[59] The flight would also carry Christa McAuliffe, a teacher-observer selected as part of NASA's Teacher in Space Project. [61], Initially scheduled for January 24, 1986, the launch was delayed until January 28 by rain, high winds, a troublesome bolt on the Space Shuttle Challenger's hatch and freezing temperatures. Judith Resnik is the Arthur Liman Professor of Law at Yale Law School, where she teaches about federalism, procedure, courts, prisons, equality, and citizenship. She arguedMohawk Industries, Inc. v. Carpenter, decided in 2009 by the United States Supreme Court, and in the 1987 case about admission of women to the Rotary Club. Resnik - Unlocking the Courts: Ending Arbitration Mandates and Gag Nancy Gertner, a retired Federal District Court Judge, is a Senior Lecturer in Law at Harvard Law School. Her scholarship focuses on the relationship of democratic values to government services such as courts, prisons, and post offices; the role of collective redress and class actions; contemporary conflicts over privatization; the relationships of states to citizens and non-citizens; the interaction among federal, state, and tribal courts and the forms and norms of federalism; practices of punishment; and equality and gender. A similar article appeared in Fortune.com. Another thing entirely is that SIX members of the Challenger crew have doppelgangers who are alive, some with the exact same names (Richard Scobee, Michael J. Smith, Judith Resnick, Sharon McAuliffe). A new fellowship honors Professors Judith Resnik and Dennis E. Curtis 66 for their commitment to public interest law. [34], Other astronauts felt that either Resnik or Sally Ride would become the first woman in the group to fly in space, as they received the sorts of technical assignments that best prepared them for flight, such as capsule communicator (CapCom) duties. A study by the Liman Center and the Association of State Correctional Administrators is mentioned in an article on how prison officials are resisting efforts to curb the use of solitary confinement. In 2001, she was elected a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and in 2002, she became a member of the American Philosophical Society, where she delivered the Henry LaBarre Jayne Lecture in 2005. Amy Kapczynski 03 is an Associate Professor of Law at Yale Law School and director of the Global Health Justice Partnership and Judith Resnik is the Arthur Liman Professor of Law at Yale Law School. Documents. But the Judith Resnik at Yale was teaching law classes at the school (and at USC) in the 1970s and '80s at the same time that astronaut Judith Resnik was studying and working in. She also developed the deployment systems for the tethered satellite systems and worked on orbiter development, writing software for NASA to use on its missions. Navy. They read Carrying the Fire, the 1974 book by Apollo 11 astronaut Michael Collins, and she met with him in his office at the National Air and Space Museum. Arthur Liman Professor of Law Judith Resnik comments on the decline in the use of solitary confinement in prisons nationally. This fall, Yale Law Schools new cohort of faculty includes two members of the Liman community, Marisol Orihuela, a 20082009 Liman Fellow, and Monica Bell, a 20102011 Liman Fellow. Dear ladies and gentlemen, it's a great pleasure for me to say a few words at the launch of your new online course. [10] She was a gourmet cook and a navigator in sports car rallies, in which she took part many times with Oldak in his Triumph TR6. National Public Radio/ All Things Considered. Discovery had to be taken back to the Vehicle Assembly Building, where the faulty engine was replaced. House Judiciary Committee Member Howard Berman, Judge Danny Boggs and Yale Law Professor Judith Resnik Discuss Judicial Independence. Follow-up surveys provide a unique longitudinal database on the use of what correctional officials call restrictive housing. The reports include Aiming to Reduce Time-In-Cell: Reports from Correctional Systems on the Numbers of Prisoners in Restricted Housing and on the Potential of Policy Changes to Bring About Reforms(2016);Rethinking Death Row(2016);Reforming Restrictive Housing: The 2018 ASCA-Liman Nationwide Survey of Time-in-Cell, and its companion volume,Working to Limit Restrictive Housing: Efforts in Four Jurisdictions to Make Changes, both published in 2018, Time-in-Cell 2019: A Snapshot of Restrictive Housing.