SOUTH CAROLINA 41 Factors, Individuals, and Information that Counts.
In the 107th Congress -
[41]                         


[Page 236-242]


[[Page 236]]
 
                             SOUTH CAROLINA

                      (Population 2000, 4,012,012)

                                SENATORS

    STROM THURMOND, Republican, of Aiken, SC; attorney and educator; 
committees: senior member, Senate Armed Services Committee; senior 
member, Judiciary; senior member, Veterans' Affairs. Family: born 
December 5, 1902, in Edgefield, SC; son of John William and Eleanor 
Gertrude (Strom) Thurmond; married Jean Crouch, 1947 (deceased January 
6, 1960); married Nancy Moore, 1968; four children: Nancy Moore 
(deceased April 14, 1993), James Strom II, Juliana Gertrude, and Paul 
Reynolds. Education: 1923 graduate of Clemson University; studied law at 
night under his father, admitted to South Carolina bar, 1930, and 
admitted to practice in all federal courts, including the U.S. Supreme 
Court. Professional career: teacher and athletic coach (1923-29), county 
superintendent of education (1929-33), city attorney and county attorney 
(1930-38), State Senator (1933-38), circuit judge (1938-46), Governor of 
South Carolina (1947-51), serving as chairman of Southern Governors 
Conference (1950); practiced law in Edgefield, SC (1930-38) and in 
Aiken, SC (1951-55); adjunct professor of political science at Clemson 
University and distinguished lecturer at the Strom Thurmond Institute; 
member, President's Commission on Organized Crime and Commission on the 
Bicentennial of the Constitution. Military service: Reserve officer for 
36 years; while serving as judge, volunteered for active duty in World 
War II the day war was declared against Germany; served with 
Headquarters First Army (1942-46), American, European, and Pacific 
theaters; participated in Normandy invasion with 82nd Airborne Division 
and landed on D-day; awarded 5 battle stars and 18 decorations, medals, 
and awards, including the Legion of Merit with Oak Leaf Cluster, Bronze 
Star Medal with ``V'', Purple Heart, Belgian Order of the Crown, and 
French Croix de Guerre; major general, U.S. Army Reserves. Honors and 
awards: past national president of Reserve Officers Association (ROA) of 
the United States (1954-55); Clemson University Alumni Association 
Distinguished Service Award (1961), Clemson Medallion (1981) and Clemson 
University Athletic Hall of Fame (1983); Disabled American Veterans 
Outstanding and Unselfish Service Awards (1964 and 1981); Military Order 
of World Wars Distinguished Service Award (1964); Order of AHEPA 
Dedicated Public Service Award (1968); WIS Radio-TV (Columbia, SC) 
``South Carolinian of the Year'' (1968); 33rd degree Mason (1969); first 
president of ROA to receive ``Minuteman of the Year Award'' (1971); 
Noncommissioned Officers Association L. Mendel Rivers Award for 
Legislative Action (1971); Congressional Medal of Honor Society National 
Patriots Award (1974); The Retired Officers Association Distinguished 
Service Award (1974); Association of U.S. Army Distinguished Service 
Citation (1974); American Legion Distinguished Public Service Award 
(1975); Medal of the Knesset, Israel (1982); Distinguished Service Medal 
(1984); Military Order of the Purple Heart Congressional Award (1976); 
AMVETS Silver Helmet Congressional Award (1977); Veterans of Foreign 
Wars Dwight D. Eisenhower Service Award (1977) and Congressional Award 
(1985); Touchdown Club of Washington, DC, ``Mr. Sam'' Award for 
contributions to sports (1978); South Carolina Trial Lawyers Association 
Service Award (1980); Navy League of U.S. Meritorious Service Citation 
(1980); American Judges Association Distinguished Service Citation 
(1981); South Carolina Hall of Fame (1982); Audie Murphy Patriotism 
Award (1982); National Guard Association of United States, Harry S. 
Truman Distinguished Service Award (1982); New York Board of Trade 
``Textile Man of the Year'' (1984); Napoleon Hill Gold Medal 
Humanitarian Achievement Award (1985); Order of the Palmetto Award; 
Presidential Citizens Medal by President Ronald Reagan, 1989; 
Noncommissioned Officers Association Lifetime Legislative Achievement 
Award, 1990; Adjutants General Association of the United States, George 
Washington Freedom Award, 1991; U.S. Marshals Service America's Star 
Award, 1991; ROA; Presidential Medal of Freedom by President George 
Bush, 1992; over 20 honorary degrees; numerous Watchdog of the Treasury 
awards and Guardian of Small Business awards. International awards: 
Order of Distinguished Diplomatic Service Merit Medal, South Korea 
(1974); Order of Kim Khanh Award, Republic of Vietnam (1975); Grand 
Cross in the Order of Orange-Nassau, the Netherlands (1982); numerous 
other distinctions; U.S. Army Ranger Hall of Fame Medal (1994); Senior 
Army Reserve Commanders Association Hall of Fame Medal (1995). Named in 
his honor: Thurmond Hall at Winthrop College, SC (1939); Strom Thurmond 
High School, Edgefield County, SC (1961); Strom Thurmond Student Center, 
Charleston Southern University at Charleston, SC (1972); Strom Thurmond 
Federal Building, Columbia, SC (1975); The Strom Thurmond Institute of 
Government and Public Affairs at The Strom Thurmond Center for 
Excellence in Government and Public Service at Clemson University, 
Clemson, SC (1981); Strom Thurmond Chairs and Scholarships (1981), and 
Strom Thurmond Auditorium (1982) at University of South Carolina School 
of Law, Columbia, SC; life-sized statue erected on Edgefield town square 
by people of Edgefield County, SC (1984), and on streets in several 
South Carolina cities; Strom Thurmond Lake, Dam and Highway, Clarks 
Hill, SC, 1987; Strom Thurmond Mall, Columbia, SC, 1988; has endowed 52 
scholarships at 45 colleges and universities, and established the Strom 


