Difference between revisions of "Ruth Bader Ginsburg"

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'''Ruth Bader Ginsburg''' [[Law school|Law]] '[[1959|59]] is a Supreme Court Justice. She graduated from Columbia Law after transferring from [[Harvard]], and was the first woman to serve on both the Harvard and [[Columbia Law Review|Columbia Law Reviews]]. She graduated tied for first in her class. From [[1961]] to [[1963]] she was a research associate and then associate director of the Columbia Law School Project on International Procedure. She then briefly moved on to Rutgers before returning to become Columbia Law's first tenured woman, teaching from [[1972]] to [[1980]], when President Carter appointed her her to the DC Circuit Court of Appeals.
 
'''Ruth Bader Ginsburg''' [[Law school|Law]] '[[1959|59]] is a Supreme Court Justice. She graduated from Columbia Law after transferring from [[Harvard]], and was the first woman to serve on both the Harvard and [[Columbia Law Review|Columbia Law Reviews]]. She graduated tied for first in her class. From [[1961]] to [[1963]] she was a research associate and then associate director of the Columbia Law School Project on International Procedure. She then briefly moved on to Rutgers before returning to become Columbia Law's first tenured woman, teaching from [[1972]] to [[1980]], when President Carter appointed her her to the DC Circuit Court of Appeals.
  
Her daughter, [[Jane Ginsburg]], is a copyright professor at [[Columbia Law School]].
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Her daughter, [[Jane Ginsburg]], is a prominent scholar of copyright law at [[Columbia Law School]].
  
 
[[Category:Law school alumni|Ginsburg]]
 
[[Category:Law school alumni|Ginsburg]]
 
[[Category:Former professors|Ginsburg]]
 
[[Category:Former professors|Ginsburg]]

Revision as of 13:44, 20 September 2007

See also Wikipedia's article about "Ruth Bader Ginsburg".

Ruth Bader Ginsburg Law '59 is a Supreme Court Justice. She graduated from Columbia Law after transferring from Harvard, and was the first woman to serve on both the Harvard and Columbia Law Reviews. She graduated tied for first in her class. From 1961 to 1963 she was a research associate and then associate director of the Columbia Law School Project on International Procedure. She then briefly moved on to Rutgers before returning to become Columbia Law's first tenured woman, teaching from 1972 to 1980, when President Carter appointed her her to the DC Circuit Court of Appeals.

Her daughter, Jane Ginsburg, is a prominent scholar of copyright law at Columbia Law School.