
The first Black woman appointed to the U.S. District Court in eastern Michigan fought for civil rights as an attorney and challenged presidential overreach during her judicial career.
Basic pages are used throughout Barnard’s main website and mini sites. See how to set up a basic page on Barnard’s Website Resources site.
This page type has no hero image component at the top and does not support large, visually engaging components. It’s a no-nonsense kind of page.
This text is displayed in a “Body WYSIWYG” component.
Other components available for use on a basic page include the following and are shown below:
Here’s the text that remains hidden inside of the accordion until a user “opens” it.
Both the “Question” and “Answer” fields are required.
The “Answer” field is similar to a body WYSIWYG component with the ability to style and link text.
Accordions can be a way to present a lot of text. Images don’t work in them, however.
This example of two columns uses the 30%-70% width option, which can be useful for headshots and some text.
Other width options include 50% (for 2 columns), 33% (for 3 columns), 25% (for 4 columns), and 70%-30% (for 2 columns).
The first Black woman appointed to the U.S. District Court in eastern Michigan fought for civil rights as an attorney and challenged presidential overreach during her judicial career.
This component requires you to choose keywords from the “Taxonomy” to curate the events that are shown. We chose New York City, Alumnae, and Women.
If no events are shown above, that means no upcoming events have been tagged with these terms from Barnard’s taxonomy.