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- <text id=91TT1892>
- <title>
- Aug. 26, 1991: Dan Quayle's Legal Career
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Aug. 26, 1991 Science Under Siege
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- LAW, Page 55
- Dan Quayle's Legal Career
- </hdr><body>
- <p> Dan Quayle, it might be said, put his ironies in the fire
- when he took on the entire legal profession in his A.B.A. speech.
- What is curious about this newly minted legal critic is not that
- the Vice President is a lawyer by training but that hitherto he
- has always been such an indifferent one.
- </p>
- <p> When Quayle was under attack during the 1988 election
- campaign for enlisting in the National Guard in 1969 and thereby
- avoiding Vietnam, he had a simple explanation for his choice of
- military service: "I wanted to go to law school as soon as
- possible." But with a lackadaisical undergraduate record at
- DePauw University, he was far from standard-issue law-school
- material. Through family connections, Quayle finally won
- admission to the night program at Indiana University. There he
- met his soon-to-be wife Marilyn, another law student. Quayle,
- who has refused to release his law-school transcript, also
- worked full-time as an aide in the state attorney general's
- office. He passed the bar exam in 1974 and spent the next two
- years working for his father's newspaper, the Huntington
- Herald-Press, until he was elected to Congress in 1976. That was
- Quayle's entire legal record. Marilyn was the lawyer in the
- family; he was the politician.
- </p>
- <p> Quayle's A.B.A. speech had its roots in meetings of the
- President's Council on Competitiveness beginning last December.
- His staff seized upon his scheduled appearance as an event that,
- as one aide put it, "would force us to get off the dime" on
- putting together a package of proposals for civil-justice
- reform. Such a package, it was believed, would provide Quayle
- with a high-visibility issue on which he could take the lead,
- thus enhancing his claim on the ticket for 1992. His remarks
- were drafted by his regular speechwriter, John McConnell, but
- the Vice President made extensive revisions during his recent
- trip to Latin America. In early May, Quayle road-tested some of
- his themes in a speech to a judicial conference. Back then he
- took pains to reassure his audience, "I'm an attorney; I'm also
- married to one--so I don't want to bash lawyers." The Vice
- President abandoned these constraints last week, and an unlikely
- lawyer basher was born.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
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