[Barbara Jordan Scrapbook, July - September, 1974] Page: 14 of 236
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28 E jangtt0 rtn
Part I-Wed., July 24, 1974
PANELISTS
Continued from 27th Page
was captured by the Ger-
mans. He was graduated
from the Rutgers law
school in 1948, and was
elected to the New Jersey
state Senate in 1955, serv-
ing until his election to
Congress.
From the outset of the
inquiry he has not com-
mented on impeachment,
holding it would be impro-
per to prejudge. He is be-
lieved to be a vote for the
President.
Tom Railsback (Ill).,
41, a moderate who has
been one of the most visi-
ble and talkative Republi-
cans throughout the in-
quiry. Considered one of
the most likely Republi-
can votes for impeach-
ment, he has played the
role of peacemaker when
partisanship has flared in
the committee, causing ob-
servers to liken his perfor-
mance to the role played
in the Senate Watergate
hearings by Sen. Howard
H. Baker Jr. (R-Tenn.). He
has said polls in his dis-
trict indicate his impeach-
ment vote will not be cata-
strophic, whichever way it
goes.
Elected to Congress in
1966, he represents Rock
Island County, a farm-ma-
c h i n ery manufacturing
center. Railsback has en-
joyed labor support, and
his rating by COPE is the
second-highest among the
committee Republicans.
Charles E. W i g g in s
(Calif.), 46, a conservative
who represents much of
President Nixon's ol d
House district but who
will seek reelection in
November in a new Or-
ange County district. Con-
sidered one of the sharpest
legal minds on the com-
mittee, he has been the
mpst effective anti - im-
peachment force through-
out the inquiry.
Apparently trying to
make wavering Republi-
cans hold fast, he said re-
cently, "I don't see how
any Republican on the
committee can vote for im-
peachment b a s e d on this
f i i m s y, inferential evi-
dence."
Even if the President is
shown to have continued a
technically impeachable
offense, Wiggins believes,
it still might not be in the
national interest to re-
move him from office.
Wiggins was elected to
theHouse in 1966 and has
since been reflected by
votes of more than 60%.
-David W. Dennis
(nd.), 61, a blunt, comba-
tive conservative wvh o
says he has not closed the
door on his decision but
still leans toward a vote
against impeachment. De-
scribed by a committee col-
league as a "bantam roost-
er," Dennis has been one
of themost active voices
in the committee's closed
deliberations.A graduate of Harvard
law school, he is an exper-
ienced trial attorney and
f o r m e r prosecutor. He
served as an Army lawyer
in World War II before re-
turning to Indiana to prac-
tice law and run for the
stateLegislature. Elected
to Congress in 1968, Den-
nis represents a district
that once was agricultural
and republican, but whose
voters now are nearly 50%
blue-collar workers. He
supported the Nixon Ad-
ministration with 76% of
his votes in 1973.
Hamilton Fish Jr.
(N.Y.), 48, great-grandson
of President Ulysses S.
Grant's secretary of state
and the grandson and son
of members of the House.
Last May his f a t h e r
signed a newspaper adver-
tisement 'asking, "What
crime has our great Pres-
ident committed to war-
rant the abuse heaped
upon by lunatics, liberals,
and bloodthirsty haters
?" Fish says of his
father, "He's an unrecon-
structed Nixon man."
Considered one of the
Republicans w h o m a y
vote against Mr. Nixon,
Fish has said the issue be-
ing decided is "contempt
of the Constitution."
Fish attended Harvard
University, served as a
vice consul in the Foreign
Service and earned his law
degree from New York
University before entering
law practice in New York
City. He won his first con-
Please Turn to Pg. 29, Col. 1
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[Barbara Jordan Scrapbook, July - September, 1974], book, 1974; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth616583/m1/14/: accessed May 22, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Texas Southern University.