OFFICES (CATO)
Suite 801, 1925 North Lynn Street, Arlington, VA 22209. Phone, (703) 522
8664; FAX: (703) 522 0616
General Manager. Charles A. Dinardo.
Assistant General Manager. Susan B. Marshall.
Room B 222, Longworth House Office Building. Phone, (703) 522
2286Supervisor. Becky Reeder.
Room SR B06, Russell Senate Office Building. Phone, (703) 522
2286Supervisor. Charles Koster.
#ENDCARD
#CARD
CAPITOL TELEPHONE EXCHANGE
Room SD 180, Dirksen Senate Office Building. Phone, 224 2145
Chief Operator in Charge. Martha Pridgen.
Assistants: Patricia Scott; Joan Sartori.
#ENDCARD
#CARD
RAILROAD TICKET OFFICE
Room S 101, The Capitol. Phone, 224 5948
General Supervisor, Ticketing. Jimmy M. Fouts.
Capitol Ticket Office. Ernie Davis.
#ENDCARD
#CARD
WESTERN UNION TELEGRAPH CO.
Room 242 A, Cannon House Office Building. Phone, 225 4553/4554; FAX:
225 5499
Manager. Roth H. Coleman.
#ENDCARD
#CARD
CHILD CARE CENTERS
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES CHILD CARE CENTER
501 First Street SE. 20003. Phone, 225 9684
Director. Natalie Gitelman.
SENATE EMPLOYEES' CHILD CARE CENTER
190 D Street NE. 20510. Phone, 224 1461
Director. Arlene Altman.
#ENDCARD
#CARD
LIAISON OFFICES
OFFICE OF PERSONNEL MANAGEMENT
Room B 332, Rayburn House Office Building. Phone, 225 4955 or 632
6296
Director. Charlene E. Luskey.
Civil Service Representatives: Bobbie A. Harden; Elnora E. Lewis; Donna
M. Quinta.
Liaison Clerk. Timothy S. Percival.
GENERAL ACCOUNTING OFFICE
Room 7025, 441 G Street 20548. Phone, 275 5388/5739
Director. M. Thomas Hagenstad.
Legislative Attorney. T. Vincent Griffith, 275 6307.
Legislative Advisers: William A. Gerkens, 275 6303; Helen H. Hsing,
275 6301; Richard P. Roscoe, 275 6305.
Associate Legislative Adviser. Susan Fleming, 275 5456.
VETERANS' AFFAIRS
5225
Chief. Philip R. Mayo.
Assistant Chief. Linda E. Jurvelin.
Liaison Assistant. Pamela L. Mugg.
Representatives. Margaret Phillips; Robin Sumner; Rosemary Tunnell.
5218
Chief. Edwin L. Arnold.
Liaison Assistant. Joan C. Lee.
Representatives: Patricia J. Covington, Susan Theroux.
Secretary. Reo J. Johnson.
ARMY
Room B 325, Rayburn House Office Building. Phone, 225 3853
Chief. Col. Melvin J. Littig.
Liaison Officers: Lt. Col. Hank Ostehoudt; Lt. Col. Alfonso Malden; Lt.
Col. Blanche Mazur.
Administrative Assistant. Sgt. Bruce Junkmann.
Chief Congressional Caseworker. Ethel McCann.
Congressional Caseworkers: Deborah Whitmer; Barbara Yeager.
Room SR 183, Russell Senate Office Building. Phone, 224 2881; FAX: 224
2864
Chief. Col. Frank Norton.
Deputy Chief. Lt. Col. Robert Demers.
Liaison Officer. Maj. Joseph Pallone.
Chief, Casework Liaison. Margaret T. Tyler.
Casework Liaison Officers: Joan E. Goodale; Cpl. Kirsten Cler;
Michelle Cromwell.
AIR FORCE
Room B 322, Rayburn House Office Building. Phone, 225 6656; FAX: 475
0686
Chief. Col. Jerry D. Woods.
Deputy Chief. Maj. Jeffrey A. McChesney.
Legislative Liaison Specialist. Ms. Diana L. Kadi.
Secretary. Mrs. Beatriz Pleasants.
Room SR 182, Russell Senate Office Building. Phone, 224 2481
Chief. Col. Jim Tapp.
Deputy Chief. Maj. Steve Barach; Maj. Nicki Watts.
Legislative Liaison Specialists: Cheryl S. Cromwell; Pinky Salley.
NAVY/MARINE CORPS
Room B 324, Rayburn House Office Building. Phone, 225 7124
Director. Capt. Donald H. Nash, USN.
Deputy Director. Comdr. Paul E. Stanton, USN.
USN Liaison Officers: Lt. Comdr. Douglas S. Roark (contracts), USN; Lt.
Timothy P. Matthews, USN; Lt. Elaine M. Hogg, USN; Lt. John H. Niehaus,
USN.Yeoman. Yn1(AW) Terry D. Quattlebaum, USN.
USMC Liaison Officers: Col. William H. Frizell, USMC; Capt. Donald W.
Sapp, USMC.
Administrative Clerk. Sgt. Rodger F. Dewey, USMC; Lt. Chris Dickerson,
USN.
Room SR 182, Russell Senate Office Building. Phone, 224 4681
Principal Deputy. Capt. W.S. Orr, USN.
Assistant Deputy. Comdr. Elliot Bloxom, USN.
USN Liaison Officers: Lt. Christopher Wiler, USN; Lt. Paul Sozensky,
USN.
USMC Liaison Officer. Lt. Col. Terrence Paul.
Assistant Liaison Officers: YNC Trisha Kathy Blomquist, USN; Sgt. Terry
Petrovich, USMC; Sgt. William Hatch, USMC.
COAST GUARD
Room B 320, Rayburn House Office Building. Phone, 255 4775; FAX: 426
6081
Chief. Comdr. James Underwood.
Liaison Officers: Lt. Gregory Shaffer; LTJG Anita Abbott.
Room SR 183, Russell Senate Office Building. Phone, 224 2913
Liaison Officer. Comdr. Steve Froehlich.
Liaison Assistant. Liz Moses.
245 First Street SW. 20024 Phone, 225 7099
Acting Director. George M. White, Architect of the Capitol, 5
1200.Executive Director. David T. Scheid, 5 8333.
Office Services Specialist. Charles W. Dudley, 5 8333.
Public Affairs Specialist. Holly H. Shimizu, 6 4082.
Botanist. Monica L. Kilby, 6 4082.
Purchasing Assistant. Mary C. McKendree, 5 8333.
Conservatory Manager. Wayne R. Amos, 5 6646 or 5 6647.
Maintenance Foreman. Kenneth L. Murphy, 5 1824.
Production Facility Manager. Robert DeFeo, 5 6420.
Ford House Office Building, Second and D Streets SW. 20515. Phone, 226
2621
Director. Robert D. Reischauer, 226 2700.
Deputy Director. Robert W. Hartman (acting), 226 2606.
General Counsel. Alfred B. Fitt, 226 2633.
Director, Office of Intergovernmental Relations. Stanley L. Greigg, 226
2600.
Assistant Director for_
Fiscal Analysis. Frederick C. Ribe, 226 2756.
Budget Analysis. James L. Blum, 226 2800.
National Security. Robert F. Hale, 226 2900.
Tax Analysis. Rosemary D. Marcuss, 226 2687.
Human Resources and Community Development. Nancy M. Gordon, 226
2669.
Natural Resources and Commerce. [Vacant], 226 2946.
Senior Analyst for Budget Process. Robert W. Hartman, 226 2606.
#ENDCARD
#CARD
GENERAL ACCOUNTING OFFICE
General Accounting Office Building, 441 G Street 20548
Comptroller General of the United States. Charles A. Bowsher, 275
5481; FAX: 275 6722.
Deputy Comptroller General of the United States. [Vacant.]
Special Assistant to the Comptroller General. Milton J. Socolar, 275
5432; FAX: 275 6722.
Assistant Comptroller General for_
Operations. Ira Goldstein, 275 4093; FAX: 275 5782.
Planning and Reporting. Donald J. Horan, 275 5453; FAX: 275
6722. Assistant Comptroller General. Harry S. Havens, 275 4730; FAX: 275
6722.
Assistant Comptroller General, Policy. Werner Grosshans, 275 6172,
FAX: 275 7144.
Director, Office of_
Affirmative Action Plans. Arnold P. Jones, 275 7797.
Chief Economist. Sidney G. Winter, 275 6209.
Congressional Relations. M. Thomas Hagenstad, 275 5739; FAX: 275
1919.
Counseling and Career Development. Howard N. Johnson, 275 8992.
General Counsel. James F. Hinchman, 275 5205; FAX: 275 6703.
Information Management and Communications. F. Kevin Boland, 275 8688;
FAX: 275 3825.
Internal Evaluation. Joe E. Totten, 275 5748.
International Audit Organization Liaison. Peter V. Aliferis, 275 4707;
FAX: 275 4021.
Joint Financial Management Improvement Program. Virginia B. Robinson,
376 5415.
Public Affairs. Cleve E. Corlett, 275 2812; FAX: 275 7726.
Program Planning. William J. Gainer, 275 6190.
Recruitment. Frances Garcia, 275 1633; FAX: 275 2539.
Director of_
Civil Rights Office. Nilda I. Aponte, 275 6388.
General Services and Comptroller. Richard L. Brown, 275 3909; FAX: 275
0496.
Deputy Director. Susan B. Burtner, 275 5905.
Personnel. Felix R. Brandon II, 275 6064; FAX: 275 9899.
Personnel Appeals Board, Chair. Roger P. Kaplan, 275 6137.
GAO Training Institute. Terry Hedrick, 275 8674.
Assistant Comptroller General, Division of_
Accounting and Financial Management. Donald Chapin, 275 9461; FAX: 275
9193.
Special Assistant to the Assistant Comptroller General. Donald R.
Wurtz, 275 9359.
Directors: David L. Clark 275 9507; David M. Connor, 275 7095;
Brian P. Crowley, 275 9450; Gene L. Dodaro, 275 9459; Dennis J. Duquette, 275
9406; Robert W. Gramling, 275 9406; John Hill, 275 7097; James L. Kirkman,
275 9573; Jeffrey C. Steinhoff, 275 9454; Ronald S. Young, 275
9487. General Government. Richard L. Fogel, 275 6059; FAX: 275 3938.
Directors: Lowell Dodge, 275 8389; Johnny C. Finch, 275 7824;
William Gadsby, 275 8387; Rosslyn Kleeman, 275 6204; Ray C. Rist, 275 7802;
Craig A. Simmons, 275 8678; Jennie S. Stathis, 275 6407; L. Nye Stevens, 275
8676; Bernard Ungar, 275 4232.
Human Resources. Lawrence H. Thompson, 275 5470; FAX: 275 0528.
Directors: David P. Baine, 275 6207; Joseph F. Delfico, 275 6193;
Edward A. Densmore, 275 5103; Frank Frazier, 275 6193; Sally Frazier
Jaggar, 275 5100; Linda G. Morra, 275 1655; Janet L. Shikles, 275
5451. Information Management and Technology. Ralph V. Carlone, 275 4892;
FAX: 275 5859.
Directors: Samuel W. Bowlin, 275 4649; Jack L. Brock, 275 3195;
Michael Gryszkowiec, 275 8598; Jayetta Hecker, 275 9675; Ron F. Lauve, 275
8027; Frank Reilly, 275 4659; Howard G. Rhile, 275 3455.
National Security and International Affairs. Frank C. Conahan, 275
5518; FAX: 275 8900.
Directors: Neel P. Curtin, 275 6152; Richard A. Davis, 275 4141;
Martin M. Ferber, 275 6504; Mark E. Gebicke, 275 5140; Arthur R. Goldbeck,
275 6152; Donna M. Heivilin, 275 8412; Jim Johnson, 275 5790; Paul L.
Jones, 275 3990; Joseph E. Kelley, 275 4128; Nancy R. Kingsbury, 275 4268; Paul
F. Math, 275 4587; Allan I. Mendelowitz, 275 4812; Louis J. Rodrigues, 275
4841.
Program Evaluation and Methodology. Eleanor Chelimsky, 275 1854.
Directors: Thomas J. Brew, 275 6113; Kwai Chan, 275 3092.
Resources, Community and Economic Development. J. Dexter Peach, 275
3567; FAX: 275 8774.
Directors: James Duffus III, 275 7756; Harry R. Finley, 275 5187;
Keith O. Fultz, 275 3678; John Harman, 275 5138; Richard L. Hembra, 275
5489; Kenneth M. Mead, 275 1000; John M. Ols, 275 5525; Victor S. Rezendes,
275 1441.
Manager, Office of_
European. William J. Anderson, c/o American Consulate General, APO,
New York, NY 213; Frankfurt 9 011 49 69 7536 3696; FAX: 9 011 49
69 7535 3621.
Far East. Walter C. Herrmann, Jr., P.O. Box 50187, Honolulu, HI
96850, (808) 541 1250; FAX: (808) 541 1253.
Managers:
Atlanta. James D. Martin, Suite 2000, 101 Marietta Tower, Atlanta, GA
30323, (404) 332 1900; FAX: (404) 332 1819.
Boston. Morton A. Myers, Room 575, 10 Causeway Street, Boston, MA 02222,
(617) 565 7500; FAX: (617) 565 5909.
Chicago. John H. Luke, Suite 700, 200 W. Adams Street, Chicago, IL
60606, (312) 220 7600; FAX: (312) 220 2878.
Cincinnati. C. William Moore, Cincinnati Commerce Center, 600 Vine
Street, Suite 2100, Cincinnati, OH 45202 2430, (513) 684 7120; FAX: (513) 684
7115.
Dallas. Robert A. Peterson, Suite 1500, 1445 Ross Avenue, Dallas, TX
75202, (214) 855 2600; FAX: (214) 855 2758.
Denver. David A. Hanna, Suite 800, 1244 Speer Boulevard, Denver, CO
80204 3581, (303) 572 7306; FAX: (303) 572 7433.
Detroit. John H. Luke, Patrick V. McNamara Federal Building, Suite 865,
477 Michigan Avenue, Detroit, MI 48266, (313) 256 8000; FAX: (303) 256
8015.Kansas City. David L. Jones, Broadmoor Place, Suite 600, 5799 Broadmoor,
Mission, KS 66202 2400, (913) 384 7400; FAX: (913) 384 7517.
Los Angeles. George E. Grant, Los Angeles World Trade Center, 350 South
Figueroa Street, Los Angeles, CA 90071, (213) 894 3813; FAX: (213) 894
6260.New York. Mary R. Hamilton, 7 World Trade Center, Floor 25, New York, NY
10048, (212) 264 0730; FAX: (212) 264 5154.
Norfolk. Wilbur D. Campbell, 5705 Thurston Avenue, Virginia Beach, VA
23455, (804) 460 9620; FAX: (804) 363 0604.
Philadelphia. Fred D. Layton, Suite 760, 841 Chestnut Street,
Philadelphia, PA 19107, (215) 597 4000; FAX: (215) 574 4082.
San Francisco. Thomas P. McCormick, State Fund Building, Suite 900, 1275
Market Street, San Francisco, CA 94103 1420, (415) 556 6200; FAX: (415) 556
6464.
Seattle. James K. Meissner, Jackson Federal Building, Room 1992, 915
Second Avenue, Seattle, WA 98174, (206) 287 4800; FAX: (206) 287
4872.
#ENDCARD
#CARD
GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE
North Capitol and H Streets 20401. Phone, 275 2051
Public Printer. Robert W. Houk, 275 2034.
Deputy Public Printer. William A. Hohns, 275 2234.
Chief of Staff. Richard C. Barnett, 275 2034.
General Counsel. Anthony J. Zagami, 275 2757.
Deputy General Counsel. Drew Spalding, 275 2757.
Director, Congressional, Legislative and Public Affairs. Nancy A.
Guiden, 275 2894.
Administrative Law Judge. Stuart M. Foss, 275 2388.
Inspector General. Lewis L. Small, 275 2861.
Director of Workforce Planning and Training. Lois Schutte, 275
1116.Director, Office of Planning. Thomas J. Muldoon, 275 1191.
Director, Office of Information Dissemination Policy. Judith Russell,
275 8652.
Assistant Public Printers:
Operations and Procurement. Michael F. DiMario, 275 7157.
Directors:
Analysis and Review Staff. John Chapman, 275 2595.
Engineering Service. Joseph Palank, 275 2648.
Materials Management. Thomas M. Hughes, 275 2701.
Customer Service Manager. Burkey Boggs, 275 2941.
Superintendents:
Congressional Printing Management. Albert W. Buchwald, Jr. (acting),
275 2226.
Departmental Account Management. Robert G. Cox, 275 2287.
Production Planning. Philip J. Markett, Jr., 275 2280.
Typography and Design. Louis R. Glessman, 275 2132.
Printing Procurement Manager. James T. Smith, 275 2265.
Regional Operations Director. Meredith L. Arneson, 275 2774.
Superintendents:
Contract Management. Howard A. Harrison, 275 3427.
Purchase. W. Lewis Gardner, 275 3777.
Term Contracts. Raymond T. Sullivan, 275 2225.
Eastern Regional Operations. Douglas MacBride, 275 2774.
Western Regional Operations. M. Clive Walker, 275 2774.
Production Superintendent. Glenn H. Rottmann, 275 3118.
Managers:
Electronic Systems Development. Chester Szymczak, 275 2619.
Graphic Systems Development. Russell A. Duncan, Jr., 275 3726.
Superintendents:
Binding. Charles M. Enterline, 275 2172.
Electronic Photocomposition. Robert E. Schwenk, 275 2341.
Press. James A. Hickey, 275 2526.
Quality Control and Technical Department Manager. George J. Collins,
275 2873.
Chief Financial Officer. Vincent F. Arendes, 275 2073.
Financial Management/Comptroller. Robert B. Holstein (acting), 275
2073.
Information Resources Management. Raymond J. Pluto, 275 3358.
Administration and Resources Management. James N. Joyner, 275
9090. Directors:
Equal Employment Opportunity. Claudette Bouldin, 275 2014.
Labor and Employee Relations. Neal H. Fine, 275 2296.
Occupational Health and Environmental Services. William T. Harris,
275 7968.
Personnel Service. Lawrence W. Gardner, 275 2476.
Security and Support Services. Manuel M. Brito, 275 2777.
Superintendent of Documents. Wayne P. Kelly, Jr., 275 3345.
Directors:
Documents Sales. James D. Young, 275 3286.
Library Programs. Bonnie B. Trivizas, 275 1114.
Marketing. Charles B. McKeown, 275 2981.
Region 1: Assistant Manager_ Roger S. White, John F. Kennedy
Federal Building, Government Center, Room 612, Boston, MA 02203 0001, (617) 720
3680; FAX: (617) 720 0281.
Region 2 (I): Manager. James T. Reingruber, Southampton Office
Park, Suite A 190, 928 Jaymore Road, Southampton, PA 18966 3820, (215) 364
6465; FAX: (215) 364 6490.
Assistant Manager. Andrew Morgan, GPO Satellite Printing Procurement
Office, Moorhead Federal Office Building, Room 501, 1000 Liberty Avenue,
Pittsburgh, PA 15222 4000, (412) 644 2858; FAX: (412) 644 4846.
Region 2 (II): Manager. Francis P. Dillon, 201 Varick Street, Room
709, New York, NY 10014 4879, (212) 620 3321; Fax: (212) 620
3378. Region 3 (I): Superintendent. Jerome Durrington, Government
Printing Office, Rapid Response Center (Procurement), Building 136, Washington Navy
Yard, First and N Streets SE. 20403, 755 2110; FAX: 472 2575.
Region 3 (II): Manager. Robert M. Blake, 11836 Canon Boulevard,
Suite 400, Newport News, VA 23606 2555, (804) 873 2800; FAX: (804) 873
2805. Region 4: Manager. Douglas M. Faour, 401 West Peachtree Street NW,
Suite 1800, Atlanta, GA 30365 3001, (404) 331 5198; FAX: (404) 331
5468.Assistant Manager. James A. Wainscott, GPO Satellite Printing
Procurement Office, L. Mendel Rivers Federal Building, Room 122, 334 Meeting Street,
Charleston, SC 29403 6417, (803) 723 9379; FAX: (803) 723 0534.
