Professor Karen Gross of New York Law School to Be Honored at
Women’s History Month Luncheon
NEW YORK,
March 28, 2006 --- Professor Karen Gross of New York Law School will be
honored at a Women’s History Month luncheon taking place on
Wednesday, March 29 at SUNY Westchester Community College in Valhalla, New
York.
The luncheon is a focal event of the Women’s History Month
programming at the college. Gross, a
Westchester
County resident who writes the
“Money Sense” column for the Westchester County Business
Journal and Fairfield County Business Journal, is being honored
for her life’s work as a financial literacy expert who encourages
others to become knowledgeable about “The Power of
Money.”
Phyllis Fein, associate professor of business and chair of the
Women’s History Month committee at
SUNY
Westchester Community
College, said that Gross was selected because
“she represents women creating community and sustaining dreams in
countless ways and in myriad venues. Her inspiration, motivation, and
contributions to issues of women, economics, and underprivileged
communities will resonate deeply with our students.”
Gross has been a professor at New
York Law
School for more than 20 years,
teaching courses in bankruptcy, contracts, and financial advocacy, among
others. She is also president of the Coalition for Consumer Bankruptcy
Debtor Education, an award-winning pro bono organization she
cofounded, and director of New
York Law
School’s Economic
Literacy Consortium. She speaks frequently in the
United
States and abroad on consumer finance,
economic literacy, and bankruptcy-related issues. She has conducted
empirical and historical research on consumer finance and bankruptcy,
worked with individual debtors as a volunteer lawyer at
New York’s Legal Aid
Society, and written numerous scholarly articles. She is the author of the
book Failure and Forgiveness: Rebalancing the Bankruptcy System
(Yale University Press, 1997), which won the Association of American
Publishers’ 1997 Business Management Award. In 2004, Gross received
a Senior Scholar Special Commendation of Honor from the American
Association of University Women (AAUW).
She is a member of the Foundation Board of Open Door Family Medical
Centers, headquartered in Ossining,
New York.
Gross is being honored along with Janine Rose, anchor and news director
of the News 12 Westchester channel, representing “The Power of the
Press,” and two faculty members from Pace University: Barbara
Thomas, a professor at the Lienhard School of Nursing, and Jean Coppola, a
professor at the Ivan G. Seidenberg School of Computer Science and
Information Systems, collectively representing “The Power of Aging
and Technology.”
ABOUT NEW YORK
LAW
SCHOOL:
Founded in 1891, New York
Law
School is the
second oldest independent law school in the
United
States. Drawing on its location near
the centers of law, government, and finance in New York City, its faculty
of noted and prolific scholars has built the school’s curricular
strength in the areas of tax law, labor and employment law, civil and
human rights law, media and information law, urban legal studies,
international and comparative law, and interdisciplinary fields such as
legal history and legal ethics. New
York Law
School has more than 11,000
graduates and enrolls some 1500 students in its full- and part-time J.D.
program. It is one of only two law schools in the metropolitan
area to offer the Master of Laws (LL.M.) in Tax Law.