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The Thomas More Law Center is a not-for-profit public interest law firm dedicated to the defense and promotion of the religious freedom of Christians, time-honored family values, and the sanctity of human life.
www.thomasmore.org/
The ABA provides law school accreditation, continuing legal education, information about the law, programs to assist lawyers and judges in their work, and initiatives to improve the legal system for the public.
www.americanbar.org/
FindLaw, founded in 1999, provides access to legal resources on the Internet for legal professionals, corporate counsel, law students, businesses and consumers.
www.findlaw.com/
Lexis.com is the homepage for the LexisNexis Research System. On this site, users can find all published U.S. case law back to the 1770s, plus all the current laws and statutes.
www.lexis.com/
Formed in 1990, the EFF, a non-profit group made up of lawyers, is concerned with defending free speech, privacy, innovation, and consumer rights on the web.
www.eff.org/
EPIC, located in Washington D.C., is a public interest research center. It was established in 1994 to focus public attention on emerging civil liberties issues and to protect privacy, the First Amendment, and constitutional values.
www.epic.org/
This is the website for the Federal Courts of the U.S., which includes the Supreme Court, The Court of Appeals, District Courts, and Bankruptcy Courts.
www.uscourts.gov/
American University, located in Washington D.C., was founded in 1893 by an act of Congress. There are more than 5000 undergraduates, 3000 graduate students, and almost 600 faculty. AU also has a law school.
www.american.edu/
Emory University, located in Atlanta, Georgia, was founded in 1836 by a group of Methodists. There are 12,000 students, graduate and undergraduate, and 3200 faculty.
www.emory.edu/
FSU, in Tallahassee, began 1857 as a Seminary. There are more than 40,000 students at the University. FSU has both a Law School and a Medical School, which is described as an allopathic school.
www.fsu.edu/
GMU, founded in 1956, has three campuses; Fairfax, Virginia is the main one. The school has strong programs in engineering, information technology, biotechnology, and health care. Its School of Law is one of the top 50 in the U.S.
www.gmu.edu/
NYU was established in 1831 as an alternative to many of the more exclusive schools of the time. Today there are 40,000 students studying at 14 colleges and schools in 6 different locations in NYC and 20 countries abroad. Faculty number 3100.
www.nyu.edu/
OSU, the largest state university, was first established in 1870 just north of Columbus. The total number of students at OSU is almost 52,000 and over 3000 faculty.
www.osu.edu/
The 508 Section, passed in 1998, is an amendment to the Rehabilitation Act of 1973. It requires that federal departments' electronic and information technology is accessible to the disabled.
www.section508.gov/
Listing of Internet sources on special education. The SERI website is arranged by topic and includes specific disorders and more general topics such as law and legislation.
www.seriweb.com
SMU is a private University of about 11,000 students and 600 faculty located near Dallas. The University was founded in 1911 by the Methodist Church, but is non-sectarian in its teaching.
www.smu.edu/
Spamhaus tracks the Internet's spammers, spam gangs, and spam services. It provides real-time anti-spam protection services and works with law enforcement to identify and pursue spammers worldwide.
www.spamhaus.org/
Thomson, headquartered in Connecticut, was formed by the merger of Thomson Newspapers, a UK firm, and International Thomson in 1989.
www.thomson.com/
Tulane, located in New Orleans, was founded in 1834 as a medical college. Today it offers architecture, business, law, liberal arts, medicine, public health and tropical medicine, sciences, engineering, and social work.
www.tulane.edu/
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