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{{Infobox Law School
#REDIRECT [[Penn State Dickinson Law]]
|class_canceled=Yes
|canceled_graduation=Yes
|temp_pass_fail_grading=Yes
|type=Public
|established=1834
|parent=Pennsylvania State University
|endowment=1,546
|dean=Philip J. McConnaughay
|street_address=150 S College St
|city=Carlisle
|state=PA
|country=US
|full_time_students=638
|full_time_faculty=62
|adjunct_faculty=38
|ranking=60
|unsubsidized_annual_tuition=37,704
|website=www.law.psu.edu
|aba_profile=https://officialguide.lsac.org/Release/SchoolsABAData/SchoolPage/SchoolPage.aspx?sid=43
|nickname=PSU
}}
'''Penn State University Dickinson School of Law''' (also known as '''Penn State Law''' or '''The Dickinson School of Law of the Pennsylvania State University''') is the law school of The [[Pennsylvania State University]]. Penn State Law, one of the professional [[graduate schools]] of Penn State, operates as a unified two-location operation with facilities in both [[University Park, Pennsylvania]] and [[Carlisle, Pennsylvania]]. The two campuses operate meaningfully as a single enterprise, with a single identity, single reputation and single stature. The University Park Campus is Penn State's main campus, and it maintains over 40,000 [[undergraduate]] and [[Graduate school|graduate]] [[students]]. Carlisle, approximately {{convert|80|mi|km}} southeast of University Park, is the original home of the law school.
 
The law school was founded by John Reed in 1834, making it the fifth oldest [[law school in the United States]] and the oldest law school in [[Pennsylvania]]. It is home to over 600 law students, most of whom are earning the degrees of [[Juris Doctor]] (J.D.) or [[Master of Laws]] ([[LLM]]). Penn State Dickinson has a faculty and staff of over 100.
 
''[[U.S. News and World Report]]'', in its 2012 edition of America's Best Graduate Schools, ranked Penn State Dickinson 60th among the nation's top 218 law schools. 
 
In June 2007 Penn State established the [[School of International Affairs]] that is intimately linked with the law school. The School of International Affairs, which offers a professional master's degree in International Affairs with several specialty concentrations, is housed administratively within the law school. The two schools share similar educational objectives and outstanding faculty including [[Randall Robinson]].
 
== Dual-Campus System ==
In 2005 a dispute over whether to move the Dickinson School of Law to Penn State's University Park campus in [[State College, Pennsylvania]] led to a dual-campus proposal. Under this proposal, Penn State has invested over $130 million in a law school that operates out of both locations.  The proposal was approved by the law school's board of trustees before the 2005-2006 academic year.<ref>http://law.psu.edu/the_penn_state_law_experience/student_life/unified_school</ref>
 
The law school has now fully merged with Penn State, and has been integrated into the University's system.  Starting in the fall of 2006, the law school began offering classes at its University Park location. Ground was broken for the Lewis Katz Building on January 18, 2007.<ref name="groundbreak upark">{{cite web|url=http://live.psu.edu/story/21769|title=Work begins on Penn State's Dickinson School of Law University Park facility|date=2007-01-08|accessdate=2007-01-23|publisher=Penn State University}}</ref> The building opened for classes in January 2009.
 
In January 2010, students in the Carlisle location began attending classes in the new Lewis Katz Hall and the renovated Trickett Hall. The new facilities are the designs of [[Polshek Partnership Architects]].
 
==Lewis Katz Building==
 
The Lewis Katz Building in [[University Park, Pennsylvania]], opened for classes on January 9, 2009.  The $60 million, {{convert|114000|sqft|m2|adj=on}} building is the first academic facility to be built on the west side of Park Avenue, opposite from Penn State's main campus. It is adjacent to the Penn State Arboretum.
 
