UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS SCHOOL OF LAW


'The University of Texas School of Law' is an ABA-certified American law school located on The University of Texas at Austin campus. The law school has been in existence since the founding of the University in 1883. It was one of only two schools at the University when it was founded, the other being the liberal arts school. The school offers both Juris Doctor and Master of Laws degrees.[1]
The law school is consistently ranked among the top twenty law schools in the nation (according to ''U.S. News & World Report''), and has a reputation for turning out outstanding lawyers and public servants. The school is ranked eighteenth by U.S. News & World Report.
The law school has the dubious distinction of having its racially-based admission policies struck down by courts on two separate occasions.
The law school is one of four buildings on the campus to have a storm siren system installed in early 2007.[1]

Contents
History
''Sweatt v. Painter''
''Hopwood v. Texas''
Notable alumni
References
External link

History


Founded in 1883.
''Sweatt v. Painter''

The school was involved in the 1950 United States Supreme Court case of ''Sweatt v. Painter''. The case involved a black man, Heman Marion Sweatt, who was refused admission to the School of Law on the grounds that substantially equivalent facilities (meeting the requirements of ''Plessy v. Ferguson'') were offered by a law school open only to blacks. At the time the plaintiff first applied to The University of Texas, there was no law school in Texas which admitted blacks. The Texas trial court, instead of granting the plaintiff a ''writ of mandamus'', continued the case for six months allowing the state time to create a law school only for blacks.
The Supreme Court reversed the lower court decision saying that the separate school failed to measure up because of quantitative differences in facilities and intangible factors such as its isolation from most of the future lawyers with whom its graduates would interact. The documentation of the court's decision includes the following differences in facilities between The University of Texas Law School and the separate law school for blacks: The University of Texas School of Law had 16 full-time and 3 part-time professors, 850 students and a law library of 65,000 volumes, while the separate school had 5 full-time professors, 23 students and a library of 16,500 volumes.
The court held that education could be measured only in intangibles.
''Hopwood v. Texas''

In 1992, plaintiff Cheryl Hopwood, a White American woman, was denied admission to the School of Law despite being better qualified than many admitted minority candidates. ''Texas Monthly'' editor Paul Burka later described as "the perfect plaintiff to question the fairness of reverse discrimination" because of her academic credentials and the personal hardships she had endured (including a young daughter suffering from a muscular disease).
The case of ''Hopwood v. Texas'' was the first successful legal challenge to racial preferences in student admissions since ''Regents of the University of California v. Bakke''. The court decided that the school "may not use race as a factor in deciding which applicants to admit in order to achieve a diverse student body, to combat the perceived effects of a hostile environment at the law school, to alleviate the law school's poor reputation in the minority community, or to eliminate any present effects of past discrimination by actors other than the law school."
However, in 2003, the Supreme Court ruled in ''Grutter v. Bollinger'', a case involving the University of Michigan, that the United States Constitution "does not prohibit the law school's narrowly tailored use of race in admissions decisions to further a compelling interest in obtaining the educational benefits that flow from a diverse student body." This effectively reversed the decision of ''Hopwood v. Texas''.

Notable alumni



James Baker — former Secretary of State

Paul Begalapolitical consultant, commentator and former advisor to President Bill Clinton

Lloyd Bentsen — former Secretary of the Treasury and United States Senator

George P. Bush — son of Florida Governor Jeb Bush, nephew of President George W. Bush

Tom C. Clark — former Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States and United States Attorney General

John B. Connally, Jr. — former Governor of Texas, former Secretary of the Navy, former Secretary of the Treasury

Leon A. Green — long-time dean at Northwestern University School of Law and professor at UT and at Yale Law School; authored pioneering works in tort law

Herbert Hovenkamp, Professor of Law at the University of Iowa College of Law; prolific author and expert in Antitrust law; member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences

Sam Hurt, creator of the Eyebeam comic strip.

Kay Bailey Hutchisonsenior United States Senator from Texas

Joe Jamailbillionaire litigator and philanthropist

Edith JonesChief Justice of the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals

W. Page Keeton — 1931 graduate and Dean from 1949 to 1974; expert in Torts

Samuel B. Kent — United States District Judge, Southern District of Texas, Galveston

Ron Kirk — former mayor of Dallas, Texas

Thomas Mengler — dean of the law school at University of St. Thomas (Minnesota); former dean at the University of Illinois College of Law.

Gene R. Nichol — President of the College of William and Mary; former dean of the law schools at North Carolina and Colorado.

Federico Peña — former Secretary of Transportation and Secretary of Energy

Robert Schwarz Strauss — former United States Ambassador to Russia

Sarah Weddington — represented Jane Roe in the landmark Supreme Court case, ''Roe v. Wade''

Harry Whittington — Well known Texas attorney for the hunting incident with Dick Cheney and also eminent domain cases.

Ralph Yarborough — former United States Senator

References


1. History of the Law School

External link



The University of Texas School of Law

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