[[Page 237]]
Thurmond Foundation, which assists in educating 80 to 100 needy, worthy 
students annually; Strom Thurmond Soldier Service Center, Fort Jackson, 
Columbia, SC, 1991; Strom Thurmond Room, U.S. Capitol, 1991; Strom 
Thurmond Highway (Interstate 20 from the Georgia Line to Florence, SC), 
1992; Strom Thurmond Biomedical Research Center, Medical University of 
South Carolina, Charleston, SC (1993); Strom Thurmond National Guard 
Armory, Edgefield, SC (1994); Strom Thurmond Defense Finance and 
Accounting Building, Charleston, SC, 1995; Strom Thurmond Monument, 
Columbia, SC, December 4, 1999; Memberships and affiliations: Baptist; 
Shriner; South Carolina and American bar associations; numerous defense, 
veterans, civic, fraternal, and farm organizations. Political 
activities: States Rights Democratic candidate for president of the 
United States (1948), carrying four states and receiving 39 electoral 
votes; delegate to six Democratic national conventions (chairman of 
South Carolina delegation and national committeeman, 1948); switched 
from Democratic to Republican Party (September 16, 1964); delegate to 
five Republican national conventions (chairman of South Carolina 
delegation, 1984); elected to the U.S. Senate, November 2, 1954, as a 
write-in candidate (first person in U.S. history elected to a major 
office in this manner) for term ending January 3, 1961; resigned as U.S. 
Senator April 4, 1956, to place the office in a primary, pursuant to a 
promise made to the people during the 1954 campaign; renominated and 
reelected to the Senate in 1956, resuming duties on November 7, 1956; 
reelected for each succeeding term; served as President pro tempore of 
the U.S. Senate, 1981-87, 1995-2001, and January 20-June 6, 2001; named 
President Pro Tempore Emeritus, June 6, 2001.


                  Office Listings

      http://www.senate.gov/~thumond    senator@thurmond.senate.gov

217 Russell Senate Office Building, Washington, DC        (202) 224-5972
 20510-4001............................................
  Chief of Staff.--R.J. (Duke) Short.
  Executive Assistant.--Holly Richardson.
  Press Secretary.--Genevieve Erny.
Thurmond Federal Building, 18365 Assembly Street,         (803) 765-5494
 Columbia, SC 29201....................................
  State Director.--Warren Abernathy.
Federal Building, 211 York Street NE, Aiken, SC 29801..   (803) 649-2591
Federal Building, 334 Meeting Street, Charleston, SC      (803) 727-4596
 29501.................................................
McMillan Federal Building, 401 West Evans Street,         (803) 662-8873
 Florence, SC 29501....................................


