New & Notable
Names, Not Numbers ® Inspires New Documentary
Can These Bones Live Again recently had its New York premiere at the Center for Jewish History. Directed and produced by Tzvi Simchon, a 2023 graduate of the Marsha Stern Talmudical Academy (MTA), this powerful documentary follows 15 MTA students who, inspired by the Holocaust education program Names, Not Numbers® , embark on a transformative journey to Poland, where they confront the enduring legacy of the Holocaust and the resilience of Jewish heritage. The evening was hosted by Names, Not Numbers® and the Emil A. and Jenny Fish Center for Holocaust & Genocide Studies. READ MORE
$3,500 to two students who build upon and cultivate the professional connections made at the dinner.
Dream Dinner 2025: A Night of Connection and Opportunity On April 22, the Shevet Glaubach Center hosted its 2nd Annual Dream Dinner, an inspiring evening designed to connect student ambition with real-world opportunity. This year’s event featured 15 executive-hosted tables, with each table led by a prominent leader in either finance, health care, law, technology or fashion. Students competed for the chance to join a table that matched their career interests. In a new twist for 2025, the Center introduced the “Keep the Dream Alive” scholarship, which awards
Students, Faculty & Alumni
Sy Syms Professor Makes Judicial History Judge Matthew Solomson, adjunct professor of ethical and legal environment of business at the
Shoah Scholarship Spotlighted at Cardozo On April 29, Cardozo School of Law hosted a book launch celebrating Law, Literature, and History: A Fateful Rendezvous with the Shoah , the latest work by Richard
Weisberg, emeritus chair in constitutional law at Cardozo and the founding director of the school’s Holocaust,
Sy Syms School of Business, has been named chief judge of the U.S. Court of Federal Claims by President Trump. A member
Genocide and Human Rights Program. Weisberg is a leading scholar in the field of law and literature. He has successfully litigated in U.S. federal courts on behalf of Holocaust survivors and their heirs, providing a measure of justice for World War II victims of antisemitism. Melanie Leslie, Dean of Cardozo, and Richard Weisberg
of the court since 2020, Solomson is the first Orthodox Jew to hold the position. READ MORE
Made with FlippingBook - professional solution for displaying marketing and sales documents online