Membership of the 97th Congress of the United States

 

January 3, 1981 to January 3, 1983

 

First Session:  January 5, 1981 to December 16, 1981

Second Session:  January 25, 1982 to December 23, 1982

 

Vice President of the United States: 

Walter F. Mondale (Minnesota)
George H. W. Bush (Texas), from January 20, 1981

President Pro Tempore of the Senate: 

J. Strom Thurmond (South Carolina)

Secretary of the Senate: 

William F. Hildenbrand (District of Columbia)

Sergeant at Arms of the Senate: 

Howard S. Liebengood (Virginia)

 

 

Speaker of the House of Representatives: 

Thomas P. O’Neill, Jr. (Massachusetts)

Clerk of the House: 

Edmund L. Henshaw, Jr. (Virginia)

Sergeant at Arms of the House: 

Benjamin J. Guthrie (Virginia)

Doorkeeper of the House: 

James T. Molloy (New York)

Postmaster of the House: 

Robert V. Rota (Pennsylvania)

 

Alabama

 

Senators

 

Howell T. Heflin (Dem.)

Jeremiah A. Denton (Rep.)

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

Jack Edwards (Rep.)

District 2:

William L. Dickinson (Rep.)

District 3:

William F. Nichols (Dem.)

District 4:

Tom Bevill (Dem.)

District 5:

Ronnie G. Flippo (Dem.)

District 6:

Albert L. Smith, Jr. (Rep.)

District 7:

Richard C. Shelby (Dem.)

 

Alaska

 

Senators

 

Theodore F. Stevens (Rep.)

Frank H. Murkowski (Rep.)

 

Representative At Large

 

Don E. Young (Rep.)

 

Arizona

 

Senators

 

Barry M. Goldwater (Rep.)

Dennis W. DeConcini (Dem.)

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

John J. Rhodes (Rep.)

District 2:

Morris K. Udall (Dem.)

District 3:

Robert L. Stump (Rep.)

District 4:

Eldon D. Rudd (Rep.)

 

Arkansas

 

Senators

 

Dale L. Bumpers (Dem.)

David H. Pryor (Dem.)

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

Bill Alexander, Jr. (Dem.)

District 2:

Ed Bethune (Rep.)

District 3:

John P. Hammerschmidt (Rep.)

District 4:

Beryl F. Anthony. Jr. (Dem.)

 

California

 

Senators

 

Alan M. Cranston

S. I. Hayakawa

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

Eugene A. Chappie

District 2:

Don H. Clausen

District 3:

Robert T. Matsui

District 4:

Victor H. Fazio, Jr.

District 5:

John L. Burton

District 6:

Phillip Burton

District 7:

George Miller

District 8:

Ron V. Dellums

District 9:

Fortney Y. Stark

District 10:

Don Edwards

District 11:

Thomas P. Lantos

District 12:

Pete McCluskey

District 13:

Norman Y. Mineta

District 14:

Norman D. Shumway

District 15:

Tony Coelho

District 16:

Leon E. Panetta

District 17:

Charles Pashayan, Jr.

District 18:

William M. Thomas

District 19:

Robert J. Lagomarsino

District 20:

Barry M. Goldwater, Jr.

District 21:

Bobbi Fiedler

District 22:

Carlos J. Moorhead

District 23:

Anthony C. Beilenson

District 24:

Henry A. Waxman

District 25:

Edward R. Roybal

District 26:

John H. Rousselot

District 27:

Robert K. Dornan

District 28:

Julian C. Dixon

District 29:

Augustus F. Hawkins

District 30:

George E. Danielson (resigned March 9, 1982 to become an associate justice of the California Court of Appeal, Second Appellate District, Division Three)

Matthew G. Martinez (elected to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of George E. Danielson; served from July 13, 1982)

District 31:

Mervyn M. Dymally

District 32:

Glenn M. Anderson

District 33:

Wayne R. Grisham

District 34:

Daniel E. Lungren

District 35:

David T. Dreier

District 36:

George E. Brown, Jr.

District 37:

Jerry Lewis

District 38:

Jerry M. Patterson

District 39:

William E. Dannemeyer

District 40:

Robert E. Badham

District 41:

William D. Lowery

District 42:

Duncan L. Hunter

District 43:

Clair W. Burgener

 

Colorado

 

Senators

 

Gary W. Hart

William L. Armstrong

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

Patricia S. Schroeder

District 2:

Timothy E. Wirth

District 3:

Raymond P. Kogovsek

District 4:

Hank Brown

District 5:

Kenneth B. Kramer

 

Connecticut

 

Senators

 

Lowell P. Weicker, Jr.

