TEMPLE UNIVERSITY JAMES E. BEASLEY SCHOOL OF LAW • LAW SCHOOL AND ALUMNI NEWS • FALL 2012Temple Launches public policyProgram in Nation’s CapitalHigh-powered internships, mentoring and leadership workshops attracted 18 policy-minded scholars to D.C.“I am a registeredPennsylvania voter. I havelived here for six years andvoted in this state twicebefore. However, if the2012 presidential electionwere held today, I wouldbe denied my right to vote. . . .” wrote LucasMichelen ’14 in an op-edin the Harrisburg Patriot-News.In writing this, arising second-year TempleLaw student became animportant voice in thepublic debate surroundingthe Pennsylvania voteridentification law passedin 2012, estimated toaffect the eligibility ofthousands of potential voters.Michelen is one of 18 students who was selected to go to Washington, D.C. in the inaugural year of Temple’s Law and Public Policy Program. The program, conceived andled by Professor Nancy Knauer at the request of DeanJoAnne A. Epps, provides a multi-pronged experience in thenation’s capital aimed at empowering public policy-mindedlaw students. In entering the contentious public debate on voter ID laws,Michelen was implementing the skills he learned—and theknowledge he acquired—in this intensive new program thatimmersed students in D.C.’s political culture through acombination of internships, classes, seminars and research. Through the program, students were provided with professional headshots, the title of Law and Public Policy Scholar, and were taught to target influential newssources, lawmakers, and institutions.“Harrisburg is sending the wrong message to Pennsyl-vania students,” Michelen concluded in his op-ed. “Thelegislature should protect and promote students’ rights to vote rather than diminish and bury young voters eager toparticipate in making Pennsylvania better.” He recognizedthat public opinion was only going to be one factor in theultimate fate of the controversial voter ID law. By July 24, thelaw was being challenged in court by the ACLU and Michelenposted on Facebook that “My paper might not be relevantpretty soon. . . .” As soon as Michelen’s activities came to theattention of the activist group, Change.org, he was invited toSUMMER PROGRAM IN ROME BLENDSACADEMICS AND ‘LA DOLCE VITA’SUMMER 2012Thirty-four students traveled toTemple’s campus in Rome to study internationaland comparative law and immerse themselvesin la dolce vitafor five weeks. The program, co-directed this year by Professors David Postand James Shellenberger, features classes inEnglish at the Villa Caproni on the banks of theTiber, as well as a visit to the Italian SupremeCourt and guided tours of sites including theRoman Forum and Ostia Antica, the city’sancient port. craft a petition which is currently onlinegathering signatures, “PennsylvaniaUniversities: Allow Students to Vote.” When Michelen’s piece went “viral”—appearing in regional papers, blogs, tweetsand tumblers—it was more than just luck.The Law and Public Policy Program wasdesigned, says Knauer, to “provide studentswith insight into the roles lawyers can play in institutional policy making, connect themto Temple Law alumni working in the D.C.Metro area, and place them in internshipsthat reflect an area of policy concern.” Michelen’s influential op-ed piece was the result of the research component of the summer program, which required eachscholar to complete a “white paper” on a policy issue. Michelen conducted hisresearch at the same time that he wasinterning at AEquitas, The Prosecutor’sResource on Violence Against Women, and being mentoredby a Temple Law alumnus and Justice Department trialattorney Eric Gibson ’95. CLASSES ‘LEVERAGE COLLECTIVE KNOWLEDGE OF PARTICIPANTS,’ SAYS KNAUERThe program’s classroom component—squeezed into thejam-packed schedule in the evenings and on weekends—focused on how to effectively implement change. The formatof the class was specially designed, says program directorKnauer, “to leverage the collective knowledge of theparticipants to benefit each individual student’s policy work.” Knauer, who developed and taught the classroomcomponent, was also on hand throughout the eight weeks tooffer career guidance and help students navigate the uniqueculture and bureaucracies of the nation’s capital. Knauer’swork was bolstered by a large and talented pool of TempleLaw alumni in the D.C. area. Leadership seminars, often ledby alumni, stressed creative approaches to using a legaleducation in both legal and extra-legal settings. Temple’s extensive alumni network in D.C. provided acrucial foundation for establishing a wide-ranging selection of internships from which to choose, as well as a host ofmentors. Through the mentorship program, each student was paired with a Temple alumnus, providing a critical point of contact in the D.C. legal community outside of the internships. continued on page twoLUCAS MICHELEN ’1435362 TLS_ESQ_Sept06/f 9/7/12 11:13 AM Page 12 • TEMPLE ESQ. FALL 2012INTERNSHIPS RANGE FROM HOUSE JUDICIARY TO ASSOCIATION OF WHEATGROWERSThe range of internships reflected the many options opento policy-minded attorneys, and included many governmentagencies: the House Judiciary Committee,Office of U.S.Senator Pat Toomey, SEC Enforcement Division, U.S. SmallBusiness Administration, D.C. Bureau of Gaming andCharitable Games, and the departments of HomelandSecurity, Veterans Affairs, Commerce (NationalTelecommunications and Information Agency), andTreasury. Internships with non-governmental organizationsincluded National Council of State Legislatures, AEquitas,Services and Advocacy for GLBT Elders, National Alliancefor Fair Housing, DNC’s Voter Protection Institute, NationalAssociation of Wheat Growers, Rural Water ResourceCouncil, and Armenian Assembly in America. Students alsointerned at issues-oriented firms including the labor lawfirm of O’Donnell, Schwartz & Anderson, the immigrationlaw firm of The Law Offices of Irena I. Kapinski, and theantitrust law firm of Doyle, Barlow and Mazard.Scholars in the program quickly rose to the challengesof the program. Michelen was not alone in implementinghis newfound skills, and as the summer progressed, moreand more of thescholars entered thepublic policy-makingarena. Law and PublicPolicy Scholar Sean Rust ’14 authored “How to Save Unions byMaking Them Weaker”as a guest post forForbes.com, themagazine’s online blog.Rust was eventuallyinvited to write threeblogposts while working at an internship at theNational Council of StateLegislatures. In Forbes,Rust posited: “I believethat an important factorholding unions back is theironic fact that the NLRAgives them too muchpower.If unions embracedthe concept of minority unions,they may be able to help slow oreven