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- <text id=90TT2050>
- <title>
- Aug. 06, 1990: An 18th Century Man
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Aug. 06, 1990 Just Who Is David Souter?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 19
- COVER STORIES
- An 18th Century Man
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>David Souter is a flinty New Englander with a love of books and
- a reverence for legal precedent. He has plenty of brains, but
- does he have a heart?
- </p>
- <p>By Margaret Carlson/Washington--Reported by Dan
- Goodgame/Washington and Melissa Ludtke/Boston
- </p>
- <p> In this the age of shameless self-promotion, Supreme Court
- nominee David Souter comes onto the national stage as an
- oddity. No one knows quite what to make of a man who has a
- life, not a life-style, who lives modestly, works hard, spends
- inconspicuously, attends church, enjoys solitude, honors his
- mother, and helps his neighbors. While part of being a public
- official these days is vying for an appearance on Nightline,
- Souter is extremely publicity shy, pursuing a life of quiet
- introspection.
- </p>
- <p> When he was named attorney general of New Hampshire in 1976,
- Souter decided not to move into the office that went along with
- the job. Instead, he stayed put in the adjoining office he had
- occupied as the department's No. 2 man and gave the more
- prestigious quarters--and the attention of the press--to
- his deputy, Tom Rath, who welcomed it. Souter labored behind
- the scenes and spread the glory around. Then assistant attorney
- general Bill Glahn recalls, "If you screwed up, David took the
- blame. If you did well, you got the credit."
- </p>
- <p> That self-deprecating style has made Souter the Nowhere Man,
- a tabula rasa in the cult of personality--and so the perfect
- post-Bork appointment. Law-review articles asserting opinions
- on controversial subjects? There are none. Sweeping court
- decisions? Souter, as a trial and appellate judge, narrowly
- ruled on the facts at hand. In Souter, Bush may have found the
- last person in America who does not think in opinionated sound
- bites. Souter, with his Yankee reticence, does not presume
- anyone would be interested in what he thinks if legal scholars
- have already thought about it. In that, he may be the answer to
- the President's secret moderate dreams: someone conservative
- enough to allay right-wing suspicions that he has been
- insufficiently sympathetic to their causes but at the same time
- unknown enough to keep liberals from finding anything on which
- to hang another bruising confirmation fight.
- </p>
- <p> As it turns out, Souter, like everyone, has a personality,
- if not strong personal opinions, and a rich inner life, which
- he was able to keep to himself until last Monday. Friends
- describe him as a combination of the intellectual, scholarly,
- never married Justice Benjamin Cardozo and a tightfisted
- solitary cleric. In looks and wit, he resembles comedian Pat
- Paulsen; in his 5 o'clock shadow, Richard Nixon. He favors
- well-worn suits (black robes are said to add color to his
- wardrobe), cheap cars (a 1987 Volkswagen), non-power lunches
- (cottage cheese and an apple) and classical music. His main
- indulgence is to go off with his small circle of friends to
- Boston for the symphony, with a stop at Goodspeed's, a rare
- print-and-book shop in the city. There he purchased the 1850s
- print of the Merrimack River and Concord that hangs above the
- stereo in his living room. He is an accomplished mimic, doing
- a wicked imitation of Meldrim Thomson Jr., the archconservative
- former Governor who named him attorney general.
- </p>
- <p> To call Souter bookish would be like describing the Grand
- Canyon as a hole in the ground. In the ramshackle farmhouse
- nine miles outside Concord where he has lived since he was 11,
- groaning shelves of books on philosophy, history and the law
- have won the battle for space. Souter jokes that the room looks
- like "someone was moving a bookstore and stopped." Vacations
- are devoted to rereading as much of the work of a particular
- author as he can; he has plowed through Dickens, Proust,
- Shakespeare and Oliver Wendell Holmes, the legendary Supreme
- Court Justice. When he is not reading, Souter is hiking, often
- alone. He has climbed all the White Mountains 4,000 ft. or
- higher, and in one day hiked the 25-mile-long trail that
- crosses over the Presidential Range. His habits include
- attending services at St. Andrew's Episcopal Church in
- Hopkinton, where he prefers the 1928 prayer book to the 1970s
- modernized version. His close friend from Oxford, Dr. Melvin
- Levine, who now teaches pediatrics at the University of North
- Carolina Medical School at Chapel Hill, says of Souter, "You
- really feel as if you are with one of our Founding Fathers."
- </p>
- <p> Like other aspects of his life, the unmarried Souter's
- social activities resemble those of an 18th century gentleman,
- when an unmarried relative was often the backbone of the
- community, with the leisure to do what those with children did
- not have time for. Like Henry Higgins, Souter may be happiest
- spending "his evenings in the silence of his room; [in] an
- atmosphere as restful as an undiscovered tomb."
