TEMPLETemple University James E. Beasley School of Law Alumni News • November 2017Meet the new Dean for Students: Jen BretschneiderESQ_Nov17_CS6_crw1.indd 111/6/17 7:42 PMInside this issueFACULTY SCHOLARSHIPFeaturing Hosea Harvey’s pioneering work in youth concussion lawNew books by Knauer, Stanchi, and Sonenshein and Bocchino4CLASS NOTES and other ALUMNI NEWSCover photo (from left): Eileen Bradley ’18, Ryan Smith ’20, Diane Kim ’19, Assistant Dean for Students Jen Bretschneider, Jude Joanis ’20723NEW FACES IN THE ADMINISTRATIONJen Bretschneider, Rachel Rebouché and Jaya Ramji-Nogales22016-17 HONOR ROLL OF DONORS LAW SCHOOL NEWSJuvenile Law Center’s Robert Schwartz is 2017 Phyllis W. Beck Chair6ESQ_Nov17_CS6_crw2.indd 211/8/17 5:55 PMMessage from Dean Gregory MandelWe are deeply appreciative to our graduates, students, and friends who are listed in this published Honor Roll of donors for the 2016-2017 academic year. You are part of advancing Temple Law School’s commitment to being at the forefront of legal education.I am excited and energized by my new role as Dean of Temple Law School and proud to lead this talented and accomplished community of students, faculty, and alumni. Our mission to provide a superior, affordable, and accessible legal education to a diverse student body sets us apart. The Entering Class of 2017In August I was thrilled to welcome our new class, a class that continues our tradition of excellence. We have 223 students in our first-year program, 185 in the day and 38 in the evening division. They come from 23 states and countries and 109 colleges and universities; 54% are women, 29% are minority students, and 13% hold advanced degrees. The average age is 25 and the top university feeder schools this year are Temple and Penn State. Almost half of the members of the entering class speak another language. Four of our students are active military. Many members of this class are the first in their family to graduate college, while others have a parent, grandparent, or sibling who is a Temple Law School graduate. The Graduating Class of 2017Several months before this new class entered law school, another fabulous class graduated and began their legal careers. The members of the Class of 2017 who took the Pennsylvania Bar had an 84.6% pass rate, which is our highest first-time pass rate since 2013 and well above the state average. I am very proud of our new Temple lawyers and look forward to congratulating them at our annual swearing-in ceremony this fall. FacultyOur faculty had another outstanding year. Their research contributes to justice and our understanding of how the law functions in society. Several of our professors recently published new books: Professor Kathy Stanchi is co-author of Legal Persuasion: A Rhetorical Approach to the Science; Professor Nancy Knauer co-authored a new casebook, Property Law: A Context and Practice Casebook; and Professors Emeriti Anthony Bocchino and David Sonenshein just published The Modern Deposition (see article on page 5). Other faculty have had impact in other manners. Professor Jonathan Lipson’s scholarship was a key element of the Supreme Court decision in Czyzewski v. Jevic Holding Corp., a closely-followed bankruptcy case, while Professor Shanahan’s Justice Lab in our Sheller Center made national headlines with Double Punishment, a report on the practice of charging parents for the costs of their children’s incarceration that caused the city of Philadelphia to change its policy.Thank you for your continued generosity. We look forward to another exciting year at Temple Law School.Gregory Mandel, DeanESQ_Nov17_CS6_crw1.indd 311/6/17 7:42 PMNew faces in the administration2 • TEMPLE ESQ. NOVEMBER 2017JULY 2017 Following a national search, Dean Gregory Mandel has named PROFESSOR JENNIFER BRETSCHNEIDER as Temple Law’s new assistant dean for students. Bretschneider, who has served as director of experiential programs and associate professor since 2012, is well known to the law school community. In announcing the appointment to faculty and staff, Dean Mandel praised Bretschneider for her “thoughtfulness, insight, and student-centered approach,” expressing “confidence that she will do an exceptional job in this new role.” In assuming her new position, she fills the vacancy created after longtime Dean for Students Marylouise Esten was appointed Temple University’s deputy provost. Esten, who had been at Temple Law since 1995, left in 2016 to join former Dean JoAnne Epps shortly after Epps was appointed University Provost. Professor Emerita Eleanor Myers was interim dean for students until Bretschneider’s appointment. Myers shares Dean Mandel’s confidence in his pick for the individual