reverse their long-rundecline.” His right-to-workphilosophy drew the interest ofmultiple news sources includingFox News, and on July 5, theTemple Law student traveled toNew York to present his views liveon television. In the weeks afterthe Temple students had left D.C.,media interest in Rust’s ideascontinued to grow and on August10, he appeared on NBC news.Divya Vasudevan ’14 internedat the union-side labor law firm of O’Donnell, Schwartz &Anderson, where she attended collective bargainingnegotiations and labor arbitrations, and drafted pre-arbitration briefs and motions. Vasudevan was particularlyproud of assisting in representing the American PostalWorkers Union in a case that, she believes, “will have aprofound impact on . . . how all Americans send andreceive their mail.” After a long day of working on the Postal Service case,Vasudevan found that the content of Knauer’s course gaveher just the wider perspective she needed. “Our Institu-tional Decisionmaking course provided me with a nuancedview of the interplay between the executive, legislative andjudicial branches in the creation of public policy andenriched my understanding of the forces at play.”Dean leads Temple’s Task force following ‘Freeh Report’John G. Iannacone ’14 says his internship with the SEC “was a great learning experience, especially since I want to pursue a career in public service.” At the SEC, he “investigated possible violations of federal securitieslaws spanning a wide range of conduct, including insidertrading, fraudulent misrepresentations to investors, andmicrocap stock fraud. I also researched and compiled legal memoranda in response to opposing counsel’smotions on novel legal issues, such as fraudulent marketabuse and manipulation schemes, violations byprofessional market intermediaries, and attorney ethicalviolations. Being able to participate in such a wide range ofexperiences while at the SEC was made possible by theamazing attorneys I was working with, who were verygenerous with their time and advice.”Knauer kept the scholars busy in their free time,organizing a reception at the offices of FoxKiser hosted by Alan Fox ’72, a managing partner at the firm, and at the home of the chief counsel of the Small BusinessAdministration. Students were treated to private tours of the State Depart-ment and the White House. And,because Knauer recognized that even “policy wonks” enjoy the finer things in life, students were offered thechance to see theTaming of the Shrewat the FolgerTheater, and join a group of Temple alumni towatch the Nationals play the Braves.STUDENTS LEARN THEY CAN HAVE ‘PROFOUND INFLUENCE ON PUBLIC POLICY’“The students who were selected for thisinaugural year of the program worked reallyhard, and it paid off,” says Knauer. “I think theyall left feeling more confident than ever in theirdecision to become a lawyer and—importantly—their ability to make change happen.”Students now reflecting on the first year ofthe Law and Public Policy Program agree thatthe critical balance of hands-on internships,mentoring and classroom input made for arewarding experience. Eight of the scholars—Andrea Anastasi, Erin Bramhall,PatrickBianchi, Jared Burns,Christina Gilfillan, JasonLamb, Lucas Michelen,and Sean Rust—wererecently notified that their policy papers have been accepted for presentation at theinaugural conference of the Mid-Atlantic Law and Society Associationconvening at Drexel in October.Vasudevan summedup her experience as a Temple Law and Public Policy Scholar.“My involvement in [the Postal Worker case], coupled with my participation inTemple’s Law and Public Policy program, taught me thatthe work lawyers do can have a profound influence onpublic policy.” “The summer both changed and reinforced my careeraspirations,” says Iannacone. “Being down in Washingtonfor the summer opened my eyes to the many possibilitiesand career opportunities with the federal government. So in a way my thoughts about my career were changedbecause I now am aware of several different paths I cantake. However, in general the summer reinforced myaspirations to work for the federal government.” Michelen put it this way: “This summer program reallymade me 100% certain that I made the right decision tocome to law school.”INTERNSHIPS continued from page one“I am honored to have been asked toparticipate in this very importantinstitutional project,” says Dean JoAnne A.Epps. “No one can read the Freeh reportwithout a profound sense of sadness, butalso with a renewed commitment to ensurethat every one of its recommendations arecarefully evaluated to see if they offeruseful lessons to follow.”SEAN RUST ’14 XIMENA D. FLORES CARVAJAL ’14 (CENTER) INTERNED AT THEDNC VOTER PROTECTION INSTITUTE, WHERE SHE WASSUPERVISED BY RUTH GREENWOOD (LEFT). CARVAJAL'SSUMMER MENTOR IN D.C. WAS ERIN MOORE ’06 (RIGHT),DEPUTY GENERAL COUNSEL OF INTERNET2.JULY 17, 2012Following the July 12 release of theindependent report by Judge Louis Freeh on the childabuse scandal rocking Penn State, campuses across thecountry are wasting no time reviewing—and revising, ifnecessary—their policies and procedures for responsiblereporting in athletics departments. At Temple University, Acting President Richard Englertselected Law School Dean JoAnne A. Epps to head aspecial task force to guarantee that best practices are in place. Epps brings more than extensive legal andadministrative expertise to her position as head of the taskforce. As a former prosecutor, she is experienced in overseeing fact-gathering, and as the former facultyathletics representative to the NCAA, she is familiar withthat aspect of the institutional setting.Joining Dean Epps on the 11-person task force will be Professor of Law Eleanor Myers, who has served asTemple’s faculty athletics representative to the NCAA since2006 and who serves as a member of the prestigiousNCAA Infractions Committee. Other members of the taskforce are drawn from the athletic, academic andadministrative departments across the university. The taskforce began meeting immediately over thesummer, working to complete a final report by September15, to be submitted simultaneously to Acting PresidentEnglert, the chairman of the board of trustees, and theuniversity counsel.35362 TLS_ESQ_Sept06/f 9/7/12 11:13 AM Page 23 • TEMPLE ESQ. FALL 2012AUGUST 2012There are some careers Temple would liketo take credit for, and Lee Carpenter’s is one such career.Assistant Professor Leonore Carpenter ’00, a Temple Lawgraduate and a full-time member of the faculty since 2008, has worked her entire professional life advocating for the rights of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender(LGBT) individuals in Pennyslvania. When the membershipof the LGBT Bar Association gathered in D.C. this pastsummer to announce the 2012 class of “Best LGBTLawyers Under 40,” Carpenter was the only academic onthe list of forty high-powered corporate and nonprofitleaders from across the U.S.