                                 *  *  *

    ERNEST F. HOLLINGS, Democrat, of Charleston, SC; born in Charleston, 
January 1, 1922; son of Wilhelmine Meyer and Adolph G. Hollings; 
graduated, The Citadel, B.A., 1942; University of South Carolina, LL.B., 
1947; LL.D. The Citadel, June 1959; lawyer; member of Charleston County, 
South Carolina, and American bar associations; admitted to practice 
before South Carolina Supreme Court, U.S. District Court, U.S. Circuit 
Court of Appeals, U.S. Tax Court, U.S. Customs Court, and U.S. Supreme 
Court; member, St. John's Lutheran Church; member, Court of 
Adjudication, Lutheran Church in America; Armed Forces, 1942-45, served 
overseas from Africa to Austria, 33 months; 353rd Antiaircraft 
Artillery; 3rd, 36th, and 45th Divisions, captain; member, highest honor 
society at The Citadel--The Round Table; president of the alumni (the 
Association of Citadel Men), 1954; at the University of South Carolina 
Law School--member, Honor Society, Wig and Robe, South Carolina Law 
Review, and president of Law Federation; honorary doctor of letters 
degree, Benedict College, Columbia, SC, 1971; Charleston Junior Chamber 
of Commerce Distinguished Service Award as Young Man of the Year, 1953; 
U.S. Junior Chamber of Commerce, one of ten Outstanding Young Men of the 
United States, 1954; South Carolina Veteran of the Year, 1957; member, 
Hibernian Society, Arion Society, Sertoma Club; Charleston Rifle Club; 
Mason, LeCandeur No. 36, AFM; Shriner, Omar Temple; BPOE Lodge No. 242; 
American Legion, Post No. 10; Charleston Chamber of Commerce; Veterans 
of Foreign Wars; Captain John L. Weeks Post No. 3142; elected to South 
Carolina General Assembly from Charleston County, 1948, 1950, and 1952; 
chairman, Charleston County legislative delegation; speaker pro tempore, 
South Carolina House of Representatives; elected twice by unanimous 
vote, 1951, 1953; elected lieutenant governor, November 2, 1954; elected 
governor, November 4, 1958; served as Governor, 1959-63; appointed to 
Hoover Commission May 15, 1955; appointed by President Eisenhower to 
Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental Relations, December 1959; 
reappointed by President Kennedy, February 1962; chairman, Regional 
Advisory Council on Nuclear Energy; instituted technical training 
program in South Carolina, Nuclear Space Commission, and Commission on 
Higher Education; married to the former Rita Louise Liddy of Charleston, 
SC; four children: Michael Milhous, Helen Hayne, Patricia Salley, and 
Ernest Frederick Hollings III; author of ``The Case Against Hunger--A 
Demand for a National Policy,'' 1970; elected to the U.S. Senate, 
November 8, 1966, to complete the unexpired term of the late Senator 
Olin D. Johnston; elected to full six-year term on November 5, 1968; 
reelected in 1974, 1980, 1986, 1992, and 1998; chairman, Commerce, 
Science, and Transportation Committee; other committee assignments: 
Appropriations; Budget.


[[Page 238]]
                  Office Listings
     http://www.senate.gov/~hollings    senator@hollings.senate.gov

125 Russell Senate Office Building, Washington, DC        (202) 224-6121
 20510-4002............................................
  Chief of Staff.--Joab Lesesne.
  Executive Assistant.--Betty Pittleman.
  State Assistant.--Trip King III.
  Appointments Secretary.--Robin McCain.
  Press Secretary.--Andy Davis.
Room 1551, 1835 Assembly Street, Columbia, SC 29201....   (803) 765-5731
Custom House, Suite 112, 200 East Bay Street,             (843) 727-4525
 Charleston, SC 29401..................................
126 Federal Building, Greenville, SC 29603.............   (864) 233-5366



                             REPRESENTATIVES

                             FIRST DISTRICT

    HENRY E. BROWN, Jr., Republican, of Hanahan, SC; born on December 
20, 1935, in Lee County, SC; education: Berkeley High School; Baptist 
College; and The Citadel; occupation: Businessman; Piggly Wiggly 
Carolina Co., Inc.; helped develop the Lowcountry Investment Corp.; 
awards: National Republican Legislator of the Year; South Carolina 
Taxpayers Watchdog Award; South Carolina Association of Realtors 
Legislator of the Year; honorary degree, Doctor of Business 
Administration, The Citadel; family: married to Billye; three children; 
public service: Hanahan City Council, 1981-85; South Carolina House of 
Representatives, 1985-2000; elected to the 107th Congress on November 7, 
2000.


                  Office Listings

                     http://www.house.gov/henrybrown

1017 Longworth House Office Building, Washington, DC      (202) 225-3176
 20515-4001............................................
  Chief of Staff.--Stovall Witte.
  Legislative Director.--Sam Willett.
  Press Secretary.--Britton Clarke.
5900 Core Avenue, Charleston, SC 29406.................   (843) 747-4175
  District Director.--Kathy Crawford.