- </p>
- <p> But Souter had barely left the podium in the press room of
- the White House before Republican Party officials were raising
- "the 50-year-old bachelor thing," which was widely interpreted
- as a way of introducing speculation that Souter is homosexual.
- In fact the question has been dealt with twice: once in 1978,
- when Souter was about to be appointed a Superior Court Judge,
- and then again in 1983, before he was named a State Supreme
- Court Justice by then Governor John Sununu. During law school,
- he went out with Ellanor Fink, a student at Wheaton College.
- After he became a Superior Court Judge, he dated Anne Hagstrom,
- a lawyer in the attorney general's office. She said going out
- with Souter was like "knowing someone from another century."
- More recently, Souter has dated a woman who works at a Boston
- television station.
- </p>
- <p> The more serious question about Souter's ascetic ways is
- whether a man who seems to prefer books to people can empathize
- with and understand the problems of ordinary people. Former
- state attorney general Steven Merrill says he once feared that
- Souter lacked "the social context" to serve as a judge, but
- that concern dissipated once Merrill got to know him. Former
- girlfriend Fink says, "Having never married, I know everyone
- is wondering does he have the empathy to understand women's
- issues. He's not all brain. He's a friendly, warm person and
- extremely considerate." His former colleague Rath says, "David
- is the kind of person who will visit a clerk who is in the
- hospital or attend the funeral of the mother of one of his
- employees." On Sundays, Souter wheels an aged churchgoer across
- the street to the general store to pick up her Sunday New York
- Times, and then goes off to visit his mother Helen, 82, who
- moved to a nearby retirement home 10 years ago.
- </p>
- <p> Souter's belief system mirrors that of an aunt, a Simmons
- College professor and Cambridge dowager who swam Lake
- Winnipesaukee in her 70s, was conservative socially and
- politically, but liberal in her concern for other people.
- Although she was an heiress of the Boston & Maine Railroad who
- didn't need the money, she became a pioneering medical social
- worker at Massachusetts General Hospital.
- </p>
- <p> Souter's conservative philosophy alternately pleases and
- confuses both ends of the political spectrum and is a reminder
- that the label does not belong only to Jerry Falwell and Jesse
- Helms. Elizabeth Hager, who led the state's successful 1972
- fight to pass an equal-rights amendment, points out that people
- outside the state "equate the word conservative with right
- wing. We don't do that in New Hampshire."
- </p>
- <p> That philosophy led Hager to seek Souter's aid when she
- wanted to kill a parental-consent bill in the New Hampshire
- house of representatives in 1981. In response, he wrote a
- letter to lawmakers opposing the bill because it would have
- required judges to make "fundamental moral decisions about the
- interests of other people without any standards to guide the
- individual judge." Last week, as Sununu was hinting to
- right-to-lifers that Souter could be trusted, Hager was busy
- allaying the fears of members of the National Abortion Rights
- Action League. Hager kept repeating, "He has never associated
- with pro-life groups. His friends aren't pro-life." His closest
- political allies and friends--Republican Senator Warren
- Rudman and Rath--are pro-choice.
- </p>
- <p> Souter is the son of an assistant bank manager and a mother
- who worked in a giftshop. He attended public elementary schools
- and Concord High School, where he managed to be well liked
- despite being something of a grind--voraciously studious,
- fastidiously neat, with no time for organized sports.
- </p>
- <p> At Harvard College, Souter joined Hasty Pudding and majored
- in philosophy. He wrote his senior thesis on Justice Holmes'
- belief that a judge should not be influenced by either politics
- or ideology. He graduated magna cum laude and Phi Beta Kappa.
- For a graduation gift, friends put together a scrapbook of
- made-up news stories featuring Souter as the lawyer he hoped
- to be. One headline read, DAVID SOUTER NOMINATED TO THE SUPREME
- COURT.
- </p>
- <p> He won a Rhodes scholarship to Magdalen College at Oxford.
- His classmate Bill Bardel, now a managing director of Shearson
- Lehman Hutton, recalls that Souter belonged to a group that
- would return so late to their rooms after visiting the local
- pubs that they would have to climb a ladder to get over the
- locked gates. Back at Harvard Law School, Souter played the
- role of courtly gentleman, wearing a three-piece suit to
- parties and telling stories in his strong New England accent.
- Says Levine: "No one I've ever met is more fun at a party; he
- has that British satirical sense of humor, does wonderful
- impressions." That hardly qualifies him as a party animal, but
- it may have contributed to his failure to make law review.