“[Carpenter] personifies the kind of activist andacademician that we would want to teach the next wave oflaw students,” wrote David M. Rosenblum when henominated Carpenter for the honor. Rosenblum is legaldirector of the Mazzoni Center, a Philadelphia organizationdevoted to health of well-being of the LGBT community. When Carpenter enrolled at Temple Law in 1997, shecame with a passion for LGBT rights and a talent forwriting. As an undergraduate at Rutgers in New Brunswick,NJ, she became a First Amendment advocate after leadinga controversial school newspaper, The Medium. A long listof accomplishments at law school earned her the BethCross Award for commitment to underserved populations,awarded when she graduated in 2000.Following a clerkship with Judge Harold B. Wells III ofthe New Jersey Superior Court’s Appellate Division,Carpenter secured an Equal Justice Works Fellowship towork at Equality Advocates Pennsylvania. EqualityAdvocates, where Carpenter had interned as a law student,was a nonprofit agencyproviding direct legalservices, education, andpolicy reform advocacyfor the LGBT populationacross the state. Underits auspices, Carpentersuccessfully launchedand directed thePennsylvania Anti-Violence Project, aimedat protecting LGBTvictims of domesticviolence and hate crimes,and youth victims ofschool-basedharassment. With the Anti-Violence Project established and herfellowship completed, she stayed on at Equality Advocates,first as a staff attorney and ultimately as the legal director.Among the duties Carpenter found deeply satisfying wassupervising Temple Law students who signed up for theLGBT-rights clinical, “Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual andTransgender Law,” that she had designed. The experiencewhet her appetite for teaching, and in 2008 the law schoolextended an offer to join the faculty, first as a visitingprofessor and a year later as an assistant professor. Nowfull-time at Temple, Carpenter teaches courses in legalresearch and writing; sexual orientation, gender identity,and the law; and introduction to public interest law. “When the Child is aParent: Effective Advocacyfor Teen Parents in theChild Welfare System,” andco-authored “Martyrs, theMedia and the Web:Examining a GrassrootsChildren’s Rights MovementThrough the Lens of Social Movement Theory,” “A BetterWay to Spend $500,000: How the Juvenile Justice SystemFails Girls,” and “Criminalizing Abused Girls.” Katz earned a J.D. from University of Pennsylvania LawSchool in 2003, and began her legal career as a law clerkto Judge Norma L. Shapiro of the Eastern District ofPennsylvania. She is active in the Nicholas A. CiprianiFamily Law Inn of Court, and serves on the steeringcommittee of the American Bar Association Center forChildren and the Law’s Parent Representation Project. Katzalso serves on the executive committee of the family lawsection of the Philadelphia Bar Association.VISITING PROFESSOR BOLSTERS TRIAL ADVOCACY PROGRAMAlso joining the Temple Law faculty full time for theupcoming academic year is Professor KENNETH A.JACOBSEN.Jacobsen has taught advanced civil procedurefor four years in the Integrated Trial Advocacy Program,and will continue teaching that course as a Visiting PracticeProfessor. He will also teach litigation basics, a seminar oncomplex civil litigation, and a course on interviewing,counseling and negotiation. HEALTH LAW ADVOCATE WILL ASSUME BECK CHAIR IN 2013ANN S. TORREGROSSAis a Visiting Professor of Law for theupcoming academic year and has been appointed to thePhyllis W. Beck Chair in Law for the Spring 2013 semester.Torregrossa is the fourth legal luminary to hold the PhyllisW. Beck Chair in Law. The endowed professorship wasestablished in 1997 by the Independence Foundation inhonor of Superior Court Judge Beck ‘67. It was previouslyheld by Carrie Menkel-Meadow of Georgetown UniversityLaw School, Theodore M. Shaw, the associate director andcounsel of the NAACP Legal Fund, and Frank McClellan,Temple Law Professor and Co-Director of the Center forHealth Law, Policy and Practice. Torregrossa is the executive director of the PennsylvaniaHealth Funders Collaborative as well as a health care policyconsultant. She is the former director of the PennsylvaniaGovernor’s Office of Health Care Reform and director of thePennsylvania Health Law Project. She began her legalcareer working for the Philadelphia Community LegalServices, and went on to become its deputy director. Shelater served as a consultant to the National Legal ServicesCorporation and as executive director at Delaware CountyLegal Assistance Association.Torregrossa has been honored repeatedly for her workin public interest law. She received an Honorary Doctor ofLaws from Villanova Law School; the 1997 John HeinzAward by the Pennsylvania Nursing Association; the 2010G. Fred DiBona Excellence in Health Care Award; and the2010 Health Care Hero distinction from the NationalNursing Consortium and Philadelphia Social Innovations. Torregrossa has previously taught at Villanova LawSchool and University of Pennsylvania Law School. Sheearned a B.A. from Marietta College in 1967 and a J.D.from Villanova Law School in 1970.LEGAL SERVICES ATTORNEY SARAH KATZ JOINS FACULTYWhen Visiting Clinical Professor SARAH KATZ accepted anoffer to teach at Temple this year, she and the law schoolwere already deeply familiar with one another. Katz hasbeen teaching a child welfare law seminar titled “Parent,Child and the State” to second and third year law studentssince 2005. She also has supervised and mentored Templelaw students for years.Katz joins the faculty with eight years of experience at Philadelphia Community Legal Services (CLS). As anattorney in CLS’ Family Advocacy Unit, she engaged in the challenging work of representing parents in civil childabuse and neglect cases, known as dependency cases,and she leveraged her expertise in representingdisenfranchised clients to advocate for policy change at the city and state levels. At CLS, Katz discovered that the time she spent trainingnew attorneys, paralegals and law students, as well asdoing extensive community and continuing legal educationwas deeply satisfying. In addition to serving as an adjunctprofessor at Temple Law, she was also a visiting lecturer at Penn, where she herself had studied law.Katz says that it will be rewarding to teach on a full-timebasis: “Ultimately, as a clinical professor, I’ll be working toensure that students not only provide zealous advocacy fortheir clients, but also build skills and knowledge that willenable them to pursue successful legal careers.”