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Roberts blends low-key style, high ambition
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John Roberts Jr. graduated in the fifth class to exit La Lumiere, and headed off to Harvard. His parents remained in the area until the mid-1980s, when his father was named general manager of the Bethlehem Steel plant in Johnstown, Pa.
Today the son is a local legend. That might have been the case even if he had not been tapped for the Supreme Court. "Everybody remembers John Roberts," says David Langley, a retired Bethlehem executive and John Langley's husband. "He was just smarter than everybody else."
The future nominee cut the same sort of swath through Cambridge, Mass. Fellow students from his Harvard years remember him as a person who was well-liked, though not gregarious; a hard worker, though never showy; and stand-out intelligent in an environment where the criteria to measure that is quite high.
Former colleagues remember him as a rare person who was both persuasive and persuadable. In a word, he was ... judicious. It's almost as if he were wearing black robes at age 21.
"He almost enjoyed it when you persuaded him that he was wrong," says Bill Kayatta, who met Roberts in their first year of law school. "A lot of people are not like that. They will look like they just lost a tennis match."
Roberts entered Harvard Law School in the fall of 1976. Eventually he won the post of managing editor of the Harvard Law Review - the person charged with making the editorial train run on time.
In that position Roberts wrote little himself, but dealt with the writings of others. He worked long hours, as did all masthead editors on the staff.
Stephen Galebach met Roberts on the first day of their law review careers, in the stuffy stacks of a library without air conditioning. He says the fact that Roberts thrived in the craftsman-like job of managing editor shows how nonpartisan he is. "He had no strong drive to stamp the law review with his particular views," says Mr. Galebach.
Roberts graduated from Harvard Law in 1979. A succession of fast-track positions quickly followed. From 1979 to 1980 he was a law clerk for Judge Henry Friendly for the 2nd US Circuit Court of Appeals. Next he was a clerk for then-associate Supreme Court justice William Rehnquist. After a quick stint in the Justice Department he served four years, 1982 to 1986, in President Reagan's Office of the White House Counsel. Then he entered the lucrative world of Washington private legal practice at a top firm.
In January 1992 the first President Bush nominated him for a federal judgeship on the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals. But then followed what could have been a crushing career blow, in that the Democratic-controlled Senate did not take up his nomination prior to that fall's election, and Bill Clinton's victory.
Roberts would have been one of the youngest federal appeals judges ever, says Richard Lazarus, a Georgetown University law professor and friend from Harvard Law days. But he did not let the disappointment wear him down. He spent the next decade developing himself into one of the most skilled members of the Supreme Court bar, arguing dozens of cases before the high court. He married, and adopted two children.
"He took what could have been a depressing and disappointing time, and made himself much more full, professionally and personally," says Professor Lazarus.
On Jan. 7, 2003, another President Bush nominated him - once again for the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals. This time the Senate confirmed him in four months.
Now his short record of opinions and his lengthier record of work in the Reagan administration are undergoing intense scrutiny by Republicans and Democrats alike. Some legal or ideological controversy may yet emerge. But people from his past say a personal controversy is unlikely in the extreme.
The Rev. Michael C. McFarland is president of the College of the Holy Cross in Worcester, Mass., alma mater of Roberts' wife, Jane. The Robertses "pretty much are what they appear," he says. "Everyone's probing around for some new threat they can pull out. But they're both really genuine people."
• Reporting by Barbara Stodola in Long Beach, Ind., Sara B. Miller in Cambridge, Mass., and Adam Karlin in Boston.
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