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  1. It is later re-named Southern California Review of Law and Social Justice. 1994. The school's law library embraces information technology: Its card catalog goes online. The following year, USC Gould publicly launches its website, becoming one of the first law schools in the country to join the World Wide Web. 1997

  2. USC Law School. The USC Gould School of Law located in Los Angeles, California, is the law school of the University of Southern California. The oldest law school in the Southwestern United States, USC Law traces its beginnings to 1896 and became affiliated with USC in 1900. [5] It was named in honor of Judge James Gould in the mid-1960s.

  3. The Southern Pacific’s earliest roots in railroading can be traced to Texas in the decade leading up to the Civil War. An early railroad known as the Buffalo Bayou, Brazos & Colorado operated its trains in Texas in 1853, three years before the Sacramento Valley Railroad operated its first train in California.

  4. The law school's location on USC's University Park Campus supports numerous opportunities for interdisciplinary education and research among the multitude of renowned schools. USC pioneered the concepts of interdisciplinary and clinical legal education. The first modern legal aid program grew out of a USC Gould clinic established in 1929.

  5. Beginnings: 19th century. The original company, Union Pacific Rail Road (UPRR), was created and funded by the federal government by Pacific Railroad Acts of 1862 and 1864. The laws were passed as war measures to forge closer ties with California and Oregon, which otherwise took six months to reach.

  6. In fact, it was not the first such school here, as I’ve confessed; Southern California College of Law operated in Los Angeles from 1892-94. The first law school (according to all currently available information) was Hastings in San Francisco, its initial session taking place on Aug. 12, 1878.

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  8. The school grew out of state lawmakers’ sustained effort in the 1940s to create Southern California’s first public law school — more affordable and accessible than private institutions. On July 18, 1947, California Gov. Earl Warren signed a measure authorizing $1 million to build a law school on the UCLA campus, and UCLA Law opened in 1949 in temporary barracks behind Royce Hall.