“Because I personally benefited from the mentorshipand experience of working with professors and practitionersthroughout my own law school experience, I know theimportance of clinical experience in shaping law students’career goals and opportunities.” Katz has published scholarly articles drawn from herexperience in family law, exploring juvenile law and policy:new LAW facultyThree visiting professors bring legal expertise to the classroom.Professor named to list of ‘Best LGBT Lawyers Under 40’Lee Carpenter ’00 is an ‘activist and academician.’In the past, Jacobsen has lectured on sports law toclasses at both Temple and Villanova Law Schools. He has an ownership interest in the Wilmington Blue Rocksprofessional baseball club, a single “A” affiliate of theKansas City Royals based in Wilmington, Delaware.Through his law office and sports marketing company,Sports Concepts, Inc., he provides legal advisory andconsulting services to professional athletes on promotions,product endorsements, appearances and other marketingactivities. Among Jacobsen’s clients are former Phillyoutfielder Shane Victorino; star Philadelphia EaglesQuarterback Michael Vick; and NBA basketball legendJulius “Dr. J” Erving. Jacobsen is in private practice at Jacobsen Law, with a focus on complex business and commercial litigation,including class actions on behalf of investors, consumersand victims of environmental disasters. Prior to opening his law office, he clerked for a New Jersey District CourtJudge, was an associate at Schnader, Harrison, Segal &Lewis, and a senior partner at Chimicles, Jacobsen &Tikellis. Jacobsen earned a J.D., cum laude,from VillanovaUniversity School of Law in 1979. PROFESSOR SARAH KATZ PROFESSOR KENNETH A.JACOBSENPROFESSOR ANN S.TORREGROSSA 35362 TLS_ESQ_Sept06/f 9/7/12 11:13 AM Page 34 • TEMPLE ESQ. FALL 2012POST AND HOFFMANARTICLES AMONG‘MOST-CITED . . . OF ALL TIME’ Two Temple Law professorsco-authored articles thatappear in a study recentlypublished by the MichiganLaw Review,“The Most-Cited Law Review Articlesof All Time.” ProfessorDavid Post co-authored the second most cited intellectual property article: 547 David R. Johnson & David Post, Law and Border—The Rise of Law inCyberspace,48 Stan. L. Rev. 1367 (1996). Professor David A. Hoffmanco-authored the second most cited law review article of 2009: Dan M. Kahan,David A. Hoffman & Donald Braman, Whose Eyes Are You Going to Believe?Scott v. Harris and the Perils of Cognitive Illiberalism,122 Harv. L. Rev. 837(2009). The Michigan Law Reviewstudy updated previous lists compiled in1985 and 1996. —Michigan Law Review, June 2012WELLS’ ARTICLE ON EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION LAUDED BY PEERS An article by Professor Harwell Wells,“Executive Compensation in the Courts:Board Capture, Optimal Contracting, and Officers’ Fiduciary Duties,” has been selected as one of the top ten corporate and securities articles of 2011by Corporate Practice Commentator.The list of top scholarly articles wereselected by professors of corporate law from among more than 450 articles.The article explores the recent rise in executive compensation, and proposes a new way to police executive compensation agreements by a renewedemphasis on officers’ fiduciary duties when negotiating such contracts. —Corporate Practice Commentator, June 2012 MONROE’S ARTICLE ON TAX PARTNERSHIP LAUDEDProfessor Andrea Monroe’sarticle, ‘‘Too Big to Fail:The Problem of Tax Partnership Allocations,’’ was one of the top ten partnership tax articles selected for analysis in an article in Tax Notes by Bradley T.Borden. The article was published in the Virginia TaxReviewin winter 2010. “In ‘Too Big to Fail,’ professorAndrea Monroe provides an engaging account of thehistory of the section 704(b) allocation rules. She describes the shortcomings ofsubstantial economic effect and partners’ interests in a tax partnership. Monroerecognizes that the evolution of state law entities and tax entity classificationrules has outpaced changes to the allocation rules, and the rules now lackeffectiveness.” —Tax Notes, March 12, 2012SPIRO SAYS ‘CONGRESS COULD FIX’CITIZENSHIP DILEMMAEveryone born in a U.S. state or territory automaticallygets U.S. citizenship—unless one happens to be bornin American Samoa. That exception is at the heart of afederal lawsuit filed against the U.S. government thisweek by five American Samoans and a Samoanorganization based in California. . . . Peter Spiro,anexpert in citizenship law and a law professor at TempleUniversity, said the suit might run into problems.“There’s a long, historical tradition of U.S. territorieslying outside the reach of the 14th Amendment,” he said. That said, Mr. Spirocalled the situation concerning American Samoa and citizenship “a real modern-day anomaly” that unfairly disadvantaged American Samoans. “It wouldn’t behard for Congress to fix this, and in my opinion, it probably should.” —Wall Street Journal, July 14, 2012ACA DECISION SHOWS HIGH COURT IS NON-PARTISAN, SAYS REINSTEINChief Justice John G. Roberts Jr.’s opinion . . . upholding much of PresidentObama’s Affordable Care Act should quiet for now critics who say the court actsout of raw partisan impulses. . . . “It is going to send a message that this court isdeciding cases not just on politics or ideology and that it is really committed tothe law,” said Robert Reinstein,constitutional law professor at Temple UniversityLaw School. “That will give it credibility for future decisions that may be moreideological.” —Philadelphia Inquirer, July 3, 2012TING SAYS PENN STATE IS ‘LIKELY RELIEVED’Professor Jan Tingwrote in his weekly op-ed column:“Those in the know at Penn State are likely relievedthat the university escaped the ‘death penalty’ theNCAA could and should have imposed on its footballprogram for a cover-up of sexual abuse of children. Amere year of football revenue will cover the $60 millionfine the NCAA ordered Penn State to pay for childabuse prevention.” —Philadelphia Inquirer, TheWesterly Sun, July 25, 2012SEPTEMBER 8, 2012Murray Shusterman ’36 celebrated hiscentennial birthday with a host of friends and family. As he passesthe century mark, Fox Rothschild senior counsel Shustermanworks 5 days a week from 8:30 a.m. until 5 p.m. Sometimes thePhiladelphia legal legend takes the 44 bus to his office at FoxRothschild, where he continues to practice corporate and realestate law as senior counsel. Earlier in 2012, Shusterman was awarded a Philadelphia Bowl from the Philadelphia BarAssociation to a standing ovation when he was inducted into their 75 year club, having practiced law for 75 years.In addition