most responsible for the students’ law school experience. “Jen Bretschneider will be a wonderful dean for students,” Myers says. “She brings not only tremendous experience both as an administrator and a lawyer, but also an enthusiasm for our students and for their success. She is deeply devoted to them.”Bretschneider was working in the Philadelphia District Attorney’s office when she first began teaching at Temple Law in 2005 as an adjunct professor in the Trial Advocacy program. As an accomplished litigator, first in the family violence and sexual assault unit and later in the homicide unit, Bretschneider brought valuable first-hand experience to the classroom. In 2011, when after six years of deepening involvement at Temple Law, Bretschneider made the break from the DA’s office, her work pace did not slow down. In her new position, she was responsible for New Assistant Dean for Students Jennifer Bretschneider is ‘deeply devoted’ to studentsthe law school’s extensive external clinical programs as well as the Temple Summer Professional Experience Curriculum. As an assistant and later associate professor, she taught ethics in practice and trial advocacy in addition to coaching the National Trial Team. By 2012, she was named Director of Experiential Programs. Bretschneider’s twelve year association with Temple Law has given her a deep knowledge of the student body, and the curriculum that works best for them. She says she still plans to spend time in the classroom, and is teaching in the Introduction to Transactional Skills program. She also looks forward to supporting students as leaders in the school community. “I work very closely with Dean Bretschneider in her capacity as Dean of Students,” says Reginald Streater, President of the Temple Law Student Bar Association. “My first chance to interact with her was during Trial Team Bootcamp. The biggest takeaway from that experience was how she inspired students to be at their very best, while understanding that the pathway for each student to reach their very best will vary from student to student. Due to the diversity in the student body, to me, this is a crucial skill set. I am equally impressed with Dean Bretschneider’s willingness to advocate on behalf of the students.” Bretschneider says her commitment to students is what makes this job a good fit. “If my decisions are in the best interests of the students, then I am certain my professional compass is pointed in the right direction. Students are always at the center of what I do. And there’s nowhere I’d rather be doing it than Temple Law.” Student leader Cameron Redfern ’19 agrees: “As a student leader, it has been a pleasure to work with Dean Bretschneider in her new role as Dean for Students. Her commitment to the student body is at the forefront of her day to day actions, and it is felt by each Temple Law student.” “The Temple Law School community is vibrant, engaged, and supportive. My role is to help students thrive as members of this community and take advantage of all that Temple has to offer.”ESQ_Nov17_CS6_crw1.indd 411/6/17 7:42 PMDean Gregory Mandel appointed PROFESSOR JAYA RAMJI-NOGALES to a position in faculty leadership as associate dean for academic affairs. Ramji-Nogales is also the I. Herman Stern Professor of Law for Research and co-director of Temple Law’s Institute for International Law and Public Policy. As associate dean, Ramji-Nogales will work with senior advisor to the dean, Professor Robert Bartow, to ensure compliance with ABA standards, Association of American Law Schools requirements, and other law school and university accreditation matters. Ramji-Nogales will also oversee portions of the law school’s expanding experiential learning program. Ramji-Nogales, who has taught at Temple Law since 2006, specializes in immigration law, international law, procedure and process. She currently teaches civil procedure, evidence, and refugee law and policy. Before joining the Temple Law faculty, Ramji-Nogales was a clinical teaching fellow at the Center for Applied Legal Studies at Georgetown Law Center, where she was trained in clinical pedagogy and supervised students representing asylum seekers. There she began a highly productive research collaboration: with her Georgetown University co-authors, Ramji-Nogales has published quantitative and qualitative studies of the U.S. asylum system. Their first study, Refugee Roulette: Disparities in Asylum Adjudication and Proposals for Reform, was the first empirical study of decision-making at all four levels of the I. Herman Stern Research Professor Jaya Ramji-Nogales has been named Associate Dean for Academic Affairs.Dean appoints Jaya Ramji-Nogales and Rachel Rebouché to