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Senate Years of Service: 1966-1979 Party: Republican
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GRIFFIN, Robert Paul, a Representative and a Senator from Michigan; born in Detroit, Wayne County,
Mich., November 6, 1923; attended public schools in Garden City and Dearborn, Mich.; during the
Second World War enlisted in 1943 and served three years in the U.S. Army, fourteen months in the
European theater; graduated, Central Michigan College at Mount Pleasant 1947; received law degree
from University of Michigan Law School 1950; admitted to the bar in 1950 and commenced the
practice of law in Traverse City, Mich.; elected as a Republican to the Eighty-fifth and to the four
succeeding Congresses, serving from January 3, 1957, until his resignation May 10, 1966; appointed
on May 11, 1966, to the United States Senate to fill vacancy caused by the death of Patrick V.
McNamara; elected November 8, 1966, to full six-year term commencing January 3, 1967; reelected
in 1972 and served from May 11, 1966, to January 2, 1979; Republican whip 1969-1977;
unsuccessful candidate for reelection in 1978; is a resident of Traverse City, Mich.
BibliographyGriffin, Robert P. The Landrum-Griffin Act: Twelve
Years of Experience in Protecting Employee Rights. Georgia Law Review 5 (summer
1971): 622-42; Griffin, Robert P. Rules and Procedure of the Standing Committees. In We
Propose: A Modern Congress, edited by Mary McInnis, pp. 37-53. New York:
McGraw-Hill Book Co., 1966.
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