To: shield; trumandogz; Trajan88
Texas A&M adjunct law professor Frederick Larson began researching the Star after putting up a nativity scene for his daughter. The lawyer in him, Larson said, required him to investigate what it was that he was putting up in his front yard. Beginning with the book of Matthew, he ended up on a decade-long odyssey into astronomy. Since when does A&M have a law school?
To: Paleo Conservative
I thought they had Murphy’s Law. You know, where if you pile logs up too high they will collapse on you.
16 posted on
12/20/2007 4:00:55 PM PST by
fish hawk
(The religion of Darwinism = Monkey Intellect)
To: Paleo Conservative
Rick Larson teaches business law and he is an attorney. I've gone to see the presentation every year for the past almost 6 years now. It's an amazing couple of hours. By the time he finishes, he has everyone's attention and it's so quite you can hear a pin drop in a huge auditorium.
If you get a chance to see the presentation you should do so.
17 posted on
12/20/2007 4:01:02 PM PST by
texgal
(end no-fault divorce laws return DUE PROCESS & EQUAL PROTECTION to ALL citizens))
To: Paleo Conservative
They have, since 1998, an
affilation with South Texas College of Law (A joint 3+3 program), and also offer several sepecilized law courses, mainly for those in other fields who need to know about the law applying to their field.
32 posted on
12/20/2007 5:49:28 PM PST by
El Gato
("The Second Amendment is the RESET button of the United States Constitution." -- Doug McKay)
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