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Kopitzke '14 Moot Court's Top Advocate

Cory Kopitzke ’14 smiled with pride when he thought of the names of past Moot Court Top Advocates. Kopitzke added his name to previous winners Tuesday night during the 20th Wabash Moot Court competition.

Prof. Tom Wilson '77 presents Kopitzke top honors."It’s just great because the people who’ve won it have gone on to do great things,” the senior said. "Riley Floyd ’13 won last year and is at IU Maurer this year, a great law school. He’s a guy I really looked up to. Other individuals like Donovan Bisbee have won this and I see him doing great things in his future. It puts a good feeling in you to see guys like that winning it and now I’m on the same platform.”

The Wabash College Rhetoric Department and Wabash alumni lawyers have been presenting the program for 20 years. The competition started this year with 36 students arguing a case about the constitutionality of an amendment to the constitution to prohibit any form of affirmative action in university admissions. The Wabash alums judge the early rounds paring the numbers to 12 then four.

Kopitzke, Jacob Burnett ’15, Adam Alexander ’16, and Nash Jones ’16 argued the case for top honors.

Another tradition is to bring in an impressive judges panel. This year the panel was led by Professor Lloyd Wilson ’77, a professor of law at Indiana University Robert H. McKinney Law School. He was joined by Steven David, who has had a long and distinguished career, and now sits on the Indiana Supreme Court. Debra McVlicker Lynch is a U.S. Magistrate Judge and summa cum laude graduate of the IU School of Law. Each year a member of the Wabash faculty or administration serves as a judge. This year President Gregory Hess rounded out the panel.

At right, Indiana Supreme Court Judge Steven David with President Hess“Your conduct tonight makes me very, very proud,” said Wilson ’77. “You were fine examples of what my college teaches and that’s to think critically, lead effectively, and embody our mission statement.”

What makes the Wabash Moot Court competition unique is that it’s extremely rare at the undergraduate level. Several of the judges made comments about the impressive nature of the program.

"I’ve judged moot court many times before but never at