John Paul
Stevens, the 101st Justice to serve on the supreme court of the United States,
and the first appointed by President Gerald R. Ford. John Paul Stevens became a member of the high
court in December of 1975. Stevens, a middle aged man, with a reputation as a
sharp-minded, hardworking lawyer, and first rate judge was given the highest
evaluation from the American Bar Association committee that examined his
record. ³A superb judicial craftsman²
and a Judge¹s judge,² are two of the praises that Stevens has received from the
United States Court of Appeals.
Stevens was voted into the supreme court with
a vote of 98-0. In that time, Stevens
was considered by the press, to be a moderate or moderate conservative in his
legal thinking, and would take sides with other justices Powell, Stewart, and
White.
John Paul was
born on Apr. 20, 1920. Stevens, the youngest out of 4 sons, Stevens was also
considered to be the smartest of the 4 . At the age of six, his brother Ernest
Stevens noted to a New York Post reporter, ³I guess we always knew he was going
to make something of himself. He was always awfully smart....When John was six,
he could play better bridge then most adults today>²
Stevens attended the University of Chicago High
School, and then later went to the University its self. In 1941, he left the
University with a Phi Betta Kappa key, and a B.A. degree. He joined the navy, after the U.S
entered World War 2. Stevens was stationed in Washington D.C, as a intelligence
officer on the staff of admiral Chester W. Nimitz. He worked with a group
assigned to break Japanese codes. for doing this, he was awarded the Bronze
Star. After he returned to Chicago, (at the end of the war) he enrolled himself
into Northwestern University School of Law to earn his J.D. degree, where he
graduated first in his class. Not long after that, he was admitted into the
Order of the Coif and the Phi Delta Phi law society.
From 1947 to 48, Stevens spent the year as a
clerk to supreme court justice Wiley Rutledge. After that, he joined his first
law firm, Poppenhausen, Johnston, Thompson & Raymond. A Chicago based firm,
that he was inducted to as an Associate.
This was in 1948. With expert guidance from a
Senior in the firm, Stevens acquired the expertise in antitrust, that law, that
stood him a good stead during 51 and 52, for when he spent time on the Capitol
in D.C as an associate counsel of the house Judiciary committee¹s subcommittee
on the study of monopoly power and then from 1953 to 55 where he was a member of the attorney
generals national committee to study antitrust laws.
Finally on December of 1975, John Paul Stevens became Supreme Court
Justice John Paul Stevens where he served a lengthily term and ruled justly
over all of the cases placed before him.
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