[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 128 (Wednesday, September 22, 2010)]
[Senate]
[Pages S7305-S7306]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HONORING CONLEY INGRAM
Mr. ISAKSON. Mr. President, I rise for a moment to pause and pay
tribute to the life and accomplishments of a citizen of my home
community, Judge Conley Ingram. In fact, in a few days a number of
members of our community, his friends and associates over his career in
law and community service, will join to celebrate his life and
achievements and his birthday. He is a remarkable person whom I admire
greatly because he has been a mentor to me and the example I have tried
to follow. Unfortunately, I will not be able to attend that particular
program, but today on the floor of the Senate, I wanted to memorialize
a true storied jurist of the State of Georgia, probably amongst the top
three or four from our State in the history of our State. He is a man
who stands shoulder to shoulder with men such as Griffin Bell, the
former Attorney General of the United States, and former Assistant
Attorney General Larry Thompson.
Conley Ingram has done about everything you can do as an attorney and
a lawyer. When he graduated from Emory University 59 years ago and went
into the service, he taught at the Judge Advocate School in
Charlottesville, VA. From there, he went on to be city attorney,
special assistant attorney general, juvenile court judge of the County
of Cobb, and went on to become
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superior court judge in the County of Cobb. He then founded his own law
firm and ran it for a number of years until he became a justice of the
Supreme Court of the State of Georgia. After leaving there, he went
with the storied firm of Alston & Bird and became probably the Nation's
most recognized arbitrator and mediator of any attorney in the country.
And not to finish and not to quit, for the last 12 years he has been a
senior special superior court judge in Cobb County, GA, serving all the
time the citizens of our State.
But his greatest service is the example he shows. He has been
selected our Community Citizen of the Year. He received excellence
awards for the legacy he has left not just for his work on the bench,
not just his work as a lawyer, but his work for the betterment of the
community, whether it is the Boys Club or the Girls Club, whether it is
his church, or whether it is his neighborhood.
But for me, there is one special thing to say about Judge Conley
Ingram: He is a man who takes time for everybody. He is a man who is
willing to help. He is a man who would rather find common ground in the
interest of both parties than have a winner-take-all philosophy of
life.
Probably the greatest blessing of Conley Ingram's life is his wife
Sylvia, whom my wife Dianne and I cherish as a dear friend.
So this week in which our community will celebrate the many
accomplishments of the 59 years of the practice of law of Judge Conley
Ingram and his life in general, I am proud to stand on the floor of the
Senate and say: Conley, thank you, not just for what you have done for
me but what you have done for so many people in our great State and for
this great country, the United States of America.
I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The clerk will call the roll.
The assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. MERKLEY. I ask unanimous consent that the order for the quorum
call be rescinded.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. Without objection, it is so
ordered.
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