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Source: Justice Souter retiring

By MARK SHERMAN and JENNIFER LOVEN, Associated Press

WASHINGTON -- Justice David Souter is planning to retire after nearly two decades on the Supreme Court, but his departure is unlikely to change its conservative-liberal split.

President Barack Obama's first pick for the high court is likely to be a liberal-leaning nominee, much like Souter.

The White House has been told that Souter will retire in June, when the court finishes its work for the summer, a source familiar with his plans said Thursday night. The retirement is likely to take effect only once a successor is confirmed.

The source spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak for Souter.

Souter had no comment Thursday night, a Supreme Court spokeswoman said.

The vacancy could lead to another woman on the bench to join Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, currently the court's only female justice.

At 69, Souter is much younger than either Ginsburg, 76, or Justice John Paul Stevens, 89, the other two liberal justices whose names have been mentioned as possible retirees. Yet those justices have given no indication they intend to retire soon and Ginsburg said she plans to serve into her 80s, despite her recent surgery for pancreatic cancer.

Souter, a regular jogger, is thought to be in excellent health.

Interest groups immediately began gearing up.

"We're looking for President Obama to choose an eminently qualified candidate who is committed to the core constitutional values, who is committed to justice for all and not just a few," said Nan Aron, president of the liberal Alliance for Justice.

Some of the names that have been circulating include recently confirmed Solicitor General Elena Kagan; U.S. Appeals Court Judges Sonya Sotomayor, Kim McLane Wardlaw, Sandra Lea Lynch and Diane Pamela Wood; and Leah Ward Sears, chief justice of the Georgia Supreme Court. Men who have been mentioned as potential nominees include Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick, Harvard Law professor Cass Sunstein and U.S. District Judge Ruben Castillo of Chicago.

The Obama White House began from almost its first days in office preparing for the possibility of a retirement by thinking about and vetting potential high court nominees. Those efforts only accelerated with Ginsburg's cancer surgery.

The timing may have been unexpected, but Souter has long yearned for a life outside Washington.

He has never made any secret of his dislike for the capital, once telling acquaintances he had "the world's best job in the world's worst city." When the court finishes its work for the summer, he quickly departs for his beloved New Hampshire.

He has been on the court since 1990, when he was an obscure federal appeals court judge until President George H.W. Bush tapped him for the Supreme Court.

Bush White House aide John Sununu, the former conservative governor of New Hampshire, hailed his choice as a "home run." And early in his time in Washington, Souter was called a moderate conservative.

But he soon joined in a ruling reaffirming woman's right to an abortion, a decision from 1992 that remains still perhaps his most noted work on the court.

Souter became a reliable liberal vote on the court and was one of the four dissenters in the 2000 decision in Bush v. Gore that sealed the presidential election for George W. Bush.

Yet as Souter biographer Tinsley Yarbrough noted, "he doesn't take extreme positions." Indeed, in June, Souter sided with Exxon Mobil Corp. and broke with his liberal colleagues in slashing the punitive damages the company owed Alaskan victims of the Exxon Valdez oil spill.

Souter is the court's 105th justice, only its sixth bachelor. He works seven days a week through most of the court's October-to-July terms, a pace that he says leaves time for little else. He told an audience this year that he undergoes "an annual intellectual lobotomy" each fall.

Souter earned his bachelor's and law degrees from Harvard sandwiched around a stay at Oxford University as a Rhodes scholar.

He became New Hampshire's attorney general in 1976 and a state court judge two years later. By 1990, he was on the federal appeals court in Boston for only a few months when Bush picked him to replace Justice William Brennan on the Supreme Court.

National Public Radio first reported Souter's plans Thursday night.

Associated Press writer Jesse J. Holland contributed to this report.

April 30, 2009 in Current Affairs, Politics | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

A few pictures from women’s SWEET Thursdays at Halo Miami Lounge

sweet

A few shots I took at SWEET Thursday's at Halo Miami Lounge last night:

Sweet at Halo 1

Sweet at Halo 2

April 30, 2009 in Fashion, Food and Drink | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Does Souter's silence on hiring mean he's leaving?

