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- <text id=90TT2061>
- <title>
- Aug. 06, 1990: Putting A Thumbprint On History
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Aug. 06, 1990 Just Who Is David Souter?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- LAW, Page 75
- Putting a Thumbprint on History
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Supreme Court clerks help shape the nation's final judgments
- </p>
- <p> "Who are you, two months out of law school, to give such a
- patronizing evaluation of an opinion written by a judge of a
- United States Court of Appeals who was appointed to his office
- by the President of the United States and confirmed by the
- United States Senate?"
- </p>
- <p> Such was the question a 27-year-old novice asked himself on
- his first day as an aide to U.S. Supreme Court Justice Robert
- Jackson in 1952. His name: William Rehnquist. Whether Rehnquist
- was patronizing or not, his qualifications to evaluate
- appellate matters have been amply borne out by his subsequent
- career, culminating as it has in his present position as Chief
- Justice of the U.S.
- </p>
- <p> Rehnquist is one of scores of distinguished legal figures
- who, with the same mixture of audacity and humility, started
- out at the top. They were law clerks at the U.S. Supreme Court,
- members of the small cadre of top young law graduates who each
- term help churn out the work of the nation's highest tribunal.
- The clerks' job description is simple, if daunting: to assist
- the Justices in the crafting of the nation's final judgments.
- Their responsibility, however, is bounded only by the
- discretion of the individual Justice for whom they work. Their
- duties, which last a year, may range anywhere from technical
- researcher to ghostwriter to personal confidant.
- </p>
- <p> The internships typically begin in the summer, and already
- this year's crop of new clerks is arriving in Washington to
- prepare for the opening of the court in the fall. The job pays
- $34,580 a year and requires 15-hour days, a seven-day workweek,
- completely sealed lips and absolute fidelity to the boss. The
- prestige attached to it routinely carries former clerks down
- the staircase of the Marble Palace and up the steps of the
- nation's most powerful law firms, law schools and government
- offices. More immediately, there is the exhilaration of the post
- itself. "It's a very heady feeling for a 24-year-old to be
- arguing with a Supreme Court Justice about what constitutional
- law should be," says San Francisco lawyer Dean Gloster, who
- clerked for Justice Byron White, himself a former clerk. The
- possibility always exists of placing one's thumbprint on the
- jurisprudence of the nation.
- </p>
- <p> And what a thumbprint it can be. Each term the court must
- choose the 150 or so cases it will consider out of more than
- 4,000 petitions. The Justices--six of whom pool their clerks
- for this purpose--lean on the memos of their young assistants
- to help them pick the cases to hear. Once the docket is
- selected, the clerks turn out even more detailed documents,
- called bench memos, exploring and analyzing all possible sides
- of the disputes, to prepare their Justices for the oral
- arguments.
- </p>
- <p> The climax comes at the opinion-writing stage. Although the
- Justices confer alone and vote in complete secrecy, the clerks
- listen to their bosses' instructions, often see their private
- notes and write the preliminary drafts of the opinions. The
- custom of Justice Sandra Day O'Connor, recalls University of
- Michigan law professor Kent Syverud, is to give her clerks "a
- firm outline" of her opinion, then take the clerks' ensuing
- draft--together with all the relevant research--and "edit
- the hell out of it."
- </p>
- <p> How much influence do the clerks really wield? According to
- one recent alumnus, "a clerk has influence but never makes a
- decision." The power comes, he explains, "from being able to
- track down information and think of new ways to argue a case."
- Says AFL-CIO lawyer Walter Kamiat, once a clerk for Justice
- Thurgood Marshall: "In most chambers, the Justices are looking
- for all the perspectives in a case. I did not feel it was my
- function to insert my views in opinions, but it was my
- responsibility to raise any issues I saw." Justice Department
- lawyer James Feldman, who clerked for Justice William Brennan,
- believes that "clerks are more important in the details of how
- the opinions are written than in how the cases are decided. The
- more technical the issue, the more important a clerk is."
- </p>
- <p> Not surprisingly, the competition for Supreme Court
- clerkships is intense. Seven of the current Justices hire four
- clerks each; the other two hire three. Because the court acts
- like nine separate law offices, each Justice follows his or her
- own acceptance procedures. But among the virtual application
- requisites for all Justices are graduation from a top law
- school, stellar grades, a law-review editorship and, in recent
- years, an interim internship with a lower-court judge. "The
- key," advises one former clerk, "is to get to know someone on
- the faculty who was a clerk and let that person know the
- quality of your mind."
- </p>
- <p> Once they obtain the job, clerks enter into an intimate
- family. The Justices tend to return the loyalty and friendship
- they demand of their young assistants. O'Connor, for example,
- takes an active interest in the personal lives of her clerks,
- sometimes makes lunch for them, even invites them home for
- Thanksgiving. Brennan always liked to mix business and pleasure
- over daily freewheeling breakfast chats with his clerks. So
- does Justice Harry Blackmun. "He's a real baseball fan,"
- remembers New York University law professor Vicki Been, "so
- there's a lot of talk about the previous day's scores." And
- Justice White, once a basketball regular in the courthouse gym,
- holds reunions with his former clerks at which he still offers
- them a tough game, shooting baskets in "the highest court of
- the land."
- </p>
- <p> Symbiosis is the key to the success of the clerkship
- program. For the Justices, appointed for life, the presence of
- bright young minds brings a regular infusion of new vitality.
- And for the clerks? "For one year," says Washington lawyer
- Ronald Lee, who clerked for another alumnus, Justice John Paul
- Stevens, "it is the greatest job in the world."
- </p>
- <p>By Alain L. Sanders. Reported by Jerome Cramer/Washington and
- Andrea Sachs/New York.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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-