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Pace Law School Featured In The
Princeton Review's
Best 159 Law Schools: 2006 Edition
White Plains, N. Y. – October 07, 2005 – Pace Law School
was once again chosen as one of the nation’s most outstanding law
schools, according to The Princeton Review’s latest rankings. The
organization used student opinions and statistical data from the
American Bar Association to determine the schools included in its
guide entitled The Best 159 Law Schools.
(The number 157, Princeton Review explains, is what came out after
the Review decided which schools met its criteria.)
Pace Law School Dean Stephen J. Friedman said, "We are
delighted that the Princeton Review has named Pace Law School one of
the nation’s top law schools. That this ranking was driven by
student feedback is indicative of the strength of our programs, the
vitality of our campus and the dedication of our faculty."
Says Robert Franek, Princeton Review VP-Guidebook Publishing, who
oversaw the selection of schools for the book; "Every school we
profile in this book offers students an outstanding law school
education, yet each one is distinctive in its academic programs,
school offerings and campus culture. We don’t name – and don’t
think it’s useful to name-one best law school overall. Our profiles
and ranking lists of top school in various categories are based on
straight-from-the-campus data we collected from school administrators
and students at the schools."
The two-page descriptive profiles in The Best 159 Law Schools cover
each school’s academics, admission, financial aid and campus life,
and include information on its job placement rates and graduates’
employment fields. Each profile is laced with comments from students
about their experiences.
Commenting on the Pace Law School faculty, one student said:
"motivated, enthusiastic professors are genuinely eager to teach
the material. They have a way of making even the most mundane issue
interesting and applicable to our lives."
Pace Law School’s location was also a draw for students. One said
that being "minutes away from the federal courthouses in White
Plains and roughly between New York City and Stamford, Connecticut
results in endless opportunities for students," adding that this
was particularly true of clinics and externships. Its proximity to the
city bring in many guest speakers and "important lecturers"
and since Pace is "the only law school in Westchester County we
have a monopoly on resources (including the DA’s office, private law
firms, corporations, Federal Court, state and local courts,
etc..)." Pace Law School’s international programs were also
touted for giving students the opportunity to travel abroad for
externships in Brazil and London.
The Pace Law School is home to the nation’s first judicial
training and research facility custom-built by and for a state court
system, the New York State Judicial Institute. Another student noted
that the Institute "serves as the educational stomping ground for
New York’s judicial minds and allows students to interact with
judges from all over." Pace’s Law Library was also noted as
"the best environmental law collection in the country."
The Princeton Review is a New York-based company known for its
graduate school and college admission services, test-preparation
courses, books and other education services. It is not affiliated with
Princeton University or ETS.
Founded in 1976, Pace Law School is a New York Law School with a
suburban campus in White Plains, NY, 20 miles north of New York
City. Part of Pace University, the school offers the JD program for
full-time and part-time day and evening students. Its postgraduate
program includes the LLM and SJD degrees in Environmental Law and
an LLM in Comparative Legal Studies. Pace has one of the nation's
top-rated Environmental Law programs and its Clinical Education
program also is nationally ranked, offering clinics in domestic
violence prosecution, environmental law, securities arbitration,
criminal justice and disability rights. www.law.pace.edu
Pace is a comprehensive, independent university with campuses in
New York City, Pleasantville and White Plains, NY, and a Hudson Valley
Center at Stewart International Airport in New Windsor, NY. More than
14,000 students are enrolled in undergraduate, graduate and
professional degree programs in the Dyson College of Arts and
Sciences, Lubin School of Business, School of Computer Science and
Information Systems, School of Education, Lienhard School of Nursing
and Pace Law School. www.pace.edu
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