faculty leadership postsAmerican asylum process. Their most recent co-authored study is Lives in the Balance: Asylum Adjudication by the Department of Homeland Security. Both works offer suggestions for systemic reform.Ramji-Nogales also writes in the field of global migration law. She is a senior research associate of the Refugee Law Initiative of the School for Advanced Studies at the University of London, and, along with Professor Peter Spiro, she is a founding co-chair of the Migration Law Interest Group at the American Society of International Law, on whose executive council she also sits. For more than fifteen years, she has been a senior legal advisor to the Documentation Center of Cambodia, and has authored several pieces on transitional justice in Cambodia. Ramji-Nogales earned a J.D. from Yale Law School, and an LL.M. from Georgetown University Law Center. Prior to teaching law, Ramji-Nogales was a staff attorney at the American Civil Liberties Union in New York and an associate at the international law firm Debevoise & Plimpton. The widely published legal scholar PROFESSOR RACHEL REBOUCHÉ is Dean Mandel’s pick for associate dean for research. Rebouché, who succeeds Dean Mandel, will support and promote faculty scholarship both at Temple and within the legal academy, as well as work with the law school administration on key initiatives.Rebouché, who joined the Temple Law faculty in 2013 after teaching at University of Florida Levin College of Law for three years, teaches family and health care law. Her extensive scholarship includes co-authoring Governance Feminism: An Introduction and the sixth edition of the casebook, Family Law. She is also co-editor of Governance Feminism: Notes from the Field. Rebouché’s most recent research focuses on reproductive health and justice, and includes articles on prenatal genetic testing and genetic counseling, abortion law reform, collaborative divorce, and international reproductive rights. Rebouché is currently writing a book on reproductive justice under contract with NYU Press and is editing a collection of rewritten family law opinions as part of the Feminist Judgments series for Cambridge University Press. She is also a co-investigator for a project on adolescent reproductive health housed at the Rollins School of Public Health at Emory University. Rebouché earned her J.D. from Harvard Law School, an LL.M. from Queen’s University in Belfast, and a B.A. from Trinity University. Prior to law school, she worked as a researcher for the Northern Ireland Human Rights Commission and the Human Rights Centre at Queen’s University, Belfast. Following law school, Rebouché clerked for Justice Kate O’Regan on the Constitutional Court of South Africa. Before teaching, Rebouché was an associate director of adolescent health programs at the National Partnership for Women & Families (formerly, the Women’s Legal Defense Fund) and a Women’s Law and Public Policy Fellow at the National Women’s Law Center. TEMPLE ESQ. NOVEMBER 2017 • 3Rachel Rebouché is the new associate dean for research.ESQ_Nov17_CS6_crw2.indd 511/8/17 5:56 PMHosea H. harvey Empirical regulatory scholar looks at youth concussion laws4 • TEMPLE ESQ. NOVEMBER 2017Professor Hosea H. Harvey’s recent research on laws governing concussions among young athletes has placed him at the center of a national discussion, and he candidly admits that it was his interest in the science of lawmaking, rather than athletic talent, that drew him to the issue. Harvey has carved out an ambitious long-term agenda as a regulatory empiricist: a health and consumer finance law focused scholar who uses a variety of social science methodologies to analyze when and how innovative regulation, law, and policy measures can be used to improve outcomes for targeted populations. Harvey says he decided to enter the controversial discussion surrounding youth sports concussion laws “because it’s a large scale public health regulatory problem, where states all quickly passed laws and created rules covering millions of youth athletes without a full understanding of how to do so most effectively.” Harvey says that the news-cycle narrative was that these concussion laws would essentially solve the problem of youth athletic concussions, but, “I was extraordinarily skeptical about the ability of the law to impact the problem of youth concussions in this way.” Building on the pioneering work of Professor Scott Burris, Temple Law’s resident expert in public health law research, Harvey first applied a public health epidemiological framework to the problem. He then quantified components of existing laws, applied the framework to the laws, and finally postulated about the effect the