Rick Garnett wonders about the place of law schools in 'great Catholic universities' - to which I would answer - the law school in the great Catholic university should be treated much better than it is - but he knew that already.
My actual inclination would actually be similar. As a practical matter, I think that absolutely law schools should be given a strategic place because of the place of law in American culture. As Rob Vischer points out (in what I would describe as a vile and degrading movie, forgettable is being generous - if only it were) - lawyers are the new high priests (at least of political and many cultural matters). Culture pays attention to lawyers and to law schools, so they offer a certain strategic usefulness in communicating the central truths of Catholic (and Christian) legal, cultural and political reflection.
But law schools have problems to - they are intellectually underresourced, sometimes shallow, neglectful of moral and ethical formation (both in faculty and students), typically privilege cleverness over more substantive intellectual attributes, are often arrogant (both in faculty and students) and sometimes disdain interaction with the rest of their universities.
All that said, they truly are great and important places, deserving of greater resources and offer the potential to be a true jewel in the crown of a great Catholic university - but they will have to alter their approach substantially to achieve such status.