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Reda Taleb’s Life’s Work: Turning Pain into Purpose — and Giving It Back to Dearborn

Reda Taleb’s Life’s Work: Turning Pain into Purpose — and Giving It Back to Dearborn

When Reda Taleb (McLean Class, 2015) talks about “giving back,” she isn’t just reciting a slogan — she’s living by example. The daughter of immigrants from Bint Jbeil, Lebanon, Taleb’s parents, along with her six older siblings, laid roots in Dearborn’s south end, an area known for its pollution-emitting factory smoke stacks and community of Arab Americans seeking the “American Dream.”

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  • Christian Wise Smith: Significance Over Success
    Christian Wise Smith: Significance Over Success

    Christian Wise Smith: Significance Over Success

    Christian Wise Smith (Wilkins Class, 2011) has a history of beating the odds. So when he launched his campaign for Fulton County, Georgia, district attorney and was told he had little chance of success, he simply recalled his motto: significance over success. “By that measure, what I did was very significant, and ultimately, it’s going to lead to enormous success in fighting for social justice.”

  • Zack Hugg: Cooley Law School Connections Instrumental in Career Climb
    Zack Hugg: Cooley Law School Connections Instrumental in Career Climb

    Zack Hugg: Cooley Law School Connections Instrumental in Career Climb

    When Zack Hugg entered undergraduate school at Oakland University in Rochester, Michigan, he planned to seek a career in the technology field. But, by his senior year, he’d discovered interests in intellectual property and privacy laws that led him to alter course and go to law school.

  • Hard Road Proves To Be Best Path
    Hard Road Proves To Be Best Path

    Hard Road Proves To Be Best Path

    Logical reasoning and analytical thinking – that is what really drew Cooley Law School graduate Gerlinde (Linda) Nattler to the law, from as far back as in high school. She reminisced about reading stories describing ancient Roman orator Cicero’s life during a Latin class. She loved how, as a lawyer, he was able to intellectually parse out arguments and fine-tune words to razor-sharp perfection.

  • Cooley Grad: Article Published in the Florida Defender
    Cooley Grad: Article Published in the Florida Defender

    Cooley Grad: Article Published in the Florida Defender

    Exclusion of Partial DNA Specimens, Specimens from Multiple Contributors and the Lab-Created Phenomenon of Allelic Dropout by Jason S. Downs Cooley graduate Jason S. Downs is an attorney in Brevard County at Murphy’s Law Offices, P.A. His article, Exclusion of Partial DNA Specimens, Specimens from Multiple Contributors and the Lab-Created Phenomenon of Allelic Dropout, published in the Winter 2019 issue, Volume 31, No. 4, of the Florida Defender, A Publication of the Florida Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers. Downs is a member of FACDL and the Young Lawyers Division of The Florida Bar. Before law school, he was a successful independent analyst and brief author. He was retained by many Florida criminal defense attorneys to lend his skills in formulating winning defense strategies and developing theory. He has authored hundreds of successful dispositive motions and is the author of dozens of prevailing appeals in all levels of the Florida court system and in the Supreme Court of the United States.

  • Cooley librarian creates podcast that traces history of american law
    Cooley librarian creates podcast that traces history of american law

    Cooley librarian creates podcast that traces history of american law

    Cooley’s Head of Public Services at its Auburn Hills campus library, Tim Innes, recently launched a new podcast that traces the history of American law from its most ancient roots to the present day. [This article was published in the January 13, 2020 edition of the Detroit Legal News]

  • Haley Monaghan: Appreciate and Reciprocate are Words to Live By
    Haley Monaghan: Appreciate and Reciprocate are Words to Live By

    Haley Monaghan: Appreciate and Reciprocate are Words to Live By

    Haley Monaghan thought she wanted to be a lawyer, but the thought of going back to school after her undergraduate degree wasn't appealing.

  • Ed Sternisha - Bridging the Divide and Putting Together All the Pieces
    Ed Sternisha - Bridging the Divide and Putting Together All the Pieces

    Ed Sternisha - Bridging the Divide and Putting Together All the Pieces

    Anyone who’s ever seen an episode of Law & Order knows there are the police, and then there are the defense attorneys. They rarely like each other, they have different goals, and they certainly aren’t in the same camp.

  • Limited Scope Representation is a New Paradigm for Future Practice of Law
    Limited Scope Representation is a New Paradigm for Future Practice of Law

    Limited Scope Representation is a New Paradigm for Future Practice of Law

    Read about Cooley Law School graduate Mechelle Woznicki, and other Grand Rapids attorney's role in offering Limited Scope Representation in the Legal News story below by Cynthia Price.

  • Michael Terner: Success is not where you start, but where you finish
    Michael Terner: Success is not where you start, but where you finish

    Michael Terner: Success is not where you start, but where you finish

    “Look to your left, look to your right; one of you won't complete your law school journey.” I remember getting this from deans and professors when I first started at Cooley Law School. I also remember thinking one of the “ones” should have been me.