Christopher J. Dodd

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

William R. Cotter (died September 8, 1981)

Barbara B. Kennelly (elected to fill the vacancy caused by the death of William R. Cotter; served from January 12, 1982)

District 2:

Sam Gejdenson

District 3:

Lawrence DeNardis

District 4:

Stewart B. McKinney

District 5:

William R. Ratchford

District 6:

Nancy L. Johnson

 

Delaware

 

Senators

 

William V. Roth, Jr.

Joseph R. Biden

 

Representative At Large

 

Thomas B. Evans, Jr.

 

Florida

 

Senators

 

Lawton M. Chiles, Jr.

Paula Hawkins

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

Earl D. Hutto

District 2:

Don Fuqua

District 3:

Charles E. Bennett

District 4:

William V. Chappell, Jr.

District 5:

Bill McCollum

District 6:

Bill Young

District 7:

Sam M. Gibbons

District 8:

Andy Ireland

District 9:

Bill Nelson

District 10:

Louis A. Bafalis

District 11:

Daniel A. Mica

District 12:

E. Clay Shaw

District 13:

William Lehman

District 14:

Claude D. Pepper

District 15:

Dante B. Fascell

 

Georgia

 

Senators

 

Samuel A. Nunn

Mack F. Mattingly

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

Ronald B. Ginn

District 2:

Charles F. Hatcher

District 3:

Jack T. Brinkley

District 4:

Elliott H. Levitas

District 5:

Wyche Fowler, Jr.

District 6:

Newt L. Gingrich

District 7:

Larry P. McDonald

District 8:

Billy Lee Evans

District 9:

Edgar L. Jenkins

District 10:

Doug Barnard, Jr.

 

Hawaii

 

Senators

 

Daniel K. Inouye

Spark M. Matsunaga

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

Cecil L. Heftel

District 2:

Daniel K. Akaka

 

Idaho

 

Senators

 

James A. McClure

Steven D. Symms

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

Larry E. Craig

District 2:

George V. Hansen

 

Illinois

 

Senators

 

Charles H. Percy (Rep.)

Alan J. Dixon (Dem.)

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

Harold Washington (Dem.)

District 2:

Gus Savage (Dem.)

District 3:

Martin A. Russo (Dem.)

District 4:

Edward J. Derwinski (Rep.)

District 5:

John G. Fary (Dem.)

District 6:

Henry J. Hyde (Rep.)

District 7:

Cardiss Collins (Dem.)

District 8:

Daniel D. Rostenkowski (Dem.)

District 9:

Sidney R. Yates (Dem.)

District 10:

John Edward Porter (Rep.)

District 11:

Frank Annunzio (Dem.)

District 12:

Philip M. Crane (Rep.)

District 13:

Robert McClory (Rep.)

District 14:

John N. Erlenborn (Rep.)

District 15:

Thomas J. Corcoran (Rep.)

District 16:

Lynn M. Martin (Rep.)

District 17:

George M. O'Brien (Rep.)

District 18:

Robert H. Michel (Rep.)

District 19:

Thomas F. Railsback (Rep.)

District 20:

Paul Findley (Rep.)

District 21:

Edward R. Madigan (Rep.)

District 22:

Daniel B. Crane (Rep.)

District 23:

Melvin Price (Dem.)

District 24:

Paul M. Simon (Dem.)

 

Indiana

 

Senators

 

Richard G. Lugar

Dan Quayle

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

Adam Benjamin, Jr. (died September 7, 1982)

Katie Beatrice Hall (elected to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Adam Benjamin; served from November 2, 1982)

District 2:

Floyd J. Fithian

District 3:

John P. Hiler

District 4:

Dan Coates

District 5:

Elwood H. Hillis

District 6:

David W. Evans

District 7:

John T. Myers

District 8:

H. Joel Deckard

District 9:

Lee H. Hamilton

District 10:

Philip R. Sharp

District 11:

Andrew Jacobs, Jr.

