Authors: Linda Hirshman
 Â
12 respectable, but not outstanding: Henry Monaghan, interview with the author, October 14, 2013.
 Â
12 Carl Spaeth: Biskupic,
Sandra Day O'Connor
, 24â25.
 Â
12 right to privacy: Samuel D. Warren and Louis D. Brandeis, “The Right to Privacy,”
Harvard Law Review
4 (December 15, 1890): 193â220,
http://
www.english.illinois.edu/-people-/faculty/debaron/
582
/
582
%
20
readings/right%
20
to%
2
0
privacy.pdf.
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12 rule of law itself: Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., “The Path of the Law,”
Harvard Law Review
10 (1897): 457,
http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/
2373.
 Â
12 secretary of state: Warren Christopher,
Chances of a Lifetime: A Memoir
(New York: Simon and Schuster, 2001), 19â20
.
 Â
13 Everybody loved Sandra: A titillating factoid is that apparently Sandra spent a few evenings with Bill Rehnquist, a fellow student just out of the army, and destined as well for higher things. McFeatters,
Sandra Day O'Connor
, 43.
 Â
13 never dated anyone else: Biskupic,
Sandra Day O'Connor
, 26, n. 18.
 Â
13 to phone around: Ann McFeatters,
Sandra Day O'Connor: Justice in the Balance
(Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 2005), 45; David Gergen, “A Candid Conversation with Sandra Day O'Connor: âI Can Still Make a Difference,'”
Parade
, September 30, 2012,
http://www.civicmissionofschools.org/news/
2012
-
10
-parade-magazine-a-candid-conversation-with-sandra-da.
 Â
14 had a brain: Marlo Thomas,
The Right Words at the Right Time
(New York: Atria, 2002), 115.
 Â
14 a similar fate: Seymour Brody, “Ruth Bader Ginsburg,”
Jewish Heroes and Heroines of America:
150
True Stories of Jewish Heroism
(Hollywood, Fla.: Lifetime Books, 1996),
http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/
biography/Ginsburg.html
 Â
15 two classroom buildings: Bradley Blackburn, “Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Sandra Day O'Connor on Life and the Supreme Court,”
ABC News
, October 26, 2010,
http://abcnews.go.com/WN/diane-sawyer-interviews-maria-shriver-sandra-day-oconnor/story?id=
11977195.
 Â
15 1954 desegregation decision: Herbert Wechsler, “Toward Neutral Principles of Constitutional Law,”
Harvard Law Review
73 (1959): 1.
 Â
16 “their husband's work”: Ira E. Stoll, “Ginsburg Blasts Harvard Law; Past, Present Deans Defend School,”
Harvard Crimson
, July 23, 1993,
http://www.thecrimson.com/article/
1993
/
7
/
23
/ginsburg-blasts-harvard-law-pin-testimony/.
 Â
16 with a Harvard degree: Martin D. Ginsburg, “Spousal Transfers: In '58, It Was Different,”
Harvard Law Record
, May 6, 1977, 11.
 Â
16 “or had been a male”: Ginsburg Archive, Library of Congress, Box 19, F Bio 1976â78.
 Â
17 lymph nodes: Ginsburg, letter to Stephen Wiesenfeld, December 22, 1998.
 Â
17 died of the disease: Testicular Cancer Resource Center, “Testicular Cancer Treatments: Chemotherapy,”
http://tcrc.acor.org/chemo.html.
 Â
17 she says flatly: Debra Bruno, “Justice Ginsburg Remembers Her First Steps in the Law,”
Legal Times
, November 13, 2007, www.law.com/jsp/article.jsp?id=1194861838591 and http://www.law.com/jsp/article .jsp?id=900005558448&Justice_Ginsburg_Remembers_Her_First_Steps_in_the_Law&slreturn=20130313123922.
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17 of radiation: Ginsburg, letter to Stephen Wiesenfeld, December 22, 1998.
 Â
17 “a set of notes”: Ibid.
 Â
17 the only woman: “Ruth Bader Ginsburg,”
Miriam's Cup
(website),
http://www.miriamscup.com/GinsburgBiog.htm.
 Â
17 no further evidence of cancer: Ginsburg, letter to Stephen Wiesenfeld, December 22, 1998.
 Â
17 “couldn't cope with”: Bruno, “Justice Ginsburg Remembers.”