laws would have on the problem. Harvey says, “My research revealed that using the best science for lawmaking takes time and resources that many lawmakers don’t have. And, most early versions of these laws were designed to prevent a second concussion from happening, but largely ignored the science about causes of initial concussion.”Armed with this research, Harvey has become a nationally recognized advocate for youth concussion law reform. “If we truly believe in making an impact on the complex legal problems we write about, we have to broaden our audience,” he says. To that end, Harvey has published his work in scholarly journals and innovative scientific dataset portals, and has spoken at leading public health conferences and medical schools, and with state legislatures. This dissemination strategy has been impactful. “Law professors are not ideally suited to mobilize school boards and state legislators on this issue—students, parents, coaches, health professionals, and interest groups are,” Harvey says. “Now these individuals, whether they learned about the research from a health journal, a law journal, or a newspaper article, can engage in the wonderful process of civic engagement to make necessary changes. It has been really powerful to watch key stakeholders use the power of academic research to improve public policy and public health.”Redressing ‘differential regulatory impact’ on vulnerable populationsHarvey’s recent scholarship also focuses on the role of socio-demographic differences when designing and evaluating the impact of consumer finance regulations. Harvey explains how these diverse areas of research are inter-connected: “I was always curious about regulatory regimes in which the particular concerns of vulnerable communities were often ignored in order to create broad, general policies for the ‘public good.’ Whether in consumer law or public health law, I began to see a pattern. All-inclusive regulations were designed to positively impact a problem to maximize overall utility, but the potential for differential group impact was often ignored. “In the field of behavioral law and economics for example, there has been great work focused on incentivizing consumer behaviors through innovative regulatory approaches—but much less research on how consumer responses to these approaches might be impacted by race, among other characteristics.” Harvey’s research on consumer finance laws and regulations considers their impact on borrowers for whom English is a second language. “When a person reads a mortgage or credit card disclosure, if they attach meanings to words or phrases differently because English is their second language, they may act on the disclosure’s information in ways that are objectively financially harmful,” says Harvey. “For example, the CFPB (Consumer Financial Protection Bureau) recently developed the first Spanish-language model mortgage disclosure guide, a critical and positive development. But during that process, they learned that the concepts “appraisal, balloon payment, borrower, escrow, final payment, and origination charges” do not translate directly into Spanish and also do not have an agreed meaning across Spanish dialects. It then took the CFPB an extraordinary amount of time, careful research and focus group testing to ensure that the disclosure document was most helpful to Spanish-speaking consumers, and that any dialect differences in interpretation were minimized or eliminated.” In the case of youth concussions, Harvey says he is also seeking to redress the laws’ differential group impact: “Take low-income communities that lack the resources to have certified athletic trainers or doctors available during all athletic contests. If we build into the law a requirement that such resources exist, what about schools that can’t afford them? Programs are eliminated. That then reduces the opportunities for college scholarships, and general youth physical fitness. ESQ_Nov17_CS6_crw1.indd 611/6/17 7:42 PMNew books by Temple Law facultyProperty law book by Knauer ‘places students in the role of practitioner’Professor Nancy Knauer’s new book, Property Law: A Context and Practice Casebook, combines best practices for student learning with a lawyering practice orientation. Published by Carolina Academic Press and co-authored with ALICIA KELLY ’92, LL.M. IN TEACHING ’99, the book addresses all the major topics of property law and places students in the role of practitioners who apply their learning by evaluating real world practice-based problems and documents, and engage in professional identity development. Knauer is a professor of law and director of the Law and Public Policy Program at Temple Law. Her previous