 

Iowa

 

Senators

 

Roger W. Jepsen

Charles E. Grassley

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

James A. S. Leach

District 2:

Thomas J. Tauke

District 3:

T. Cooper Evans

District 4:

Neal E. Smith

District 5:

Thomas R. Harkin

District 6:

Berkley W. Bedell

 

Kansas

 

Senators

 

Robert J. Dole

Nancy L. Kassenbaum

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

Pat Roberts

District 2:

James E. Jeffries

District 3:

Larry Winn, Jr.

District 4:

Daniel R. Glickman

District 5:

Robert R. Whittaker

 

Kentucky

 

Senators

 

Walter D. Huddleston

Wendell H. Ford

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

Carroll Hubbard, Jr.

District 2:

William H. Natcher

District 3:

Romano L. Mazzoli

District 4:

Gene Snyder

District 5:

Harold Rogers

District 6:

Larry J. Hopkins

District 7:

Carl D. Perkins

 

Louisiana

 

Senators

 

Russell B. Long

J. Bennett Johnston, Jr.

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

Robert L. Livingston, Jr.

District 2:

Corinne C. Boggs

District 3:

Billy Tauzin

District 4:

Buddy Roemer

District 5:

Thomas J. Huckaby

District 6:

W. Henson Moore III

District 7:

John B. Breaux

District 8:

Gillis W. Long

 

Maine

 

Senators

 

William S. Cohen

George J. Mitchell

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

David F. Emery

District 2:

Olympia J. Snowe

 

Maryland

 

Senators

 

Charles McC. Mathias

Paul S. Sarbanes

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

Roy P. Dyson

District 2:

Clarence D. Long

District 3:

Barbara A. Mikulski

District 4:

Marjorie S. Holt

District 5: Gladys N. Spellman (seat declared vacant February 24, 1981)
Steny H. Hoyer (elected to fill the vacancy created by H. R. 80, which declared Gladys N. Spellman’s seat vacant due to an incapacitating illness; served from May 19, 1981)
District 6:

Beverly B. B. Byron

District 7:

Parren J. Mitchell

District 8:

Michael D. Barnes

 

Massachusetts

 

Senators

 

Edward M. Kennedy

Paul E. Tsongas

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

Silvio O. Conte

District 2:

Edward P. Boland

District 3:

Joseph D. Early

District 4:

Barney Frank

District 5:

James M. Shannon

District 6:

Nicholas J. Mavroules

District 7:

Edward J. Markey

District 8:

Thomas P. O'Neill

District 9:

Joe Moakley

District 10:

Margaret M. Heckler

District 11:

Brian Donnelly

District 12:

Gerry E. Studds

 

Michigan

 

Senators

 

Donald W. Riegle, Jr.

Carl M. Levin

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

John Conyers, Jr.

District 2:

Carl D. Pursell

District 3:

Howard E. Wolpe

District 4:

David Stockman (resigned January 27, 1981 to become  Director of the Office of Management and Budget)

Mark D. Siljander (elected to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of David Stockman; served from April 21, 1981)

District 5:

Harold S. Sawyer

District 6:

Jim Dunn

District 7:

Dale E. Kildee

District 8:

J. Bob Traxler

District 9:

Guy Vander Jagt

District 10:

Donald J. Abosta

District 11:

Robert W. Davis

District 12:

David E. Bonior

District 13:

George W. Crockett, Jr.

District 14:

Dennis M. Hertel

District 15:

William D. Ford

District 16:

John D. Dingell, Jr.

District 17:

William N. Brodhead

District 18:

James J. Blanchard

District 19:

William S. Broomfield

 

Minnesota

 

Senators

 

David F. Durenberger

Rudy E. Boschwitz

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

Arlen I. Erdahl

District 2:

Tom Hagedorn

District 3:

Bill Frenzel

District 4:

Bruce F. Vento

District 5:

Martin O. Sabo

District 6:

Vin Weber

District 7:

Arlan I. Stangeland

District 8:

James L. Oberstar

 

Mississippi

 

Senators

 

John C. Stennis

Thad Cochrane

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

Jamie L. Whitten

District 2:

David R. Bowen

District 3:

Sonny Montgomery

District 4:

Jon C. Hinson (resigned April 13, 1981 after being arrested in a men's restroom in the House of Representatives and charged with oral sodomy)

Wayne Dowdy (elected to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Jon C. Hinson; served from July 7, 1981)

District 5:

Trent Lott

 

Missouri

 

Senators

 

Thomas F. Eagleton

John C. Danforth

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

William L. Clay, Sr.

