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"You know, like all Jews," she quipped, "I was probably at a Chinese restaurant." Speaking at the White House on Friday, Kagan mostly took a more serious tone. She thanked Obama for trusting her enough to nominate her to the Supreme Court and pledged to fulfill an "obligation to uphold the rights and liberties afforded by our remarkable Constitution" and "to provide what the inscription on the Supreme Court building promises: equal justice under law." Chief Justice John Roberts will swear in Kagan twice on Saturday. She will recite one oath as prescribed by the Constitution during a private ceremony in a conference room at the court with only her family present. Roberts will then administer a second oath, taken by judges, with Kagan's family and friends and reporters present. Kagan won't be formally installed as a justice until Oct. 1 in a courtroom ceremony at the start of the court's new term.
[Associated
Press;
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