Marilyn Jean Kelly
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Marilyn Jean Kelly (b. April 15, 1938) is a jurist in the U.S. state of Michigan. She is serving her second term in office as Justice on the Michigan Supreme Court. Kelly is a Detroit native and 1956 graduate of Mackenzie High School.
In the fall of 1956, Marilyn Jean Kelly moved to Ypsilanti to begin undergraduate coursework at Eastern Michigan University; she received her B.A. from E.M.U. in 1960. One year later, Kelly was awarded a Masters degree in French Language and Literature from Middlebury College in Vermont. Following a brief stay in France, wrapping up her graduate studies at La Sorbonne - the University of Paris, Miss Kelly spent five years teaching French in the Grosse Pointe public school system, Albion College and Eastern Michigan University.
Marilyn Jean Kelly also served on the Michigan State Board of Education during the 1960s; later elected as President of the statewide organization. In 1971, Marilyn Jean Kelly graduated with honors from the Wayne State University Law School. For the next seventeen years, Kelly clerked and practiced law as an associate attorney; eventually opening her own practice - Marilyn Kelly and Associates, of Bloomfield Hills.
In 1988, Kelly was elected to the first of two consecutive terms on the Michigan Court of Appeals. In 1996, during her second term on the appellate court, Marilyn Jean Kelly won election to the Michigan Supreme Court. Justice Kelly won a landslide re-election to the high court in 2004; receiving over 2 million votes - nearly half a million more than the runner-up.
Kelly is a supporter of forcing government institutions to provide benefits to same-gender couples and of the ACLU.[1]
[edit] References
- ^ based on her speech at the 2008 Graduation of the Michigan College of Law