to serving as senior partner at Fox Rothschild,Shusterman’s legal career includes posts as Deputy City Solicitorfor Philadelphia, as well as counsel for the Commission onHuman Relations and for City Council. He also was vice president of the City Board of Health.At Temple Law, Shusterman is perhaps best known to current students and faculty as the generous benefactor whosegift of $1 million made possible the architecturally striking andtechnologically cutting edge facility now named Shusterman Hall.Murray Shusterman ’36 The benefactor of Shusterman Hall is going strong at 100.Shusterman contributed thefunds to renovate the building,previously a chapel, in 1996as part of the law school’sCentennial Campaign. Today, ShustermanHallserves as a much-neededvenue for lectures, meetingsand symposia. Shusterman’s commitment to his alma mater spans decades prior to his generous contribution to the Centennial Campaign. He was amember of The Law Foundation Board for many years and served asits president for more than a decade. He has also been president ofthe Temple Law Alumni Association and is still an active member of theAssociation’s Executive Committee. For 35 years, Shusterman took timefrom his practice to teach corporate and real estate law as an adjunctProfessor at the law school. He has been recognized repeatedly by theUniversity, which named him a Distinguished Alumni in 1993. In 1995,he was awarded an honorary Doctor of Laws. FacultyIN THENewsJOIN US IN HONORING MURRAY SHUSTERMAN ’36Please join us in honoringMurray’s legacy by making a giftto the Law Foundation ScholarshipFund in honor of his birthday.To contribute to the LawFoundation Scholarship Fund, mail a check to The Temple Law Foundation, 1719 N. Broad Street, Philadelphia, PA 19122 or go to www.law.temple.edu and click on Make a Gift. You may select Law FoundationScholarship Fund from the dropdown menu on this page.35362 TLS_ESQ_Sept06/f 9/7/12 11:13 AM Page 45 • TEMPLE ESQ. FALL 20121980sThe law school alumni office is seeking volunteers from your class to form a Reunion Committee to help plan your class reunion activities. Interested? Email lawalum@temple.edu or call 215.204.2325PHYLLIS HORN EPSTEIN ’80 of Epstein Shapiro & Epstein was a faculty member at a CLE program presented by the Pennsylvania Bar Institute, where she spoke about the tax implications of filing joint or separate returns, the tax impact of alimony and property transfers and thepotential for tax liability for separated and divorced couples; she also spoke about nonprofit organization management and the impact of Sarbanes Oxley at a CLE presented by the National Business Institute. Epstein is serving her second term as treasurer of the Pennsylvania Bar Association.In January 2012, OURANIA PAPADEMETRIOU ’81 began an elected three-year term on the board of governors of the Philadelphia Bar Association. Papademetriou has been a managing attorney of litigation at Philadelphia VIP, “the hub of pro bono services in theregion,” since 2005. Her prior experience includes serving as an assistant district attorney in Philadelphia and as legal director for Women Against Abuse, Inc. RAYMOND B. OSTROSKI ’83 has joined the Harrisburg, PA law firm of Thomas, Long, Niesen and Kennard as a partner.RONALD T. HOSKO ’84 was named assistant director of the Criminal Investigative Division at FBI Headquartersin July 2012. Hosko most recently served as special agent in charge of the criminal division of the FBI’s Washington field office. He began his career with the FBI as a special agent in 1984. RHONDA BROWNSTEIN ’86 has been named the new executive director of the Education Law Center. The Education Law Center is a statewide law center with offices in Philadelphia and Pittsburgh with the mission of making “good public education a reality for Pennsylvania’s mostvulnerable children.” Brownstein previously led the Southern Poverty Law Center, where she expanded the legal department from five attorneys in Alabama to 25 in five states across the Deep South, and was lead and co-counsel in many complex class action federal and state lawsuits on behalf of public school students, children in the criminal justice system, and other at-risk populations. 1970sThe law school alumni office is seeking volunteers from your class to form a Reunion Committee to help plan your class reunion activities. Interested? Email lawalum@temple.edu or call 215.204.2325In July 2012, THEODORE SIMON ’74 was sworn in as first vice-president of the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers at its annual meeting in San Francisco, CA. Simon is in private practice in Philadelphia, where, in addition to representing individuals and corporations in state and federal trial and appellate proceedings, he represents Americans abroad. BETTE WALTERS, J.D. ’70, LL.M. IN TAXATION ’74, is one of two new members of the Pennsylvania Advisory Board of Devereux, a nonprofit behavioral healthcare organization headquartered in Villanova, PA. Walters currently teaches at La Salle University School of Business,where she has worked with students to develop business plans for Devereux to foster job opportunities for the individuals served by the organization. MARI CARMEN APONTE ’75 was confirmed as Ambassador to El Salvador after serving in that role under a recess appointment since August 2011. Before assuming the diplomatic position in El Salvador, Aponte worked as an attorney and consultant with Aponte Consulting, and served on theboard of directors of Oriental Financial Group. Prior to that, she practiced law in Washington DC for nearly twenty years. Pepper Hamilton partner MARK S. BLASKEY ’75 has been appointed president of the Jewish Federation of Greater Philadelphia Endowments Corporation. Blaskey is a partner in Pepper’s Philadelphia office and chairman of the firm’s trusts and estates practicegroup. Blaskey also chairs Temple University’s planned giving advisory council, is a member of the board of directors of the Madlyn and Leonard Abramson Center for Jewish Life, and is a member of the AIPAC Greater Philadelphia Leadership Council and the Philadelphia Scholars advisory committee. RAY DOMBROSKI ’79 will be inducted into the U.S. Merchant Marine Academy Athletic Hall of Fame on October 6, 2012. Dombroski is the managing director of Alvarez & Marsal in New York, where he works in the commercial restructuring.JOSEPH D. MANCANO ’79, a partner of Pietragallo Gordon Alfano Bosick and Raspanti, presented at the University of North Carolina’s Treasury Management Program held in April 2012. He spoke on two topics, “Understanding Bank Agreements” and “Legal Pitfalls inTreasury.” Mancano is vice-chair of his firm’s white collar criminal defense group and a member of the firm’s commercial litigation group. 