Region 5 (I): Manager. Valentine T. Brandner, 200 West Adams
Street, Room 1460, Chicago, IL 60606 5299, (312) 353 3916; FAX: (312) 886
3163. Region 5 (II): Manager. David G. Sever, 1335 Dublin Road, Suite
112 B, Columbus, OH 43215 7034, (614) 488 4616; FAX: (614) 488
4577. Region 6: Manager. Rolf A. Beike, Old Post Office Building, Room
328, 815 Olive Street, St. Louis, MO 63101, (314) 241 0349; FAX: (314) 241
4154.
Region 7: Manager. Richard W. Wildbrett, U.S. Courthouse and
Federal Office Building, Room 3D4, 1100 Commerce Street, Dallas, TX 75242 1001,
(214) 767 0451; FAX: (214) 767 4101.
Assistant Manager. Lowell W. Borton, GPO Satellite Printing Procurement
Office, Building 1552, Door No. 2, Kelley Air Force Base, TX 78241 5000, (512)
229 4775; FAX: (512) 229 4779.
Assistant Manager. J. David Robb, GPO Satellite Printing Procurement
Office, U.S. Customs Building, Room 310, 423 Canal Street, New Orleans, LA 70130
2341, (504) 589 2538; FAX: (504) 589 2542.
Assistant Manager. Timothy J. Ashcraft, GPO Satellite Printing
Procurement Office, Building 206, L 55, Tinker Air Force Base, OK 73145 5000, (405)
231 4146; FAX: (405) 231 4125.
Region 8: Manager. Judy Ruehle, Denver Federal Center, Building
53, Room D 1010, Denver, CO 80225 0347, (303) 236 5292; FAX:(303) 236
5304.
Region 9 (I): Manager. James A. Davidson, 3950 Paramount
Boulevard, Room 220, Lakewood, CA 90712 4139, (213) 982 1130; FAX: (213) 982
1147.Assistant Manager. Eileen P. Hall, GPO Satellite Printing Procurement
Office, Valley Center Office Building, 2221 Camino Del Rio South, San Diego, CA
92108 3609, (619) 497 6050; FAX: (619) 497 6054.
Region 9 (II): Manager. John J. O'Connor, Building 99, Treasure
Island, San Francisco, CA 94130 9991, (415) 677 0340; FAX: (415) 677
0352. Region 10: Manager. Michael J. Atkins, Federal Center South, 4735
East Marginal Way South, Seattle, WA 98134 2397, (206) 764 3726; FAX: (206)
764 3301.
Chicago: Manager. Valentine T. Brandner, 433 West Van Buren
Street, Room 300 D, Chicago, IL 60607 4597, (312) 353 2943; FAX: (312) 886
4276.
Denver: Manager. Judy Ruehle, Denver Federal Center, Building 53,
Room D 1010, Denver, CO 80225 0347, (303) 236 5952; FAX: (303) 236
5304. New York: Manager. Francis P. Dillon, 201 Varick Street, Seventh
Floor, New York, NY 10014 4879, (212) 620 3327; FAX: (212) 620
3378. Rapid Response Center: Manager. Jerome K. Durrington, Building
136, Washington Navy Yard, First and N Streets SE. 20403, 755 9865; FAX: 472
2575.
San Francisco: Manager. John J. O'Connor, Building 99, Treasure
Island San Francisco, CA 94130 9991, (415) 677 0340; FAX: (415) 677
0352. Seattle: Manager. Michael J. Atkins, Federal Center South, 4735
East Marginal Way South, Seattle, WA 98134 2397, (206) 764 3726; FAX: (206)
764 3301.
Mail orders: Superintendent of Documents, Washington, DC 20402
Washington, DC area: Main Bookstore, U.S. Government Printing Office,
710 North Capitol Street NW., Washington, DC 20401, (202) 275 2091.
Farragut Bookstore: 1510 H Street NW., Washington, DC 20005, (202) 653
5075.
Warehouse Sales Outlet: 8660 Cherry Lane, Laurel, MD 20707, (301) 953
7974, (301) 792 0262.
02
Alabama: O'Neill Building, 2021 Third Avenue North, Birmingham, AL
35203, (205) 731 1056.
California: Los Angeles Bookstore, ARCO Plaza, C Level, 505 South
Flower Street, Los Angeles, CA 90071, (213) 239 9844.
San Francisco Bookstore: Room 1023, Federal Building, 450 Golden Gate
Avenue, San Francisco, CA 94102, (415) 252 5334.
Colorado: Room 117, Federal Building, 1961 Stout Street, Denver, CO
80294, (303) 844 3964.
Pueblo Bookstore: World Savings Building, 720 North Main Street, Pueblo,
CO 81003, (719) 544 3142.
Pueblo Distribution Center: Public Documents Distribution Center, P.O.
Box 4007, Pueblo, CO 81003, (719) 948 3335.
Florida: Room 158, Federal Building, 400 W. Bay Street, Jacksonville,
FL 32202, (904) 353 0472.
Georgia: Room 100, Federal Building, 275 Peachtree Street NE., P.O.
Box 56445, Atlanta, GA 30343, (404) 331 6947.
Illinois: Room 1365, Federal Building, 219 South Dearborn Street,
Chicago, IL 60604, (312) 353 5133.
Massachusetts: Thomas P. O'Neill Building, 10 Causeway Street, Room
179, Boston, MA 02222, (617) 720 4180.
Michigan: Suite 160, Federal Building, 477 Michigan Avenue, Detroit,
MI 48226, (313) 226 7816.
Missouri: No. 120 Bannister Mall, 5600 East Bannister Road, Kansas
City, MO 64137, (816) 767 8225.
New York: Room 110, 26 Federal Plaza, New York, NY 10278, (212) 264
3825.
Ohio: Room 1653, Federal Building, 1240 East 9th Street, Cleveland,
OH 44199, (216) 522 4922.
Columbus Bookstore: Room 207, Federal Building, 200 North High Street,
Columbus, OH 43215, (614) 469 6956.
Oregon: 1305 SW. First Avenue, Portland, OR 92701 5801, (503) 221
6217.
Pennsylvania: Robert Morris Building, 100 North 17th Street,
Philadelphia, PA 19103, (215) 597 0677.
Pittsburgh Bookstore: Room 118, Federal Building, 1000 Liberty Avenue,
Pittsburgh, PA 15222, (412) 644 2721.
Texas: Room 1C46, Federal Building, 1100 Commerce Street, Dallas, TX
75242, (214) 767 0076.
Houston Bookstore: Texas Crude Building, 801 Travis Street, Suite 120,
Houston, TX 77002, (713) 228 1187.
Washington: Room 194, Federal Building, 915 Second Avenue, Seattle,
WA 98174, (206) 533 4270.
Wisconsin: Room 190, Federal Building, 517 East Wisconsin Avenue,
Milwaukee, WI 53202, (414) 297 1304.
#ENDCARD
#CARD
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS
10 First Street SE. 20540. Phone, 707 5000
OFFICE OF THE LIBRARIAN
Librarian of Congress. James H. Billington, 707 5205.
Deputy Librarian. Winston Tabb (acting).
Executive Assistant. Declan C. Murphy.
Inspector General. John W. Rensbarger.
General Counsel. John J. Kominski.
Assistant General Counsel. Robert A. Lincoln.
Legislative Liaison Officer. Adoreen M. McCormick, 707 6577.
SPECIAL PROJECTS OFFICE
Phone, 707 5560
Director. Rhoda W. Canter (acting).
Director, Office of Planning and Development. Robert G. Zich.
LIBRARY MANAGEMENT SERVICES
Phone, 707 5560
Associate Librarian. Rhoda W. Canter.
Director for_
Financial Services. John D. Webster.
Human Resources. Ben Benitez.
Information Technology Services. Herbert S. Becker.
Integrated Support Services. James R. Trew.
Chief for_
Budget Office. John O. Hemperley.
Contracts and Logistics Services. Patricia Gardner (acting).
Office Systems Services. [Vacant.]
CULTURAL AFFAIRS
Phone, 707 6587
Associate Librarian. [Vacant.]
Executive Officer. Roberta A. Stevens.
Executive Director, Center for the Book. John Y. Cole.
Director for_
American Folklife Center. Alan Jabbour.
Office of Communications. Peter Braestrup.
Public Affairs Officer. Nancy F. Bush.
Director of Publishing. Dana J. Pratt.
Office of Scholarly Programs. Prosser Gifford.
Development Officer. Cathleen Clinton.
Interpretive Programs Officer. Irene Burnham.
CONGRESSIONAL RESEARCH SERVICE
Phone, 707 5700
Director. Joseph E. Ross, 707 5775.
Deputy Director. William H. Robinson, 707 5775.
Coordinator for Policy Implementation and Specialist, American Law.
Douglas A. Warshof, 707 8848.
Associate Director for_
Management Studies. Thomas W. Novotny, 707 6070.
Research Coordination. John P. Hardt, 707 8889.
Deputy Associate Director for Research Coordination. Philip Royal
Shipp, Jr., 707 5775.
Assistant Director for_
Policy. Hugh L. Elsbree, 707 8924.
Operations. Susan C. Finsen, 707 5770.
Special Programs. Nancy A. Davenport, 707 6464.
Resource Development. Ruth Ann Stewart, 707 1515.
Division Chiefs:
American Law. Richard C. Ehlke, 707 6006.
Assistant Chief. Kent M. Ronhovde.
Congressional Reference. Catherine Ann Jones, 707 5741.
Assistant Chief. Margaret E. Whitlock, 707 5376.
Economics. Leon M. Cole, 707 7800.
Assistant Chief. Roger S. White.
Education and Public Welfare. Earl Canfield, 707 6228.
Assistant Chief. [Vacant.]
Environment and Natural Resources Policy. John L. Moore, 707 7232.
Assistant Chief. John E. Blodgett, 707 7233.
Foreign Affairs and National Defense. Robert G. Sutter, 707 5064.
Assistant Chief. Charlotte P. Preece, 707 5064.