Counties: Berkeley (part), Charleston (part), Dorchester (part), 
        Georgetown, Horry. Population (1990), 581,125.
ZIP Codes: 29018 (part), 29081 (part), 29082 (part), 29401-12, 29414-15, 
        29417-18, 29426-27, 29429, 29432 (part), 29433, 29435, 29437-39, 
        29445-49, 29451-52, 29455-56, 29458, 29460, 29463-64, 29470-71, 
        29472 (part), 29474-75, 29477, 29481 (part), 29482, 29483 
        (part), 29484, 29487-88, 29493-94, 29902-05, 29910-11, 29913-16, 
        29918, 29920-24, 29927-29, 29931-36, 29939-41, 29943-45

                                 *  *  *

                             SECOND DISTRICT

    [FLOYD SPENCE], Republican, of Lexington, SC; born in Columbia, SC, 
April 9, 1928; married: the former Deborah Ellen Williams of Lexington, 
SC, on July 3, 1988; children: father of four sons with the late Lula 
Hancock Drake Spence: David, Zach, Benjamin and Caldwell; education: 
Lexington High School, SC; attended University of South Carolina on an 
athletic scholarship; B.A. in English, 1952, president South Carolina 
Association of Student Governments, junior class president, battalion 
subcommander of USN-ROTC, member of Kappa Alpha Order social fraternity, 
honor council, honor board, student council, captain of track team, 
football team, basketball team, YMCA; named to Omicron Delta Kappa 
honorary leadership fraternity, Kappa Sigma Kappa honorary service 
fraternity, dean's list, Who's Who Among Students in American Colleges 
and Universities, president of the student body; selected Outstanding 
Senior and recipient of Algernon-Sydney Sullivan Award as outstanding 
male student at University of South Carolina in 1952, Fellowship of 
Christian Athletes; University of South Carolina Law School, LL.B., 
1956, J.D., 1970, editor of South Carolina Law Quarterly, chief justice 
of Phi Alpa Delta legal fraternity and vice president of the Law 
Federation; military service: enlisted as a recruit in Naval Reserve 
when in high school, commissioned upon graduation from college, served 
aboard U.S.S. Carter Hall (LSD-3) and U.S.S. LSM-397 in the Korean 
Conflict; former commanding officer of a Naval Reserve surface division; 
retired as captain, U.S. Naval Reserve; former group commander, all 
Naval Reserve units, Columbia, SC, area; South Carolina House of 
Representatives, 1956-62; elected to South Carolina Senate in 1966, 
reelected in 1968; minority leader of South Carolina Senate, 1966-70; 
chairman of Joint Senate-House Internal Security Committee in South 
Carolina, 1967-70; lawyer; former partner in law firm of Callison and 


[[Page 239]]
Spence, West Columbia, SC; author and lecturer on communism and national 
defense; coauthor, Can You Afford This House? and The Case Against the 
Reckless Congress; Who's Who in America; Who's Who in the South and 
Southwest, Who's Who in American Politics, and Outstanding Personalities 
of the South; former Sunday School teacher and council member, St. 
Peter's Lutheran Church; first president of Lexington County Historical 
Society; former county chairman and member of board of directors of Mid-
Carolina Mental Health Association; Sons of Confederate Veterans, former 
commander of Wade Hampton Camp; former circuit vice president and 
counselor-at-large, University of South Carolina Alumni Association; 
former executive board member, former district chairman, and former 
scoutmaster, currently, Council Advisory Board member of the Indian 
Waters Council of the Boy Scouts of America; Silver Beaver Award; member 
of Farm Bureau, Chamber of Commerce, American Legion, Veterans of 
Foreign Wars, Lexington Voiture, Reserve Officers Association, Naval 
Reserve Association, South Carolina Historical Society, South 
Caroliniana Society; Columbia Carillon, Archeological Society of South 
Carolina; charter member of the University of South Carolina Association 
of Lettermen; graduate of Defense Strategy Seminar at National War 
College, graduate of National Security Seminar of Industrial College of 
the Armed Forces; former member of the Board of Visitors at the U.S. 
Naval Academy; Chairman Emeritus, Committee on Armed Services; member, 
Committee on Veterans' Affairs; the only member of Congress to serve as 
chairman of the Committee on National Security; former ranking member of 
the Committee on Armed Services; former ranking member of the Committee 
on Standards of Official Conduct; former member of the Republican 
Committee on Committees; Tidewater Region Representative on the 
Republican Policy Committee in the 104th to 107th Congresses; honorary 
degrees: The Citadel, LL.D., 1995 and University of South Carolina, 
Doctor of Public Service, 1995; elected to the 92nd Congress in 
November, 1970; reelected to each succeeding Congress; died on August 
16, 2001.

