Norma Sondra Levy Shapiro L'51

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Norma Sondra Levy was born on July 27, 1928, in Philadelphia, PA and raised in Cheltenham, a Philadelphia suburb. Her father, Bert, a furniture salesman, was born in Russia and immigrated to the United States around 1900. Her mother, Jane Kotkin, was a teacher. Norma graduated with honors from Cheltenham High School and from the University of Michigan in 1948 with a B.A. in political theory. At Michigan, she was elected to Phi Beta Kappa, Phi Beta Phi, and Alpha Lamda Delta. After college, she entered the Law School of the University of Pennsylvania, from which she graduated in 1951, magna cum laude, Order of the Coif, and the only woman in her class. While at law school, she was editor of the University of Pennsylvania Law Review, and married Bernard Shapiro, a doctor specializing in the emerging field of nuclear medicine.

Following graduation, Judge Shapiro served as a clerk (1951–1952) for Justice Horace Stern of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court. In 1954, she returned to the University of Pennsylvania Law School for a one-year graduate fellowship in criminal law, with an emphasis on juvenile court law.

During the early 1950s, Judge Shapiro taught a number of law courses at the University of Pennsylvania and, in 1956, she joined the prestigious Philadelphia law firm of Dechert, Price and Rhoads as an associate. In 1973, despite leaving the firm as a full-time lawyer for nine years to raise her three sons and working part-time instead, she was made partner. On August 11, 1978, President Jimmy Carter nominated her to be the first woman judge on the United States Third Circuit District Court.

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The Law Alumni Journal of the University of Pennsylvania Law School. This 1980 edition features an article about the careers of Judges Phyllis Kravitch, Dolores Sloviter, and Norma Shapiro, pg. 14-16.

Several court decisions gained Judge Shapiro national recognition. Perhaps the most famous was Harris v. Reeves, filed by a group of prisoners in 1982, complaining that prison overcrowding violated their constitutional guarantee against cruel and unusual punishment. Shapiro agreed with the plaintiffs, established a limit on Philadelphia prison populations, and became the de facto overseer of the prisons. In 1993, she ruled in favor of public housing in Chester, Pennsylvania, and placed the Chester Housing Authority in receivership, with the goal of improving public housing conditions.

Judge Shapiro received many awards for her legal, civic, and philanthropic service from organizations as diverse as the American Bar Association, the Federal Bar Association, the Philadelphia Bar Association, the Golden Slipper Club, and the National Council of Jewish Women. She served as a member or as the chair of Philadelphia and American Bar Association committees, and on the boards of professional societies and judicial bodies, the Jewish Publication Society, the University of Pennsylvania Law School, the Albert Einstein Medical Center, the Women’s Law Project, the Lower Merion [Pa.] School Board, the Jewish Community Relations Council of Greater Philadelphia, and the Philadelphia Federation of Jewish Agencies. Judge Shapiro assumed senior status on December 31, 1998, having served more than 20 years as a federal judge.

Judge Shapiro passed away on July 22, 2016, at the age of 87.

Biography of Judge Norma Shapiro was taken from the Jewish Women's Archive article, Norma Levy Shapiro, by Paul E. Wallner. 

Additional information about the career and life of Judge Norma Sondra Levy Shapiro: