Supreme Court nominee John Roberts "has spent most of his career as a star -- by all accounts, a superstar -- in the most rarified constellation of the legal galaxy, the exclusive club of Supreme Court appellate specialists," the Washington Post reports. "Now that Roberts has been nominated to sit on the court as its leader instead of standing before it as an advocate, his 17-year membership in that genteel, apolitical, almost academic club of overachievers may reveal more about his legal mind than his six-year stint as a brash, young Reagan administration aide or his two-year tenure as a federal judge."
The AP has the complete schedule for the hearings which begin on Monday.
The New York Times provides "a viewer's guide, by topic and in context, to the words and phrases that are likely to be heard as the event, part legal seminar and part political theater, proceeds."
New CBS Poll: "Forty-nine percent canít say today whether they think he should be confirmed or not. Thirty-five percent say he should be, while 10 percent think he should not."