Word: connors
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...wonder then that the fight shaping up over Judge Robert Bork, 60, the conservative legal scholar nominated by Reagan last week, promises to be far fiercer than anything that met the President's earlier appointments of Sandra Day O'Connor and Antonin Scalia. By giving the court's right wing a decisive fifth vote, the addition of Bork could be as pivotal as the 1962 appointment of Arthur Goldberg, which consolidated the liberal majority that worked the Warren Court revolution...
...young as 24 weeks to survive. Indeed, the framework of Roe v. Wade makes jurisprudence dependent on technological developments. If the moment of viability is pushed back much further toward conception, the state's right to limit abortions will gradually increase. The Roe decision, concluded Justice Sandra Day O'Connor in a 1983 opinion on an abortion-related case, is "on a collision course with itself...
...woman's right to abortion in the original Roe v. Wade case of 1973 shrank to only 5-to-4 in a June 1986 ruling reaffirming that decision, with Powell in the majority both times. The deciding vote in future cases might be cast by Sandra Day O'Connor, who has indicated a willingness to countenance restrictions on abortion but not necessarily to overturn Roe entirely. Proponents of abortion rights fear the worst. Said Kate Michelman, of the National Abortion Rights Action League: "We believe the right to choose a safe and legal abortion has never been in greater jeopardy...
...place a creche in a municipal Christmas display, but also to strike down an Alabama law authorizing a moment of silence in public schools. Justices Rehnquist, Byron White and Antonin Scalia want to go further than Powell ever would in approving state practices that foster religion, and O'Connor would like to rewrite the court's standard test for deciding when such practices are constitutional. Powell's successor might make a majority...
...resignation last week of Supreme Court Justice Lewis Powell, a moderate, throws open the possibility of a new examination of the "mess." Justices William Rehnquist, Sandra Day O'Connor and Byron White have indicated a willingness to lower some church-state barriers, and Antonin Scalia, a conservative who joined the court last year, dissented from overturning a Louisiana law that required equal school treatment for creation science, deeming the court's work on the establishment clause "embarrassing." Powell's replacement, who will become President Reagan's third court appointment, may create a new 5-4 majority favoring a less rigid...