Government. Daniel P. Mulholland (acting), 707 7852.
Assistant Chief. Daniel P. Mulhollan, 707 7851.
Library Services. William R. Gigax (acting), 707 5804.
Assistant Chief. William R. Gigax.
Science Policy Research. Richard E. Rowberg, 707 7040.
Assistant Chief. Jane Bortnick.
American National Government. Thomas H. Novotny, 707 6070.
American National Government:
Louis Fisher, 707 8676.
William W. Ellis, 707 6928.
Walter J. Oleszek, 707 7854.
Stanley Ira Bach, 707 8669.
American Public Law:
Raymond J. Celada, 707 5037.
Johnny H. Killian, 707 7224.
Agricultural Policy. Charles E. Hanrahan, 707 7235.
Conservation and Energy. Warren H. Donnelly, 707 7226.
Economic Policy:
William A. Cox, 707 7846.
Jane G. Gravelle, 707 7591.
Donald W. Keifer, 707 7591.
Environmental Policy. David E. Gushee, 707 7228.
Housing. Morton J. Schussheim, 707 7846.
International Affairs (National Defense). John M. Collins, 707
7618.International Security Policy. Stanley R. Sloan, 707 1011.
Senior Specialist for American Public Law. Charles Doyle, 707
6006.Social Legislation. Philip Royal Shipp, Jr., 707 5775.
Soviet Economics. John P. Hardt, 707 8889.
Taxation and Fiscal Policy. Harry G. Gourevitch, 707 5042.
U.S. Foreign Policy. Mark M. Lowenthal, 707 7617.
COLLECTIONS SERVICES
Phone, 707 5325
Associate Librarian. Henriette D. Avram.
Director for_
Acquisitions. Mary S. Price
Price Cataloging. [Vacant.]
Collection Policy. William J. Sittig.
Preservation. Kenneth E. Harris.
Executive Officer. Donald P. Panzera.
Chiefs:
Automation Planning and Liaison. Barbara Roland.
Catalog Management and Publication Division. Gloria Hsia.
Cataloging in Publication Division. John P. Celli (acting).
Copyright Acquisitions Division. Laila Mulgaokar.
Decimal Classification Division. David A. Smith.
Descriptive Cataloging Division. John D. Byrum.
Exchange and Gift Division. Judy C. McDermott.
MARC Editorial Division. Cynthia J. Johanson (acting).
Network Development and MARC Standards Office. Sally H. McCallum.
Office for Descriptive Cataloging Policy. Mary Kay D. Pietris.
Order Division. Michael Albin.
Overseas Operations Division. E. Christian Filstrup.
Serial Record Division 2DKimberly G. Dobbs.
Shared Cataloging Division. Ben R. Tucker (acting).
Special Materials Cataloging Division. Jeffrey Heynen.
Subject Cataloging Division. John D. Byrum (acting).
Technical Processing and Automation Instruction Office. Judith P.
Cannan.
Whole Book Cataloging. Susan H. Vita.
CONSTITUENT SERVICES
Phone, 707 5543
Associate Librarian. Donald C. Curran.
Executive Officer. Carolyn H. Sung.
Special Assistant for Planning Management. Edward A. D'Alessandro.
Automation Officer. Theodore Leach.
PUBLIC SERVICE AND COLLECTIONS MANAGEMENT I
Phone 707 5325
Director. Winston Tabb.
Assistant to the Director. [Vacant.]
Chiefs:
African and Middle Eastern Division. Julian W. Witherell.
Asian Division. Warren M. Tsunieshi.
Geography and Map Division. John A. Wolter.
Manuscript Division. James H. Hutson.
Motion Picture, Broadcast and Recorded Sound. Robert Saudek.
Music Division. James W. Pruett.
Prints and Photographs Division. Stephen E. Ostrow.
Rare Book and Special Collections Division. Larry Sullivan.
PUBLIC SERVICE AND COLLECTIONS MANAGEMENT II
Phone, 707 5543
Director. Ellen Hahn.
Assistant to the Director. [Vacant.]
Chiefs:
Children's Literature Center. Sybille Jagusch.
Collections Management Division. Steven J. Herman.
European Division. David H. Kraus.
General Reading Rooms Division. Suzanne Thorin.
Hispanic Division. Cole Blasier.
Loan Division. Christopher Wright.
Science and Technology Division. Joseph Price.
Serial and Govern~ment Publications Division. Donald F. Wisdom.
Visitor Services Office. Lee Eleanor Probasco.
LIBRARY DISTRIBUTION SERVICES
Phone, 707 5543
Director. Nancy A. Davenport (acting).
Assistant to the Director. [Vacant.]
Chiefs:
Cataloging Distribution Service. Susan M. Tarr.
Federal Research Division. Louis R. Mortimer (acting).
National Translations Center. Karl Green.
Photoduplication Service. Norman J. Shaffer.
Retail Marketing Office. Anna Lee.
NATIONAL LIBRARY SERVICE FOR THE BLIND AND PHYSICALLY HANDICAPPED
Phone, 707 5100
Director. Frank Kurt Cylke.
FEDERAL LIBRARY AND INFORMATION CENTER COMMITTEE
Phone, 707 6055
Executive Director. Mary B. Levering (acting).
COPYRIGHT OFFICE
Library of Congress 20559. Phone, 707 8350.
Register of Copyrights. Ralph Oman.
Associate Register for_
Management. Michael R. Pew.
Legal Affairs:
General Counsel. Dorothy Schrader.
Assistant General Counsel. Marilyn Kreitsinger.
Assistant Register. [Vacant.]
Policy Planning Advisers: Lewis I. Flacks; Marybeth Peters.
Division Chiefs:
Cataloging. William Collins.
Examining. Harriet Oler.
Information and Reference. Joan Doherty, 707 6800.
Licensing. Walter D. Sampson, Jr.
Receiving and Processing. Orlando L. Campos.
LAW LIBRARY
Phone, 707 5065
Law Librarian. Mary Kathleen Price.
Special Assistant to the Law Librarian. Keith Ann Stiverson.
Division Chiefs:
American-British Law. Marlene C. McGuirl.
European Law. Ivan Sipkov.
Far Eastern Law. Tao-tai Hsia.
Hispanic Law. Rubens Medina.
Near Eastern and African Law. Zuhair Elias Jwaideh.
THE LIBRARY OF CONGRESS TRUST FUND BOARD
[A quasi corporation, created by an act of Congress approved March 3, 1925,
with perpetual succession and ``all the usual powers of a trustee,'' including
the power to ``invest, reinvest, and retain investments,'' and, specifically,
the authority to ``accept, receive, hold, and administer such gifts, bequests, or
devises of property for the benefit of, or in connection with, the Library, its
collections or its service, as may be approved by the board by the Joint
Committee on the Library.'']
06
Chairman. Nicholas F. Brady, Secretary of the Treasury.
Secretary. James H. Billington, Librarian of Congress.
Joint Committee on the Library. Claiborne Pell, Senator from Rhode
Island.
Mrs. Mildred Lois Teas, Dallas, TX.
[Vacant.]
#ENDCARD
#CARD
OFFICE OF TECHNOLOGY ASSESSMENT
06
06
Chairman. George E. Brown, Jr., Representative from California.
Vice Chairman. Ted Stevens, Senator from Alaska.
Appointed by the House:
Morris K. Udall, Representative from Arizona.
George E. Brown, Representative from California.
John D. Dingell, Representative from Michigan.
Clarence E. Miller, Representative from Ohio.
Don Sundquist, Representative from Tennessee.
Amo Houghton, Representative from New York.
Appointed by the Senate:
Edward M. Kennedy, Senator from Massachusetts.
Ernest F. Hollings, Senator from South Carolina.
Claiborne Pell, Senator from Rhode Island.
Ted Stevens, Senator from Alaska.
Orrin G. Hatch, Senator from Utah.
Charles E. Grassley, Senator from Iowa.
Chairman. Chase N. Peterson, President, University of Utah.
Vice Chairman. Joshua Lederburg, Rockefeller University.
Members:
Charles A. Bowsher, U.S. Comptroller General.
Lewis Branscomb, Harvard University.
Michel T. Halbouty, Michel T. Halbouty Energy Co.
Neil E. Harl, Iowa State University.
James C. Hunt, University of Tennessee.
Henry Koffler, President, University of Arizona.
Sally Ride, California Space Institute.
Joseph E. Ross, Director, Congressional Research Service, Library of
Congress.
John F.M. Sims, Usibelli Coal Mine, Inc.
Marina V.N. Whitman, General Motors Corp.
OFFICE OF THE DIRECTOR
Director. John H. Gibbons, 224 3695.
Executive Assistant to the Director. Susanne Bachtel, 224 3695.
Director of Congressional Affairs. James Jensen, 228 6787.
Director of Press Affairs. Jean K. McDonald, 228 6204.
Congressional Relations Officer. Eugenia Ufholz, 224 9241.
General Counsel. Holly Gwin, 228 6104.
ENERGY, MATERIALS, AND INTERNATIONAL SECURITY DIVISION
Assistant Director. Lionel S. Johns, 228 6750.
Program Managers:
Energy and Materials. Peter D. Blair, 228 6260.
Industry, Technology, and Employment. Audrey B. Buyrn, 228 6340.
International Security and Commerce. Alan Shaw, 228 6420.
HEALTH AND LIFE SCIENCES DIVISION
Assistant Director. Roger C. Herdman, 228 6500.
Program Managers:
Biological Applications. Michael Gough, 228 6670.
Food and Renewable Resources. Walter E. Parham, 228 6510.
Health. Clyde J. Behney, 228 6590.
SCIENCE, INFORMATION, AND NATURAL RESOURCES DIVISION
Assistant Director. John P. Andelin, 228 6750.
Program Managers:
Communication and Information Technologies. John Curlin, 228
6760. Oceans and Environment. Robert W. Niblock, 228 6840.
Science, Education, and Transportation. Nancy C. Carson, 228
6920.OPERATIONS DIVISION
Operations Manager. Bart J. McGarry, 224 3695.
Administrative Officer. Thomas P. McGurn, 228 6050.
Director of Contracts. Claude Bowen, 228 6066.
