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Ginsburg sought to tamp down the speculation in a lighthearted manner. She mentioned a painting that usually hangs in her office by the German emigre artist Josef Albers. The painting is part of a traveling exhibition and is supposed to be returned in 2012. "If anyone asks how long I'll be here, at least until my Albers comes back," she said. Ginsburg also spoke often of Sandra Day O'Connor, who stepped down from the court in 2006 after 25 years. O'Connor's retirement briefly left Ginsburg as the only woman justice and she made clear she didn't like it. Now two women have been nominated to the court in the past two years.
Ginsburg pointed out that she also is the oldest justice, with the retirement of the 90-year-old Stevens. Next in line is her close friend and ideological opposite, 74-year-old Antonin Scalia. Ginsburg observed that she placed her desk in her recently renovated office the same way Scalia did in his. But the similarities end there, Ginsburg said, gesturing at the many paintings that hang on the walls. "He would not put up any of my art, and I wouldn't put up with his elk or whatever it is," she said of the hunting trophies Scalia displays.
[Associated
Press;
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