Dedication: Lending Light to Countless Lamps: A Tribute to Judge Norma Levy Shapiro

November 1, 2003

ITEM DETAILS

Type: Law review article
Source: U. Pa. L. Rev
Citation: 152 U. Pa. L. Rev 1 (2003-2004)
Date is approximate: No

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Article Text

DEDICATION

LENDING LIGHT TO COUNTLESS LAMPS:

A TRIBUTE TO JUDGE NORMA LEW SHAPIRO

SANDRA DAY O'CONNORt

There is a sad but common misconception in our society that time and energy contributed to others is time and energy lost. Rare is the individual with the perspective to recognize that we may give without losing, and that it is often in giving that we gain.

Judge Norma Shapiro is such an individual. In a career that has spanned more than five remarkable decades, Judge Shapiro has dem onstrated a sincere selflessness that is immeasurable in its impact. She has said that one of her favorite quotations is from the ancient Roman official Gains, who poignantly noted that "[o]ne who helps the wan dering traveler does, as it were, light another's lamp by their own, and it gives no less light because it helped another."1 And indeed, as we pay tribute to her extraordinary professional and personal accom plishments, we cannot help but recognize the countless lamps to which she has lent her light.

When she began law school in 1948, Judge Shapiro was one of only eight women in her class at the University of Pennsylvania. As one whose timing and experience was parallel, I can say with some confidence that this path sometimes was not easy. Nonetheless,Judge Shapiro thrived. She served as an editor of the Law Reviewand gradu ated at the top of her class. And in the years that followed, women who walked the same path into that predominantly male world knew that they could count on her

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