                  Office Listings

2405 Rayburn House Office Building, Washington, DC        (202) 225-2452
 20515-4002............................................
  Chief of Staff.--Craig H. Metz.                          FAX: 225-2455
  Executive Assistant.--Caroline S. Bryson.
  Legislative Director.--Miriam E. A. Wolff.
220 Stoneridge Drive, Suite 202, Columbia, SC 29210....   (803) 254-5120
1681 Chestnut Street NE, P.O. Box 1609, Orangeburg, SC    (803) 536-4641
 29116-1609............................................
66 East Railroad Avenue, P.O. Box 550, Estill, SC 29918   (803) 625-3177
903 Port Republic Street, P.O. Box 1538, Beaufort, SC     (843) 521-2530
 29901.................................................
Hilton Head Island, SC.................................   (843) 842-7212


Counties: Aiken (part), Allendale, Barnwell, Beaufort (part), Calhoun 
        (part), Colleton (part), Hampton, Jasper, Lexington, Orangeburg 
        (part), Richland (part). Cities and townships: Aiken (part), 
        Allendale, Ballentine, Barnwell, Batesburg, Beaufort, 
        Blackville, Bluffton, Blythewood, Brunson, Cayce, Chapin, 
        Columbia (part), Cooaawhatchie, Cope, Cordova, Crocketville, 
        Daufuskie Island, Early Branch, Elko, Estill, Fairfax, Furman, 
        Garnett, Gaston, Gifford, Gilbert, Hampton, Hardeeville, Hilda, 
        Hilton Head Island, Irmo, Islandston, Kline, Leesville, 
        Lexington, Livingston, Lodge, Luray, Martin, Miley, Montmorenci, 
        Neeses, North, Norway, Orangeburg, Pelion, Pineland, Port Royal, 
        Ridgeland, Ruffin, Scotia, Springfield, St. Helena Island, St. 
        Matthews (part), State Park, Swansea, Sycamore, Tillman, Ulmer, 
        Varnville, Walterboro (part), West Columbia, White Rock, 
        Williams, Williston, Windsor, Yemassee. Population (1990), 
        581,111.
ZIP Codes: 29002, 29006, 29016, 29033, 29036, 29038, 29039, 29053, 
        29054, 29054, 29063, 29070, 29071, 29072, 29073, 29076, 29082, 
        29107, 29112, 29113, 29115 (part), 29116 (part), 29123, 29135 
        (part), 29146, 29147, 29160, 29169, 29170 (part), 29171-72, 
        29177, 29201 (part), 29202 (part), 29203 (part), 29204 (part), 
        29205 (part), 29206 (part), 29207 (part), 29208 (part), 29209 
        (part), 29210-12, 29214 (part), 29215 (part), 29216 (part), 
        29217 (part), 29218 (part), 29221 (part), 29223 (part), 29224 
        (part), 29228 (part), 29230 (part), 29240 (part), 29250 (part), 
        29260 (part), 29290 (part), 29292 (part), 29475, 29488 (part), 
        29493, 29801 (part), 29802 (part), 29083 (part), 29804 (part), 
        29810, 29812-14, 29817, 29826-27, 29836, 29839, 29846, 29849, 
        29853, 29856, 29901-05, 29910-13, 29915-16, 29918, 29920-29, 
        29932-36, 29938-40, 29943-45, 29948

                                 *  *  *

                             THIRD DISTRICT

    LINDSEY GRAHAM, Republican, of Seneca; born in Seneca, July 9, 1955; 
education: graduated, Daniel High School, Central, SC; B.A., University 
of South Carolina, 1977; awarded J.D., 1981; military service: joined 
the U.S. Air Force, 1982; served in the Base Legal and as area defense 
counsel; assigned to Rhein Main Air Force Base, Germany, 1984; circuit 
trial counsel, U.S. Air Forces; Meritorius Service Medal for Active Duty 
Tour in Europe; presently, Lt. Col. in Air Force Reserves; employment: 
established private law practice, 1988; former member, South Carolina 
House of Representatives; Home Health Care Legislator of the year, 1992; 
assistant county attorney for Oconee County, 1988-92; city attorney for 
Central, SC, 1990-94; member: Seneca Sertoma, Walhalla Rotary, Anderson 
Chamber of Commerce, American Legion Post 120, Retired Officers 
Association; served as fundraising chairman, Oconee County Chapter of 
the American Cancer Society; board member, Rosa Clark Free Medical 
Clinic in Seneca, SC; appointed to Judicial Arbitration Commission by 
the Chief Justice of the Su-


[[Page 240]]
preme Court; religion: attends Corinth 
Baptist Church; committees: Armed Services; Education and the Workforce; 
Judiciary; subcommittees: 21st Century Competitiveness; Constitution; 
Courts, The Internet, and Intellectual Property; Workforce Protection; 
Military Procurement; Military Personnel; elected to the 104th Congress 
on November 8, 1994; reelected to each succeeding Congress.