The Lewis Katz Building is LEED certified and equipped with advanced high definition digital audiovisual telecommunications capacity that enables the real-time delivery of classes and programs between the law school's Carlisle and University Park campuses and other collaborative projects and programs with schools and institutions worldwide.  The second floor includes the glass-enclosed library, with a two-story information commons, four group study rooms and 11 offices among the features. Library spaces comprise about 50 percent of the building.
 
In 2009, Judge D. Brooks Smith used the Lewis Katz Building's courtroom to hear an oral argument to the [[Third Circuit Court of Appeals]].  In addition to the courtroom, the Katz Building includes a 250-seat auditorium, four specially designed 75-person classrooms, several seminar rooms, and a highly advanced "board room" permitting electronic "face-to-face" contact with meeting participants worldwide.
 
==Lewis Katz Hall==
 
The centerpiece of the Carlisle building project is the addition of a new, signature Lewis Katz Hall, named in honor of the principal donor to the project, philanthropist and businessman, Lewis Katz, for his $15 million gift to the Law School. Completed in January 2010, the transition marks the end of a two-year, $50 million construction project which included the addition of the elegant, new Lewis Katz Hall which is completely interconnected with the University Park campus via the most advanced high-definition, digital audiovisual telecommunications system available.
 
The project included an extensive renovation of historic Trickett Hall, the Law School's home since 1918, which houses the Law School's library, named in honor of H. Laddie Montague, Jr., a prominent Philadelphia lawyer and trial attorney who has committed $4 million to the school.  As a design companion to the Lewis Katz Building the Carlisle campus is renovated and rebuilt to comply with LEED standards, the facilities feature state-of-the-art classrooms, a new courtroom/auditorium, an exterior courtyard, and an environmentally friendly vegetated green roof.
 
==Curriculum==
Like many law schools, the first year program consists of required courses that include two semesters of research and writing.  During their first year, 1Ls must complete courses in [[Civil Procedure]], [[Constitutional Law]], [[Contracts]], [[Criminal Law]], [[Property]], [[Criminal Procedure]] and [[Torts]].  Only two courses are required after completion of the first year: Professional Responsibility and a Seminar.  Students' remaining credits are to be filled with electives.
 
The law school is nationally recognized for its [[Alternative Dispute Resolution]] (ADR) Program.
 
==Student Profile==
The 25th, 50th, and 75th percentile GPAs and LSAT scores of the 185 students entering the school in Fall 2011 were 3.3/3.6/3.8 and 156/159/161 respectively.  They came from 4848 applicants.  There were 110 male and 75 female matriculants from 141 different colleges, 40 majors, 39 states, and 3 foreign countries.  Their average age was 24 years, with a range of 18 to 45, and 25% were minorities.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://law.psu.edu/news/facts_at_a_glance |title=Penn State Law Facts at a Glance |publisher=Penn State Law |accessdate=6 January 2012}}</ref>
 
==Institutes, Centers & Programs==
===Center for the Study of Mergers & Acquisitions===
<!-- Image with unknown copyright status removed: [[Image:Samuel c thompson jr 2.jpg|thumb|right|Professor Sam Thompson]] -->
Headed by Samuel C. Thompson Jr., former director of the [[UCLA]] Center for the Study of Mergers and Acquisitions, the center examines corporate, [[securities]], [[tax]], [[antitrust]], and other legal and economic issues that arise in [[mergers and acquisitions]]. An important part of the Center's mission is to sponsor continuing legal education programs addressing these issues.
 
Penn State Law and the [[New York City Bar]] co-sponsor the Institute on Corporate, Securities, and Related Aspects of Mergers and Acquisitions.  The Institute, which has been co-chaired by Professor Thompson and [[H. Rodgin Cohen]] of [[Sullivan & Cromwell]] LLP for a number of years, is held at the Bar's facility in [[New York City]]. Sessions provide penetrating analyses of recent developments in this very dynamic area; speakers at the Institute included some of the world's leading M&A attorneys, investment bankers, and governmental officials.
 