1950sThe law school alumni office is seeking volunteers from your class to form a Reunion Committee to help plan your class reunion activities. Interested? Email lawalum@temple.edu or call 215.204.23251960sThe law school alumni office is seeking volunteers from your class to form a Reunion Committee to help plan your class reunion activities. Interested? Email lawalum@temple.edu or call 215.204.2325In 2011, like many of his classmates, ALBERT DRAGON ’61 celebrates 50 years as a lawyer. He has also written and published a book about hiking 1,600 miles of the Appalachian Trail, titledAvalanche and Gorilla Jim, Appalachian Trail Adventures and Other Tales. Judge SANDRA MOSS ’75, who had the opportunity to read and review the book, writes “Al’s memoir . . . is filled with exciting exploits, belly laughs and shocking surprises.” The author, who is presently of counsel to the McEldrew Law firm, previously handled catastrophic injury cases with his own firm of A Dragon Associates, and with the firms of Litvin, Blumberg, Matusow and Young, and Kline & Spector. ELIZA J. EWING ’64 is enjoying retirement afterworking for the Bethlehem, PA firms of McFadden, Riskin and Williams and Kolb, Holland, Antonelli and Heffner.Former New Jersey municipal court judge HARRY SCHMOLL ’67 practices in Marlton, NJ and volunteers for Camden CountyLegal Services. He is a member of the Cherry Hill Zoning Board and of the board of trustees for the condominium community, Plaza Grande At Garden State Park. NOTESClassCLASSES of 1963 and 1968CLASSES of 1953 and 1958CLASSES of 1973 and 1978Temple School of Law alumni from the 1980s gathered at a recent Pennsylvania State Conference of Trial Judges held in Philadelphia. Left to right: Hon. Guido A.DeAngelis ’84, Allegheny County Court of Common Pleas, Hon. Fred A. Pierantoni III ’83, Luzerne County Court of CommonPleas, Hon. Annette M. Rizzo ’83, Philadelphia County Court of Common Pleas, Hon. Glynnis D. Hill ’84, Philadelphia County Court of Common Pleas.CLASSES of 1983 and 198835362 TLS_ESQ_Sept06/f 9/7/12 11:13 AM Page 5PETERBRAMPTONKOELLE’83 isworkingindependently, providingEuropeanlanguageservicesandinternational culturalandpoliticalconsultingtoclientsinthelegal community.1990sThe law school alumni office is seeking volunteers from your class to form a Reunion Committee to help plan your class reunion activities. Interested? Email lawalum@temple.edu or call 215.204.2325 NADEEM BEZAR ’91 recently became president-elect of the North American South Asian Bar Association at the group’s annual convention in Philadelphia. Bezar is a partner at Kolsby, Gordon, Robin, Shore & Bezar, where his practice focuses on medical negligence and other cases involving catastrophic personal injuries. ARTHUR BUGAY, J.D. ’91, LL.M. IN TAXATION ’98, LL.M. IN TRIAL ADVOCACY ’00, has received the George F. Douglas Jr. Amicus Award from the Pennsylvania Association for Justice. Bugay, a partner at Galfand Berger, received the award at the association’s annual retreat in June.Bugay’s practice areas include products liability, construction accident litigation, personal injury litigation, negligent security and employment law.ERIC J. PHILLIPS ’91 has joined Obermayer Rebmann Maxwell & Hippel’s labor relations and employment law department as senior counsel, residing in the firm’s Philadelphia office. Prior to joining Obermayer, Phillips was corporate counsel with a national builder and developer.DANIEL R. MILLER ’92 has been named a shareholder in the Philadelphia firm of Berger & Montague, where he focuses his practice on qui tam whistleblower cases and recently represented one of the whistleblowers in the successful lawsuit against NextCare, Inc., the nation’s largest privately owned urgent care provider. Miller joinedBerger & Montague in 2010, after serving 16 years as a deputy attorney general for the Delaware Department of Justice; for seven of those years he headed the state’sMedicaid fraud control unit. 6 • TEMPLE ESQ. FALL 2012Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta has promoted NANETTE DERENZI ’86 to the rank of vice admiral and Judge Advocate General of the Navy. President Barack Obama nominated DeRenzi for the prestigious promotion, which made DeRenzi one of only 40 vice admirals inthe Navy. As Judge Advocate General, she heads the JAG Corps, a global network of 2,300 attorneys, paralegals and support staff. DeRenzi, who served as Deputy Judge Advocate General from 2009 to 2012, has also served on three different ships. HELEN S. CAMPBELL ’87, Collegiate Professor at the University of Maryland University College in Heidelberg,Germany, recently joined the faculty of EBS Universitaet fuer Wirtschaft und Recht in Wiesbaden, where she is a lecturer on Anglo-American law. New Jersey Superior Court Judge SUSAN F. MAVEN ’87 was elevated to the Appellate Division in August. The Appellate Division of the Superior Court is New Jersey’s intermediate appellate court. Appointed to the Superior Court in 2001, Judge Maven served in the family division in Atlantic County until 2008, when she was assigned to the criminal division in Cape May County. She returned to Atlantic County in 2010, serving first in the criminal division and then in the family division. Judge Maven has been chair of the state Supreme Court’s committee on minority concerns since 2010, and is vice-chair of the committee on access and fairness. The Foreign Policy Research Institute, a Philadelphia-based think tank, announced the election of trustee MARINA KATS ’88. Kats is a founding partner of Kats, van der Veen & Associates. She is also the president of the Russian-American Chamber of Commerce, and a member of the board of trustees of Albert Einstein Hospital, the Einstein Society, and the advisory board to the president of Temple University.TRIAL LAWYER JOE TUCKER ’89 NAMED TO IATLJULY 2012 Joe H. Tucker Jr. ’89 was inducted into the International Academy of Trial Lawyers at its mid-year meeting. The International Academy of Trial Lawyers is an invitation-only organization that limits membership to 500 fellowsfrom the U.S., from both the plaintiff and defense bars. Tucker is founder and managing partner of Tucker Law Group, a firm with practices in Philadelphia and South Florida. Tucker often handles clients’ most high profile cases ranging from complex civil litigation, to civil rights and employment discrimination litigation, to general liability claims, and has argued cases successfully before the Pennsylvania Commonwealth, Superior and Supreme Courts and The Eastern District of Pennsylvania and The Third Circuit Court of Appeals. He is an adjunct professor at