Penn State Dickinson Introduces New
Program in Washington, D.C.
Carlisle, PA (January 11, 2006) –
This week, third-year law students accepted to Penn
State Dickinson School of Law’s inaugural
Semester in Washington,
D.C. program kicked off their final semester
of law school working for government agencies and
nonprofit organizations in Washington, D.C.

Click on photo to view a larger image. |
Front Row –
Left to Right: Gerald Feige, Nicole Lobaugh,
Kristin Roberts, Lynval Gray, Saam Youssefi-Ram.
Back Row – Left to Right: Prof. Lance
Cole, Anika Campbell, Prof. Camille Marion
and Prof. Jay Mootz. |
Seven Penn State Dickinson students
are living in Washington and earning academic credit
for conducting legal work as unpaid interns for
approved federal agencies or nonprofit groups. Student
Kristy Roberts is interning with the U.S. Attorney’s
Office for the District of Columbia, the nation’s
largest federal prosecutor’s office, and is
very excited and enthusiastic about the opportunities
it presents. Roberts, who plans to specialize in
criminal law, says that the timing of this opportunity
could not be more perfect and sees her semester
in D.C. as an “opportunity not only to learn,
but also to network.”
Participating students are also earning
academic credit for a required seminar course that
focuses on topics related to their internships.
The seminar is being taught by Stanley M. Brand,
Esq., a prominent Washington attorney who previously
served as general counsel to the United States House
of Representatives and has taught law courses at
the Georgetown University School of Law. Brand praised
the program as “a great opportunity for law
students to get real world experience in Washington,”
and stated that he was looking forward to sharing
with the students the insights he has gained from
his many years of experience working in high-level
staff positions in Congress and on high-profile
cases in private practice.
The Washington, D.C. Semester program
is directed by Penn State Dickinson professors Lance
Cole and Camille Marion. Professor Cole served as
a legal consultant to the 9-11 Commission and as
a special counsel in the United States Senate. Professor
Marion directs the law school’s Field Placement
externship program, which offers Penn State Dickinson
students the opportunity to earn academic credit
for working part-time as unpaid interns at a wide
variety of state and local government offices in
the greater Harrisburg area and at Penn State’s
main campus in University Park.
“This new Washington program
will expand the many opportunities already available
to our students here in Pennsylvania by permitting
students to spend an entire semester in Washington
focusing on a particular area of law,” Cole
explained. “The practice of law is becoming
more and more specialized, and this program allows
students to gain valuable expertise at the federal
level while they are still in law school.”
For this year’s program, students
could choose from internships at the United States
Attorney’s Office for the District of Columbia,
the U.S. Department of the Treasury, the U.S.-China
Economic Review and Security Commission, the U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services, the U.S.
Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, the U.S.
Securities and Exchange Commission, and committees
of the United States House of Representatives. Professors
Cole and Marion expect to expand the program to
meet student demand and to offer more internship
opportunities, particularly at nonprofit public
interest organizations in Washington, D.C.
Roberts said she expects that her
internship with the U.S. Attorney’s Office
will allow her to gain more practical experience
and build on what she’s already learned from
her clerkship with recently retired Cumberland County
Court of Common Pleas President Judge George Hoffer.
She also believes that her fellow law students should
take advantage of the many opportunities that Dickinson
offers to gain practical legal experience during
law school, in addition to classroom instruction,
and advises first and second year law students to
“plan ahead” so that they can participate
in the Semester in Washington, D.C. program during
their last semester of law school if it will further
their career goals.