By MARK SHERMAN, Associated Press

Scotus_Is_Souter_Hiring_sff_embedded_prod_affiliate_56 WASHINGTON -- The case of the missing law clerks is this spring's most-watched mystery at the Supreme Court.

It could be, to borrow a page from Sherlock Holmes, the court's dog that didn't bark, offering a clue as to the retirement plans of Justice David Souter.

Or perhaps Souter, known for his wry humor, is having a little chuckle at our expense.

He isn't saying, declining through a court spokeswoman to put the issue to rest.

Either way, eight justices are known to have hired the four law clerks who will work with them in the Supreme Court term that begins in October. Souter appears to be the lone holdout.

Officials at the highest levels of government have taken notice, while the court's press corps is consumed with anxiety.

Why does this matter? Under the scenario that counts, Souter, 69, would not be hiring clerks because he isn't planning to be in Washington in the fall. A retirement would give President Barack Obama his first chance to nominate a justice and the next few months would bring Senate confirmation hearings.

This is concededly an unusual way to signal that a retirement announcement is imminent, but then the court is an unusually secretive institution. Those who watch it for a living gobble up crumbs of information, much the way Sovietologists once looked for the slightest changes at the Kremlin.

Consider, too, that attempts to elicit information from Souter's former clerks, normally voluble law professors among them, have been met with stony silence.

But one former senior government lawyer who declined to be named because he practices in front of the Supreme Court said, "It's getting late, even for Souter."

For the last three years, at least, the identities of Souter's clerks for the upcoming term have been known by now. Gossipy legal blogs actively seek out the names of the clerks - recent graduates of the nation's top law schools who go on to lucrative careers and, sometimes, the Supreme Court.

Clerkships are highly sought and applicants have been known to interview with multiple justices in the hopes of landing a job at the high court. Chief Justice John Roberts and Justices Stephen Breyer and John Paul Stevens were clerks when they were younger.

Clerks typically start work in July and spend the summer poring over appeals to decide which ones they think the court should hear. Justice Clarence Thomas recently said of new clerks that "the way that we work, there is no start up time. You hit the ground running and you're ready to go."

So if Souter hasn't made his choices yet, but plans to do so, he is not giving them much advance notice.

Still, tantalizing as his silence is, there are other possible and less momentous explanations.

Artemus Ward, who co-wrote a book on law clerks called Sorcerers' Apprentices, said he doubts that Souter is planning to retire to New Hampshire this summer, much as the justice dislikes Washington and yearns for his old farmhouse.

"I wouldn't put too much stock in the clerk-hiring game as an indicator" that Souter plans to retire, said Ward, a political science professor at Northern Illinois University.

The justice always has been the last to hire, Ward said, because he likes to gauge how people do as clerks for lower federal court judges. Yet other justices are hiring earlier and earlier. Some even have made offers to lawyers for the middle of 2010.

"So it may very well be that Souter is waiting longer out of frustration with the process," Ward said.

Also possible is that Souter has not finished his hiring, but has sworn the others to secrecy until he's done. This is the Supreme Court, after all, which has resisted cameras and other intrusions.

Less likely, but not inconceivable is that the rough economy is affecting even the top of the legal profession and that Souter's current crop of clerks will be around for another term. Or another justice will leave this summer and Souter already has agreed to employ his colleague's clerks.

The other candidates for retirement are Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, 76, and Stevens, 89, although neither has betrayed any intention of leaving. Ginsburg, who is undergoing chemotherapy following surgery for pancreatic cancer in February, said she wants to serve into her 80s.

Even if Souter were intending to step down, he might be likely to hire clerks with the expectation that they would remain at the court working for his successor or another justice. Several justices have described the mountain of legal briefs that awaited them when they joined the court, so having clerks in place would help, Ward said.

April 30, 2009 in Current Affairs, Politics | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Washington Blade video | Carrie Prejean talks marriage

From Washington Blade:

Carrie Prejean spoke and answered questions about her faith and her opinions about marriage at the Press Club in Washington, D.C. Video by Aram Vartian.