 Â
17 no more children: Ginsburg, letter to Stephen Wiesenfeld, December 22, 1998.
 Â
18 “would not give it up”: Stephanie Frances Ward, “Family Ties,”
ABA Journal
, October 1, 2010,
http://www.abajournal.com/magazine/article/family_ties
1
/.
 Â
18 applied to him: Biskupic,
Sandra Day O'Connor
, 28.
 Â
19 “run out of money”: taped interview with Sandra O'Connor, Phoenix Oral History Project, 1980, Arizona Historical Society.
 Â
19 old, tired, and corrupt: Paul Eckstein, interview with the author, April 16, 2013; Zachary Smith,
Politics and Public Policy in Arizona
(Westport, Conn.: Praeger, 1996).
 Â
19 took over the state media: “The Arizona Republic: An Overview,” azcentral.com,
http://www.azcentral.com/help/articles/about
2
.html.
 Â
19 up-and-coming Young Republicans: Dennis Abrams,
Sandra Day O'Connor
(New York: Chelsea House, 2009), 42.
 Â
20 county vice chairman: “Justice Sandra Day O'Connor Talks about Her Life on Valley Girl,” AOL.com, July 12, 2012,
http://on.aol.com/video/justice-sandra-day-oconnor-talks-about-her-life-on-the-valley-girl-
517415204.
 Â
20 voluntary organization: Phoenix Oral History Project, taped interview with Sandra Day O'Connor, 1980, Arizona Historical Society.
 Â
20 365 nights: Ibid.
 Â
20 gave a party: John Driggs, interview with the author, January 25, 2014.
 Â
21 “I'm not hiring a woman”: Ruth Bader Ginsburg, interview, Academy of Achievement, August 17, 2010,
http://
www.achievement.org/autodoc/page/gin
0
int-
4.
 Â
21 salty style of speech: “A Conversation with Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg,” C-SPAN, September 15, 2009,
http://
www.c-span.org/video/?
288900
-
1
/conversation-justice-ruth-bader-ginsburg.
 Â
21 as harshly as race: Seth Stern and Stephen Wermiel,
Justice Brennan: Liberal Champion
(Boston: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2010), 400. In 1973, a former Brennan clerk, then teaching at Berkeley, baldly pressured his former justice to hire his first woman clerk, Marsha Berzon. The
Harvard Law Review
had just done a study of the paucity of female clerks, the male ex-clerk warned Brennan, and it was just a matter of time before the spotlight on him grew more intense.
 Â
21 “as if I wasn't there”: “A Conversation with Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg,” C-SPAN, September 15, 2009,
http://www.c-span.org/video/?
288900
-
1
/conversation-justice-ruth-bader-ginsburg.
 Â
21 rest of the year: Sandra Grayson, interview with the author, November 8, 2013.
 Â
21 Eva Moberg: Moberg's article, “Kvinnans villkorliga frigivning,” appeared in an anthology,
Unga Liberaler: nio inlägg i idédebatten
(Stockholm: Bonnier, 1961). Ginsburg's Swedish roots are the subject of a pathbreaking revisionist
history of her jurisprudence by the young legal scholar Cary C. Franklin, “The Anti-Stereotyping Principle in Constitutional Sex Discrimination Law,”
NYU Law Review
85 (2010), electronic copy available at http://ssrn.com/abstract=1589754. Much of this section of
Sisters in Law
is indebted to Franklin's research, as well as my own findings in the Ginsburg archives.
 Â
22 sex-role stereotyping: Franklin, “The Anti-Stereotyping Principle,” 119.
 Â
22 “The Emancipation of Man”: Olof Palme, “The Emancipation of Man,” Address Before the Women's National Democratic Club (June 8, 1970),
http://www.olofpalme.org/wp-content/dokument/
700608
_emancipation_of_man”.pdf.
Kenneth M. Davidson, Ruth B. Ginsburg, and Herma H. Kay,
Sex-Based Discrimination: Text, Cases and Materials
(Saint Paul, Minn.: West Publishing, 1974), 938, 944.
 Â
22 “her personal talents”: Palme, “The Emancipation of Man.”
 Â
22 reproducing on the job: Malvina Halberstam, “Ruth Bader Ginsburg,”
Encyclopedia
, Jewish Women's Archive,
http://jwa.org/encyclopedia/article/ginsburg-ruth-bader.
