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ARCHITECT OF THE CAPITOL

U.S. Capitol Building, Washington, D.C. 20515
Phone, 202-225-1200

Architect of the Capitol----

GEORGE M. WHITE.

The first Architect of the Capitol was appointed in 1793 by the President of thei United States. During the period of the construction of the Capitol (1793-1865) appointments were made to the position of Architect at such times and for such periods as the various stages of the construction work required. The office of Architect has, however, been continuous from 1851 to date.

The functions of the office have changed materially through the years in accordance with the increased activities imposed upon it by Congress, due, principally, to the addition of new buildings and grounds. Originally, the duties of the Architect of the Capitol were to plan and construct the Capitol Building, and later, to supervise its care and maintenance.

Permanent authority for the care and maintenance of the Capitol Building is provided by the act of August 15, 1876 (19 Stat. 147; 40 U.S.C. 162-163). This act has been amended from time to time to provide for the care and maintenance of the additional buildings and grounds placed under the jurisdiction of the Architect of the Capitol by Congress in subsequent years.

The Architect of the Capitol, acting as an agent of Congress, has charge of the structural and mechanical care of the United States Capitol Building, and making arrangements with the proper authorities for ceremonies and ceremonials held in the building and on the grounds; is responsible for the care, maintenance, and improvement of the Capitol Grounds, comprising approximately 190.5 acres; has the structural and mechanical care of the Library of Congress Buildings and the United States Supreme Court Building; and is responsible for the operation of the United States Senate restaurant.

In addition to these activities the Architect has the following duties and responsibilities:

Under the direction and approval of the House Office Building Commission, the structural, mechanical, and domestic care and maintenance of the House Office Buildings, including the maintenance and operation of the mechanical, electrical, and electronic equipment, and the care, maintenance, and operation of the Capitol Power Plant, which supplies heat and airconditioning refrigeration for the Capitol, Senate and House Office Buildings, Library of Congress Build

ings, and the United States Supreme Court Building; heat for the United States Botanic Garden and the Senate and House garages; and steam heat for the Government Printing Office, Washington City Post Office, and Folger Shakespeare Library;

Subject to the approval of the Senate Committee on Rules and Administration as to matters of general policy, the structural, mechanical, and domestic care and maintenance of the Senate Office Buildings, including the maintenance and operation of the mechanical, electrical, and electronic equipment;

The jurisdiction and control, including care and maintenance of the Senate garage, subject to such regulations respecting the use thereof as may be promulgated by the Senate Committee on Rules and Administration.

The Architect of the Capitol is also charged with the planning and construction of such buildings as may be committed to his care by Congress from time to time. Current projects include extension, reconstruction, alteration, and improvement of the United States Capitol; construction and equipment of an extension to the Dirksen Office Building; construction

and improvements under the additional House Office Building projects; construction of the Library of Congress James Madison Memorial Building; and expansion, modification, and enlargement of the facilities of the Capitol Power Plant.

Under the direction and supervision of the Joint Committee on the Library, he serves as Acting Director of the United States Botanic Garden.

- The Architect of the Capitol serves as a member of the Commission for Extension of the United States Capitol, the Capitol Police Board, the Capitol Guide Board, the District of Co

lumbia Zoning Commission, the Board of Directors of the Pennsylvania Avenue Development Corporation, the Art Advisory Committee to the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority, and Coordinator of Civil Defense for the Capitol group of buildings.

For further information, contact the Office of the Architect of the Capitol, U.S. Capitol Building, Washington, D.C. 20515. Phone, 202225-1200.

Approved.

GEORGE M. WHITE, Architect of the Capitol.

UNITED STATES BOTANIC GARDEN

Office of Director, 245 First Street SW., Washington, D.C. 20024

Phone, 202-225-5833

Conservatory, Maryland Avenue, First to Second Streets SW., Washington, D.C. 20024 Phone, 202-225-6646

Nursery, Poplar Point, 700 Howard Road SE., Anacostia, D.C. 20020

Phone, 202-225-6420

Acting Director___

GEORGE M. WHITE, Architect of the Capitol.

The purpose of the United States Botanic Garden is to collect, cultivate, and grow the various vegetable productions of this and other countries for exhibition and display to the public and for study material for students, scientists, and garden clubs.

The Botanic Garden contains a large variety of palms, cycads, ferns, cacti, orchids, and other miscellaneous tropical and subtropical plants, many of which are rare species. There are special displays during most of the months of the year, and in their proper seasons banana, papaya, orange, lemon, tangerine, kumquat, averrhoa, coffee, and surinam cherry are to be seen in luxuriant fruiting. The entire collection of the Garden includes over 10,000 species and varieties of plant growth. The collection attracts many visitors annually, including botanists, horticulturists, students, and garden club members.

The Garden, though not operated as a scientific institution, offers educational facilities in that it makes available for study to students, botanists, and floriculturists many rare and interesting botanical specimens. Every year botanical specimens are received from all over the world with requests for identification, and one of the services rendered by the Garden to the public is the identification of such specimens and the furnishing of information relating to the proper methods of growing them.

