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[Clerk's note. The agency provided these program and financing, object class and personnel summary tables to the Subcommittee. Please check the appendix to the Budget of the United States Government, Fiscal Year 1999, for any changes that may have been made subsequent to the

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Comparative Summary of Appropriation and Appropriation Estimates, Table I Summary of Full Time Equivalents (FTE), Table II Summary of Agency Request, Schedule D

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Total Funds Available - All Sources

Number of FTES by Source of Funds, Fiscal Year 1998

Statement of Receipts, Treasury Department General Fund Account

New FTEs Requested by Grade Level

Glossary of Price Level (Inflation) Increases

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Human Resources Services

78

Integrated Support Services

82

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Licensing Division ....

Copyright Arbitration Royalty Panel (CARP)

Salaries and Expenses, Congressional Research Service

Salaries and Expenses, Books for the Blind and Physically Handicapped

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Appropriated/Gift and Trust Funds

Acquisition of Library Materials

Research, Reader and Reference Services

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Organization of the Collections

Public Programs

Service Fee Accounts - Revolving

Justification Supplement - Capital Improvement Projects Through the Architect of the Capitol

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The Library of Congress will be 200 years old on April 24 in the year 2000, the oldest Federal cultural institution in the
country. With congressional support and direction, the Library has developed a massive collection of more than 113 million items,
a superbly knowledgeable staff, and cost-effective networks for gathering in the world's knowledge for the nation's good.

The Library has a proven record of making knowledge and information accessible to users everywhere -- evidenced by the
exponential rate of growth in the Library's Internet transactions and the wide public acclaim of its website. The Library directly
serves not only the Congress but the entire nation with the most important commodity of our time: information. The Library's
critical role as a trusted knowledge navigator for the Congress and the nation is made more important than ever by the growing
flood of unsorted information available today.

The Library's mission is to make its resources available and useful to the Congress and the American people and to
sustain and preserve a universal collection of knowledge and creativity for future generations. The Library's first priority is to
make knowledge available and useful to the United States Congress. This primary purpose can be realized only if the Library
continues to acquire, organize, preserve, secure, and sustain its incomparable collections for present and future use. These are the
top priorities in the Library's 1997-2004 Strategic Plan (see attachment 1), closely followed by the imperative to make the Library's
unique collections and resources maximally accessible to the American people.

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