With this week’s news of Supreme Court Justice David Souter’s retirement, there’s been speculation about whom Obama will pick to replace the liberal judge. Pundits believe the nominee will most likely be a woman or Latino–or perhaps both!–which is why University trustee Sonia Sotomayor ‘76, who is of Puerto Rican descent, has consistently been mentioned as a shortlist candidate. In fact, some say she is currently the frontrunner.
Sotomayor’s name has been floating around for a while. She’s currently a federal appeals court judge in New York and is well liked by liberal public-interest groups, though she’s considered to be a centrist. In fact, she was first appointed to the federal bench by George H.W. Bush. Her highest-profile case, to date, is probably her 1995 decision that finally ended the Major League Baseball strike.
She’s also crazy smart. At Princeton, Sotomayor was a history major and graduated summa cum laude. Her thesis was on Luis Muñoz Marín, the first democratically elected governor of Puerto Rico. She went on to gradaute from Yale Law, where she was an editor for the Yale Law Journal.
Credentials aside, Sotomayor has a compelling life story. She grew up in a Bronx housing project, and her father died when she was nine years-old. Her single mother raised her and her younger brother by working as a nurse in a methadone clinic.
In 2001, Princeton awarded her an honorary degree, and she became a University trustee in 2007. If nominated, Sotomayor would be only the third woman and first Latino Supreme Court justice. She would also be the second Princetonian to currently sit on the Supreme Court, the other being Justice Samuel Alito ‘72.



Princeton students have voted to donate both the Fall 2009 Lawnparties main act and USG Senate Pilot Program funds to “Student-initiated service projects” over not donating the money at all or donating the funds to Annual Giving. At least, that’s according to a PDF released by the USG earlier today.
If election hijinks are your bag (you’re out there, I know you are!) then the past year of USG fun has been a field day. After last semester’s USG VP debacle (Ivy Gate!) we were hoping for a nice, quiet election cycle this time around. As usual, we were disappointed. Queue up the email!
Professor Paul Muldoon, a Pulitzer Prize-winning poet, will rediscover his Northern Ireland roots as he spends 

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On a recent Wednesday evening Kathy Kiely, USA Today writer and current Mathey College Faculty Member in Residence (she lives in Blair Arch!) had dinner with a group of about a dozen students to talk about the rapidly deteriorating state of print journalism and her own coverage of the November election.
After Obama’s victory in the Iowa caucus, Kiely’s editors at USA Today assumed that Obama would win the New Hampshire primary easily and go on to win the nomination (pretty much all the polling data and public opinion was predicting a big Obama victory in New Hampshire). So her editors assigned Kiely to a big profile on Obama that would run after his victory.
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