The United States Botanic Garden was founded in 1820 under the auspices

of the Columbia Institute for the Promotion of Arts and Sciences, an organi

zation which was the outgrowth of an association known as the Metropolitan Society and which received its charter from Congress on April 20, 1818. The Garden continued under the direction of this Institute until 1837, when the Institute ceased to exist as an active organization.

It remained abandoned until 1842 when it became necessary for the Government to provide accommodations for the botanical collections brought to Washington, D.C., from the South Seas by the United States Exploring Expedition of 1838-42, under the leadership of Capt. Charles Wilkes. The collections were placed temporarily on exhibition at the Patent Office upon return of the expedition in June 1842. The first greenhouse for this purpose was constructed in 1842 on a lot behind the Patent Office Building under the direction and control of the Joint Committee of Congress on the Library, from funds appropriated by Congress.

The act of May 15, 1850 (9 Stat. 427), provided for the relocation of the Botanic Garden under the direction of the Joint Committee on the Library.

The site selected by the Joint Committee on the Library for the relocation of the Botanic Garden was on the Mall at the west end of the Capitol Grounds,

practically the same site the Botanic Garden occupied during the period it functioned under the Columbia Institute.

This site was later enlarged, and the main area continued to serve as the principal Botanic Garden site from 1850 until 1933, when the Garden was relocated to its present site.

Although the Botanic Garden began functioning as a Government-owned institution in 1842, the records indicate that it was not until 1856 that the maintenance of the Garden was specifically placed under the direction of the Joint Committee on the Library, and a regular, annual appropriation was provided by Congress (11 Stat. 104).

At the present time the Joint Committee exercises its supervision through the Architect of the Capitol, who has been serving as Acting Director since 1934.

For further information concerning the United States Botanic Garden, contact the Administrative Officer, Office of the Architect of the Capitol, U.S. Capitol Building, Washington, D.C. 20515. Phone, 202-225-1225.

Approved.

GEORGE M. WHITE, Acting Director.

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Director, Office of Equal Employment Opportunity-----
Director, Federal Personnel and Compensation Division
Director, Field Operations Division____

Director, Financial and General Management Studies
Division

Director, General Government Division_.
Director, International Division____

Director, Logistics and Communications Division___
Director, Management Services____

Director, Office of Administrative Services_
Controller, Office of Controller___.
Director, Office of Librarian___.

Director, Office of Personnel Development and Services_
Director, Human Resources Division___.

Director, Procurement and Systems Acquisition Division-Director, Community and Economic Development Division

Information Officer___

ALExander A. Silva, Jr.
HYMAN L. Krieger.
STEWART D. McELYEA.

DONALD L. SCANTLEBURY.
VICTOR L. Lowe.
J. KENNETH FASICK.
FRED J. SHAfer.
CLERIO P. PIN.
LARRY A. HERRMANN.
RICHARD L. BROWN.
SUSAN BURNS.
WILLIAM D. Martin, Jr.
GREGORY J. Ahart.
RICHARD W. GUTMANN.

HENRY ESCHWEGE.
ROLAND J. Sawyer.

The General Accounting Office (GAO), created by the Budget and Accounting Act, 1921 (31 U.S.C. 41), was vested with all powers and duties of the six auditors and the Comptroller of the Treasury, as stated in the act of July 31, 1894, and other statutes extending back to the original Treasury Act of 1789. The 1921 act broadened the Government's audit activities and established new responsibilities for reporting to the Congress.

The scope of the activities of the General Accounting Office was further extended by the Government Corporation Control Act (31 U.S.C. 841), the Legislative Reorganization Act of 1946 (31 U.S.C. 60), the Accounting and Auditing Act of 1950 (31 U.S.C. 65), the Legislative Reorganization Act of 1970 (31 U.S.C. 1151), the Congressional Budget and Impoundment Control Act of 1974 (31 U.S.C. 1301), the General Accounting Office Act of 1974 (31 U.S.C. 52c), and other legislation.

The General Accounting Office is under the control and direction of the Comptroller General of the United States and the Deputy Comptroller General of the United States, appointed by the President with the advice and consent of the Senate for terms of 15 years.

The General Accounting Office has the following basic purposes: to assist the Congress, its committees, and its Members in carrying out their legislative and oversight responsibilities, consistent with its role as an independent nonpolitical agency in the legislative branch; to carry out legal, accounting, auditing, and claims settlement functions with respect to Federal Government programs and operations as assigned by the Congress; and to make recommendations designed to provide for more efficient and effective Government operations.

DIRECT ASSISTANCE TO
THE CONGRESS

The General Accounting Office di-
rectly assists the Congress, its commit-
tees, Members, and officers on request.
This assistance can be in any of the
following forms:

Legislation may be enacted directing the General Accounting Office to examine a specific matter; special audits, surveys, and reviews may

be

per

formed for the committees, Members, or officers of Congress; professional staff members may be assigned to assist committees in conducting studies and investigations; the Comptroller General or his representatives may testify before committees on matters considered to be within the special competence of the General Accounting Office; and committees or Members may request comments on or assistance

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