Louisiana 2014 2014 Regular Session

Louisiana Senate Bill SCR28 Enrolled / Bill

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Regular Session, 2014	ENROLLED
SENATE CONCURRENT RESOLUTI ON NO. 28
BY SENATORS CLAITOR, MURRAY AND GARY SMITH AND REPRESENTATIVES
CONNICK, FOIL, GAROFALO, JOHNSON AND LOPINTO 
A CONCURRENT RESOLUTI ON
To commend and congratulate the College of Law at Loyola University New Orleans upon
its one hundredth anniversary and to declare Tuesday, March 25, 2014, as Loyola
Law Day at the State Capitol.
WHEREAS, in 1849, the priests of the Jesuit order, known as the Society of Jesus,
established the College of the Immaculate Conception that would later become Loyola
University; moved to its present location in 1884, the institution prospered in the uptown
section of New Orleans to reflect its status as an urban center of learning fully integrated into
its metropolitan setting; and
WHEREAS, the College of Law was founded as the School of Law by Jesuit Father
Albert Biever; its first session began on October 5, 1914; its first dean, John St. Paul, was
a civil district court judge; and
WHEREAS, in its humble beginnings, Dean St. Paul and other members of the bar
donated their time to teach evening classes to part-time students; the full-time program was
added in 1925; and
WHEREAS, the College of Law at Loyola upholds the Jesuit traditions of academic
rigor, the pursuit of justice, and service to others in its fundamental mission to educate future
members of the bar to be skilled advocates and sensitive counselors-at-law; and
WHEREAS, since its inception, Loyola Law has remained at the forefront of
furthering the tenets of ethics in legal education, civil rights, and public interest law; and
WHEREAS, in the 1950s, Loyola Law graduates played a crucial role in the orders
rendered to desegregate LSU and New Orleans public schools, helping to make integration
and equal rights enforcement the law of the land; and
WHEREAS, Loyola Law has also demonstrated equity of gender; Alice Allen was
its first female law student in 1921; and  SCR NO. 28	ENROLLED
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WHEREAS, Loyola Law continues the advancement of the Jesuits' ideal of social
justice by encouraging concentrated study in several specialized legal disciplines through
the Center for Environmental Law and Land Use, the Center for International and
Comparative Programs, Continuing Legal Education, the Gillis Long Poverty Law Center,
and the Stuart H. Smith Law Clinic and the Center for Social Justice; and
WHEREAS, the Gillis Long Poverty Law Center is the oldest law clinic in Louisiana
and the largest in the South, serving over seven hundred clients annually; and
WHEREAS, Loyola Law is critically acclaimed for its academic scholarship and
success in national and international moot court competitions; and
WHEREAS, Loyola Law continues to play a pivotal role in controversial social
issues that include capital punishment, immigration reform, the disenfranchisement of the
homeless, and labor relations. 
THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED that the Legislature of Louisiana does hereby
commend and congratulate the College of Law at Loyola University New Orleans upon its
one hundredth anniversary and does hereby note its many contributions to advancement of
legal expertise and social reform in the justice system.
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that the Legislature of Louisiana does hereby declare
March 25, 2014, as Loyola Law Day at the State Capitol.
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that a copy of this Resolution be transmitted to María
Pabón López, dean of Loyola University New Orleans College of Law.
PRESIDENT OF THE SENATE
SPEAKER OF THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES