The Docket Passer, September 14, 2007 | |
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Game 2 recap | Game 3 preview |
ESPN video: Postgame interview: |
Download the September 14, 2007, edition of The Docket Passer
Welcome to the September 14 installment of "The Docket Passer," your online source for observations about Cardinal football, the UofL, and Louisville Law.
The third game of the Cardinals' 2007 season, of course, is better known across the Commonwealth as the game. It's the University of Louisville versus the University of Kentucky for football supremacy. Both teams have shown so far this season that they can post points by the dozen. Passions run deep, and UK's fans will be dyeing themselves blue, but we Louisville partisans truly believe that Cardinal virtue will prevail.
Our mission statement directs the University of Louisville to "be a premier, nationally recognized metropolitan research university with a commitment to the liberal arts and sciences and to the intellectual, cultural, and economic development of our diverse communities and citizens."
There is also a related line of thought, more conventional than creative, that rates American universities according to their names. Some people admire a university simply because it is named for a person who once was rich but now is dead. Other people like having their schools named for the biggest available piece of real estate. Virginia, Michigan, Texas -- or, for that matter, Kentucky.
Never forget: some of America's finest universities are named for cities. Chicago, New York, Los Angeles, Boston, Pittsburgh, Cincinnati, and, yes, Louisville. People outside our country name their most prestigious universities for their cities: Oxford, Cambridge, Toronto, Salamanca, Bologna, Heidelberg.
The world's metropolitan research universities matter because cities matter. Yes, today's cities generate many of contemporary society's greatest problems. Those cities also attract the greatest minds, the loftiest ambitions, and the hardest workers. Led by their universities and their most engaged citizens, the cities of the world offer hope. They offer solutions.
Louisville Law proudly aspires to be a metropolitan law school. These are the irreducible elements of our metropolitan mission:
Access. A metropolitan university stands as a beacon of hope and opportunity. Our Law School proudly serves first generations and provides second chances. We accept -- and fulfill -- the strongest possible commitment to diversity and financial aid. The University of Louisville provides one of the best bargains in American higher education.
- Excellence. In order to accomplish its access mission, a metropolitan university must strive for excellence. Giving up on academic rigor would make a splendid but worthless bauble of educational opportunity. By contrast, our Law School strives for nothing short of superlative instruction, counseling, and research.
- Service. A metropolitan university is a leading citizen of the community that sustains it. Very soon, the Law School hopes to launch the University of Louisville Law Clinic. In addition to providing hands-on training, the Law Clinic will serve the neediest segments of our community. There is no greater development in the living memory of legal education at the University of Louisville.