Information Services Manager. Martha M. Dexter, 228 6150.
Operations Services Manaer. [Vacant], 228 6230.
Personnel Officer. William J. Norris, 224 8713.
Publishing Officer. Kathie S. Boss, 224 3827.
Congressional Directory
#ENDCARD
#CARD
UNITED STATES CAPITOL
The Capitol is situated on a plateau 88 feet above the level of the Potomac
River and covers an area of 175,170 square feet, or approximately 4 acres. Its
length, from north to south, is 751 feet 4 inches; its greatest width, including
approaches, is 350 feet. The geographic position of the head of the Statue of
Freedom surmounting the dome is described by the National Geodetic Survey as
latitude 38G6 K53G6 K23.31098G6 "K north and longitude 77G6 K00G6
Its height above the base line on the east front to the top of the Statue
of Freedom is 287 feet 5\1/2\ inches. The dome is built of iron, and the
aggregate weight of material used in its construction is 8,909,200 pounds.
The Statue of Freedom, 19 feet 6 inches in height, is entirely of bronze
and weighs 14,985 pounds. The pedestal is of iron, painted to conform to the color
of the statue. The statue was modeled by Thomas Crawford, American sculptor, in
Rome, Italy, and the plaster model was shipped to this country. It was cast in
bronze at the shops of Clark Mills on Bladensburg Road, at a cost of $20,796.82.
Crawford was paid $3,000 for the plaster model, making the entire cost of the
statue $23,796.82. The last section of the statue, the head and shoulders, was
raised into position on December 2, 1863.
Selection of a Site for the National Capital
Prior to 1791, there was no permanent site for the Federal Government. The
Continental Congress, met in eight different cities: Philadelphia, Baltimore,
Lancaster, York, Princeton, Annapolis, Trenton, and New York City.
The subject of a permanent capital for the Federal Government of the United
States was first approached in Congress on the 30th day of April
1783.The Constitution of the United States, provided in Article I, Section 8,
the following:
``To exercise exclusive legislation in all cases whatsoever over such
district (not exceeding ten miles square) as may, by cession of particular States,
and the acceptance of Congress, become the seat of the Government of the United
States, . . .''
The State of Maryland, by Act approved December 23, 1788, did cede to
Congress ``any district in this State, not exceeding ten miles square, . .
.''The State of Virginia, by Act approved December 3, 1789, also ceded ``not
exceeding ten miles square, or any lesser quantity. . . .''
These cessions of territory were accepted by Act of Congress approved July
16, 1790. ``That a district or territory not exceeding ten miles square to be
located as hereafter directed on the river Potomac, at some space between the
mouths of the Eastern branch and Conogocheague, be, and the same is hereby, accepted
for the permanent seat of the Government of the United States: . .
.''President Washington, by proclamation dated January 24, 1791, designated
the experimental boundary lines of the District, as beginning at a point on
Hunting Creek (in Virginia where it enters the Potomac River) and ordered the
Commissioners appointed by him on January 22, 1791, ``to survey, and by proper metes and
bounds to define and limit the part within the same which is hereinbefore
directed for immediate location and acceptance; . . .''
The lines designated in the proclamation of January 24, 1791, were approved
by Congress but as the original act of July 16, 1790, required the location of
the District ``above the mouth of the Eastern Branch or Anacostia River,'' the
act was amended March 3, 1791, as follows: ``and that it shall be lawful for the
President to make any part of the said territory, below the said limit, and
above the mouth of Huntington (sic) Creek, a part of the said district,'' and also
provided ``That nothing herein contained shall authorize the erection of the
public buildings otherwise than on the Maryland side of the river Potomac, as
required by the aforesaid act.''
After an agreement with the landowners of the area within the city proper
on March 30, 1791, President Washington by proclamation on the same day, fixed
the boundary as ``Beginning at Jones's Point, being the upper Cape of Hunting
Creek, in Virginia, and at an angle in the outset of forty-five degrees west of the
north and running in a direct line ten miles, for the first line; then beginning
again at the same Jones's Point, and running another direct line, at a right
angle with the first, across the Potomac ten miles, for the second line; thence
from the termination of the said first and second lines, running two other lines
of ten miles each, the one crossing the Eastern Branch aforesaid and the other
the Potomac, and meeting each other in a point.''
On April 15, 1791, the cornerstone of the lines of the federal territory
was laid at Jones's Point ``with great solemnity'' in the presence of the
commissioners and a large number of persons.
Major Pierre Charles L'Enfant was commissioned to prepare plans for laying
out the city into streets, avenues, squares, lots, etc. and the plan was carried
out under the direction of Andrew Ellicott.
On March 2, 1797, President Washington, by proclamation, directed the
trustees, Thomas Beall and John M. Gantt, to ``convey all the streets in the city of
Washington as they are laid out and delineated in the plan of the said city . .
. to the use of the United States forever, . . .''
The proclamation also described the public reservations as areas for public
domain of which number two, including the Mall, east of 15th Street, was to be
Capitol Square.
The area selected for ``the Congress House'' was on Jenkins' Hill, a part
of Cerne Abbey Manor, owned by Daniel Carroll of Duddington, who was one of the
original proprietors and a signer of the agreement of March 30, 1791, wherein it
recites, ``For the streets, the proprietors shall receive no compensation, but
for the squares or lands in any form which shall be taken for public buildings or
any kind of public improvements or uses, the proprietors whose land shall be so
taken shall receive at the rate of G7 uK25 per acre, to be paid by the
public.'' (Note: A pound of currency at that time was equal to $2.66+ or $66.66 per
acre.)
Daniel Carroll of Duddington was a cousin of Daniel Carroll of Maryland,
one of the original Commissioners of the city appointed by President Washington on
January 22, 1791.
By Act of Congress approved July 9, 1846 (9 Stat. 35), the entire area
previously ceded by the State of Virginia on December 3, 1789, was returned to that
state as not being required or necessary for the use of the District.
#ENDCARD
#CARD
CAPITOL GROUNDS
The original Capitol Grounds, at one time a part of Cerne Abbey Manor, were
occupied at an early date by the Powhatans, a subtribe of the Algonquin
Indians, whose council house was then located at the foot of the hill.
These grounds were acquired under President Washington's proclamations of
1790 and 1797 for use as a site for the United States Capitol. These
proclamations authorized the appropriation of all of reservation 2 which, in its entirety,
included the ``Capitol Square and the Mall east of Fifteenth Street
West.''Additional ground was acquired under appropriations provided by Congress in
1872 and 1873 in order to obtain a better landscape surrounding in keeping with
the Senate and House wings which had been added to the building since the
acquisition of the original site. The purchase of this additional property completed
the acquisition of the area known as the old Capitol Grounds and totaled 58.8
acres.
Under a plan developed by Frederick Law Olmsted of New York, the terraces
were built on the north, west, and south sides of the building from 1884 to 1892.
The entire grounds were developed and improved from 1874 to 1892.
During the period 1910 35, the Capitol Grounds were further enlarged and
improved by the purchase, annexation, and development of 61.4 additional acres
located north of Constitution Avenue.
From 1955 57, part of the new area, located over and in the vicinity of
the Senate Garage, was reconstructed from funds provided in the Second
Supplemental Appropriation Act, 1955.
The area of the Capitol Grounds has been increased periodically since 1935.
The Capitol Grounds, as defined by Public Law 570, 79th Congress, approved July
31, 1946, as amended includes 221 acres of lawn areas, sidewalks, streets, and
roadways.
Plans for the Capitol
After a site for the Capitol was selected, the Commissioners placed
advertisements offering a prize of $500 or a medal of the same value, for the ``most
approved plan'' for a Capitol. Sixteen plans were submitted_some writers claim
17_but of these plans none was wholly satisfactory. In October 1792, Dr. William
Thornton, a physician of Tortola, West Indies, requested by letter an opportunity
to present a plan after the competition had closed, within the terms of the
original advertisement. The request was granted and his plan accepted by the
Commissioners on April 5, 1793.
President Washington approved the plan on July 25, 1793, and on September
18, 1793, the cornerstone was laid with Masonic ceremonies in the southeast
corner of the north section of the building. Thornton's plan provided for a central
section surmounted by a low dome, this central section to be flanked on the north
and south by rectangular buildings, with a length of 126 feet and a width of
120 feet. The northern wing was completed in 1800. In this small building, the
legislative and judicial branches of the government, as well as the courts of the
District of Columbia, were accommodated. The government moved from Philadelphia
in 1800, and Congress met in the new Capitol in November. The Supreme Court's
first session in the new Capitol was in February 1801.
Building of the Capitol
Development of the Thornton plan began with the construction of the north,
or Senate, wing. Three architects were employed on this work_Stephen H. Hallet,
George Hadfield, and James Hoban, architect of the White House. The construction
of the south wing, now known as the Statuary Hall section, was carried out by
Benjamin H. Latrobe. In 1807, the House of Representatives occupied its new
legislative chamber, but the wing was not completed until 1811. A temporary wooden
passageway connected the two wings, and was still in use when the building was
burned by the British on August 24, 1814.
Immediately after the fire, Congress met for one session in Blodgets'
Hotel, which was at Seventh and E Streets NW. From 1815 19, Congress occupied the
Old Brick Capitol, a building erected specifically for them on First Street NE.,
on part of the site now occupied by the Supreme Court Building.
The work of reconstructing the damaged interiors was begun by Latrobe in
1815. He continued the restoration until his resignation in November 1817. On
January 8, 1818, Charles Bulfinch, a prominent architect of Boston, MA, was
appointed. Under his direction, the restoration was completed and the central building
was constructed. The ``Bulfinch,'' or original low dome built of wood and covered
with copper, was the dominant feature of the Capitol for more than a quarter of
a century. When the building was completed in 1829, the services of Charles
Bulfinch terminated and there was no Architect of the Capitol again until
1851.The original Capitol as completed in 1829 was built of Aquia Creek
sandstone from Virginia. The structure was 351 feet 7\1/2\ inches in length at ground
level and 282 feet 10\1/2\ inches in depth at ground level including the East
Portico and steps. The cost of this original building, including the grading of the
grounds, repairs, etc., up to the year 1827 was $2,432,851.34.
