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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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  • Cooley Military Feature: Derek Grisard Values Cooley Camaraderie and Community
    Cooley Military Feature: Derek Grisard Values Cooley Camaraderie and Community

    Cooley Military Feature: Derek Grisard Values Cooley Camaraderie and Community

    Cooley, as a military friendly and designated Yellow Ribbon School, talks to its military students, faculty and graduates about their journey from the military to law school and about their career goals. This month’s feature is Cooley student Derek Grisard, who currently works in Tampa's MacDill Air Force Base as an imagery analyst in the Intelligence Community.

  • Hardam Tripathi: Diversity, culture and a passion to help others
    Hardam Tripathi: Diversity, culture and a passion to help others

    Hardam Tripathi: Diversity, culture and a passion to help others

    Cooley is a military friendly and designated Yellow Ribbon School. This month’s military blog feature is recent Cooley graduate Hardam Tripathi. Learn about his law school journey and his new position as an Officer and Judge Advocate with the U.S. Army Judge Advocate General’s (JAG) Corps.

  • Weekend law student Stephanie Samuels: Never too late to start a new life
    Weekend law student Stephanie Samuels: Never too late to start a new life

    Weekend law student Stephanie Samuels: Never too late to start a new life

    Stephanie Samuels was almost 60 years old when she finally discovered she could make her life dream of going to law school a reality. Up until then, “life sort of just happened,” and it was never really an option – until she heard about Cooley’s weekend program.

  • Cooley graduation speaker: Others don’t have to fail in order for you to succeed
    Cooley graduation speaker: Others don’t have to fail in order for you to succeed

    Cooley graduation speaker: Others don’t have to fail in order for you to succeed

    “Because of Cooley, you are now prepared to join in the battle for justice; to be the voice for the voiceless, to bring hope to the hopeless, and to speak justice for those who suffer injustice … In pursuing success in the profession, remember that success is not a zero sum game. Others don’t have to fail in order for you to succeed.” – Frederick McClure, managing partner at the Tampa Bay office of DLA Piper and president of the George Edgecomb Bar Association.

  • How a Small Firm, in a Small Town, is Making a Big Impact
    How a Small Firm, in a Small Town, is Making a Big Impact

    How a Small Firm, in a Small Town, is Making a Big Impact

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    Dropping in on Cooley’s Foreign Study Down Under – Literally!

    Dropping in on Cooley’s Foreign Study Down Under – Literally!

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    Advocating for animals is a passion and commitment for Cooley law school student Alicia Prygoski.

    Advocating for animals is a passion and commitment for Cooley law school student Alicia Prygoski.

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    Debra Steele: You are only as strong as you believe yourself to be.

    Debra Steele: You are only as strong as you believe yourself to be.

    “The defining step in the journey to where I am today is the time I served in the United States Marine Corps where I was taught discipline, leadership, and the value of team work. The Marine Corps’ motto is Adapt, Improvise and Overcome. I have lived by that code for most of my adult life and it has brought me much success.” – Cooley Law School graduate Debra Steele

  • Innocence Project’s Efforts Free Detroit Man After 42 Years of Wrongful Imprisonment
    Innocence Project’s Efforts Free Detroit Man After 42 Years of Wrongful Imprisonment

    Innocence Project’s Efforts Free Detroit Man After 42 Years of Wrongful Imprisonment

    Almost 42 years after being sent to prison for robbery and murder, two crimes he didn't commit, LeDura (Ledora) Watkins was released on June 15, 2017, thanks to the efforts of the Cooley Innocence Project. Following a motion for a new trial, the Wayne County Prosecutor’s office agreed to vacate the judgment of conviction and dismiss all charges in the 1975 murder of a Detroit woman. Watkins had spent more than two-thirds of his life in prison for no reason.