The Virginian-Pilot
                             THE VIRGINIAN-PILOT 
              Copyright (c) 1996, Landmark Communications, Inc.

DATE: Friday, January 26, 1996               TAG: 9601260550
SECTION: LOCAL                    PAGE: B5   EDITION: FINAL 
SOURCE: BY ROBERT LITTLE, STAFF WRITER 
DATELINE: RICHMOND                           LENGTH: Medium:   58 lines

SENATE REAPPOINTS JUDGES, MAKES BIPARTISAN HISTORY

Virginia's state senators didn't plot against one another, fire dozens of people or grind the wheels of government to a stop Thursday.

As such, they called it nothing short of a historic milestone in state politics.

The General Assembly on Thursday reappointed about four dozen judges from around the state whose terms are expiring. In the Senate, members approved the list unanimously and without discussion.

That wouldn't normally be noteworthy, but the list submitted for consideration this year was signed by members of both political parties - not just the Democrats. Giving Republicans a say in appointing judges was a key compromise when senators divided power in a chamber now represented equally by both parties.

The state constitution requires 21 votes in the Senate to nominate judges, so neither party has the heft to name judges alone. That means Republicans could have forced some Democratic judges from the bench. But they didn't.

``It is an historic moment, I think, to see bipartisan cooperation on an issue that had been so political in the past,'' said Sen. Joseph V. Gartlan Jr., a Fairfax Democrat.

Some members of the House of Delegates, which also approved the list Thursday, refused to vote in protest of the new arrangement. Democrats still rule in the House. But without a guaranteed concurrence from their Senate counterparts, they can no longer control the nomination process.

The true test of the legislature's new bipartisan design will come March 8, when members vote to fill judicial vacancies.

Republicans who negotiated their party's new sway said they never intended to meddle with the sitting judges - only to help choose new ones.

``I guess we can't declare it a complete success quite yet,'' said Gartlan. ILLUSTRATION: LOCAL JUDGES

Hampton Roads judges reappointed Thursday, and the lengths of

their new terms:

John C. Morrison Jr., Norfolk Circuit Court, eight years.

Lydia C. Taylor, Norfolk Circuit Court, eight years.

Colon H. Whitehurst, Chesapeake General District Court, six

years.

Thomas M. Ammons III, Virginia Beach General District Court, six

years.

G. Blair Harry, Suffolk General District Court, six years.

Frederick H. Creekmore Sr., Chesapeake Juvenile and Domestic

Relations Court, six years.

James H. Flippen Jr., Norfolk Juvenile and Domestic Relations

Court, six years.

KEYWORDS: GENERAL ASSEMBLY JUDGESHIPS by CNB