Word: byron
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...year term, he can be removed from office only by Congress. That power of dismissal, wrote outgoing Chief Justice Warren Burger in his final opinion for the court, means that the Comptroller General is "subservient" to Congress and cannot be entrusted with Executive powers. In a vigorous dissent, Justice Byron White criticized the majority's adherence to a "distressingly formalistic view of separation of powers" to derail "one of the most novel and far-reaching legislative responses to a national crisis since the New Deal...
...Department, was trying to overturn a lower-court order that it work toward the goal of including 29% nonwhites among its membership -- a figure based on the percentage of nonwhites in the local labor pool. A narrow majority of five Justices upheld the lower court's order. Another Justice, Byron White, agreed that while in principle judges have the power to set hiring goals, in this case the 29% target was an impermissible quota...
Associate Justice Byron White, who wrote the decision, claims that there is no "constitutional right of homosexuals to engage in acts of sodomy." Why this is so is not apparent to anyone, including White, judging from the muddled arguments that he makes to buttress his decision...
...decision overturning Scalia's opinion, the court seemed to say, "Ignore previous message." Writing for the majority, Justice Byron White held that when examining a motion for summary judgment, judges must determine "whether the evidence presented is such that a reasonable jury might find that actual malice had been shown with convincing clarity." Specifically, said White, judges must assess such evidence in light of the stringent "clear and convincing" standard of the landmark 1964 libel case, New York Times Co. vs. Sullivan. The effect would be to make libel complaints more difficult to justify at the pretrial stage...
Dissenting were Justices Byron R. White, Chief Justice Warren E. Burger, who is about to retire, and Justice William H. Rehnquist, Reagan's choice to succeed Burger as chief justice...