book, Gay and Lesbian Elders: History, Law, and Identity Politics in the United States, was published by Ashgate Publishing in 2010. Kelly, co-author of Property Law, earned a J.D. from Temple Law, returned from 1997 to 1999 as a Freedman Teaching Fellow and in 2010 as a visiting professor. She is now co-director of the Family Health Law & Policy Institute, where she is also a distinguished professor of law. Stanchi’s new book explores legal persuasion through a cross-disciplinary lensProfessor Kathryn M. Stanchi’s newest book, Legal Persuasion: A Rhetorical Approach to the Science, develops a central theme: legal persuasion results from making and breaking mental connections. In this volume, Stanchi and co-author Linda L. Berger combine research from cognitive science with classical and contemporary rhetorical theory and apply these disciplines to the real-life practice of persuasion, using concrete examples from briefs and trials. Legal Persuasion was written to appeal to scholars, students, judges and practicing lawyers, and it assesses and explains why, how, and when certain persuasive methods and techniques are more effective than others. Stanchi, Jack E. Feinberg ‘57 Professor of Litigation, is the principal organizer of the U.S. Feminist Judgments Project and was co-editor and author of the introduction of Feminist Judgments: Rewritten Opinions of the United States Supreme Court, published by Cambridge University Press in 2016.Modern Depositions: A new book by Sonenshein and Bocchino calls for ‘radical change’Ever since the deposition was introduced into U.S. civil litigation practice in 1938, it has been recognized as an invaluable legal tool. But it is a tool that is a constantly evolving component of the American legal system, say Temple Law Professors Emeriti Anthony J. Bocchino and David A. Sonenshein in a new book, The Modern Deposition. While the role of depositions may be changing, lawyers and practices are still mired in the same staid techniques used in preparing them. Co-authors Bocchino and Sonenshein say this new guide details the need for a radical change in the way lawyers think about depositions.The Modern Deposition represents the most recent publication resulting from a decades long scholarly collaboration between Bocchino and Sonenshein. The two Temple Law professors emeriti have co-authored a series of widely used legal texts, including A Practical Guide to Federal Evidence; Federal Rules of Evidence with Objections; Cases and Materials on Motion Practice; and Lawyer on Trial: A Case of Malpractice.“Similarly, in sports that field both boys’ and girls’ teams, concussion rates are always higher for girls than boys for a variety of reasons. But concussion laws treat all concussions as essentially being caused by the same impacts, yielding education regimes and post-concussion processes that are uniform across sports. Some state laws don’t include cheerleading—in which injury and concussion rates are high—within the definition of sports. “In short, the data show that a well-intentioned law may work better for boys than it does for girls at reducing concussions. We need to do more.” The Path ForwardHarvey has reason to believe that his research can result in a more thoughtful, nuanced policy-making that will incorporate the views of a more diverse group of stakeholders. His empirically-oriented approach has led to fruitful dividends in the past year. In October 2017, a multi-year collaborative research effort led to two more prestigious scientific journal publications examining the effect of youth concussion laws. In one of them, Harvey and his co-authors used a poisson regression framework, his state-law concussion dataset, and a national concussion tracking system to empirically test whether the laws had their intended effect. Their conclusion was consistent with his earlier hypothesis: the laws did reduce recurrent concussions, but their impact on initial concussions cannot be definitively proven. In spring 2017, Harvey’s advocacy for the incorporation of race and ethnicity variables in consumer finance disclosure research and regulatory regimes found renewed interest when the CFPB amended a key regulation to explicitly permit credit-card issuers to directly ask, gather, and retain information about card-holders’ racial demographics. This can allow researchers to more precisely test whether changes in disclosure models or other factors may result in differential impact on a variety of populations. Harvey reflects on these recent developments with a challenge to other scholars: “I believe the future of legal research for those who study a variety of substantive areas that have direct consumer impact, whether