
Watch the recording of the 2018 Commencement Ceremony:Ìę
The Âé¶čapp School of Law celebrated its 43rd commencement ceremony on Saturday, May 19, 2018, awarding more than 75 juris doctor and graduate degrees.
The ceremony also featured the awarding of an honorary degree to retired New Hampshire Supreme Court Chief Justice Linda Stewart Dalianis â the first woman to serve as New Hampshireâs chief justice, and to sit on the stateâs highest court â and a celebration of the schoolâs class of 1978, as well as a keynote address from Tim Ryan â00 JD, a rising star in the Democratic party and United States congressman in Ohio.
The entrepreneurial and independent spirit that has fueled UNH Law since its founding as the Franklin Pierce Law Center in 1973 was highlighted throughout the festivities. It began with recognition for the class of 1978, celebrating the 40th anniversary of its graduation with recollections of the schoolâs humble beginnings in a former bull barn in East Concord, and continued with the honoring of Dalianis, a visionary for the schoolâs celebrated Daniel Webster Scholar Honors program, still the nationâs only client-ready, bar-alternative course of study.
Ryan, a graduate of the JD class of 2000, heralded UNH Law as âthe first law school in America to drop the pomp from the study of law.â
UNH Law Dean Megan Carpenter opened the proceedings with a similar sentiment, comparing the school to a spirited startup by referring to it as âthe Apple of legal education,â crediting the members of the class of 1978 for being âso much a part of the pioneering spirit of taking legal education in a different direction.â
Carol Ann Conboy, retired New Hampshire Supreme Court Justice and a member of the class of â78, addressed the graduates as well.
âWe all, in our disparate ways, heard the siren call of a law school in its infancy,â she said of her classmates. âWe, your legal ancestors, were risk takers, and we bet it all on a quirky place we affectionately called âFrankâs.ââ
The focus wasnât solely on the past, however. UNH President Mark Huddleston, addressing his final cohort of graduates as he prepares to retire after 11 years as the longest-tenured president in UNHâs history, pointed out the opportunities that await the class of 2018.
âYou thrived on the cutting edge of innovative legal education, and you earned your degrees at an institution that boasts some of the highest bar passage and job placement rates in the nation,â Huddleston said. âThe world is eager for your talent, and we are excited to follow your successes.â
Professor Buzz Scherr was next to address the crowd as part of a long-standing school tradition known as Advice from the Faculty. Scherr began his remarks with some good-natured ribbing of Ryan â who was once a student in Scherrâs classroom at the law school â before encouraging the graduates to follow three pieces of advice: to âlisten well in your professional lives,â to âspeak confidently,â and to âshow people, donât tell people.â
âIt may well be true that you think you are pretty much the smartest person in the room,â Scherr said. âIf thatâs true, you donât need to tell people that â you will show it by the way you carry yourself, and thatâs maybe the most important thing.â
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Vijaya Natarajan, a student from India who earned an LLM in intellectual property, was selected by her classmates as the graduate student speaker, and she noted the âwonderful journey and lifetime of experiencesâ she had at UNH Law.
She said the education provided knowledge and skills that âwe are all going to take as good-will ambassadors, and follow the path of the alumni network. I have a bunch of people in my country all from this proud institution, and I am so happy to be a part of it.â
Richard Steele, the selected speaker for the juris doctor graduates, used a poem by Charles T. Davis as the basis for his remarks. The poem refers to âthe ancient laws of youthâ â âto ride, shoot straight, and speak the truth.â
âWe have been trained to precisely choose our words, to concisely communicate exactly what we mean,â Steele said. âWe have to make the truth matter. Because if the truth does not matter, then those precise words will not matter. And if the words do not matter, then the law will not matter.â
Following the awarding of the honorary degree to Dalianis, Ryan took to the podium and challenged the graduates to be leaders for the next generation.
He highlighted many of the societal and political challenges that currently face the United States, including economics, health care, school shootings, climate issues, and the opiate epidemic.
âThe world you are entering is much different than the world that existed in 1973 when this school was founded. But its founders have given us a road map on how to deal with these tumultuous times, and hereâs what I think this school has shown us â to believe, to be brave, and to be together.â
He encouraged the graduates to be fearless and adventurous in helping the country through such difficult times, referencing the accomplishments of leaders that led to the emergence from âthe dark ages.â
âAs graduates of this great university, you are the heirs of those brave adventurers. So I stand here today to tell you in no uncertain terms, we need you to have the courage to go on an adventure that will transform you and will transform our world.â
âYour education has prepared you to take your place among those leaders who are redefining the rules and changing the way we see things,â Ryan continued. âNo matter the challenges, answer the call and lead us to the next renaissance, for our country and for the world. Graduates, lead â and take us on an adventure.â
The ceremony concluded with remarks from Carpenter, who just completed her first year as dean of UNH Law. She, too, encouraged the graduates to work to make the world a better place by utilizing the skills and knowledge theyâve gained, once again weaving the schoolâs history and celebrated alumni into the afternoonâs proceedings by welcoming the current class into that esteemed group.
âLawyers make the roads so that the wheels of our society work. They work to safeguard the value of every individual,â Carpenter said. âHere at this school, we pay particular attention to that. This school that started in a bull barn is an essential part of social justice and public service in the information age, in this state and around the world. And today, you all join these ranks. The world needs you.
âYour parents, Iâm sure, looked at you once and wondered what you would be someday, and we are honored at UNH Law to be such an important part of your becoming,â Carpenter said. âAnd you are part of our family, too, now â the UNH Law family. You are graduating, but you will always be a part of our family.â