By 1850, the expanding needs of Congress made additions to the Capitol
necessary. From several plans submitted, those drawn by the famed Philadelphia
architect, Thomas U. Walter, for the extension of the Senate and House wings were
selected.
On July 4, 1851, the cornerstone of the extension was laid in the northeast
corner of the House wing by President Millard Fillmore. Daniel Webster,
Secretary of State, delivered the oration. During his tenure as Architect of the
Capitol from 1851 until 1865, Thomas U. Walter directed the construction of the Senate
and House wings. The exterior marble came from quarries at Lee, MA, and the
marble for the columns was quarried at Cockeysville, MD. The present House Chamber
was occupied December 16, 1857, and the Senate first met in its present Chamber
on January 4, 1859.
The addition of the Senate and House wings made the construction of a new
dome desirable for the preservation of good architectural proportions. Between
1855 and 1863, the old low wooden dome was replaced with the now familiar cast
iron structure designed by Thomas U. Walter. The overall width of the dome at the
base is 135 feet 5 inches. The rotunda, or interior of the dome, is 96 feet in
diameter, and the height from the floor to the apex of the Brumidi fresco in the
canopy is 180 feet 3 inches.
The Capitol has a floor area of 16\1/2\ acres, with approximately 540 rooms
devoted to offices, committee rooms, storage, restaurants and other purposes.
There are 658 windows and approximately 850 doorways. The dome receives light
through 108 windows. From the basement floor to the top of the dome are 365
steps.During the period from July 1949 to January 1951, under appropriations
totaling $5,102,000, the roofs and skylights of the Senate and House wings and the
connecting corridors were replaced with new roofs of concrete and steel covered
with copper.
The cast-iron and glass ceilings of the Senate and House Chambers were
replaced with new ceilings of stainless steel and plaster, and a laylight of carved
glass and bronze was placed in the center of each ceiling. Alterations and
improvements, including air conditioning, lighting, and acoustics, were made to the
interior of each Chamber, the cloakrooms and adjacent areas. These alterations
were the first major changes made in the Senate and House in the 90 years since
their initial occupancy. The roof over the Statuary Hall wing and the original
north wing was reconstructed and fireproofed in 1902.
During the renovation program, the Senate and House vacated their Chambers
on three occasions to allow the work to progress. The Senate held its sessions
in the old Senate Chamber, which it had vacated in 1859. The House met in what is
now the Ways and Means Committee room in the Longworth House Office
Building.In 1940, when temporary supports were installed under the old ceilings of
the Chambers, the Senate and House vacated their Chambers, November 22, 1940 and
returned January 3, 1941. In 1949, when the first-stage construction work was
performed, the Senate and House vacated their Chambers July 1, 1949 and returned
January 3, 1950. In 1950, when the second, or final-stage construction work was
performed, the Senate vacated its Chamber August 11, 1950 and returned to its
refurbished Chamber January 3, 1951. The House vacated its Chamber September 1,
1950, and returned to its refurbished Chamber January 1, 1951.
Extension of the Capitol
Under legislation contained in the Legislative Appropriations Act, 1956,
Public Law 242, 84th Congress, as amended by Public Law 406, 84th Congress,
provision was made for extension, reconstruction, and replacement of the central
portion of the United States Capitol and other related improvements.
Under the approved plans, a new east front in marble, faithfully
reproducing the design of the old sandstone front, was constructed 32\1/2\ feet east of
the old front. The marble east walls of the connections between the central front
and the Senate and House wings were also moved to the east. The old sandstone
walls remained in place and became a part of the interior wall.
This work was begun in 1958 and completed in 1962. The project was carried
forward by the Architect of the Capitol under the direction of the Commission
for Extension of the United States Capitol created by Public Law 84
242.Authorized cost for this work, including repairs to and rehabilitation of
the dome, construction of a subway terminal under the Senate wing steps and
reconstruction of such steps, cleaning of the Senate and House wings, birdproofing
the building, furniture and furnishings for the new areas, and providing improved
lighting throughout the building, totaled $24 million.
Restoration of the West Central Front of the Capitol
Upon the signing of the Supplemental Appropriations Act, 1983, Public Law
98 63, approved July 30, 1983, the Architect of the Capitol, under the
direction of the Commission on the West Central Front of the U.S. Capitol, was directed
and authorized to enter into contracts for the restoration of the west central
front. Forty-nine million dollars were appropriated to carry out the restoration
project as specified in plans prepared by the New York engineering firm of
Ammann & Whitney. The first phase of the restoration, which involved the removal of
many layers of paint, was reported substantially complete on February 2, 1984.
This work was performed by the Polonia Restoration Co. The general construction
contract was awarded to the Charles H. Thomkins Co. on May 9, 1984. The principal
goals of the west central front restoration were to stabilize and reinforce the
masonry vaults by inserting tie rods; to replace deteriorated stonework with
exact reproductions carved from limestone; consolidation of damaged stone; and the
repainting of the stone to match the dome. The work was completed ahead of
schedule, and the West Front area was officially reopened to the public on November
18, 1987.
#ENDCARD
#CARD
HOUSE OFFICE BUILDINGS
Cannon House Office Building
An increased membership of the Senate and House resulted in a demand for
additional rooms for the accommodations of the Senators and Representatives. On
March 3, 1903, the Congress authorized the erection of a fireproofed office
building for the use of the House Members. It was designed by the firm of Carrere &
Hastings of New York City in the Beaux Arts style. The first brick was laid July
5, 1905, in square No. 690, and formal exercises were held at the laying of the
cornerstone on April 14, 1906, in which President Theodore Roosevelt
participated. The building was completed and occupied January 10, 1908. A subsequent change
in the basis of congressional representation made necessary the building of an
additional story in 1913 14. The total cost of the building, including site,
furnishings, equipment, and the subway connecting the House Office Building with
the U.S. Capitol, amounted to $4,860,155. This office building contains about 500
rooms, and was considered at the time of its completion fully equipped for all
the needs of a modern building for office purposes.
Pursuant to authority in the Second Supplemental Appropriations Act, 1955,
and subsequent action of the House Office Building Commission, remodeling of the
Cannon Building began in 1966. The estimated cost of this work, $5,200,000, was
included in total appropriation of $135,134,000 for the additional House Office
Building project. Pursuant to the provisions of Public Law 87 453, approved
May 21, 1962, the building was named in honor of the late Honorable Joseph G.
Cannon of Illinois, who was serving as Speaker at the time the building was
constructed.
Longworth House Office Building
Under legislation contained in authorization act of January 10, 1929, and
in the urgent deficiency bill of March 4, 1929, provisions were made for an
additional House Office Building, to be located on the west side of New Jersey Avenue
(opposite the first House Office Building). The building was designed by the
Allied Architects of Washington in the Neo-Classical Revival style.
The cornerstone was laid June 24, 1932, and the building was completed and
ready for beneficial occupancy April 20, 1933. It contains 251 two-room suites
and 16 committee rooms. Each suite and committee room is provided with a
storeroom. Eight floors are occupied by Members. The basement and subbasement contain
shops and mechanics needed for the proper maintenance of the building. The cost of
this building, including site, furnishings, and equipment, was $7,805,705.
Pursuant to the provisions of Public Law 87 453, approved May 21, 1962, the
building was named in honor of the late Honorable Nicholas Longworth of Ohio, who was
serving as Speaker, when the second House Office Building was
constructed. Rayburn House Office Building and Other Related Changes and
ImprovementsUnder legislation contained in the Second Supplemental Appropriations Act,
1955, provision was made for construction of an additional fireproofed office
building, and other appurtenant and necessary facilities for the use of the House
of Representatives; for acquisition of real property located south of
Independence Avenue in the vicinity of the Capitol Grounds for purposes of construction of
such building and facilities and as additions to the Capitol Grounds; for
changes to the present House Office Buildings and changes or additions to the subway
systems.
All work was carried forward by the Architect of the Capitol under the
direction of the House Office Building Commission at an authorized limit of cost to
be fixed by such Commission. Appropriations totaling $135,279,000 were provided
to carry forward this project.
Under this program, property consisting of eight city squares was acquired.
Contracts were let for necessary architectural and engineering services for
reconstruction of a section of Tiber Creek sewer running through the site for
excavations and foundations, structural steel, superstructure, furniture and
furnishings for the new building; for a cafeteria in the courtyard of the existing
Longworth House Office Building; for remodeling of the Cannon House Office Building;
for improved lighting and other improvements in the Longworth House Office
Building; and for an underground garage in the courtyard of the Cannon House Office
Building and two underground garages in squares 637 and 691 south of the Rayburn
and Longworth Buildings.
The Rayburn Building is connected to the Capitol by a subway from the
center of the Independence Avenue upper garage level to the southwest corner of the
Capitol. Designs for the building were prepared by the firm of Harbeson, Hough,
Livingston & Larson of Philadelphia, Associate Architects. The building contains
169 congressional suites; full-committee hearing rooms for 9 standing
committees, 16 subcommittee hearing rooms, committee staff rooms and other committee
facilities; a large cafeteria and other restaurant facilities; an underground garage
accommodating 1,600 automobiles; and a variety of liaison offices, press and
television facilities, maintenance and equipment shops or rooms, and storage areas.
This building has nine stories and a penthouse for machinery.
The cornerstone was laid May 24, 1962, by the Honorable John W. McCormack,
Speaker of the House of Representatives. President John F. Kennedy participated
in the cornerstone laying and delivered the address.
A portion of the basement floor was occupied beginning March 12, 1964, by
House of Representatives personnel moved from the George Washington Inn property.
Full occupancy of the Rayburn Building, under the room-filing regulations, was
begun February 23, 1965, and completed April 2, 1965. Pursuant to the provisions
of Public Law 87 453, approved May 21, 1962, the building was named in honor
of the late Honorable Sam Rayburn of Texas, who was serving as Speaker at the
time the third House Office Building was constructed.
