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  1. Ruth Bader Ginsburg

    Ruth Bader Ginsburg

    Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States from 1993 to 2020

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  1. Sep 26, 2020 · Ruth Bader met Martin Ginsburg on a blind date as a freshman at Cornell University. They were engaged by her junior year and married after her graduation in 1954 at his parents’ home on Long...

  2. May 29, 2024 · Joan Ruth Bader was the younger of the two children of Nathan Bader, a merchant, and Celia Bader. Her elder sister, Marilyn, died of meningitis at the age of six, when Joan was 14 months old. Outside her family, Ginsburg began to go by the name “Ruth” in kindergarten to help her teachers distinguish her from other students named Joan.

  3. At age 21, Ruth Bader Ginsburg worked for the Social Security Administration office in Oklahoma, where she was demoted after becoming pregnant with her first child. She gave birth to a daughter in 1955.

  4. May 7, 2021 · Ginsburg was born Joan Ruth Bader on March 15, 1933, in Brooklyn, New York. The second daughter of Nathan and Celia Bader, she grew up in a low-income, working-class neighborhood in...

  5. Nov 9, 2009 · Ruth Bader Ginsburg became the second female justice of the U.S. Supreme Court. Born in 1933 in Brooklyn, New York, Bader taught at Rutgers University Law School and then at Columbia University...

  6. Feb 18, 2015 · From camp rabbi to Cornell student, mother to Supreme Court Justice, Ruth Bader Ginsburg has proved to be a powerful presence

  7. Sep 19, 2020 · Ruth Bader, when she was two-years-old, at her home in Brooklyn, N.Y., in 1935. Ginsburg, who was as pioneering as she was brash, died Sept. 18, 2020, the court said. She was 87.

  8. Sep 22, 2020 · Ruth Bader Ginsburg became a national icon after a young law student dedicated a social media page to her 6. "Women belong in all places where decisions are being made.

  9. 1970s: Ruth Bader Ginsburg ’59 encourages students in her seminar on sex discrimination law to assist her in preparing to argue on behalf of the ACLU Women’s Rights Project before the U.S. Supreme Court. In oral arguments, Ginsburg was a captivating storyteller.

  10. Sep 19, 2020 · Ruth Bader Ginsburg in 1972. She became the first tenured female professor at Columbia Law School before moving on to the U.S. Court of Appeals and then the Supreme Court. Credit...

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