Courts to change under Clinton ’ ■ ’ne icderal judiciary is domi [ natcd by conservative appoin tees brought in during the 12 years of leadership by Ronald Reagan and George Bush. I More than 65 percent of federal judges were nominated by the two, including fivcofthenine Supreme Court justices. Reagan also promoted William Rehnquist to chief justice. When Clinton begins his term as president on Jan. 20, he will have the opportunity to make substantial changes to im prove American jurisprudence. Immediately upon entering office, Clinton will be able to name more than 100 ofthe 846 total federal judges, or about three times the number of court openings that faced either Reagan or Bush when they began their terms. As of Nov. 1, there were 84 district ’ court openings, 16 appeals court va cancies and two slots on the Court of International Trade. If his record of appointments in Arkansas is an accu rate indicator, Clinton should fill the openings with people whotcflect the demographic makeup of the United States. In other words, the federal judi ciary will have even more women, blacks, Mexican-Americans and other minorities within its life-tenured ranks. Bush can blame himself for many of the vacancies. He nominated no one for 46 openings before the Senate adjourned in October, leaving the task to President-elect Clinton when the Senate reconvenes next year. About 53 other nominees were not acted upon by the Senate before iladjoumed. These nominations are now in limbo, leaving Clinton to either renominate the person or, more likely, make his own choice. Bush falsely contends a hostile Congress is responsible for his inef ficiency. While the Democratic Con gress may have held up a number of nominations in the Judiciary Com mittee, the presidcntalso is at fault. In addition to failing to nominate per sons for 46 judgeships this year, Bush dragged his feet in the area through out his term. In his first year in office, for ex ample, Bush named only 15 judges, leaving 60 spots to be filled. The total number of judges named that year was the lowest total since 1963. Bush ’ s four-year total was equally low, as he named only 194 judges to the district and appeals courts. In contrast, Carter named 262 and Reagan named 378. If judicial retirement statistics con tinue their trend, Clinton will have the opportunity to give the federal judi ciary a face lift. The Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts estimates that about 60 federal judges retire each year. Adding in the more than 100 appointments he will have at the beginning of his term, Clinton could appoint more than one-third of the entire federal judiciary in his four years in office. The most important changes could occur in the Supreme Court, where several judges cotild retire. Justice Byron White, who was appointed in 1962 by President Kennedy, is 75. White was appointed by a Demo cratic president, but has been consid ered a conservative. Although Reagan appointees have overshadowed White’s conservatism in the last 10 years and pushed many of his votes to the ideological center, White has often voted with conserva tive majorities. He recently has hinted at his impending retirement by saying that since he was appointed during a Democratic administration, heshould leave during one. Justice Harry Blackmun, who turned 84 in November, is another prime candidate to retire. Blackmun, who was appointed by President Nixon in 1970, was originally thought to be conservative in his views. By the time he authored Roc vs. Wade in 1973, however, it was clear Blackmun was far from the conservative ideologue Nixon had hoped he would be. Since the retirements of Justices Brennan and Marshall, Blackmun has been the most liberal member of the court. He foreshadowed his retire ment in this summer’s Planned Par enthood of Southeastern Pennsylva nia vs. Casey decision by writing, “I cannot remain on this court forever, and when I do step down, the confir mation process for my successor may well focus on the issue before us today.” Other justices also have been the subjects of retirement speculation. Chief Justice Rehnquist, appointed by Nixon in 1971 and promoted by Reagan to chief justice in 1986, is 68 years old. As a fierce partisan, how ever, it is unlikely Rehnquist would retire during a Democratic adminis tration. John Paul Stevens, 72, was ap pointed by President Ford in 1975. Between oral arguments, Stevens re portedly heads south to a home in Florida for work and recreation. His lack of desire to stay in Washington may indicate he has had his fill of the court’s rigorous schedule. Several names have been brought up as possible Clinton nominees for the one or more seats that could open up. Democratic Gov. Mario Cuomo of New York has been the subject of much of the public speculation ever since the Clinton campaign mentioned his name in connection with the “level of competence” Clinton is looking for in members of the high court Other possibilities include Amanda Lyle Kearse of the 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals in New York, Richard Arnold of the 8th Circuit in Little Rock, Ark., and Professor Laurence Tribe of Harvard University. It is clear that Clinton has the op portunity to make major changes in the judicial landscape. The interests of the American people wil 1 be served best if he chooses to make those changes not simply by :hoosing people on the basis of their ideology but by seeking out qualified women, blacks, Hispanics and others to diversify the background and per spectives of our nation’s judges. Bruning is a second-year law student and a Daily Nebraskan columnist. HUSKER HALL 705 