Two buildings have been purchased and adapted for office use by the House
of Representatives. The eight-story Congressional Hotel across from the Cannon on
C Street SE. was acquired in 1957 and subsequently altered for office use and a
dormitory for the Pages. It has 124,000 square feet. It was known as House
Office Building Annex No. 1, until it was named the ``Thomas P. O'Neill, Jr. House
of Representatives Office Building'' in honor of the former Speaker of the House,
pursuant to House Resolution 402, approved September 10, 1990. House Office
Building Annex No. 2, named the ``Gerald R. Ford House of Representatives Office
Building'' by the same resolution, was acquired in 1975 from the General Services
Administration. The structure located at Second and D Streets SW. was built in
1939 for the Federal Bureau of Investigation as a fingerprint file archives.
This building has approximately 432,000 square feet of space.
#ENDCARD
#CARD
SENATE OFFICE BUILDINGS
Richard Brevard Russell Senate Office Building
The demand for an office building for the Representatives was greater
because of their larger membership, and the Senate had been supplied with additional
office space by the purchase of the Maltby Building, then located on the
northwest corner of B Street and New Jersey Avenue NW. This building provided only a
temporary need, and when it was condemned as an unsafe structure, the requirement
arose for the Senators to have safer and more commodious office space. Under
authorization of the Act of April 28, 1904, square 686 on the northeast corner of
Delaware Avenue and B Street NE. was purchased as a site for the Senate Office
Building. The plans for the House Office Building were adapted for the Senate
Office Building by the firm of Carrere & Hastings, with the exception that the side
of the building fronting on First Street NE. was temporarily omitted. The
cornerstone was laid without special exercises on July 31, 1906, and the building was
occupied March 5, 1909. In 1931, the completion of the fourth side of the
building was commenced. In 1933, it was completed, together with alterations to the C
Street facade, and the construction of terraces, balustrades, and approaches.
The cost of the completed building, including the site, furnishings, equipment and
the subway connecting the Senate Office Building with the United States Capitol
was $8,390,892.
The building was named the ``Richard Brevard Russell Senate Office
Building'' by Senate Resolution 296, 92d Congress, agreed to October 11, 1972, as
amended by Senate Resolution 295, 96th Congress, agreed to December 3, 1979.
Everett McKinley Dirksen Senate Office Building
Under legislation contained in the Second Deficiency Appropriations Act,
1948, Public Law 80 785, provision was made for an additional office building
for the United States Senate with limits of cost of $1,100,000 for acquisition of
the site and $20,600,000 for constructing and equipping the building.
The authorized limit of cost for construction and equipment of the building
was increased to $23,446,000 by the Legislative Branch Appropriations Act,
1958, and Public Law 85 85 and to $24,196,000 by the Second Supplemental
Appropriations Act, 1959, Public Law 86 30. All work was carried forward by the
Architect of the Capitol under the direction of the Senate Office Building Commission.
The New York firm of Eggers & Higgins served as the consulting
architects.The site was acquired and cleared in 1948 49 at a total cost of
$1,011,492.
A contract for excavation, concrete footings and mats for the new building
was awarded in January 1955, in the amount of $747,200. Groundbreaking
ceremonies were held January 26, 1955.
A contract for the superstructure of the new building was awarded September
9, 1955, in the amount of $17,200,000. The cornerstone was laid July 13,
1956.As a part of this project, a new underground subway system was installed
from the Capitol to both the Old and New Senate Office Buildings.
An appropriation of $1,000,000 for furniture and furnishings for the new
building was provided in the Supplemental Appropriations Act, 1958, Public Law 85
170. An additional appropriation of $283,550 was provided in the Second
Supplemental Appropriations Act, 1959, Public Law 86 30. The building was accepted
for beneficial occupancy October 15, 1958.
The building was named the ``Everett McKinley Dirksen Senate Office
Building'' by Senate Resolution 296, 92d Congress, agreed to October 11, 1972 and
Senate Resolution 295, 96th Congress, agreed to December 3, 1979.
Philip A. Hart Senate Office Building
Construction of an extension to the Dirksen Senate Office Building was
authorized by the Supplemental Appropriations Act, 1973, Public Law 92 607,
approved October 31, 1972, and $85,147,000 were provided for that purpose. The firm of
John Carl Warnecke & Associates served as Associate Architect for the
project.Senate Resolution 525, passed August 30, 1976, amended by Senate Resolution
295, 96th Congress, agreed to December 3, 1979, provided that upon completion
of the extension it would be named the ``Philip A. Hart Senate Office Building''
to honor the Senator from Michigan.
Contract for clearing of the site, piping for utilities, excavation and
construction of foundation was awarded in December 1975. Groundbreaking took place
January 5, 1976. Contract for furnishing and delivery of the exterior stone was
awarded February 1977 and the contract for the superstructure, which included
wall and roof systems and the erection of all exterior stone-work, was awarded
October 1977. The contract for the first portion of the interior and related work
was awarded December 1978. A contract for interior finishing was awarded in July
1980. The first suite was occupied November 22, 1982.
CAPITOL POWER PLANT
During the development of the plans for the Cannon and Russell Buildings,
the question of heat, light, and power was considered. The Senate and House wings
of the Capitol were heated by separate heating plants. The Library of Congress
also had in use a heating plant for that building. Finally it was determined
that the solution of the heating and lighting, with power for elevators, could be
adequately met by the construction of a central power plant to furnish all heat
and power, as well as light, for the Capitol group of buildings.
Having determined the need of a central power plant, a site was selected in
Garfield Park, bounded by New Jersey Avenue, South Capitol Street, Virginia
Avenue, and E Street SE. Since this park was a Government reservation, an
appropriation of money was not required to secure title. The determining factors leading
to the selection of this site were its nearness to the tracks of the now Penn
Central Railroad and its convenient distance to the river and to the buildings to
be served by the plant.
The dimensions of the Capitol Power Plant, which was constructed under
authorization of act of April 28, 1904, and completed and placed in operation in
1910, were 244 feet 8 inches by 117 feet. There are two radial brick chimneys 174
feet in height (reduced from 212 feet to 174 feet in 1951 52) and 11 feet in
diameter at the top.
The buildings originally served by the Capitol Power Plant were connected
to it by a reinforced-concrete steam tunnel 7 feet high by 4\1/2\ feet wide, with
walls approximately 12 inches thick. This tunnel originated at the Capitol
Power Plant and terminated at the Senate Office Building, with connecting tunnels
for the Cannon House Office Building, the Capitol, and the Library of Congress.
Subsequently it was extended to the Government Printing Office and the Washington
City Post Office, with steam lines extended to serve the Longworth House Office
Building, the Supreme Court Building, the John Adams Building of the Library of
Congress, and the Botanic Garden.
In September 1951, when the demand for electrical energy was reaching the
maximum capacity of the Capitol Power Plant, arrangements were made to purchase
electrical service from the local public utility company and to discontinue
electrical generation. The heating and cooling functions of the Capitol Power Plant
were expanded in 1935, 1939, 1958, 1973, and 1980.
A
Insert illus. for Capitol Basement and Terrace floor plan here (Illus.
No 57)
terrace
HT 1. Joint Committee on Printing.
ST 1, 3, 5, 7, 9, 11. Capitol Police.
HT 2, 4, 6. Committee on Standards of Official Conduct.
ST 13. Sergeant at Arms.
HT 3, 5, 7. Architect of the Capitol, Curator's Office.
ST 15. Capitol Guide Service.
HT 8, 10. Pages.
ST 19. Paint shop.
HT 9, 13, 15, 17. Clerk's Office of Legislative Operations.
ST 34, 36, 38. Senate television control.
HT 14, 16, 18. Architect of Capitol, flag office.
ST 41. Office of Printing Services, Secretary of the Senate.
HT 19, 21. Sheetmetal shop.
ST 47, 54, 56, 58. Sergeant at Arms.
HT 28, 30, 32, 34, 36. Carpenter shop.
ST 50. Democratic Policy Committee.
HT 33. Machine shop.
ST 51. Electronic shop.
HT 40. Electrical shop.
ST 57. Republican Policy Committee.
HT 42. Architect's storeroom.
ST 60, 62. Custodial service.
HT 45. Laborers' shop.
ST 71. Recording studio (old Senate subway tunnel).
HT 46. Plumbers' shop.
basement
HT 53, 55, 57. House television control.
SB 10. Snack bar.
HT 58, 59, 60, 61. Official Reporters of Debates.
SB 11, 12. Senate engineers.
basement
SB 13, 13A, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 21, 22. Architect of the
Capitol.HB 4. Library of Congress station.
SB 36. Newspaper room.
HB 5, 6. Clerk of the House.
HB 9. Coffee shop.
HB 11. House Restaurant storeroom.
HB 13. Minority Clerk.
HB 15. House engineers.
HB 24. Kitchen.
HB 25. Office of the Chaplain.
HB 26, 27, 28, 29, 31, 32, 33. Architect of the Capitol.
A
Insert Illustration for Capitol First (Ground) floor plan here (Illus. No.
58)A
H 101. Post Office annex.
S 101. Railroad Ticket Office.
H 102, 104, 105. Clerk of the House.
S 102. Capitol Guide Service.
H 106, 107, 107A, 108, 109, 110, 113, 114. Majority Whip.
S 109, 110, 111, 112, 113, 114, 115. Senate Restaurant.
H 111, 112. Clerk of the House.
S 116, 117. Committee on Foreign Relations.
H 115, 116. Deputy Majority Whip.
S 118, 119, 121. Democratic Policy Committee.
H 117, 118, 119, 120, 121. House Restaurant.
S 120. Reception Room (Restaurant), [Hugh Scott Room].
H 122, 123. Private dining room (Speaker).
S 122, 123. Republican Legislative Scheduling Office.
H 123A. House Restaurant Office.
S 125, 126, 127, 128, 129, 130, 131. Committee on Appropriations.
H 124, 125, 129. Sergeant at Arms.
S 132, 133. Parliamentarian.
H 126. Parliamentarian.
S 134. Executive Clerk.
H 130, 131. Members' private dining rooms.
S 138. Reception Room (Restaurant), [Arthur H. Vandenberg Room].
H 132, 133, 134. Majority Leader.
S 139. Engrossing and Enrolling Clerks.
H 136. Committee on Ways and Means.
S 141. Old Supreme Court Chamber.
H 139. Committee on Foreign Affairs.
S 146. Committee on Appropriations.