April 30, 2009 in Current Affairs, Politics, Religion | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Today’s Dining Out For Life benefits Care Resource, South Florida’s largest AIDS charity

From Care Resource:


Today, April 30th, over 50 cities in the United States and Canada will take part in the Dining Out For Life fundraiser benefiting local HIV/AIDS charities.
When you dine at a participating restaurant, a portion of your food bill is donated Care Resource, South Florida's oldest and largest HIV/AIDS community health provider, in the fight against AIDS.
Please make sure to visit one on the restaurants listed below during their participating meal service(s) and take part in this delicious one-day nationwide fundraiser.

OUR RESTAURANTS!

8 oz. Burger Bar
American

Tel: 305-397-8246
1080 Alton Rd
Miami Beach

Donation: 25%
Dinner


Bond Street Lounge
Sushi, Japanese

Tel: 305-398-1806
150 20th Street
Miami Beach

Donation: 25%
Dinner


Bulldog Barbecue
Barbecue

Tel: 305-940-9655
15400 Biscayne Boulevard
North Miami

Donation: 25%
Dinner


Cafe @ Books & Books
New South Florida

Tel: 305-695-8898
933 Lincoln Road
Miami Beach

Donation: 25%
Dinner


Eleven Leprechauns Irish Pub & Restaurant
Irish Pub

Tel: 305.297.7405
3120 Commodore Plaza
Coconut Grove

Donation: 25%
Lunch / Dinner


Fifi's Place
Seafood

Tel: 305-865-5665
6934 Collins Avenue
Miami Beach

Donation: 25%
Dinner


Fratelli Lyon
Italian

Tel: 305-572-2901
4141 NE 2 Street
Miami

Donation: 25%
Dinner


Galanga
Sushi & Thai

Tel: 954-565-7577
2389 Wilton Drive
Wilton Manors

Donation: 25%
Dinner


Humpy's Pizza
Italian

Tel: 954-566-2722
2244 Wilton Drive
Wilton Manors

Donation: 25%
Lunch


La Riviera
Mediterranean and
French

Tel: 305-264-4888
5800 Blue Lagoon
Miami

Donation: 25%
Dinner


The Last Carrot
Health Food

Tel: 305-445-0805
3133 Grand Avenue
Coconut Grove

Donation: 25%
Lunch


Lucky Strike Lanes American

Tel: 305-532-0307
1691 Michigan Avenue
Miami Beach

Donation: 25%
Lunch / Dinner


Peruvian House
Peruvian

Tel: 786-260-4312
1851 N. Federal Highway
Hollywood

Donation: 25%
Lunch / Dinner


Piola - Brickell
Italian, Pizza

Tel: 305-374-0031
1250 S. Miami Avenue
Miami

Donation: 25%
Lunch / Dinner


Piola - Hallandale
Italian, Pizza

Tel: 954-457-9394
1703 E. Hallandale Beach Boulevard, Hallandale

Donation: 25%
Lunch / Dinner


Pizza Rustica
Pizza

Tel: 305-538-6009
1447 Washington Avenue
Miami Beach

Donation:
Dinner


Qdoba Mexican Grill
Mexican

Tel: 305-668-3770
5748 Sunset Drive
South Miami

Donation: 25%
Dinner


Shooter's Waterfront Cafe
American

Tel: 954-566-2855
3033 NE 32 Avenue
Fort Lauderdale

Donation: 25%
Dinner


Table 8
American

Tel: 305-695-4114
1458 Ocean Drive
Miami Beach

Donation: 25%
Dinner


Tap Tap
Haitian

Tel: 305-672-2898
819 5th Street
Miami Beach

Donation: 25%
Lunch / Dinner


Trina Restaurant and Lounge
Mediterranean

Tel: 954-567-8070
601 N Fort Lauderdale Beach Boulevard,
Fort Lauderdale

Donation: 25%
Dinner


Tuna's Raw Bar & Grille
Seafood

Tel: 305-932-0630
17850 West Dixie Hwy
North Miami Beach

Donation: 25%
Dinner


Wish
Mediterranean

Tel: 305-674-9474
801 Collins Avenue
Miami Beach

Donation: 25%
Dinner


World Resource Cafe
Sushi & Thai

Tel: 305-535-8987
719 Lincoln Rd
Miami Beach

Donation: 25%
Dinner

April 30, 2009 in AIDS and Health | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Miss California Organization: We paid for Carrie Prejean’s breast implants weeks before pageant

FromGay_Marriage_Miss_California_sff_embedded_prod_affiliate_56 Access Hollywood:

LOS ANGELES — Shanna Moakler, co-executive director of the Miss California Organization, has confirmed the group behind the pageant paid for Miss California Carrie Prejean’s breast implants, weeks before she competed in Miss USA.

