Geraldine A. Ferraro, the first female vice presidential candidate
on a national party ticket, will be the keynote speaker for CWRU's 2003
commencement May 18.
Elected to Congress from New York in 1978, Ferraro served three terms
in the House of Representatives, has served as United States ambassador
to the United Nations Human Rights Commission since 1993 and was inducted
into the National Women's Hall of Fame in 1994.

Geraldine A. Ferraro
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Ferraro is president of G&L Strategies, a management consulting firm
that provides corporations and global organizations counsel on creating
productive and safe workplace environments, improves relationships of
corporations with government and non-governmental organizations and
develops initiatives designed to position corporations as responsible
global citizens.
While in Congress, Ferraro was assigned to committees on public works,
post office and civil service, budget and aging. She also spearheaded
efforts to achieve passage of the Equal Rights Amendment and sponsored
the Women's Economic Equity Act.
From 1996-1998, Ferraro was a co-host of Crossfire, a public affairs
program, on CNN. She also was a partner in the CEO Perspective Group,
a consulting firm that advises top executives. In 1994, she was appointed
the United States Ambassador to the United Nations Human Rights Commission
by President Clinton and served in that position through 1996.
In addition to serving as the U.S. ambassador to the UN Human Rights
Commission from 1994 to 1996, Ferraro was named a public delegate in
February 1993 and was the alternate United States delegate to the World
Conference on Human Rights held in Vienna in June 1993. She also served
as vice chair to the U.S. Delegation at the Fourth World Conference
on Women held in Beijing in September 1995.
Ferraro is a board member of the National Democratic Institute of International
Affairs and a member of the Council on Foreign Relations. She is currently
a political analyst for FOX News and a columnist for the New York
Times Syndicate.
Before entering politics, Ferraro taught elementary school in the New
York City Public School system for five years. During that time, she
also put herself through Fordham Law School at night.
After spending 13 years at home raising her three children, she joined
the Queens County District Attorney's Office. There, she started the
Special Victims Bureau, supervising the prosecution of sex crimes, child
abuse, domestic violence and violent crimes against senior citizens.
Ferraro has honorary degrees from a number of colleges and universities
nationwide. She currently serves as a board member of the Fordham Law
School Board of Visitors, the Bertarelli Foundation, the National Italian
American Foundation, the Board of Advisors of the National Breast Cancer
Research Fund, the Pension Rights Center and the National Women's Health
Resource Center.
In addition to numerous articles, Ferraro has written the books Ferraro,
My Story, which recounts the 1984 campaign; Changing History:
Women, Power and Politics and Framing a Life: A Family Memoir.