WMU-Cooley holds commencement for its summer term graduates

Valedictory remarks were provided by WMU-Cooley graduates Ray C. Petty (left) and Ashlee Morris (right). Petty is from WMU-Cooley’s Tampa Bay campus and Morris from the law school’s Grand Rapids campus.

WMU-Cooley Law School honored 70 graduates of its Justice William Strong Class during a virtual commencement ceremony on Dec. 6. During the ceremony, 64 juris doctor and six master of laws degrees were conferred to graduates from the law school’s Michigan (Auburn Hills, Grand Rapids, and Lansing) and Tampa Bay, Florida campuses. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the commencement honoring those who earned degrees following the law school’s summer term was held virtually.

Ashlee Morris from the Grand Rapids campus, and Ray C. Petty from the Tampa Bay campus provided the valedictory remarks. WMU-Cooley President and Dean James McGrath provided the keynote address.

During her remarks, Morris thanked the WMU-Cooley faculty, adjunct professors, and the librarians who “instilled in us the knowledge and know-how to not only become successful attorneys but independent thinkers that can see both sides on almost any issue.”

“At the beginning of our law school tenure, we were all bright-eyed and eager to learn about the law,” said Morris. “Through this experience we found a group of like-minded individuals who are eager to do the same. Now, as we come out of this experience, we emerge as fully capable legal minds ready to take on whatever the world throws at us.”

While speaking to his classmates, Petty spoke about the importance of WMU-Cooley Law School being the most diverse law school in the nation.

“Cooley Law School has given many of us the opportunity that we might not otherwise received,” said Petty.  “We graduate at this point in time in a very critical moment. A time filled with hatred, a time filled racism, a time filled with bigotry, a time filled with greed, and a time filled with coronavirus. But our charge after today is to remake the world we live in and remind the world of the principles it was established on.”

Petty asked his fellow students the question, “why not us?” He noted that, “today we answer the question as attorneys, by saying it is us. We are the class that will remind America that democracy is still right. It is us, democracy was created by lawyers and will be fixed by lawyers. And lastly, it is us; I want you to know that lawyers make a difference.”

McGrath started the keynote address by saying, “I want to start out by saying how proud I am of our students, stepping up and making it all work when nothing in the world seems to be working right. I’m proud of our faculty and staff for shifting gears to keep everything working when we went 100 percent online in a moment’s notice.”

Speaking to the graduates, McGrath said, “Today as we celebrate your accomplishments and all the promise as your future as a lawyer, I want to remind you of all the possibilities awaiting you.”

Talking about career paths with a law degree, he said, “As we celebrate your accomplishments and all the promise of your future as a lawyer, I want to remind you of all the possibilities awaiting you. Your potential with a law degree is absolutely amazing, you can work in private practice, government practice, or you can work in compliance, business, business practice, you can be the head of an NGO or a corporation. A legal degree is great training for so many careers, and maybe even some new careers that you will create for yourselves based upon your unique set of skills.”

Each class at WMU-Cooley bears the name of a distinguished member of the legal profession. This graduating class is named after U.S. Supreme Court Justice William Strong. Strong was elected to Congress as an anti-slavery candidate for the Democratic party in 1846. He was elected to a 15-year term with the Supreme Court in Pennsylvania in 1857. Strong was appointed to the U.S. Supreme Court in 1870 by President Ulysses S. Grant. While serving on the Supreme Court, Strong was one of five justices who sat on the Electoral Commission to resolve the disputed 1876 presidential election.




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