St. John’s School of Law Celebrates Commencement 2012

June 18, 2012

On June 3, 2012, the Law School’s 265 J.D. candidates and 23 LL.M. candidates convened at Carnesecca Arena for Commencement Exercises. Associate Academic Dean and Professor of Law Margaret V. Turano ‘77 served as Director of Proceedings for the ceremony that included some 3500 family, friends, faculty, administrators, staff and alumni in the Law School community.

With a “teacher’s pride,” Dean Michael A. Simons welcomed the students, noting that they have taken this three-year journey together, with him embarking on his deanship just as they began their legal studies . Recounting the classroom and co-curricular achievements of the Class of 2012, he highlighted the more than 1000 hours they collectively volunteered to assist the community’s destitute, neglected and dispossessed through the Law School’s clinics and service initiatives ― selfless service embodying St. John’s Vincentian heritage and mission.

“You are ready to join the legal profession,” Dean Simons told the graduates, sharing that their law degree gives them a tremendous opportunity to make a difference and the power to change the world. He also shared that, as they continue to make their path to the profession and to a rewarding career, they will face many challenges. “The most immediate challenge is beginning your career as the legal economy is still emerging from the Great Recession,” he said. “But even as the recession eases, and it will, you will face other challenges. And I don’t just mean the challenge of finding a job, or winning a case or closing the deal. I mean the challenge of doing the right thing, of using your power as a lawyer to do justice. If you meet that challenge, then you will have made for yourself not just a career, but a life of which you can be truly proud.”

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The ceremony then turned to one particularly well made path through the law. After St. John’s University President Rev. Donald J. Harrington, C.M. presented him with an honorary Doctor of Laws degree, Eugene D. Orza ’73, a longtime advocate for workers and the former Chief Operating Officer of the Major League Baseball Players Association, delivered the commencement address. A self-proclaimed “Son of the South Bronx” whose mother never graduated from high school and whose grandmother could not read or write in English or her native Italian, Mr. Orza served as Articles Editor for the St. John’s Law Review and sowed the seeds for his future career at the National Labor Relations Board and the Players Association by helping to establish the Law School’s Labor Relations and Employment Law Society. In 2003, St. John’s University awarded him the Alumni Outstanding Achievement Medal. Last year, the Law School’s Entertainment, Arts and Sports Law Society presented him with the Joseph J. Beard Distinguished Alumni Award for outstanding achievement in the field.

Addressing the students, Mr. Orza said that he was humbled to stand before them as they received their law degree from a “truly great institution with a truly great faculty.” He went on to remark that no city on earth captures diversity better than New York City and that the students should not underestimate how much going to law school amid such diversity will impact and enhance their legal career. “Stay close to this city,” he said. “Stay close to its culture, to its museums, to its theaters. Most importantly, stay close to the people who live and work in this city.” Stressing the importance of listening to people, Mr. Orza encouraged the students to “cultivate a way of understanding and perceiving what’s left unsaid” because “therein is the fruit of settlement.” And compromise, he asserted, is vital to the promotion of harmony in our society.

Mary Vitale ’12 found these words very inspiring. “I’m glad Mr. Orza offered us such practical advice,” she said. “That’s exactly what we need.” Reflecting on the speaker’s remarks on diversity she added: “I’m from New York City and diversity is the main reason why I chose to come to St. John’s.” Sharing more practical wisdom, Mr. Orza advised the class to “treat every case as if you were the litigant” and to understand that, even in the smallest of cases, there are great and lasting lessons for lawyers to learn.

After Mr. Orza closed his remarks, Thomas J. Principe ’73, President of the Alumni Association Board of Directors, welcomed the Class of 2012 to the Law School alumni family. Mr. Principe served as a reservist in the United States Army’s Judge Advocate General’s Office for 33 years and, upon his retirement, earned the Army’s Legion of Merit and New York State’s Conspicuous Service Medal. With pride, he and the entire crowd acknowledged and applauded those in the graduating class who have served in the military. Dean Simons then presented outgoing St. John’s University Provost Julia A. Upton, RSM, Ph.D. with the Law School Alumni Association’s St. Thomas More Award for Outstanding Moral Leadership in recognition of her 12 years of “steady, skillful and supportive leadership that has enabled us to stay true to our mission.”

Ravin J. Shah ‘12, a member of the Law School’s Armed Forces Society, shared his gratitude to family and friends for making his path to and through law school possible. “St. John’s has opened doors and avenues in ways I didn’t think possible just three years ago,” he said. “I’m looking forward to the future with optimism.”

The 2012 Commencement Exercises were dedicated to the memory of Professor of Law Thomas F. Shea, who passed away in March, 50 years after graduating from the Law School and 40 years after joining its faculty. His career is a testament to the commitment to teaching that continues to define the St. John’s School of Law faculty.