District 2:

Robert A. Young III

District 3:

Richard A. Gephardt

District 4:

Ike Skelton

District 5:

Richard W. Bolling

District 6:

E. Thomas Coleman

District 7:

Gene Taylor

District 8:

R. Wendell Bailey

District 9:

Harold L. Volkmer

District 10:

Bill Emerson

 

Montana

 

Senators

 

John Melcher

Max S. Baucus

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

Pat Williams

District 2:

Roy Marlenee

 

Nebraska

 

Senators

 

Edward Zorinsky

J. James Exon

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

Doug Bereuter

District 2:

Hal Daub, Jr.

District 3:

Virginia D. Smith

 

Nevada

 

Senators

 

Howard W. Cannon

Paul D. Laxalt

 

Representative At Large

 

James D. Santini

 

New Hampshire

 

Senators

 

Gordon J. Humphrey

Warren B. Rudman

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

Norman E. D'Amours

District 2:

Judd Gregg

 

New Jersey

 

Senators

 

Harrison A. Williams, Jr. (resigned March 11, 1982 during Senate proceedings on his expulsion after his conviction on charges resulting from the Abscam investigation)

William W. Bradley

Nicholas F. Brady (appointed on April 12, 1982, as a Republican to the United States Senate to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Harrison A. Williams, Jr.; served from April 12, 1982; resigned December 20, 1982)

Frank H. Lautenberg (elected for the six-year term commencing January 3, 1983; subsequently appointed to complete the unexpired term of Nicholas F. Brady; served from December 27, 1982)

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

James J. Florio

District 2:

William J. Hughes

District 3:

James J. Howard

District 4:

Christopher H. Smith

District 5:

Millicent H. Fenwick

District 6:

Edwin B. Forsythe

District 7:

Marge Roukema

District 8:

Robert A. Roe

District 9:

Harold C. Hollenbeck

District 10:

Peter W. Rodino, Jr.

District 11:

Joseph G. Minish

District 12:

Matthew J. Rinaldo

District 13:

Jim Courter

District 14:

Frank J. Guarini, Jr.

District 15:

Bernard J. Dwyer

 

New Mexico

 

Senators

 

Pete V. Domenici

Harrison H. Schmitt

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

Manuel Lujan

District 2:

Joseph R. Skeen

 

New York

 

Senators

 

Daniel Patrick Moynihan (Dem.)

Alfonse M. D'Amato (Rep.)

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

William Carney (Rep.)

District 2:

Thomas J. Downey (Dem.)

District 3:

Gregory W. Carman (Rep.)

District 4:

Norman F. Lent (Rep.-Cons.)

District 5:

Raymond J. McGrath (Rep.)

District 6:

John LeBoutillier (Rep.)

District 7:

Joseph P. Addabbo (Dem.)

District 8:

Benjamin S. Rosenthal (Dem.)

District 9:

Geraldine Ferraro (Dem.)

District 10:

Mario Biaggi (Dem.)

District 11:

James H. Scheuer (Dem.-Lib.)

District 12:

Shirley A. Chisholm (Dem.)

District 13:

Stephen J. Solarz (Dem.)

District 14:

Frederick. W. Richmond (Dem.) (resigned August 25, 1982 after pleading guilty to charges of tax evasion, marijuana possession and improper payments to a federal employee)

District 15:

Leo C. Zeferetti (Dem.)

District 16:

Charles E. Schumer (Dem.)

District 17:

Guy V. Molinari (Rep.)

District 18:

Bill Green (Rep.)

District 19:

Charles B. Rangel (Dem.)

District 20:

Theodore S. Weiss (Dem.)

District 21:

Robert Garcia (Dem.)

District 22:

Jonathan B. Bingham (Dem.)

District 23:

Peter A. Peyser (Dem.)

District 24:

Richard Ottinger (Dem.)

District 25:

Hamilton Fish (Rep.)

District 26:

Benjamin A. Gilman (Rep.)

District 27:

Matthew F. McHugh (Rep.)

District 28:

Samuel S. Stratton (Dem.)

District 29:

Gerald B. H. Solomon (Rep.)

District 30:

David O'B. Martin (Rep.)

District 31:

Donald J. Mitchell (Rep.)

District 32:

George C. Wortley (Rep.)

District 33:

Gary A. Lee (Rep.)

District 34:

Frank J. Horton (Rep.)

District 35:

Barber B. Conable (Rep.)

District 36:

John J. LaFalce (Dem.)