To read the complete article, click here.

April 30, 2009 in Current Affairs, Politics, Religion | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Task Force Action Fund applauds Maine Senate’s passage of marriage equality bill

News release from The National Gay and Lesbian Task Force:

The National Gay and Lesbian Task Force Action Fund applauds the Maine Senate’s passage today of legislation that would extend the freedom to marry to same-sex couples. The measure advances to the House.

Statement by Rea Carey, Executive Director
National Gay and Lesbian Task Force Action Fund

“Today’s victory in Maine will resonate throughout the country as other states continue to consider extending the freedom to marry. Following recent marriage victories in Iowa and Vermont, today’s vote affirms the national momentum building for marriage equality. As legislators and the public continue to debate the issue, people are increasingly recognizing that only marriage provides same-sex couples with the dignity, respect and protections that are bestowed by the institution. We urge the House to now pass this critically important legislation.

“We congratulate our state partner, EqualityMaine, for its great work to achieve this hard-fought victory. Because of EqualityMaine’s leadership, same-sex couples in Maine are one step closer to winning the freedom to marry. The Task Force is proud of its 5-year partnership with EqualityMaine to achieve today’s victory.”

Statement by Betsy Smith
Executive Director, EqualityMaine

“The Maine State Senate today took a clear stand for fairness and equality for all Maine families. This was a difficult issue for many legislators, but in the end it was about upholding the constitutional value to treat everyone equally under the law. We are so proud of the Senate for not abdicating its responsibility by carefully studying the issue and not simply leaving it to voters to decide. Our long-term partnership with the Task Force has directly led to our ability to build and run a grassroots program rooted in identifying, recruiting and training volunteers to have face-to-face conversations with their legislators and voters. This partnership has made all the difference. It wasn't long ago when LGBT families would not have come forward to tell the stories of their lives to their neighbors and legislators. This effort has made all the difference in all of our lives.”

More about the Task Force’s investment in Maine

The National Gay and Lesbian Task Force Foundation and the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force Action Fund have invested significantly in the work of EqualityMaine to build greater political power for the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community:

The Task Force Foundation has:

  • Given $82,000 to launch and grow EqualityMaine’s first-ever voter identification project. The grant enabled EqualityMaine to hire its first statewide organizer to recruit and train hundreds of volunteers to talk with voters face to face about marriage equality and identify voters supportive of the issue. As a result, EqualityMaine has built a list of more than 50,000 identified supporters of the freedom to marry, one of the largest such state lists in the country. 
  • Organized the Maine LGBT Power Summit in late April, which brought together 140 leaders from across the country, including more than 70 Mainers, for training in campaign fundamentals. At the summit, participants walked door to door and spoke with more than 1,100 voters about marriage equality and raised more than $52,000 for their respective state or local organizations.
  • Trained more than 30 additional Maine leaders at Task Force Power Summits in 2004-2005 to support EqualityMaine’s voter identification project.

The Task Force Action Fund has: 

  • Sent organizers to work on the ground in Maine in February 2009 to launch EqualityMaine’s marriage equality field program. Following the April Power Summit, several Task Force organizers remained in Maine to provide additional field support in the final days leading up to the Senate vote.
  • Provided $20,000 to EqualityMaine in seed money in January 2009 to EqualityMaine to hire nine field organizers. 
  • Dedicated a Task Force organizer to work full time for one month in the No on 1 campaign in 2005, which successfully defeated a referendum that would have repealed its statewide nondiscrimination law. 
  • Contributed $93,000 to the No on 1 campaign.

