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New York State Attorney General Eliot Spitzer to Keynote Cardozo Commencement

May 24, 2005 -- New York State Attorney General Eliot Spitzer will be the featured speaker at the 27th commencement of the Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law of Yeshiva University at 2 pm on Tuesday, June 7.

At the ceremony, which will be held at Avery Fisher Hall of Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts, 368 men and women will receive J.D. degrees, and 43 will receive LL.M. degrees.

Also at this year’s commencement, Randi Weingarten, a 1983 graduate of Cardozo and president of the United Federation of Teachers (UFT), will receive the third annual Distinguished Alumna Award for Contribution to Public Service.

Dean David Rudenstine, in speaking of the commencement guests, noted that “Eliot Spitzer and Randi Weingarten are the paradigms of public servants —they use their exceptional abilities and the law to advocate for others with an unparalleled zeal. These individuals inspire our graduates to believe that they, too, can effect change and shape their world for the better.”

Attorney General Spitzer has a longstanding relationship with Cardozo. He taught a master class in Cyberlaw, lectured as a guest of the The Samuel and Ronnie Heyman Center for Corporate Governance, and delivered the keynote address at Cardozo’s commencement several years ago.

He is well known for his work investigating conflicts of interest by investment banks, illegal trading practices by mutual funds, and bid rigging in the insurance industry. He sued Midwest power plants, exposed the practice of pharmaceutical companies of concealing information about clinical drug trials, and pioneered labor rights cases to ensure the minimum wage and decent working conditions for immigrants and other low-wage workers.

As head of the UFT, Ms. Weingarten represents more than 140,000 educators in the New York City public school system and also leads the Municipal Labor Committee, an umbrella organization for 100 city employee unions. She negotiates citywide collective bargaining issues including health, welfare, and pension benefits on behalf of the union’s members.

Ms. Weingarten was an adjunct professor of legal writing at Cardozo from 1986 to 1991, was very active in the early years of Cardozo’s Alumni Association, and continues to be involved in Law School activities.

Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law is well known for its prolific and high profile faculty as well as its top-ranked programs in intellectual property, corporate and criminal law, entertainment and communications laws, legal theory, alternative dispute resolution, and Jewish law. The Law School’s clinical program has been cited as one of the best in the county. Cardozo has graduated more than 8,500 students since its founding in 1976.