Temple University’s undergraduate School of Business Legal Studies Department. For the past several years, Tucker has also been a guest lecturer at Penn Law School. Meagan Hassan ’07 inducted into Gallery of Success BERNARD PASTOR ’94 was recently promoted to chief of the federal litigation and appeals section of the Miami-Dade County Attorney’s Office. He was also appointed president of the South Florida Chapter Federal Bar Association. MATTHEW TAYLOR WILKOV ’94, a partner at the Lansdale, PA firm of Rubin, Glickman, Steinberg and Gifford, served as the plenary presenter at the Pennsylvania Bar Association’s 2012 family law section summer meeting. His presentation was entitled “What Family Law Attorneys Need to Know About Military Issues.”Wilkov practices in the areas of personal injury, products liability, criminal defense, business litigation, and military and veterans law. LORI RIDYARD ’95 recently joined QVC, Inc. in West Chester as assistant general counsel.Anderson Kill & Olick, P.C. announced that CAROLE B. SHEFFIELD ’96 has joined the firm as a shareholder in the firm’s Philadelphia office. Sheffield, who was previously a partner at Reed Smith, concentrates her practice in estate and tax planning and trust and estate administration.In May 2012, KELLY PHILLIPS ERB ’97 of The Erb Law Firm, was named treasurer of the Pennsylvania Bar Association’s solo and small firm practice section. Montgomery County sole practitioner C. DALE MCCLAIN ’97 has been elected to a second three-year term on the board of directors of the Pennsylvania Bar Institute. STEPHANIE J. SPRENKLE ’97 was recently appointed to a three-year term on the hearing committee of the Disciplinary Board of the Supreme Court. Sprenkle is senior counsel in Thorp Reed & Armstrong’s commercial, real estate and public finance practice group.ALUMNI SPOTLIGHTSUMMER 2012 Meagan Hassan ’07, the managing partner of Demond & Hassan, a boutique law firm based in Houston and Austin, TX, was selected as the Beasley School of Law nominee to Temple University’s Gallery of Success. Each year, alumni from each of Temple’s 17 schools and colleges are named for induction into the Gallery, a collaborative effortbetween Temple’s Career Center and the Office of Alumni Relations.Hassan has had an unusual career in the law. She made a leap of faith after graduation and moved to Texas, where she worked for several years as an associate under former Texas Secretary of State Geoffrey S. Connor, during which time she was able to formulate business and personal relationships across the state. At Demond and Hassan, Hassan is a litigator with successful outcomes in a wide variety of matters, including cyber-defamation, breach of contract, consumer protection, bankruptcy, immigration, and administrative law. Hassan says her main area of interest is “the intersection where international and U.S. privacy laws meet the American corporate forerunners of social networking.” Her first jury trial resulted in a $13.78million cyber-defamation jury verdict, the largest of its kind in the country, and her first depositions were of grand jurors (after successfully working with law partner William P. Demond to lift the secrecy traditionally associated with grand juries). The 2011 law alumna inducted into the Gallery of Success was Elena Park ’98, the founding member of the Cozen O’Connor immigration practice. CLASSES of 1993 and 199835362 TLS_ESQ_Sept06/f 9/7/12 11:13 AM Page 6TheJustinianSocietyofPhiladelphia recentlyappointedDINOPRIVITERA’93, a personalinjuryattorneyandassociateat Eisenberg,Rothweiler,Winkler,Eisenberg, &Jeck,toathree-yeartermonitsboard ofgovernors.TheJustinianSocietyisone oftheoldestnonprofitorganizationsfor lawyersofItalianancestry.2000sThe law school alumni office is seeking volunteers from your class to form a Reunion Committee to help plan your class reunion activities. Interested? Email lawalum@temple.edu or call 215.204.2325 ELIZABETH A. CLARK ’02 is a new associate with Dick, Stein, Schemel, Wine and Frey, which has offices in Waynesboro and Greencastle, PA. Clark’s practice will focus on civil litigation, criminal litigation, estate planning and estate administration.General Mills has named DAVID DUDICK ’04 president of General Mills Bakeries & Foodservice’s business segment. Dudick was previously senior vice president of sales for U.S. channels at General Mills. Segal McCambridge Singer & Mahoney announced that RICHARD GODSHALL ’04 is one of four new firm shareholders. Godshall practices in Segal McCambridge’s Philadelphia office defending complex matters in commercial, construction, products liability, and transportation cases. HEATHER A. HERRINGTON ’04 has joined the board of the Professional Women’s Roundtable, and will serve as co-chair of the organization’s events committee. Herrington is an attorney at Jacobs Law Group, where she handles complex commercial and civil litigation, and labor and employment matters. In June 2012, NIKKI JOHNSON-HUSTON, J.D., LL.M. IN TAXATION ’04 was the 2012 Fashioning Futures for Women Award Honoree by the nonprofit The CareerWardrobe. Johnson-Huston is an Assistant City Solicitor in the major tax enforcement division for the Philadelphia Law Department.DOUGLAS R. MADANICK, J.D. ’04, LL.M. IN TAXATION ’06 was recently made partner at Kulzer & DiPadova, a tax and estate boutique firm in Haddonfield, NJ. RIAN MILLER ’04 has joined Marsh & McLennan Companies, a global professional services firm, as general counsel of Mercer, the company’s human resource consulting subsidiary. Miller joined the firm from Towers Watson, where she has been managing counsel for risk and litigation since 2010. KAREN GELD SANCHEZ, J.D., M.B.A. ’04 was recently appointed to a three-year term as a member of the hearing committee of the Disciplinary Board of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania. Sanchez is an associate at Thorp Reed & Armstrong in the firm’s commercial, real estate and public finance practice group. JENNIFER K. WELSH ’06 recently accepted the position of Assistant U.S. Attorney in the District of Delaware, after serving three years at the U.S. Department of Labor Office of the Regional Solicitor. JENNIFER J. RILEY ’09 was appointed to the executive council of the Pennsylvania Bar Association’s Commission on Women in the Profession and will serve as co-chair of the mentoring committee for the upcoming year. DANIELLE SCHWARTZ ’11 is the new Philadelphia director of Lateral Link, a full service legal search firm. 7 • TEMPLE ESQ. FALL 2012IN MEMORIAMTEMPLE ESQ. welcomes news and photos of our alumni/ae. Please include: Full name, class, degree, and a way to reach you if we need to confirm information.Send to: Janet