John Boozman.
"http://wiki.answers.com/Q/Current_us_representative_from_the_3rd_congressional_district_of_Arkansas"
oh hi
Rizalina seachon lanete
they rejected it on the ground that 54% of the District's citizens were Negroes
For a US congressman you can find out here: http://www.house.gov
there is a lock in the third district and if you examine it it will unlock.
Based on the 2010 Census, there are 4 members of the U.S. House of Representatives from Iowa. As of October, 2017 they are Rod Blum (R) - First District; Dave Loebsack (D) - Second District; David Young (R) - Third District; and Steve King (R) - Fourth District.
Absolutely! In fact, in some states, Congressional districts extend to multiple cities (not just towns, but full-blown cities). The State of Arkansas, for example, has four districts. The Third district has many major cities in it, including Fayetteville, Springdale, Rogers, Harrison, and Fort Smith. Obviously, a Congressman who is running for that district can't possibly live in all of those cities, so just by nature of him running for that district, he's running in a town that he doesn't live in. Now, asking if you can go outside of your DISTRICT to run for Congress; that's a different story. I suppose it would be possible (the Constitution only forbids people from running for a seat in Congress of a STATE that he doesn't reside in, but says nothing about districts), but no one that I know of has actually done it yet.
Old Third District Courthouse was created in 1853.
The Bikaner district,and the Third largest is the Barmer district
In the 111th Congress Walter B. Jones (R) represents the third district which includes the Outer Banks, Pamlico Sound and parts of Duplin, Wayne, Wilson, Nash, Craven, Cartaret and Pitt counties and David Price (D) represents the fourth district which includes part of Raleigh and Cary and all of Durham and Chapel Hill.
The Colorado Third District