District 37:

Henry J. Nowak (Dem.)

District 38:

Jack F. Kemp (Rep.)

District 39:

Stanley N. Lundine (Dem.)

 

North Carolina

 

Senators

 

Jesse Helms

John P. East

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

Walter B. Jones

District 2:

Lawrence H. Fountain

District 3:

Charles O. Whitely

District 4:

Ike F. Andrews

District 5:

Stephen L. Neal

District 6:

Walter E. Johnston III

District 7:

Charlie Rose

District 8:

W. G. "Bill" Hefner

District 9:

James G. Martin

District 10:

James T. Broyhill

District 11:

William M. Hendon

 

North Dakota

 

Senators

 

Quentin N. Burdick

Mark Andrews

 

Representative At Large

 

Byron L. Dorgan

 

Ohio

 

Senators

 

John H. Glenn, Jr. (Dem.)

Howard M. Metzenbaum (Dem.)

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

Willis D. Gradison, Jr. (Rep.)

District 2:

Thomas A. Luken (Dem.)

District 3:

Tony P. Hall (Dem.)

District 4:

Tennyson Guyer (Rep.) (died April 12, 1981)

Michael G. Oxley (Rep.) (elected to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Tennyson Guyer; served from June 25, 1981)

District 5:

Delbert Latta (Rep.)

District 6:

Bob McEwen (Rep.)

District 7:

Clarence J. Brown, Jr. (Rep.)

District 8:

Thomas N. Kindness (Rep.)

District 9:

Edward F. Weber (Rep.)

District 10:

Clarence E. Miller (Rep.)

District 11:

J. William Stanton (Rep.)

District 12:

Robert N. Shamansky (Dem.)

District 13:

Donald J. Pease (Dem.)

District 14:

John F. Seiberling (Dem.)

District 15:

Chalmers P. Wylie (Rep.)

District 16:

Ralph S. Regula (Rep.)

District 17:

John M. Ashbrook (Rep.) (died April 24, 1982)

Jean S. Ashbrook (Rep.) (elected to fill the vacancy caused by the death of her husband, John M. Ashbrook; served from June 29, 1982)

District 18:

Douglas E. Applegate (Dem.)

District 19:

Lyle Williams (Rep.)

District 20:

Mary Rose Oakar (Dem.)

District 21:

Louis Stokes (Dem.)

District 22:

Dennis E. Eckart (Dem.)

District 23:

Ronald M. Mottl (Dem.)

 

Oklahoma

 

Senators

 

David L. Boren

Don L. Nickles

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

James R. Jones

District 2:

Mike Synar

District 3:

Wes Watkins

District 4:

David K. McCurdy

District 5:

Mickey Edwards

District 6:

Glenn English

 

Oregon

 

Senators

 

Mark O. Hatfield

Robert W. Packwood

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

Les AuCoin

District 2:

Denny Smith

District 3:

Ron Wyden

District 4:

James H. Weaver

 

Pennsylvania

 

Senators

 

H. John Heinz III (Rep.)

Arlen J. Specter (Rep.)

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

Thomas M. Folgietta (Dem.)

District 2:

William H. Gray III (Dem.)

District 3:

Raymond F. Lederer (Dem.) (resigned April 29, 1981 during House proceedings on his expulsion after his conviction on charges resulting from the Abscam investigation)

Joseph F. Smith (Dem.) (elected to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Raymond F. Lederer; served from July 21, 1981)

District 4:

Charles F. Dougherty (Rep.)

District 5:

Richard T. Schulze (Rep.)

District 6:

Gus Yatron (Dem.)

District 7:

Robert W. Edgar (Dem.)

District 8:

James K. Coyne III (Rep.)

District 9:

Bud Shuster (Rep.)

District 10:

Joseph M. McDade (Rep.)

District 11:

James L. Nelligan (Rep.)

District 12:

John P. Murtha (Dem.)

District 13:

R. Lawrence Coughlin (Rep.)

District 14:

William J. Coyne (Dem.)

District 15:

Don Ritter (Rep.)

District 16:

Robert S. Walker (Rep.)

District 17:

Allen E. Ertel (Dem.)

District 18:

Doug Walgren (Dem.)

District 19:

William F. Goodling (Rep.)

District 20:

Joseph M. Gaydos (Dem.)

District 21:

Donald A. Bailey (Dem.)

District 22:

Austin J. Murphy (Dem.)