                  Office Listings

                       http://www.house.gov/graham

1429 Longworth House Office Building, Washington, DC      (202) 225-5301
 20515.................................................
  Chief of Staff.--Richard Perry.                          FAX: 225-3216
  Press Secretary.--Kevin Bishop.
101 Federal Building, P.O. Box 4126, Anderson, SC 29622   (864) 224-7401
  District Director.--Jane Goolsby.
115 Enterprise Court, Suite B, Greenwood, SC 29649.....   (864) 223-8251
221 Barnwell Avenue, NW., Aiken, SC 29801..............   (803) 649-5571


Counties: Abbeville County; cities and townships of Abbeville, Calhoun 
        Falls, Donalds, Due West, Lowndesville. Aiken County; cities and 
        townships of Aiken, Bath, Belvedere, Clearwater, Graniteville, 
        Gloverville, Jackson, Langley, Monetta, New Ellenton, North 
        Augusta, Ridge Spring, Vaucluse, Ward, Warrenville. Anderson 
        County; Anderson, Belton, Honea Path, Iva, LaFrance, Pelzer, 
        Pendleton, Sandy Springs, Starr, Townville, Williamston, 
        Piedmont. Edgefield County; cities and townships of Edgefield, 
        Johnston, Modoc, Trenton. Greenwood County; cities and townships 
        of Bradley, Callison, Greenwood, Hodges, Ninety Six, Shoals 
        Junction, Troy, Ware Shoals. Laurens County; cities and 
        townships of Clinton, Cross Hill, Gray Court, Joanna, Laurens, 
        Mountville, Waterloo, Fountain Inn, Enoree. McCormick County; 
        cities and townships of Clarks Hill, McCormick, Modoc, Mt. 
        Carmel, Parksville, Plum Branch, Willington. Oconee County; 
        cities and townships of Fair Play, Long Creek, Madison, Mountain 
        Rest, Newry, Richland, Salem, Seneca, Tamassee, Walhalla, 
        Westminister, West Union. Pickens County; cities and townships 
        of Cateechee, Central Dacusville, Easley, Easley P.O., Liberty, 
        Norris, Pickens, Six Mile, Sunset, Clemson, Clemson University. 
        Saluda County; cities and townships of Monetta, Ridge Spring, 
        Saluda, Ward. Population (1990), 581,104.
ZIP Codes: 29006 (part), 29037 (part), 29059 (part), 29070 (part), 
        29105, 29124, 29127 (part), 29129, 29137 (part), 29138, 29146 
        (part), 29164, 29166, 29620-25, 29627 (part), 29628, 29630-33, 
        29635 (part), 29638-41, 29643, 29646-49, 29648, 29653, 29654 
        (part), 29655-59, 29661 (part), 29664-67, 29669 (part), 29671, 
        29673 (part), 29675-79, 29682, 29684-86, 29689, 29691, 29692 
        (part), 29693-94, 29696-97, 29801, 29809-10, 29812-14, 29816-17, 
        29819, 29821-22, 29824, 29826-29, 29831-32, 29834-36, 29838-41, 
        29844-51, 29853, 29856, and 29650, 29802

                                 *  *  *

                             FOURTH DISTRICT

    JIM DeMINT, Republican, of Greenville, SC; born in Greenville, SC, 
on September 2, 1951; education: graduated, West Hampton High School, 
Greenville, SC, 1969; B.S., University of Tennessee, 1973; MBA, Clemson 
University, 1981; certified management consultant and certified quality 
trainer; advertising and marketing businessman; started his own company, 
DeMint Marketing; active in Greenville, SC, business and educational 
organizations; married: Debbie; children; Mitchell Road Presbyterian 
Church; committees: Education and the Workforce; Small Business; 
Transportation and Infrastructure; elected to the 106th Congress; 
reelected to the 107th Congress.

                  Office Listings

        http://www.demint.house.gov    jim.demint@mail.house.gov

504 Cannon House Office Building, Washington, DC 20515.   (202) 225-6030
  Chief of Staff.--Marie Wheat.                            FAX: 226-1177
  Office Manager / Scheduler.--Kirstie Tucker.
  Legislative Director.--Nina Owcharenko.
Federal Building, 201 Magnolia Street, Suite 108,         (864) 582-6422
 Spartanburg, SC 29301.................................
                                                           FAX: 573-9478
Federal Building, 300 East Washington Street, Suite       (864) 232-1141
 101, Greenville, SC 29601.............................
                                                           FAX: 233-2160


