WSJ: Justice O’Connor’s continuing judicial work [as a substitute judge, Justice O’Connor has heard nearly 80 cases and written more than a dozen opinions] comes in addition to many other activities, from ceremonial functions — such as serving as grand marshal of the Rose Parade in Pasadena, Calif., and as chancellor of the College of William & Mary in Williamsburg, Va. — to serious assignments, including the Iraq Study Group that proposed an exit strategy for U.S. forces and panels reviewing policy for the national parks, the U.S. position toward the International Criminal Court and ways to promote research into Alzheimer’s disease, which afflicts her husband, John. Justice O’Connor also lectures at law schools, dedicated her old Arizona home as a new center called the O’Connor House for Public Discourse and spearheaded Georgetown Law School’s Sandra Day O’Connor Project on the State of the Judiciary. She’s written a children’s book and pioneered a Web site intended to teach youngsters about the judiciary…”
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