in public health or consumer finance, is to move from a generic one-size-fits-all behavioral approach and to more robustly incorporate the insights, perspectives, and impacts of such laws on diverse populations.” TEMPLE ESQ. NOVEMBER 2017 • 5Nancy Knauer’s most recent book is a casebook for learning property lawESQ_Nov17_CS6_crw1.indd 711/6/17 7:42 PM6 • TEMPLE ESQ. NOVEMBER 2017Robert G. Schwartz has joined the Temple Law faculty as the Phyllis W. Beck Chair in Law. Since graduating from Temple Law in 1975, Schwartz has built a national—and international—reputation as a leader in the field of juvenile justice. Schwartz, with classmates MARSHA LEVICK ’76, JUDITH CHOMSKY ’75 and PHIL MARGOLIS ’75, co-founded the Juvenile Law Center in 1975 and was the organization’s executive director from 1982 to 2015. During his career there, he represented dependent and delinquent children in Pennsylvania juvenile and appellate courts, brought class-action litigation over institutional conditions and probation functions, and testified in Congress before House and Senate committees. As a pioneer in the field, he has spoken in more than 30 states on matters related to children and the law.Schwartz’s career has not been limited to Pennsylvania, but has included fighting nationally and internationally for youths’ rights. Schwartz has chaired the American Bar Association’s commission on youth at risk and the juvenile justice committee of the American Bar Association’s criminal justice section. In 1993 he also co-authored the American Bar Association’s report,America’s Children at Risk; he later helped author a follow-up report on youths’ access to quality lawyers, A Call for Justice. From 1996 to 2006, Schwartz was a member of the MacArthur Foundation Research Network on Adolescent Development and Juvenile Justice. As part of the network, he co-edited Youth on Trial: A Developmental Perspective on Juvenile Justice. In 2005, he was named chair of the advisory committee to the Children’s Rights Division of Human Rights Watch. After four decades at Juvenile Law Center, Schwartz left to become the first visiting fellow at the Stoneleigh Foundation, where he worked to make juvenile probation services more aligned with the most recent research on adolescent development. As the Beck Chair, Schwartz is teaching a fall semester seminar, Developing Children’s Rights. Juvenile Law Center’s Robert G. Schwartz ’75 is 2017 Beck ChairPhiladelphia Bar honors four students for public interest achievementsJUNE 2017 Three recent Temple Law graduates and one second year student have been recognized by the Philadelphia Bar Association for extraordinary commitment to pro bono and public interest work. AARON BINDMAN ’17, ZACH MARSHALL ’17, AND JULIANA PETRO ’17 received the Eve Biskind Klothen Award, given to three students from each of the Philadelphia-area law schools.Throughout law school, AARON BINDMAN held key roles in the School Discipline Advocacy Service and the National Lawyers Guild Expungement Project. During the summers, he interned with Philadelphia Legal Assistance and Legal Aid of North Carolina. He also participated in clinicals at the Temple Legal Aid Office, the Philadelphia Municipal Court, and the Defender Association of Philadelphia. ZACHARY MARSHALL spent much of his law school career advocating for elders and those with disabilities. He volunteered for two years at the Disability Rights Network of Pennsylvania. During his second summer, he investigated education-based discrimination complaints at the U.S. Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights. In his third year, Marshall was the first law student volunteer with the newly-formed First Judicial District Elder Justice and Civil Resource Center. Most recently, Marshall logged 540 hours with the Temple Legal Aid Office, assisting clients with disabilities with social security, estate planning, unlawful eviction, and public utility shut-off issues.JULIANA PETRO focused her public interest work primarily on health care access and policy, as well as assisting clients with disabilities and medical issues. She spent summers at the Temple Legal Aid Office and the Pennsylvania Health Law Project. She contributed numerous pro bono hours to the Medical Legal Community Partnership at Philadelphia Legal Assistance. Petro also earned academic credit working with the National Nurse-Led Care Consortium and with the Justice Lab clinical at Temple’s Sheller Center for Social Justice.TAUSHA SAUNDERS was awarded the Judge Higginbotham Fellowship by the bar association for her work at the ACLU of PA during summer 2017. She is an officer in the Political and Civil Rights Society and the Black Law Students