Counties: Greenville, Laurens (part), Spartanburg, Union. Population 
        (1990), 581,113.
ZIP Codes: 29031 (part), 29178 (part), 29301-06, 29307 (part), 29316, 
        29318-22, 29323 (part), 29324, 29329 29330 (part), 29331, 29333-
        36, 29338, 29346, 29348-49, 29353, 29356, 29364-65, 29368-69, 
        29372 (part), 29373-79, 29385-86, 29388, 29390-91, 29601-10, 
        29611 (part), 29612-17, 29627 (part), 29635 (part), 29636, 29644 
        (part), 29645 (part), 29650-52, 29654 (part), 29661 (part), 
        29662, 29669 (part), 29673 (part), 29680-81, 29683, 29687-88, 
        29690, 29698

                                 *  *  *

                             FIFTH DISTRICT

    JOHN M. SPRATT, Jr., Democrat, of York, SC; born in Charlotte, NC, 
November 1, 1942; education: graduated, York High School, 1960; A.B., 
Davidson College, 1964; president of stu-


[[Page 241]]
dent body and Phi Beta Kappa, 
Davidson College; M.A., economics, Oxford University, Corpus Christi 
College (Marshall Scholar), 1966; LL.B., Yale Law School, 1969; admitted 
to the South Carolina Bar in 1969; military service: active duty, U.S. 
Army, 1969-71, discharged as captain; served as member of Operations 
Analysis Group, Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense 
(Comptroller), received Meritorious Service Medal; employment: private 
practice of law 1971-82, Spratt, McKeown and Spratt in York, SC; York 
County attorney, 1973-82; president, Bank of Fort Mill, 1973-82; 
president, Spratt Insurance Agency, Inc.; president, York Chamber of 
Commerce; chairman, Winthrop College Board of Visitors; chairman, Divine 
Saviour Hospital Board; board of visitors, Davidson and Coker Colleges; 
president, Western York County United Fund; board of directors, Piedmont 
Legal Services; House of Delegates, South Carolina bar; elder, First 
Presbyterian Church, York; committees: Armed Services; ranking member, 
Budget; subcommittees: Military Procurement; Military Research and 
Development; married: Jane Stacy Spratt, 1968; children: Susan, Sarah, 
and Catherine; elected to the 98th Congress, November 2, 1982; reelected 
to each succeeding Congress.


                  Office Listings

                       http://www.house.gov/spratt

1536 Longworth House Office Building, Washington, DC      (202) 225-5501
 20515-4005............................................
  Chief of Staff.--Ellen Buchanan.                         FAX: 225-0464
  Press Secretary.--Chuck Fant.
P.O. Box 350, Rock Hill, SC 29731......................   (803) 327-1114
  District Administrator.--Robert Hopkins.
39 East Calhoun Street, Sumter, SC 29150...............   (803) 773-3362
88 Public Square, Darlington, SC 29532-0025............   (843) 393-3998


Counties: Cherokee, Chester, Chesterfield, Darlington (part), Dillon, 
        Fairfield, Kershaw, Lancaster, Lee (part), Marlboro, Newberry, 
        Sumter (part), and York. Population (1990), 581,131.
ZIP Codes: 29001 (part), 29009-10, 29014-15, 29016 (part), 29017, 29020, 
        29031 (part), 29032, 29036 (part), 29037 (part), 29040, 29045 
        (part), 29046, 29051 (part), 29055, 29058, 29062, 29065, 29067 
        (part), 29074, 29075 (part), 29078 (part), 29080, 29101 (part), 
        29102 (part), 29104, 29106, 29108, 29114 (part), 29122, 29125 
        (part), 29126, 29127 (part), 29128, 29130 (part), 29131 (part), 
        29132, 29134, 29145, 29150-52, 29154, 29162 (part), 29168, 
        29175-76, 29178 (part), 29180 (part), 29183, 29323 (part), 
        29325, 29330 (part), 29332, 29340, 29342, 29351, 29355, 29360, 
        29370, 29372 (part), 29384, 29388 (part), 29520, 29550 (part), 
        29584, 29593 (part), 29644 (part), 29645, 29654 (part), 29692 
        (part), 29702-06, 29709-10, 29712, 29714-15, 29717-20, 29724, 
        29726-31, 29733, 29741-45

                                 *  *  *

                             SIXTH DISTRICT

    JAMES E. CLYBURN, Democrat, of Columbia, SC; born in Sumter, SC, on 
July 21, 1940; education: graduated, Mather Academy, Camden, SC, 1957; 
B.S., South Carolina State University, Orangeburg, 1962; attended 
University of South Carolina Law School, Columbia, 1972-74; South 
Carolina State Human Affairs Commissioner; Assistant to the Governor for 
Human Resource Development; executive director, South Carolina 
Commission for Farm Workers, Inc.; director, Neighborhood Youth Corps 
and New Careers; counselor, South Carolina Employment Security 
Commission; member: NAACP, lifetime member; Southern Regional Council; 
Omega Psi Phi Fraternity, Inc.; Arabian Temple, No. 139; Nemiah Lodge 
No. 51 F&AM; married: the former Emily England; children: Mignon, 
Jennifer and Angela; elected on November 3, 1992, to the 103rd Congress; 
reelected to each succeeding Congress.