 Â
22 she crowed: Ginsburg, letter to Stephen Wiesenfeld, December 22, 1998.
 Â
23 “bra and panties”: Frank Askin, interview with the author, June 18, 2013.
 Â
23 his unforthcoming spouse: Monagahn interview; Askin interview.
 Â
23 pictures her children had drawn: Paul Rosenblatt, interview with the author, February 7, 2014.
 Â
23 “we were so busy”: Ibid.
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24
any State on account of sex
: The text of the amendment is available at
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equal_Rights_Amendment.
 Â
24 “I never had a further problem”: Phoenix Oral History Project, transcript of taped interview with Sandra Day O'Connor, 1980, Arizona Historical Society, 10.
 Â
25 “child care as a result”: Biskupic,
Sandra Day O'Connor
, 31.
 Â
25 did the people's business: “Sandra Day O'Connor House,” Tempe Preservation on Flickr,
http://www.tempe.gov/city-hall/community-development/historic-preservation/tempe-historic-property-register/sandra-day-o-connor-house.
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25 discriminatory hiring hall:
Kaplowitz v. University of Chicago
, 387 F.Supp. 42 (1974),
http://www.leagle.com/decision/
1974429387
FSupp
42
_
1422
.xml/KAPLOWITZ%
2
0
v.%
20
UNIVERSITY%
20
OF%
20
CHICAGO.
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25 influence of the feminist revolution: Frank Askin, interview with author, June 18, 2013.
 Â
25 there was so little written: Fred Strebeigh,
Equal: Women Reshape American Law
(New York: W. W. Norton, 2009), 19.
 Â
25 “putting up with them?”: David Margolick, “Trial by Adversity Shapes Jurist's Outlook,”
New York Times
, June 25, 1993, http://www.nytimes.com/1993/06/25/us/trial-by-adversity-shapes-jurist-s-outlook.html?pagewanted=all&src=pm.
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26 in support of the Equal Rights Amendment: Ginsburg Archive, Library of Congress, Box 20, folder 1970â71, ERA correspondence, contains various letters to each of the members of the Senate and House Judiciary Committees.
 Â
26 “Realizing the Equality Principle”: Ginsburg Archive, Library of Congress, Box 12.
 Â
26 stay-at-home dad during law school: David G. Post, interview with the author, June 3, 2014.
 Â
26 down the pipeline: Ginsburg Archive, Library of Congress, Box 11, folder speeches 70â71 includes the first of many speeches to the National Conference of Law Women. Ruth Bader Ginsburg, “Sex and Unequal Protection: Men and Women as Victims,” keynote address, Southern Regional Conference of the National Conference of Law Women, Duke University, October 1, 1971, published in
Journal of Family Law
11 (1971): 347 (hereafter Duke Speech).
 Â
27 feminist heroine's consciousness-raising: Ginsburg Archive, Library of Congress, Box 46, F. Sex Equality, 1970.
 Â
27 “advantaged treatment today”: Duke Speech.
 Â
27 “extra work during the week”: Alix Kates Shulman, “A Marriage Agreement,”
Up from Under
(August/September 1970); reprinted in
A Marriage Agreement and Other Essays: Four Decades of Feminist Writing
(New York: Open Road Integrated Media, 2012), available at http://jwa.org/sites/jwa .org/files/mediaobjects/a_marriage_agreement_alix_kates_shulman.jpg.
 Â
28 Shulman's little essay: Arlie Russell Hochschild,
The Second Shift
(New York: Avon, 1990).
 Â
28 She collected: Ginsburg Archive, Library of Congress, Box 46, F. Sex Equality, 1972â73.
 Â
28 impoverishes women and enriches men: Lenore J. Weitzman, “The Economics of Divorce: Social and Economic Consequences of Property, Alimony and Child Support Awards,”
UCLA Law Review
28 (1980â81): 1181.
 Â
28 “within the meaning of the Constitution”: Ruth Bader Ginsburg, “
Muller v. Oregon
: One Hundred Years Later,”
Willamette Law Review
45 (2009): 359â80 (see 370),
http://www.willamette.edu/wucl/resources/journals/review/pdf/
Volume%
204
5
/WLR
45
-
3
_Justice_Ginsburg.pdf.