Association, a member of the Moot Court Competition Team, and active with both the School Discipline Advocacy Service and the National Lawyers Guild Expungement Clinic.The Beck Chair in Law was established at Temple Law in 1999 through the support of the Independence Foundation to bring to the faculty notable leaders or outstanding scholars in law or a field related to law. The Hon. Phyllis W. Beck ’67, for whom the chair was named, retired from the Superior Court of Pennsylvania in 2006. She has served as chair of the Independence Foundation, a philanthropic organization investing in people and programs that enrich the life experiences of the residents of the Philadelphia area, since 1993. Previous Beck Chair holders are Nan Feyler, Ann Torregrossa, Frank McClellan, Mark Heywood, Sylvia Law, Theodore M. Shaw, and Carrie Menkel-Meadow. ESQ_Nov17_CS6_crw2.indd 811/8/17 6:06 PMRUSSELL H. CONWELL SOCIETYHONOR ROLL OF DONORS 2016-17LIFETIME MEMBERS THE CHAIRMAN’S CIRCLE The following graduates and friends contributed or pledged at least $1,000,000 to the Law SchoolSteven E. Angstreich The Barrack Foundation Leonard & Lynne Barrack Jack E. Feinberg The Independence Foundation Edith KohnJoseph C. KohnCarolyn Chernick Lindheim Pennsylvania Interest on Lawyers Trust Account Board Robert Wood Johnson FoundationLeonard Rubin The Sheller Family Foundation Stephen and Sandra Sheller The Starr FoundationMurray H. Shusterman Weir & PartnersTRUSTEES CIRCLEDonors of $100,000 or greaterPennsylvania Interest on Lawyers Trust Account BoardPew Charitable TrustsRobert Wood Johnson FoundationSandy ShellerStephen A. ShellerSheller Family FoundationFOUNDER’S CLUBDonors of $50,000-$99,999Andrus Wagstaff, PCT. Rao CocaRaymond E. DombrowskiEstelle Gold-Kossman, Estate ofFrederick HumphriesLaurie IngermanM. Brad IngermanJustin Ingerman FoundationHerbert KeanJoyce S. KeanMicrosoft CorporationLeslie Anne MillerMiller-Worley Charitable FoundationAimee H. WagstaffRichard B. WorleyPRESIDENT’S COUNCILDonors of $25,000-$49,999Leonard and Lynne Barrack Cozen O’ConnorThe Cozen O’Connor Foundation, lnc.Jemma L. Kent-WaldenMass Torts Made Perfect, LLCGrant RawdinThe National Trial LawyersJames A. WaldenFELLOWSDonors of $10,000-$24,999 Dean AdlerAnkura Consulting Group, LLCJoseph William AnthonyJoseph & Megan Anthony Family AccountArcher and Greiner FoundationE. & A. Bainbridge, Estate of Beth CohenMartin D. CohenLaura FeldmanAlycia HornCarlton Lee JohnsonMarina KatsLeonard M. KlehrSusan Kline KlehrSusanna LachsJerry Michael LehockyMaureen PondSamuel H. PondPond Lehocky Stern Giordano, LLPAbraham Charles ReichSherri Engelman ReichTemple University Law Alumni AssociationJoe TuckerTucker Law Group, LLCWalter J. WeirWeir & Partners LLPMarc A. WeismanBENEFACTORSDonors of $5,000-$9,999Barbra AndrisaniMary Taylor AspinwallAnne C. BrophyThomas A. BrophyJohn M. BrubakerJames A. Bruton TEMPLE ESQ. NOVEMBER 2017 • 7Valanna BrutonMichael S. CacceseVita A. CasseseIda ChenStephen A. CozenE. Wallace Chadwick Memorial FundEducation Law CenterSally EisenbergStewart Jay EisenbergJ. Anthony FoltzRichard W. FoltzArnold GlabersonRichard C. GlazerWendy GlazerHayes A. HuntKaplan Test PrepDebra KlebanoffJacquelyn LangelJohn B. LangelBennett P. LomaxAndre Mazzola MardonFrances T. MarellaVincent J. MarellaMarie M. O’ConnorPatrick J. O’ConnorJoseph R. PozzuoloThe Joey Pozzuolo Family FoundationRobert J. ReinsteinLukas H. ReiterDavid RichmanHelene Levine RossFrances Victoria RyanJoseph N. SaccaSophie SaccaGilbert T. SchwartzJames T. SmithCatherine B. StraussJerome F. StraussFRIENDDonors of $2,500-$4,999Neysa Cristol AdamsDavid J. ArmstrongGeorge AudiBARBRI, Inc.Bonnie Allyn BarnettStephen R. BasserThe Benevity Community Impact Fund Alexis M. Berg & Joel L. Marmar FundMitchell W. BergerDoneene Keemer DamonHeyward DamonDoreen S. DavisGwen DouseRobert S. DouseMaria Elena DrydenMichael G. DrydenJoAnne A. EppsAlan M. FeldmanRobert W. FrizKoji FukumuraTerri N. GelbergJosephine HaganAngela J. HansenF.D. HennessyInstitute of International EducationL. Harrison JayErnest E. JonesMargot Wallace KeithRobert E. KeithPatricia E. KneseMichael E. KrobothArnold LevinBrenda Koenig LevinThe Barbara Silver Levin Foundation, Inc.Louis Nayovitz FoundationBonnie V. LundyJoseph LundyLundy LawJoel L. MarmarMarshall, Dennehey, Warner, Coleman & GogginEric M. McNeilStephen J. NeubergerMaureen PeltaMichael T. PiotrowiczPamela K. PiotrowiczPledgeling FoundationPricewaterhouse Coopers LLPMarge RintoulHarry M. RothLisa RothCaren M. SchiffmanRae Scott-JonesThe Settlement Alliance, LLC Robert J. SimmonsChad Lawrence StallerTemple University Alumni AssociationRichard H. WalkerA. Taylor WilliamsESQ_Nov17_CS6_crw2.indd 911/8/17 6:09 PMNext >