District 23:

William F. Clinger, Jr. (Rep.)

District 24:

Marc L. Marks (Rep.)

District 25:

Eugene V. Atkinson (Dem.)

 

Rhode Island

 

Senators

 

Claiborne B. Pell

John H. Chaffee

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

Fernand G. St. Germain

District 2:

Claudine Schneider

 

South Carolina

 

Senators

 

J. Strom Thurmond

Ernest F. Hollings

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

Tommy Hartnett

District 2:

Floyd D. Spence

District 3:

Butler C. Derrick

District 4:

Carroll A. Campbell, Jr.

District 5:

Kenneth L. Holland

District 6:

John L. Napier

 

South Dakota

 

Senators

 

Larry L. Pressler

James Abdnor

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

Thomas A. Daschle

District 2:

Clint R. Roberts

 

Tennessee

 

Senators

 

Howard H. Baker, Jr.

James R. Sasser

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

James H. Quillen

District 2:

John J. Duncan

District 3:

Marilyn L. Lloyd

District 4:

Albert A. Gore, Jr.

District 5:

William H. Boner

District 6:

Robin L. Beard, Jr.

District 7:

Ed Jones

District 8:

Harold E. Ford

 

Texas

 

Senators

 

John G. Tower

Lloyd M. Bentsen, Jr.

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

Sam B. Hall, Jr.

District 2:

Charles Wilson

District 3:

James M. Collins

District 4:

Ralph M. Hall

District 5:

Jim Mattox

District 6:

Phil Gramm

District 7:

Bill Archer

District 8:

Jack Fields

District 9:

Jack Brooks

District 10:

Jake Pickle

District 11:

Marvin Leath

District 12:

James C. Wright, Jr.

District 13:

Jack Hightower

District 14:

William N. Patman

District 15:

Kika de la Garza

District 16:

Richard C. White

District 17:

Charles W. Stenholm

District 18:

Mickey Leland

District 19:

Kent Hance

District 20:

Henry B. Gonzalez

District 21:

Tom Loeffler

District 22:

Ron Paul

District 23:

Abraham Kazen, Jr.

District 24:

Martin Frost

 

Utah

 

Senators

 

Jake Garn

Orrin G. Hatch

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

James V. Hansen

District 2:

David D. Marriott

 

Vermont

 

Senators

 

Robert T. Stafford

Patrick J. Leahy

 

Representative At Large

 

James M. Jeffords

 

Virginia

 

Senators

 

Harry F. Byrd, Jr.

John W. Warner 

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

Paul S. Trible Jr.

District 2:

G. William Whitehurst

District 3:

Thomas J. Bliley, Jr.

District 4:

Robert W. Daniel

District 5:

Dan Daniel

District 6:

Manley C. Butler

District 7:

James K. Robinson

District 8:

Stanford E. Parris

District 9:

William C. Wampler

District 10:

Frank R. Wolf

 

Washington

 

Senators

 

Henry M. Jackson

T. Slade Gorton

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

Joel M. Pritchard

District 2:

Al Swift

District 3:

Don L. Bonker

District 4:

Sid Morrison

District 5:

Thomas S. Foley

District 6:

Norman D. Dicks

District 7:

Mike Lowry

 

West Virginia

 

Senators

 

Jennings Randolph

Robert C. Byrd

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

Robert H. Mollohan

District 2:

Cleveland K. Benedict

District 3:

Mick Staton

District 4:

Nick Joe Rahall II

 

Wisconsin

 

Senators

 

William Proxmire

Robert W. Kasten, Jr.

 

Representatives

 

District 1:

Les Aspin

District 2:

Robert W. Kastenmeier

District 3:

Steve Gunderson

District 4:

Clement J. Zablocki

District 5:

Henry S. Reuss

District 6:

Thomas E. Petri

District 7:

David R. Obey

District 8:

Toby Roth

District 9:

F. James Sensenbrenner

 

Wyoming

 

Senators

 

Malcolm Wallop

Alan K. Simpson

 

Representative At Large

 

Richard B. Cheney

 
American Samoa
 

Delegate

 
Fofó I. F. Sunia
 

District of Columbia

 

Delegate

 

Walter E. Fauntroy

 

Guam

 

Delegate

 

Antonio Borja Won Pat

 

Puerto Rico

 

Resident Commissioner

 

Baltasar Corrada-del Rio

 

Virgin Islands

 

Delegate

 

Ron de Lugo