SPRING 2002
CardozoLIFE
Features
An Interview with Dean David
Rudenstine
Cardozo’s fifth dean talks with Cardozo Life editor Susan
Davis about his priorities for the Law School.
Fighting for "Hearts and Minds": Towards
a Foreign Policy of Information Space
In the war against terrorism, the United States came
up short in its ability to influence and shape opinion internationally and
to dampen the hatreds instilled by its enemies. Professor Price calls for
a new front on the war, where a strategy to change ideas is developed and
implemented through the media.
By Monroe Price,
Joseph and Sadie Danciger Professor of Law and Director,
Howard M. Squadron Program in Law, Media and Society
Cardozo Heros
Among the thousands who assisted New Yorkers devastated
by the tragedy of September 11, there were Cardozo alumni who used their
professional and personal skills to aid their neighbors and community.
By Victoria Rivkin
"More than any of us can bear"
Cardozo lost two alumni in the events of September 11, Andrew
Zucker ’99 and Barbara Bracher Olson ’89. At a memorial service, they were
remembered by family, friends, and professors. Cardozo Life reprints eulogies
by Suzanne Pronesti ’99, Prof. John O. McGinnis, and Solicitor General of
the United States Theodore B. Olson.
Departments
Around Campus
YU Appoints Rudenstine - Goldstone Delivers Ethics Center
Lecture - Cunningham Named Senior Associate Dean - Bauer Lecturer Examines
Lawyer Jokes - Howard Squadron Dies - Scholars Find New Connections to
Nietzsche - DNA Evidence Exonerates 102nd Prisoner - American Constitution
and Federalist Societies Collaborate - Racial Profiling Explored - Women’s
Groups Sponsor State v. Mom - International Students Intern in Judges’
Chambers
Faculty Briefs
Seven Visit for Spring - In Memoriam: Hedy Forspan ’90 - Professional Honors - Books Papers Panels
Alumni News & Notes
Alumni Admitted to Supreme Court • Cardozo On-Line Connected
• Capital Campaign Supports Lobby and Library Renovations • Parents Participate
in Cardozo’s Future
COVER PHOTOS: Six months after September
11, two columns of light were projected nightly for a month as a symbol
of remembrance. “The Sphere,” a sculpture by Fritz Koenig that had resided
in the World Trade Center plaza, was moved to Battery Park, where it remains
a monument to fostering peace
|