GoldwaterTemple Esq.Temple University Beasley School of Law 1719 North Broad StreetPhiladelphia, PA 19122Email: janet.goldwater@temple.eduSEND US YOUR NEWS!TEMPLE ESQ.Published by the Temple University Beasley School of Law for alumni and friends.JOANNE A. EPPS, DEANPublications Director: Janet Goldwater Art Director: Gene GilroyPhotography: Joseph Labolito, Kelly & Massa, Ryan Brandenburg, Louis Thompson. WEEKEND Saturday, April 20, 2013 SAVE THE DATE!REUNIONALUMNI1953 1958 1963 1968 1973 1978 1983 1988 1993 1998 2003 2008 *CLASSES of 2003 and 2008Send letters and comments to: Janet Goldwater, Temple Esq. Temple University James E. Beasley School of Law1719 N. Broad Street, Room 510, Philadelphia, PA 19122 Email: janet.goldwater@temple.edu Fax: (215) 204-1185Change of address: (215) 204-11871953 1958 1963 1968 1973 1978 1983 1988 1993 1998 2003 2008 35362 TLS_ESQ_Sept06/f 9/7/12 11:13 AM Page 7Blaine Emerson Capehart Class of 1933 Edward W. Robinson Jr. Class of 1957Patrick W. Kittredge Class of 1964Jerome Richter Class of 1965Francis R. Coyne Class of 1973 John M. Armstrong Class of 1986 Alvina Forthner LL.M. Class of 2011 PAPER ON MANAGING ‘FRACKING’WINS BURTON AWARDTemple Law students have won the prize for legal writing three out of last four years.MAY 8, 2012 MICHAEL DILLON ’12 was one of only fifteen law students nationwide whose paper was selected for a Distinguished Legal Writing Award. The prize is bestowed by the Burton Awards for Legal Achievement, a nonprofit program associated with the Library of Congress. Dillon was nominated for his article, Water Scarcity andHydraulic Fracturing in Pennsylvania: Examining the Potential for Pennsylvania Water Law to Adequately Manage Potential Water Shortage Issues Presented by Natural Gas Operations in the Marcellus Shale, written with supervision from Professor Amy Sinden. 2012 marks the third time in four years that a Temple Law student has been recognized by the Burton Awards.While at Temple, Dillon was the managing editor of the Temple Law Review. In September 2012, he began work with the environmental and energy law firm Manko, Gold, Katcher & Fox in Bala Cynwyd, PA. TEMPLE UNIVERSITY JAMES E. BEASLEY SCHOOL OF LAW LAW SCHOOL AND ALUMNI NEWSFALL 2012VISIT OUR WEBSITE: www.law.temple.edu WRITE TO US: lawalum@temple.eduNON-PROFIT ORGANIZATIONU.S. POSTAGE PAID PHILADELPHIA, PA PERMIT NO. 1044TEMPLE UNIVERSITYJAMES E. BEASLEY SCHOOL OF LAW1719 North Broad Street Philadelphia, PA 19122business Law expert rejoins faculty Jonathan Lipson returns to Temple as the Harold E. Kohn Professor of Law.The Harold E. Kohn Chair in Law was created in 2004 by the Barrack and Kohn foundations in honor of the renowned Philadelphia trial lawyer who was the architect of the modern-day class action. The new holder of that chair is former corporate attorney and business law expert, Professor Jonathan Lipson. The inaugural holder of the chair was Peter Huang, a scholar in the fields of securities law and behavioral law and economics.Lipson returns to Temple following two years as the Foley and Lardner Professor of Law at the University of Wisconsin Law School. Lipson first joined Temple in 2004 as a visiting professor, becoming an Associate Professor in 2005. In 2010 he was named Peter J. Liacouras Professor of Law. Starting this fall as the Kohn Chairhe will teach contracts, a transactional skills workshop (which he developed), and bankruptcy. Prior to teaching, Lipson was a lawyer, practicing corporate and commercial law at the Boston firm of Hill & Barlow, in the New York office of Kirkland & Ellis, and with the New York firm of Milbank, Tweed, Hadley & McCloy. While in practice, he was involved in several large and complex Chapter 11 cases, including those of Healthco, Thinking Machines Corporation, and CIS Corporation. Today, Lipson’s principal research focus is business failure, with an emphasis on problems of governance and information asymmetry. Lipson has written scores ofarticles and book chapters considering these questions from a variety of perspectives. He has published in many of the nation’s top law reviews, including those of the UCLA, Boston University, Notre Dame, and Southern Californialaw schools. His work is frequently cited, including by leading business courts, such as the Delaware Supreme Court, the Delaware Chancery Court and the Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York.An occasional empiricist, Lipson recently published the first study of the use of “examiners” in large Chapter 11 bankruptcies. He also developed and published the first empirical study of lawyers’ practice of writing closing opinions in large and complex transactions. His qualitative empirical study of distress investors, The Shadow Bankruptcy System, was recently excerpted in a leading collection on the current financial crisis.Lipson is also an occasional blogger. His shorter works have appeared on, among others, The Huffington Post, Concurring Opinions and Credit Slips. He also writes op-eds for the National Law Journal.Lipson is a member of the American Law Institute and the American College of Commercial Finance Lawyers, and is active with the business law section of the American Bar Association, where he is currently the section content officer. He is also a past chair of the business law education committee and the Uniform Commercial Code Task Force on Forms under Revised Article 9 of the UCC. He has also served as an expert in complex reorganizations, including that of Enron Corp.Lipson earned his undergraduate degree, with honors,from the University of Wisconsin-Madison in 1986; and his law degree from the University of Wisconsin Law School in 1990. Calendar of EventsMonday, September 10, 2012NEW YORK CITY ALUMNI RECEPTION Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft One World Financial Center, 39th Floor 6-8 pm mytlawconnection.com/2012nyc or 215.204.2325 Thursday, September 27, 2012WASHINGTON DC ALUMNI RECEPTIONHome of Robert Doyle ’75 6-8 pm mytlawconnection.com/2012dc or 215.204.2325 Thursday, October 11, 2012POLSKY MOOT COURT COMPETITIONSDuane Morris LLP Moot Court Room, 3 pmPROFESSOR JONATHAN LIPSONjoins the faculty this fall, along with three visiting professors: Ann Torregrossa, Sarah Katz, and Kenneth Jacobsen (see article on page three). Monday, October 22, 2012TLAA’S 9TH ANNUAL PA BAR ADMISSIONS CEREMONYCity Hall, Courtroom 656 4 pm mytlawconnection.com/2012admissionsceremony Friday, November 9, 2012TEMPLE LAW REVIEW SYMPOSIUMFalse Confessions: Featuring Richard Ofshe Shusterman Hall, 8:30 am-5 pm35362 TLS_ESQ_Sept06/f 9/7/12 11:13 AM Page 8Sunday,November4,2012BLACKLAWSTUDENTSASSOCIATIONBRUNCH11am-2:30pmDetails,call215.204.9000Next >