I attended a retreat for ACLU Lawyers in Tarrytown NY in 1973 when I was in my twenties and the Justice, then Professor, Ginsberg was about 40. She was then head of the ACLU Women's rights program.
As we walked the grounds of the retreat center, near a tennis court as I recall, she, elegant as ever, told a small group of us how to win a case in the conservative Burger Court. She explained that you needed an issue where both men and women were harmed by a discriminatory provision. The issue she discussed was social security survivors' payments. Men got less because it was assumed they needed less.
As a result, the man lost out because as a widower he did not collect as much as a woman based on her social security contributions. The woman also lost because her contributions did not result in the same level of survivors' benefits that a man's contributions would. The case was. Weinberger v. Weisenfeld, which she won two years later in a unanimous decision from the U.S. Supreme Court. View the online summary for the case.
– Hon. Peter Buchsbaum
National Conference of State Trial Judges
Introduction of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg in 1999 When She Became the First Woman Honored with the ABA Thurgood Marshall Award, by Her Student, Friend and Nominator, Lynn Hecht Schafran
Beginning in 1972, Justice Ginsburg was my teacher, my mentor and my friend. In l999 I nominated her for the ABA Thurgood Marshall Award, and she became the first woman so honored. Here is my award ceremony introduction to Justice Ginsburg and a link to the C-Span video of that introduction and Justice Ginsburg’s speech, focused on her deep admiration for Justice Marshall and his impact on her own work.
– Lynn Hecht Schafran
Lawyers Confernece
Legal Director and Director of the National Judicial Education Program to Promote Equality for Women and Men in the Courts at Legal Momentum
In 2012, the ABA leadership asked me to chair a task force on the future of legal education. When we issued our report in 2014, I sent a copy of the report to each of the Justices, with a cover letter that explained our work. I signed the letter in a rather ordinary way, like “truly yours” and giving my name and showing “Chief Justice of Indiana (1987-2012)”. In my copy to Justice Ginsburg, I hand-wrote something I thought she’d enjoy knowing: that the Chief Justice of Indiana’s Supreme Court, the Chief Judge of the Court of Appeals, and the Chief Judge of the Tax Court were all women.
The letter came flying back from Washington. Justice Ginsburg had written on it: “You’re too young to retire!”
The country was certainly fortunate that she so committed herself to public service.
– Hon. Randall T. Shepard
Chief Justice of Indiana (Ret.)
c/o Indiana Court of Appeals
Appellate Judges Conference