===Institute for Sports Law, Policy & Research===
Directed by Professor Stephen Ross, one of the nation's leading sports law scholars, the Penn State Institute for Sports Law Policy and Research is designed to:
* promote dialogue between students of sport and major industry participants
* aid scholars in policy-oriented research and facilitate the dissemination of this research to policy makers and industry participants, and
* serve as resource for journalists, lawyers and others connected about sports and public policy
 
The Institute is aided by an advisory board of prominent industry leaders, sports scholars from around the world, and Penn State faculty and alumni, all dedicated to advancing the study of sports. The Institute works closely with a faculty and staff from another of other disciplines on the Penn State campus, including the John Curley Center for Sports and Journalism, the Center for Sports Business Research in the [[Smeal College of Business]], and the Departments of Kinesiology and Statistics. In addition, the Institute facilitates inter-disciplinary work with a variety of sports-interested faculty on the Penn State campus, sponsoring faculty colloquia and faculty/student reading groups. The Institute intends to feature programs that are of utmost importance to the field, including a speaker series featuring prominent industry leaders, private conferences to explore consensus approaches to difficult sports policy issues, and ongoing lectures to faculty and students.
 
===Institute of Arbitration Law & Practice===
The Penn State Institute of Arbitration Law and Practice was established in August 2005 to promote the study and scholarship of arbitration law and practice. Professor Thomas E. Carbonneau, the Samuel P. Orlando Distinguished Professor of Law, serves as faculty director and is widely considered to be one of the world's foremost authorities on international and domestic arbitration.
 
The Institute's publications include the World Arbitration and Mediation Review, the Smit-Carbonneau-Mistelis Guides to International Commercial Arbitration and the student publication ''Beyond Litigation''.<ref>[http://www.dsl.psu.edu/groups/ADR.cfm]{{dead link|date=April 2011}}</ref> The Institute also sponsors student participation in moot court competitions, including the prestigious annual [[Vis Moot|Willem C. Vis International Commercial Arbitration Moot]] in Vienna, Austria, and hosts the Montreal Summer Study Program in Arbitration at the McGill University Faculty of Law in Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
 
Affiliated Penn State faculty include William E. Butler, John Edward Fowler Professor of Law and member of the Russia International Court of Commercial Arbitration; Tiyanjana Maluwa, H. Laddie and Linda P. Montague Professor of Law; Philip J. McConnaughay, dean and Donald J. Farage Professor of Law; Panagiotis Takis Tridimas, professor of law and Sir John Lubbock Professor of Banking Law at Queen Mary College, University of London.
 
===Other Penn State Law Programs===
{{multicol}}
*[[Washington, D.C.]] Semester Program
* International Justice Program at the Hague, Netherlands
* Miller Center for Public Interest Advocacy
* Agricultural Law Resource and Reference Center
* Arts, Sports, and Entertainment Law Clinic
* Center for Immigrants' Rights
* Children's Advocacy Clinic
{{multicol-break}}
* Civil Rights Appellate Clinic
* Disability Law Clinic
* Family Law Clinic
* Elder and Consumer Protection Clinic
* Study Abroad
{{multicol-end}}
 
==Law Journals==
The Law School also features three scholarly journals, including the [[Penn State Law Review]], formerly the Dickinson Law Review.  The Law Review was founded in 1897, and is one of the oldest continually published law school journals in the country.
* [http://www.pennstatelawreview.org/ Penn State Law Review]
* [http://www.law.psu.edu/academics/journals/international_law_review Penn State Journal of Law and International Affairs]
* [http://law.psu.edu/academics/journals/yearbook_on_arbitration_and_mediation The Yearbook on Arbitration and Mediation]
 
