Emilie Bullowa

She served on the board of the New York Medical College and Hospital for Women and was its president from 1921 to 1942.

She attended public school in New York and received private lessons in art, music, and languages.

Bullowa became an accomplished trial lawyer and "established a new point" in libel law in 1919.

[7] While she served as president the association held its first national conference in Minneapolis in July 1923.

She was a judge in a New York Times-sponsored contest for essays on the United States Constitution.

[4] She attended a meeting of the British and American Bars in England in 1924 where she met the lawyer Maud Crofts.

[4] She was affiliated with New York's Central Synagogue[2] and served on the Board of Trustees of the Jewish Institute of Religion.