Bill Zeliff

William H. "Bill" Zeliff ( born June 12, 1936 in East Orange, New Jersey) is an American politician. Between 1991 and 1997 he represented the State of New Hampshire in the U.S. House of Representatives.

Career

Bill Zeliff visited until 1954, the Milford High School in Connecticut. Then he studied until 1959 at the University of Connecticut. Subsequently he served until 1964 in the National Guard of that State, after which he became a member of the U.S. Army Reserve. Between 1959 and 1976 Zeliff was manager and sales manager of EI DuPont de Nemours Co.; then he ran some smaller owned stores.

Zeliff joined the Republican Party and ran unsuccessfully in 1984 for the Senate from New Hampshire. In 1988 he was a delegate to the Republican National Convention in New Orleans, on the George Bush was nominated as presidential candidate of the party. In the congressional elections of 1990 he was in the first district of New Hampshire in the U.S. House of Representatives in Washington DC chosen, where he became the successor of Robert C. Smith on January 3, 1991. After two re- election he was able to complete in Congress until January 3, 1997 a total of three legislative periods. At this time there the 27th Amendment to the Constitution was discussed and adopted.

In 1996 Zeliff renounced another candidacy. Instead, he applied unsuccessfully for his party's nomination for the gubernatorial elections in New Hampshire. He now lives in Jackson ( New Hampshire). With his wife Sydna Taylor he has three children.

125345
de