Geraldine Ferraro, LAW ’60, with her namesake rose.  Photo by Nancy Adler
Geraldine Ferraro, LAW ’60, with her namesake rose.
Photo by Nancy Adler

Former U.S. Rep. Geraldine Ferraro, LAW ’60, was honored at a ceremony on Jan. 29, at Fordham’s School of Law with a commemorative rose, sales of which will help fund research into multiple myeloma, a type of cancer Ferraro was diagnosed with in 1998.

In welcoming the former legislator and vice presidential candidate back to the Law School, Joseph M. McShane, S.J., president of Fordham University, called Ferraro a pioneer and trailblazer, and said “She made it possible for women to dream beyond the glass ceiling.”

“If it weren’t for the education I received here as a student and the relationship that has developed as an alum,” Ferraro said, “I doubt seriously that I could have accomplished the things…which made me worthy of this distinction.”

The Oregon firm Jackson & Perkins, which develops so-called “cause roses,” will donate 10 percent of the net proceeds from sales of the Geraldine Ferraro Rose to the Multiple Myeloma Research Foundation (MMRF), the world’s leading private funder of multiple myeloma research. MMRF was founded by twin sisters Karen Andrews and Kathy Giusti; Giusti is now the nonprofit’s CEO.

“The fact that she would pick this place, of all the places in her career, [to dedicate the rose]says so much about her and about her relationship to Fordham,” said William M. Treanor, J.D., dean of Fordham Law School.

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