The content provided by Texas A&M Law Review is co...
The content provided by Texas A&M Law Review is comprehensive and well-researched. It has been a valuable asset in my legal studies.
The content provided by Texas A&M Law Review is comprehensive and well-researched. It has been a valuable asset in my legal studies.
👍 The Texas A&M Law Review is doing an excellent job. The articles are well-written and cover a wide range of legal topics. Highly recommend it!
👌 Texas A&M Law Review is an excellent resource for legal information. The articles are well-written, informative, and cover a wide range of topics.
Texas A&M Law Review provides a comprehensive collection of legal articles. The quality of content is consistently good, making it a valuable resource.
😊 The Texas A&M Law Review is doing an outstanding job. The content is engaging and provides valuable insights into various legal aspects.
I really liked the Law Review. The content was well-researched and informative. Keep up the good work!
I had an average experience with Texas A&M Law Review. The content provided was decent, but could have been more comprehensive. Overall, an okay service.
The articles provided by this publication are well-researched and informative. I appreciate the effort put into them.
I've been using Texas A&M Law Review for some time now and it has been very helpful. The articles are well-curated and present complex legal concepts in an easy-to-understand manner.
I may not be in college but multiple people in my family have gone to this law school and it is amazing.
Texas Wesleyan Law School--clone! Don't buy the name. Texas Wesleyan University law grads built the school. The law school website has a school history section--but--it is superficial--representing 27 years--not as a and m law school. Now, Texas A and M wants it both ways--distance from those who created the school. No recognition to the twenty years of TWU law students who now hold a diploma of questionable value. Yet--they petition TWU law grad donations on behalf of A and M (oh--yea--audacity) and continue to highlight the careers of many TWU student grads as their own pride and joy (is this not crazy). This university has fallen into what is now a growing fascism in public college education.
When A and M acquired East Texas State University diplomas were reissued as Texas A and M Commerce. I have a relative who's ETSU doctorate was re-titled: Texas A and M Commerce the degree was earned in 1981. From admissions site: "ALL DIPLOMAS WILL READ TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY - COMMERCE WE NO LONGER PRINT EAST TEXAS STATE UNIVERSITY ON YOUR DIPLOMA." (not the case with TWU law grads--orphan status).
TWU students paid big bucks and studied (same books presently used and many of same profs) and would like their identity back. A and M carries a big whoopin stick to beat back TWU law school rife raft (sic). Thanks!
But--spend a $100k on tuition/lost income etc. and A and M tells TWU law grads to stick it. We made the school what it is (TWU grads) A and M you are meanspirited. Seems they use a different branding scheme when a state school is absorbed into their state network.
The irony of it all --the teachers of law- show their hard compassionless spirit. How would they feel if one earned a degree only to have it obliterated in favor of A and M's financial ambitions.
Unethical and immoral university. Sad.