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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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  • Ret. Brig. Gen. Michael C.H. McDaniel Offers Expertise on Mass Shootings
    Ret. Brig. Gen. Michael C.H. McDaniel Offers Expertise on Mass Shootings

    Ret. Brig. Gen. Michael C.H. McDaniel Offers Expertise on Mass Shootings

    As investigators continue to uncover evidence surrounding the two mass shootings this past weekend, WMU-Cooley Law School Associate Dean Michael C.H. McDaniel and former Deputy Assistant for Homeland Defense Strategy answers questions from law students and to members of the media regarding the investigation, current laws, and steps the government can take to protect citizens from domestic terrorism.

  • Retiring from the Military or Law Enforcement Soon? Consider Law School
    Retiring from the Military or Law Enforcement Soon? Consider Law School

    Retiring from the Military or Law Enforcement Soon? Consider Law School

    Cooley Professor Gary Bauer considers his job an important one for those law students considering going solo. His years of business and marketing experience, alongside nearly 20 years of teaching experience, are invaluable in helping Cooley students learn to navigate the successful road to solo practice, or those considering a new career. Read Professor Bauer's April 25, 2019 SoloLawyerByDesign blog post below that explores a second career in the law after retirement.

  • Law School After Military Service: A Student Success Story
    Law School After Military Service: A Student Success Story

    Law School After Military Service: A Student Success Story

    As a former U.S. Marine Staff Sgt., Victor Flores knows the meaning of commitment. As a Cooley Law School graduate and practicing attorney, he also thoroughly understands what it means to dedicate yourself to your goals. Now he offers advice to students, veterans and others considering law school and a legal career.

  • You can do anything; it all comes down to what you want
    You can do anything; it all comes down to what you want

    You can do anything; it all comes down to what you want

    To say Victoria McCormick is dedicated to her country, her legal studies, and to service is to state the obvious. Not only did she work as a JAG Corps Paralegal Specialist for the Michigan Army National Guard, she worked as a paralegal for the Loomis Law Firm and Cooley Law School's Innocence Project, all while attending law school at Cooley Law School's Lansing campus.

  • Super by name and by nature
    Super by name and by nature

    Super by name and by nature

    Cooley graduate Matt Super not only overcame a head injury and PTSD to graduate from law school, he also managed to pass the bar on his first try. Read about Matt's journey in the Detroit Legal News story by Sheila Pursglove below.

  • Senior Airman Ray Petty: A Lesson in the Power of Resilience
    Senior Airman Ray Petty: A Lesson in the Power of Resilience

    Senior Airman Ray Petty: A Lesson in the Power of Resilience

    Everyone faces times in life when they are put down, minimized, or demoralized. For most it’s a choice of take it to heart or let it roll off. For Ray Petty, those events were many and early on in life when he was just learning self-confidence. As a child he could have accepted comments that deemed him a poor reader, not smart enough, not tall enough, not fast enough. He could have believed them instead of in himself. But Senior Airman Petty knew early on he had a mission. Today that mission is coming to fruition, thanks to an amazingly resilient character, and an amazingly resilient family.

  • Cooley Security Guard an Institution and a Treasure
    Cooley Security Guard an Institution and a Treasure

    Cooley Security Guard an Institution and a Treasure

    Aspiring lawyers are often drawn to the law because it offers the opportunity to serve others, to make things right and to help those who cannot help themselves. But as law students become immersed in the rigors of their education, they sometimes find they are the ones who need a shoulder to lean on. At Cooley’s Tampa campus, that shoulder belongs to Willie Damon. Damon is a campus security guard who is “the face” of the law school every time you enter the facility. He started out at Cooley during construction and has been there ever since, welcoming new students, befriending those who need a listening ear, and wishing graduates well as they move forward in life. As the father of five daughters, a son and grandfather of 12, he’s a natural when it comes to giving.

  • Professor Burt Burleson Honored on Veterans Day with Adjunct Faculty Award
    Professor Burt Burleson Honored on Veterans Day with Adjunct Faculty Award

    Professor Burt Burleson Honored on Veterans Day with Adjunct Faculty Award

    Throughout its development and growth, Cooley Law School has been fortunate to engage the services of very gifted and dedicated adjunct (part-time) professors. Twenty years ago, the school initiated a way to honor one outstanding adjunct professor each year with an award recognizing them before their students and peers.

  • Brien Brockway: Military Background Great Training for Law School Success
    Brien Brockway: Military Background Great Training for Law School Success

    Brien Brockway: Military Background Great Training for Law School Success

    This blog features Q&A with former Cooley Law School student Brien Brockway, a U.S. Army Veteran. He was a Fire Team Leader with the infantry in Afghanistan. After careful consideration, he decided to change careers to allow more time with his family. That decision led him to law school at Cooley, a military friendly and designated Yellow Ribbon School.