- </p>
- <p> After graduating, Souter returned home to Weare, N.H., and
- took a job at Orr & Reno, a Concord law firm. But he was not
- happy in private practice. In 1968 he took the turn in the road
- that would eventually land him in the White House chatting with
- the President, by joining the New Hampshire attorney general's
- staff. Shortly after Warren Rudman became state attorney
- general in 1970, he plucked Souter from a group of assistants
- to become his top aide. The thoroughly scholarly Souter soon
- became the perfect complement to the gregarious, politically
- wired Rudman. The two, along with Rath, who headed Bob Dole's
- losing presidential campaign in the 1988 New Hampshire primary,
- became best friends. Rath joked that his job in the office was
- to go to lunch and "explain to Warren what David had just
- said."
- </p>
- <p> In 1976 Rudman resigned as attorney general and four years
- later ran for a Senate seat. Thomson reluctantly went along
- with Rudman's advice to appoint Souter to the job. Over the
- next two years Souter became involved in several controversial
- cases, largely at Thomson's behest. In 1978 Souter's staff
- defended the Governor in a suit to prevent him from lowering
- the American and state flags over state buildings on Good
- Friday. In another Thomson crusade, Souter's staff
- unsuccessfully defended the state's attempts to prosecute
- residents who for religious reasons covered up the state motto--"Live Free or Die"--on their license tags.
- </p>
- <p> In those cases, Souter seems to have been acting as a lawyer
- putting forth the best argument he could on behalf of his
- client. But friends still talk about the zeal Souter brought
- to one of the few cases he personally argued as attorney
- general: whether the state or the Federal Government had
- jurisdiction over Lake Winnipesaukee. Combining his love of New
- Hampshire with his passion for history, Souter headed off to
- museums and historical societies to dredge up scraps of
- information. He spent weeks with ancient maps spread out over
- his office, scanning each meticulously to ferret out tiny
- differences. When Souter went to Washington to present his
- case, he went alone and without notes. His argument--that
- since a boat could not get to the ocean from the lake, it was
- not a navigable waterway subject to federal control--was so
- cogent and airtight that the Coast Guard withdrew its claim.
- This case added to the legal lore in the state that no one who
- is party to a case ever knows more about it than Souter. Says
- Merrill: "You can always count on David to have read relevant
- cases that you haven't heard of. He'll say, `There's an
- interesting line of 17th century British cases that I'm sure
- you're familiar with.'"
- </p>
- <p> But there are few dog-eared tomes from a hundred years ago
- to consult on the divisive issues of today. Liberals are
- worried that just as Souter spurns gold chains and Club Med
- vacations, he will also eschew the "penumbras" emanating from
- the Constitution that activist judges have used to find
- heretofore unknown protections--like the guarantee of
- privacy, which underlies Roe v. Wade's right to abortion. New
- Hampshire Governor Judd Gregg predicts that "Souter won't
- graft current ideas or social concerns onto constitutional
- law." In a dissent he wrote in 1986, Souter said "the court's
- interpretive task is to determine the meaning of...[constitutional language] as it was understood when the framers
- proposed it." A judge cannot be more strict constructionist
- than that. On the other hand, Roe v. Wade does constitute
- precedent, another principle the conservative Souter holds
- dear. Says Fink: "He really reveres the law. He's not someone
- who's coming from his personal opinions and then twists the law
- accordingly."
- </p>
- <p> It is this kind of on-one-hand, on-the-other-hand aspect of
- Souter's behavior that has thrown the likely combatants over
- a new Justice into disarray. Souter gave a commencement address
- at Daniel Webster College in Nashua, N.H., in 1976 in which he
- called affirmative-action rules "affirmative discrimination"
- and said the government has no place meddling in such
- initiatives. He flew across the state by helicopter to make
- sure protesters who were arrested for demonstrating against the
- Seabrook nuclear power plant were forced to serve actual jail
- terms rather than suspended sentences. He tends to rule in
- favor of the prosecution in criminal trials. But Souter is also
- a great supporter of environmental and consumer protection, of
- victims' rights, and of giving child abuse and neglect cases
- high priority. He let the government in the skinflint state of
- New Hampshire know at the end of a suit to recover $206 in
- mistaken payments from an indigent that he would not look
- favorably on similar suits in the future. At Concord Hospital,
- where he served on the board from 1971 to 1985, he did not
- object to abortions being performed.
- </p>
- <p> As the week wore on and Souter came to life, he was
- transmuted from a dazed and gray-faced gnome standing awkwardly
- beside the tall and tanned Bush into a Yankee original in the
- mold of astronauts Alan Shepard and Christa McAuliffe and the
- last Supreme Court Justice to hail from the Granite State,
- Harlan Fiske Stone. By choosing someone so hard to pigeonhole,
- indeed, someone from another era, Bush may have created the
- kind of philosophical gridlock he felt he needed to get his
- nominee swiftly approved. If Americans are lucky, they will
- also get the kind of Justice they need--someone who looks at
- the law of the land with reverence and the people it governs
- with respect.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-