                  Office Listings

                      http://www.house.gov/clyburn

319 Cannon House Office Building, Washington, DC 20515-   (202) 225-3315
 4006..................................................
  Administrative Assistant.--Yelberton Watkins.            FAX: 225-2313
  Legislative Director.--Danny Cromer.
  Appointments.--Jennie Chaplin.
1703 Gervais Street, Columbia, SC 29201................   (803) 799-1100
  District Director.--Robert Nance.                        FAX: 799-9060
  Press Secretary.--Hope Derrick.
181 East Evans Street, Suite 314, Post Office Box 6286,   (803) 662-1212
 Florence, SC 29502....................................
                                                           FAX: 662-8474
Joseph Floyd Manor, Suite 7, 2106 Mt. Pleasant Street,    (843) 965-5578
 Charleston, SC 29405..................................
                                                           FAX: 965-5581


Counties: Bamberg County; cities and townships of Bamberg, Denmark, 
        Erhardt, Olar. Berkeley County; cities and townships of Bethera, 
        Cross, Huger, Jamestown, Pineville, Russellville, Saint Stephen, 
        Wando. Calhoun County; city of Cameron (part). Charleston 
        County; cities and townships of Adams Run, Charleston (part), 
        Edisto Island, Hollywood, Johns Island (part), Ravenel (part), 
        Wadmalaw Island (part). Clarendon; cities and townships of 
        Alcolu, 


[[Page 242]]
        Davis Station, Gable, Manning, New Zion, Rimini, 
        Summerton, Turbeville. Collecton County; cities and townships of 
        Cottageville, Green Pond, Jacksonboro, Lodge (part), Round O, 
        Saint George, Smoaks, Walterboro (part), Williams. Columbia 
        County; city of Columbia (part). Darlington County; cities and 
        townships of Darlington (part), Lamar (part). Dorchester County; 
        cities and townships of Dorchester, Harleyville, Reevesville. 
        Florence County; cities and townships of Coward, Effingham, 
        Florence, Johnsonville, Lake City, Olanta, Pamplico, Scranton, 
        Timmonsville. Marion County; cities and townships of Centenary, 
        Gresham, Marion, Mullins, Nichols, Rains, Sellers. Lee County; 
        cities and townships of Bishopville (part), Elliott, Lynchburg. 
        Orangeburg County; cities and townships of Bowman, Branchville 
        (part), Cope (part), Elloree, Eutawville, Holly Hill, Orangeburg 
        (part), Rowesville, Santee, Vance. Richland County; cities and 
        townships of Blythewood, Eastover, Gadsden, Hopkins (part). 
        Sumter County; cities and townships of Mayesville, Pinewood, 
        Rembert, Sumter (part), Wedgefield. Williamsburg County; cities 
        and townships of Cades, Greeleyville, Hemingway, Kingstree, 
        Lane, Nesmith, Salters, Trio. Population (1990), 581,133.
ZIP Codes: 29001, 29003, 29010 (part), 29016 (part), 29018, 29030 
        (part), 29038 (part), 29041-42, 29044, 29046-48, 29051-52, 
        29056, 29059, 29061 (part), 29069 (part), 29080-81, 29082 
        (part), 29102, 29104, 29111, 29114-15, 29116 (part), 29125, 
        29128, 29131, 29133, 29142, 29148, 29150 (part), 29151, 29153-
        54, 29161-63, 29168, 29201-05, 29206 (part), 29209, 29211, 
        29223, 29240, 29401 (part), 29403, 29405, 29407, 29411-12, 
        29415, 29426, 29430, 29432 (part), 29435-38, 29446, 29448-50, 
        29452-53, 29455 (part), 29468 29470 (part), 29471, 29474, 29476-
        77, 29479, 29481, 29487 (part), 29488 (part), 29492-93, 29501-
        06, 29518-19, 29530, 29532 (part), 29541, 29546, 29554-56, 
        29560, 29564, 29571, 29574, 29580-81, 29583, 29589-92, 29595, 
        29843


* based on information from the Congressional Directory Online
In the recommended column: Definitely worth checking ...
Recommended References. [see index for total category]

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