==Student organizations==
The Law School maintains an extensive roster of student organizations, including:
{{multicol}}
*[http://www.law.psu.edu/current_students/student_organizations/aba_law_student_division ABA/Law Student Division — PBA/Young Lawyers Division]
*[http://law.psu.edu/current_students/student_organizations/adr_society Alternative Dispute Resolution Society]
*[http://law.psu.edu/current_students/student_organizations/alumni_relations_committee Alumni Relations Committee]
*[http://law.psu.edu/current_students/student_organizations/aclu American Civil Liberties Union]
*[[Amnesty International]]
*[http://law.psu.edu/current_students/student_organizations/aldf Animal Legal Defense Fund]
*[http://law.psu.edu/current_students/student_organizations/apalsa Asian Pacific American Law Student Association]
*[[Association of Trial Lawyers of America]]
*[http://law.psu.edu/current_students/student_organizations/blsa Black Law Students Association (BLSA)]
*[http://law.psu.edu/current_students/student_organizations/cls Christian Legal Society]
*[http://law.psu.edu/current_students/student_organizations/corpus_juris_society Corpus Juris Society]
*[http://law.psu.edu/current_students/student_organizations/dickinson_republican_council Dickinson Republican Council]
*[http://law.psu.edu/current_students/student_organizations/els Environmental Law Society]
*[http://law.psu.edu/current_students/student_organizations/federalist_society Federalist Society]
*[http://law.psu.edu/current_students/student_organizations/first_impression First Impression]
*[http://law.psu.edu/current_students/student_organizations/international_law_society International Law Society]
*[http://law.psu.edu/current_students/student_organizations/islamic_legal_council Islamic Legal Council (ILC)]
*[http://law.psu.edu/current_students/student_organizations/j_reuben_clark_law_society J. Reuben Clark Law Society]
*[http://law.psu.edu/current_students/student_organizations/jewish_law_students_association Jewish Law Students Association]
*[http://law.psu.edu/current_students/student_organizations/phi_delta_phi John Reed Inn of Phi Delta Phi]
*[http://law.psu.edu/current_students/student_organizations/llsa Latino/a American Law Students Association]
 
{{multicol-break}}
*[http://law.psu.edu/current_students/student_organizations/leap Law & Education Alliance at Penn State — LEAP]
*[http://law.psu.edu/current_students/student_organizations/law_and_philosophy_society Law & Philosophy Society]
*[http://law.psu.edu/current_students/student_organizations/legalese Legalese]
*[http://law.psu.edu/current_students/student_organizations/mlsa Minority Law Students Association]
*[http://law.psu.edu/current_students/student_organizations/outlaw OutLaw (for LGBT students)]
*[http://law.psu.edu/current_students/student_organizations/agricultural_law_society The Penn State Dickinson Agricultural Law Society]
*[http://law.psu.edu/current_students/student_organizations/blue_and_white_society The Penn State Dickinson School of Law Blue and White Society]
*[http://law.psu.edu/current_students/student_organizations/blue_and_white_society Phi Alpha Delta]
*[[Phi Delta Phi]]
*[http://law.psu.edu/current_students/student_organizations/prisoner_awareness_project Prisoner Awareness Project]
*[http://law.psu.edu/current_students/student_organizations/project_staff Project S.T.A.F.F.]
*[http://law.psu.edu/current_students/student_organizations/public_interest_law_fund Public Interest Law Fund]
*[http://law.psu.edu/current_students/student_organizations/res_ipsa_loquitur Res Ipsa Loquitur]
*[http://law.psu.edu/current_students/student_organizations/speakers_trust_fund Speakers Trust Fund]
*[http://law.psu.edu/current_students/student_organizations/sports_legal_society Sports Legal Society]
*[http://law.psu.edu/current_students/student_organizations/student_bar_association Student Bar Association]
*[http://law.psu.edu/current_students/student_organizations/student_health_law_association Student Health Law Association]
*[http://law.psu.edu/current_students/student_organizations/toastmasters_international Toastmasters International]
*[http://law.psu.edu/current_students/student_organizations/vita Volunteer Income Tax Assistance Program]
*[http://law.psu.edu/current_students/student_organizations/wlc Women's Law Caucus]
*[http://law.psu.edu/current_students/student_organizations/worklaw_society WorkLaw Society]
{{multicol-end}}
 
The school also participates in a number of moot court competitions including the prestigious [[Willem C. Vis Moot]] Commercial Arbitration Moot Court, held each year in [[Vienna, Austria]] and the [[National Environmental Law Moot Court]] held at [[Pace University]] in [[White Plains, New York]].
 
