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Ken Del Rossi |
One
of my great regrets is that I didn’t
visit the Supreme Court when I had the chance. I worked
on Capitol Hill for six months as a senior in college
and somehow never set foot inside our country’s
secular cathedral.
It wasn’t for lack of respect. Among the reasons
to be proud of the United States—and despite its
current troubles, there are many—none is more meaningful
to me than its commitment to fairness, and its stubborn
insistence that its citizens be heard. The Supreme Court
exemplifies this basic American value, and sustains our
belief in the rule of law.
Of course, the Supreme Court is not really a cathedral.
Its nine justices do not channel the Divine when making
their decisions (although some folks wish they did).
They aren’t infallible, but the members of
the court do represent a noble and edifying pursuit—the
search for justice. We have never needed contemplative
minds more than today, when celebrity culture distracts
us from serious problems and a fractious society
supplies a steady drip of toxins to the nation’s
bloodstream.
Remarkably, Stanford has helped shape four of the
justices, including one William Hubbs Rehnquist, ’48,
MA ’48, JD ’52, who has been chief justice
since 1986. His service on the court provides a
moment to analyze his legacy, and to pay tribute.
Charles Lane’s
story on page 42 does both.
Lane traces the educational influences that Rehnquist
took with him from the Farm and draws a line from the
teachings of an austere, brilliant Stanford
professor, Charles Fairman, to the chief justice’s
positions on cases across three decades. In doing so,
Lane not only tells Rehnquist’s story,
but also gives overdue credit to his mentor.
Although his legal thinking was much discussed
and highly influential in his time, Fairman is so
little known today that Lane dug for weeks to find enough
information to accurately describe him. Given his
enormous influence on Rehnquist, Fairman has to
be considered an important figure in 20th-century
legal circles, yet he died in obscurity in La Jolla,
Calif., in 1988. Not a single major newspaper ran his
obituary.
Someday we will explore how Stanford managed to
produce 45 percent of the Supreme Court. We will
help you get to know associate justices Sandra
Day O’Connor, ’50,
JD’52, Stephen Breyer, ’59, and Anthony
Kennedy, ’58, a bit better, and understand the
origins of their success. For now, though, we concentrate
on the son of a paper salesman from Wisconsin who
came west for the weather and found inspiration.
Hail to the Chief.
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