April 30, 2009 in Current Affairs, Politics, Religion | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Video | ‘No Offense’: Miss California speaks against marriage for gay, lesbian couples

Updated: “This video is no longer available due to a copyright claim by Mario Lavandeira.” (AKA Perez Hilton)

Posted on YouTube by Nation For Marriage:

Is supporting marriage "bigotry"?

Preserve Marriage. Protect Freedom of Speech. Protect Religious Liberty.

Let us stand together to support marriage and these rights.

The National Organization for Marriage (NOM) is a nonprofit organization with a mission to protect marriage and the faith communities that sustain it.

April 30, 2009 in Current Affairs, Politics, Religion | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)

Breaking news: Maine senate approves same-sex marriage

From Portland (Maine) Press Herald:

The Maine Senate this morning passed a bill that would allow same-sex marriage in Maine.

The Senate voted 20-15 in favor of the measure.

The bill still has to be passed by Maine’s House and approved by Gov. John Baldacci. Click here to read the full article.

April 30, 2009 in Politics, Religion | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

Music | Let’s make a date with Johnny Rodgers

  • Audio | Click to hear a clip from Let’s Make a Date
BY STEVE ROTHAUS, srothaus@MiamiHerald.com

5274414 Johnny Rodgers' road from South Miami-Dade to Broadway and back:

• He studies musical theater at New World School of the Arts, Florida State University, Miami Dade College and University of Miami, then gets a job singing with the legendary Mel Tormé.

• Rodgers later moves to New York and a friend of a friend introduces him to Liza Minnelli, who hires him as a backup singer and says, ''come around the world with me.'' Last December, he's part of her big Broadway comeback, Liza's at the Palace.

• Now, Rodgers returns to South Florida. He and his Johnny Rodgers Band will perform two shows Saturday and Sunday at the MAC Building opposite University of Miami.

''Besides New York being my base, I consider Miami to be my home. The sky, there's something special about it. It brings me back and makes me feel like a kid again,'' said Rodgers, age 34.

After a few concerts in Europe with Minnelli, Rodgers and his band will return to South Florida this summer for concerts in Miami Beach and Palm Beach.

Rodgers grew up near the Falls shopping center and decided as a child to study musical theater.

''I was very impressed with the young man,'' says professor Larry Lapin, who heads the jazz vocal program at UM's music school. ``He had a great attitude and was very, very talented. He's developed into a very, very good singer-songwriter.''

Rodgers met Tormé after he transferred from UM to Western Michigan University. He worked with the jazz giant about a year before a stroke ended his career in 1996. Tormé died in 1999.

''I got the thrill of singing with him and singing for him backstage,'' Rodgers says.

5274415 Rodgers has recorded several albums of original music and co-wrote a song for Minnelli, I Would Never Leave You, which she introduced during the Broadway run and recorded as part of the show's cast album.

''It's a love song to the audience, a thank you and a reassurance that she will always be there for them,'' Rodgers says.

Minnelli also has recorded a duet with Rodgers, Let's Make a Date, another song he co-wrote. It can be downloaded on iTunes, Amazon.com and other sites, and bought on CD at F.Y.E. and Spec's Music.

Rodgers met Minnelli through her longtime friend Fred Ebb, who wrote the lyrics to Cabaret and Theme from `New York, New York.' Ebb died in 2004.

After playing a few benefits with Minnelli, Rodgers joined her act as a backup singer and musician. Last year, he became one of the singing Williams Brothers in a touring tribute to Minnelli's godmother, MGM music arranger Kay Thompson, who helped shape the singing style of Judy Garland.

This is the show that Minnelli brought to New York, along with Rodgers.

''It was always a dream of mine to be on Broadway,'' Rodgers says. ``What a great and surprising way to get there, through an engagement with her.''

IF YOU GO

What: Johnny Rodgers Band

When: 8 p.m. Saturday and 6 p.m. Sunday

Where: MAC Building across from University of Miami, 5960 SW 57th Ave.

Tickets: $25, $15 students with ID

Info: 305-455-3333 or www.johnnyrodgers.com

April 30, 2009 in Music, Theater | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)

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