Students at Penn State Law are active in intramural sports program. Current intramural sports include floor hockey, indoor soccer, flag football, volleyball, basketball and bowling.
 
Several students are also members of rugby and softball teams. Each spring, the school sends a softball team to participate in the [[University of Virginia Law School]] Softball Tournament.
 
==Notable alumni==
*[[Christopher F. Burne]], [[U.S. Air Force]] Brigadier General
*[[Christopher Conner]], Judge on the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania
*[[Pedro Cortés]], former [[Secretary of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania]]
*[[Andrew Curtin]], Civil War Governor of [[Pennsylvania]] (1861–1867)
*[[J. Steward Davis]], Baltimore trial lawyer and first Afro-American valedictorian at Dickinson
*[[J. Michael Eakin]], Justice of the [[Pennsylvania Supreme Court]]
*[[John Sydney Fine]], former Pennsylvania Governor (1951–1955)
*[[Jim Gerlach]], United States Congressman from Pennsylvania
*[[Kim Gibson]], Judge on the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania
*[[Milton W. Glenn]] (1903–1967), represented [[New Jersey's 2nd congressional district]] from 1957–1965
*[[Rick Gray]], current mayor of [[Lancaster, PA]]
*[[T. Millet Hand]] (1902–1956), represented [[New Jersey's 2nd congressional district]] in the [[United States House of Representatives]] from 1945–1957
*[[Arthur Horace James]], former [[Pennsylvania Governor]] (1939–1943)
*[[John E. Jones III]], U.S. District Judge for [[United States District Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania]], who presided over the ruling in [[Kitzmiller v. Dover Area School District]] which states that the teaching of [[Intelligent design]] in public classrooms violates the [[Establishment Clause]] of the [[U.S. Constitution]]
*[[Paul E. Kanjorski]], former United States Congressman from Pennsylvania
*Lewis Katz, former owner of the [[New Jersey Nets]] Basketball Team
*[[Jack Keeney]], career U.S. Department of Justice attorney
*[[Tom Marino]], United States Congressman representing Pennsylvania's Tenth Congressional District and former United States Attorney for the Middle District of Pennsylvania
*[[Sylvia H. Rambo]], first woman to serve as Chief Judge of the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania
*[[Tom Ridge]], former Pennsylvania Governor (1995–2001), former Assistant to the President for Homeland Security (2001–2003),  first [[United States Secretary of Homeland Security]] (2003–2005)
*[[Rick Santorum]], former U.S. Senator from Pennsylvania (1995–2007)
* [[Lansdale Sasscer]], 1914, U.S. Congressman for Maryland's [[Maryland's 5th congressional district|5th District]]
*[[Ronald A. Sell]], [[Wisconsin]] State Assemblyman
*[[D. Brooks Smith]], class of 1976, Judge on the [[U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit]]
*[[Donald William Snyder]] (LLM, Commerce and Taxation), Member of the [[Pennsylvania House of Representatives]] 1981-2000 and Majority Whip
*[[Thomas I. Vanaskie]], class of 1978, former chief judge of the [[United States District Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania]] and current judge on the [[Third Circuit Court of Appeals]]
*Michael J. Georger, famed denizen of Pittsburgh's finest Chinese restaurants, has red facial hair, was once told he sounded like [[H. Jon Benjamin]] if he were about to cry.
 
==References==
<references/>
 
==External links==
* [http://www.psu.edu/ Pennsylvania State University]
* [http://www.dsl.psu.edu/two_facility/omicron.cfm Construction and Renovation Website]{{dead link|date=April 2011}}

Latest revision as of 18:07, March 28, 2020