H 140. Committee on Appropriations [George Mahon Room].
S 146A. Subcommittee on Commerce, Justice, State, and the Judiciary
(Appropriations).
H 142, 143. Subcommittee on HUD Independent Agencies
(Appropriations).S 148, 149, 150. Democratic Whip.
H 144. Subcommittee on Defense (Appropriations).
S 153, 154, 155. Attending Physician.
H 145, 146, 147, 148, 149, 150. Majority Leader.
H 151. Clerk of the House.
H 152. Subcommittee on Rules of the House (Rules).
H 153, 154, 155, 156. Doorkeeper of the House.
H 159, 160, 161, 162, 165, 166. Attending Physician.
H 163, 164. Subcommittee on Treasury, Postal Service, and General
Government (Appropriations).
The Senate Sergeant at Arms' Office of Special Services is located adjacent to the Crypt.
Note: For House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence and Office
of Classified National Security Information, use express elevator at southeast
wall of Crypt, first floor, to fourth floor of the Capitol.
A
Insert Illustration illus. for Capitol Second (Principal) floor plan here
(Illus NO. 59)A
H 201, 202, 203, 204, 205, 206. Speaker.
S 205, Committee on Appropriations.
H 207. House reception room [Sam Rayburn Room].
S 206. President Pro Tempore.
H 208. Committee on Ways and Means.
S 207. Senators' conference room [Mike Mansfield Room].
H 209, 210. Speaker's Rooms.
S 208, 209. Secretary of the Senate.
H 211. Parliamentarian.
S 210. Secretary of the Senate [John F. Kennedy Room].
H 212, 213, 214. Representatives' retiring rooms.
S 211. Secretary of the Senate [Lyndon B. Johnson Room].
H 216, 217, 218. Committee on Appropriations.
S 212. Vice President.
H 219. Republican Whip.
S 213. Senators' reception room.
H 221, 223. Republican cloakrooms.
S 214. Ceremonial Office of the Vice President.
H 222, 224. Democratic cloakrooms.
S 215. Senators' retiring room [Marble Room].
H 227, 228, 229, 230, 231, 232, 232A, 233, 236. Republican Leader.
S 216. President's Room.
H 234. Prayer room.
S 218, 219. Official Reporters of Debates.
H 235. Congressional Women's Reading Room [Lindy Claiborne Boggs
Room].S 220. Bill Clerk and Journal Clerk.
S 221, 222, 223, 224. Majority Leader [Robert C. Byrd Rooms].
S 225. Democratic cloakroom.
S 226. Republican cloakroom.
S 228. Old Senate Chamber.
S 229, 243. Assistant Republican Leader.
S 230, 231, 232, 233, 234, 235, 235A, 236. Republican Leader [Howard H.
Baker, Jr., Rooms].
A
Insert Illustration for Capitol Third (Gallery) floor plan here (Illus No.
60)A
H 301, 302. Subcommittee on Legislative_D.C. (Appropriations).
S 308. Radio and Television Studio.
H 303, 308. Committee on Appropriations.
S 309, 310. Democratic Secretary.
H 304. Periodical Press Gallery.
S 311. Senate Wives' Lounge.
H 305. Committee on Rules.
S 312. Assistant Secretary of the Senate.
H 306. Members' Family Lounge.
S 313, 314, 315, 316. Press Gallery.
H 307. Subcommittee on Foreign Operations (Appropriations).
S 317. Press Photographers Gallery.
H 309, 310. Subcommittee on Commerce, Justice, State, and the Judiciary
(Appropriations).
S 318. Democratic Policy Committee.
H 311, 312, 313, 314. Committee on Rules.
S 319, 321, 322, 323, 324. Sergeant at Arms.
H 315, 316, 317, 318, 319. Press Gallery.
S 320. Periodical Press Gallery.
H 320, 321, 322. Radio and Television Correspondents' Gallery.
S 325. Radio and Television Correspondents' Gallery.
H 323. Committee on Appropriations.
S 331, 332, 333. Senate Library.
H 324, 324M. Democratic Steering and Policy Committee [Thomas P. O'Neill,
Jr. Room].
S 337, 337A. Secretary for the Minority.
H 326, 327, 328, 329, 330, 330 A, 331, 332, 333, 334, 335. Committee on
House Administration.
A
Insert Illustration for Capitol Fourth (Attic) floor plan here (Illus. No.
61)
A
H 405. Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence.
S 406. Office of Classified National Security Information (Office of the
Secretary).
S 408, 409. Radio and Television Correspondents' Gallery.
S 410. Senate Office of Conservation and Preservation.
S 411, 413A, 413B. Curator of the Senate.
S 413, 414, 415, 416. Senate Library.
S 417. Mechanical room.
Note: To reach H 405 and S 406_Use express elevator on the first
floor at southeast wall of Crypt, and take to fourth floor of Capitol.
Insert Illus. for Senate Chamber here (Illus. No. 62)
#ENDCARD
#CARD
DIRECTORY OF THE SENATE
DAN QUAYLE, Vice President of the United States and President of the
Senate
ROBERT C. BYRD, President pro tempore of the Senate
Walter J. Stewart, Secretary
John Doney, Assistant Secretary for the Minority
Martha S. Pope, Sergeant at Arms
Jeri Thomson, Assistant Secretary
C. Abbott Saffold, Secretary for the Majority
Alan S. Frumin, Parliamentarian
Howard O. Greene, Jr., Secretary for the Minority
William Farmer, Legislative Clerk
Martin O. Paone, Assistant Secretary for the Majority
William D. Lackey, Journal Clerk
Rev. Richard C. Halverson, D.D., Chaplain
Democrats in roman (56); Republicans in italic (44); total, 100
Adams, Brock, Washington, 39 Daschle, Thomas A., South Dakota, 90
Jeffords, James M., Vermont, 7 Pell, Claiborne, Rhode Island, 54
Akaka, Daniel K., Hawaii, 67 DeConcini, Dennis, Arizona, 86
Johnston, J. Bennett, Louisiana, 32 Pressler, Larry, South Dakota, 47
Baucus, Max, Montana, 55 Dixon, Alan J., Illinois, 13 Kassebaum
, Nancy Landon, Kansas, 74 Pryor, David H., Arkansas, 36
Bentsen, Lloyd, Texas, 29 Dodd, Christopher J., Connecticut, 62
Kasten, Robert W., Jr., Wisconsin, 21 Reid, Harry, Nevada, 100
Biden, Joseph R., Jr., Delaware, 88 Dole, Robert, Kansas, 7
Kennedy, Edward M., Massachusetts, 1A93 Riegle, Donald W., Jr., Michigan,
60
Bingaman, Jeff, New Mexico, 64 Domenici, Pete V., New Mexico, 2
5 Kerrey, J. Robert, Nebraska, 98 Robb, Charles S., Virginia, 40
Bond, Christopher S., Missouri, 43 Durenberger, David F.,
1Minnesota, 51 Kerry, John F., Massachusetts, 61 Rockefeller, John D.,
IV, W. Va., 1A89
Boren, David L., Oklahoma, 84 Exon, J. James, Nebraska, 85 Kohl,
Herbert H., Wisconsin, 68 Roth, William V., Jr., Delaware, 26
Bradley, Bill, New Jersey, 92 Ford, Wendell H., Kentucky, 9
Lautenberg, Frank R., New Jersey, 34 Rudman, Warren, New Hampshire, 20
Breaux, John, Louisiana, 63 Fowler, Wyche, Jr., Georgia, 14
Leahy, Patrick J., Vermont, 30 Sanford, Terry, North Carolina, 91
Brown, Hank, Colorado, 70 Garn, Jake, Utah, 81 Levin,
Carl M., Michigan, 12 Sarbanes, Paul S., Maryland, 33
Bryan, Richard H., Nevada, 97 Glenn, John, Ohio, 58 Lieberman,
Joseph I, Connecticut, 99 Sasser, James R., Tennessee, 59
Bumpers, Dale, Arkansas, 95 Gore, Albert, Jr., Tennessee, 94 L
ott, Trent, Mississippi, 2 Seymour, John, California, 69
Burdick, Quentin N., North Dakota, 10 Gorton, Slade, Washington
, 72 Lugar, Richard G., Indiana, 75 Shelby, Richard C., Alabama,
15
Burns, Conrad, Montana, 17 Graham, Bob, Florida, 38 Mack
, Connie, Florida, 18 Simon, Paul, Illinois, 83
Byrd, Robert C., West Virginia, 28 Gramm, Phil, Texas, 19
McCain, John, Arizona, 44 Simpson, Alan K., Wyoming, 6
Chafee, John H., Rhode Island, 50 Grassley, Charles E., I
owa, 3 McConnell, Mitch, Kentucky, 73 Smith, Robert C., New
Hampshire, 41
Coats, Dan, Indiana, 1 Harkin, Tom, Iowa, 96 Metzenbaum, Ho
ward M., Ohio, 11 Specter, Arlen, Pennsylvania, 77
Cochran, Thad, Mississippi, 48 Hatch, Orrin G., Utah, 52
DMikulski, Barbara A., Maryland, 65 Stevens, Ted, Alaska, 23
Cohen, William S., Maine, 46 Hatfield, Mark O., Oregon, 2
7 Mitchell, George J., Maine, 8 Symms, Steven D., Idaho, 79
Conrad, Kent, North Dakota, 66 Heflin, Howell T., Alabama, 35
Moynihan, Daniel P., New York, 82 Thurmond, Strom, South Carolina, 5
Craig, Larry, Idaho, 42 Heinz, John, Pennsylvania, 22
Murkowski, Frank H., Alaska, 45 Wallop, Malcolm, Wyoming, 80
Cranston, Alan, California, 56 Helms, Jesse, North Carolina, 49
Nickles, Don, Oklahoma, 78 Warner, John W., Virginia, 76
D'Amato, Alfonse M., New York, 4 Hollings, Ernest F., South Car
olina, 87 Nunn, Sam, Georgia, 57 Wellstone, Paul David, Minnesota,
16 Danforth, John C., Missouri, 53 Inouye, Daniel K., Hawaii, 31
Packwood, Bob, Oregon, 24 Wirth, Timothy, Colorado, 37
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