North 23rd Street 1 Housing for graduate and nontraditional students • Quiet, clean accommodations • 6 blocks from City Campus . • Off-street parking available • All utilities paid • Security door • Laundry facilities • Full kitchen • Phone and local service provided • Year-round housing available • Single room cost ~ $244 per month i For more Information, contact University Housing at 472-3561 or 1006 Seaton Hall. -* ———--- • . r Petty bitching leads to bonding m al a los$ for words. Really, I honestly can’t decide what to bitch about this week. I could bitch about being swamped with projects to finish, tests to cram for and classes I should be attending but can’t because I have projects to finish and tests to cram for. I could bitch about the crappy weather and how, when 1 take my laundry out of the dryer, I have to carry it outside through rain, snow and sleet to get it to m y apart ment. And speaking of my apartment, I could bitch about how we signed a six-month lease but were told we could move out after December and how the really company seems to remember nothing about this conversation. While I’m bitching about this, I could also bitch about how the trains go by our building right when I’m trying to sleep. Or I could bitch about the other day when, two blocks from campus, I spilled hot coffee all over my jeans and car seal, so I had to turn around and go home to change, only to spill the rest of my coffee all over the liv ing room carpel. As though my petty bitching means anything in the great workings of the cosmos. There arc much bigger things to bitch about: the ozone layer, the government, the arts, the economy, the election of an cx-Communist as the new Slovenian president. The S lovenians probably could care less if I spilled hot coffee on myself. Of course, I don’t much care who the Slovenians elect as their leader, unless he’s a distant uncle of mine. The yuppie couple in their S2(X),(XX) house bitching about a re pair bill on the new Saab or their Sl(X),(XX)-salary jobs probably could care less about me AND the Slovenians. My b i tch ing abou t tests and projee ts seems pretty darn petty compared to someone who takes as many classes as I do while taking care of an ener getic 4-ycar-old boy or someone tak ing night classes while they take care of their kids and work a full-time job. And all this seems petty to the guy out on the street sleeping on a park bench who bitches about being hun gry* I know people who hardly ever bitch about anything, who could have all their possessions destroyed in a natural catastrophe and still be grate ful to be alive. I also know people who, if they won a $ 10 mill ion lottery, would bitch about not knowing how to spend it all. Bitching is relative. Whether we’re bitching about finding food or finding car keys, we all do it. That’s what friends arc for. They will listen to almost any gripe, from natural catastrophes to losing car keys. So I bitched to my friends about my hot coffee episode, and they nod ded thoughtfully. For a really good bitch session, we talk about money. It’s almost like a contest to see who can bitch about being the poorest. The winner gets thoughtful nods all around. With Christmas on the way, the money-bitching sessions come like snowstorms: starting slow, then build ing and going on for what seems like forever. My parents bitch that they can’t afford to buy many gifts this year, and I nod thoughtfully. My friends bitch that they can’t afford to buy gifts at all, and I nod thoughtfully. I tell all of them that I really don’t care one way or the other, that gifts arc not important to me, and they all nod thoughtfully. All this thoughtful nodding should mean the issue is resolved. But we still go on bitching about what to do for Christmas as though the world revolved around finding the perfect present. My grandparents have a unique , concept. They don’t give gifts to any one, nor do they get any. That may sound pretty radical to a lot of people, but it makes sense to me. They don’t have to bitch about find ing the perfect gifts or how much to spend on certain people; they wish you “Merry Christmas” and leave it at that. They make up for the missed gifts on birthdays and anniversaries, but 1 don’t think that’s necessary. Just be ing there is enough of a gift for me. I’ve recently realized the value of people in my life, perhaps a little too late. My other grandfather is in the hos pital, dying of cancer. My mother tells me that I should prepare myself for the inevitable, but how do you prepare for the death of a loved one? Our final goodbyes were implied over Thanksgiving, but pre pared,I’m not. I don’t think I ever will be until the inevitable finally comes. And there’s nothing I can do but bitch to whoever will listen. But my bitching seems petty com pared to someone who has lost loved ones to a natural catastrophe, to some one who never knows where his next meal will come from, or to someone who, about 2,(XX) years ago, was born to a carpenter and his wife in a stable far from home. The best gift you can give is your self. Merry Christmas. Paulman is » senior news editorial and history major and a Daily Nebraskan colum nist and photographer. SUPER PRICE ON SONY DISCMAN! Discman ■T D-34 "'^sar e«g90 OK MFGABASS # Suggested Retail $179.95 SONY DISCMAN® PORTABLE COMPACT DISC PLAYER • One Bit Digital-to-Ana log Converter • Shuffle Play Plus 3 Disc-Repeat Modes • Portable, Home, or Car Use • Automatic Music Sensor™ (AMS) • MegaBass® Sound System • 8 Hours Play with 4 “AA" Batteries • 20 Track RMS Programming • Over-the-Ear Stereo • Large LCD Display Panel Headphones Supplied 13th &Q Street « 476-0111