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The San Beda School of Law in Alabang was established in 2004 and has been declared autonomous from the San Beda Law School in Mendiola, with lawyer Ulpiano P. Sarmiento III as its first dean. Among San Beda Alabang's faculty members are former Philippine senator Rene Saguisag, Rene Sarmiento, a former commissioner of the Philippines ...
San Beda College of Law is the law school college under the San Beda University, a private, Roman Catholic university run by the Benedictine monks in the Philippines. [1]The main campus, educational, and administrative offices are located at Mendiola Street in San Miguel, Manila.
Feliciano Jover Ledesma, an Ateneo graduate, was the first dean of the San Beda Law School. It sent bar candidates for the first time in 1952, who all passed the bar. From 1952 up to 1957, and 1960 to 1961, the San Beda Law School achieved the feat of attaining a 100 percent passing rate in the Bar Exams. [5]
Rev. Fr. Ranhilio C. Aquino (SJD, San Beda College, 2008, by assessment) - Vice-President for Academic Affairs, Cagayan State University; dean (on consultancy), Graduate School of Law, San Beda College; chair, Department of Jurisprudence and Legal Philosophy, Philippine Judicial Academy, Supreme Court of the Philippines; Fellow, Commonwealth ...
Lex Talionis Fraternitas, Inc. (Sodalitas Ducum Futurorum), commonly known as Lex Talionis, is a fraternal organization of Filipino jurists, legal practitioners, and law students. It was founded on September 29, 1969 at the San Beda College of Law.
San Beda University. San Beda University (Mendiola, Manila) San Beda College-Alabang (Alabang Hills Village, Muntinlupa) San Juan de Dios Educational Foundation – Pasay; San Sebastian College – Recoletos de Manila; Santa Catalina College; Santa Isabel College Manila; Southeastern College; Siena College of Quezon City; STI College. STI ...
The following is a list of Roman Catholic schools, colleges and universities in the Philippines.More than 1,500 Catholic schools throughout the country are members of the Catholic Educational Association of the Philippines (CEAP), the country's national association of Catholic schools founded in 1941. [1]