Law School Admissions Council: http://www.lsac.org/ 

LSAT/GPA Calculator: https://officialguide.lsac.org/release/OfficialGuide_Default.aspx

US News Law School Rankings: http://grad-schools.usnews.rankingsandreviews.com/best-graduate-schools/top-law-schools/law-rankings

Above the Law: http://abovethelaw.com/ 

SCOTUSblog: http://www.scotusblog.com/

Top Law School Forums: http://www.top-law-schools.com/forums/index.php

The LSAT/GPA Calculator is great place to figure out what sort of LSAT score makes you competitive given your current GPA.  Plug in your GPA, play around with a few LSATscores until you reach a 50% chance of getting into your dream school.

Top Law School Forums is the best place on the internet to go and obsess over the minutiae of law school applications and the LSAT.  Fair warning: everyone posting there is a type A obsessive-compulsive insane person.  And I don't mean kind of insane.  I mean the sort of insane where they wouldn't be legally allowed to execute you.  REALLY insane.

Above the Law is the legal blog of choice for most gossipy insiders, and a must read for law students.  It keeps pace with the trends in legal education and legal employment, and I think you'll find it an invaluable and entertaining resource.
 

Candidate Referral Service & Free Applications

The Candidate Referral Service offers FREE APPLICATIONS to registrants, basically in exchange for sharing your info with law schools. After you log into your LSAC account (you have to log in first), you should be able to check your current status with CRS here: https://os.lsac.org/Release/MyLSAC/Profile/CRS.aspx

For instance, the University of Texas School of Law offered all Texas residents registered with CRS a free application last year, and many other schools offer similar free applications to registrants.  Keep in mind: applying to 10 schools could easily cost $750 in application fees alone (and another $280 in score reports).  Applying to more schools increases your chances of getting into a GREAT school and receiving a GREAT scholarship offer.

I'm also including a link to a list of application waivers law schools.  This is the updated list.  MANY schools offer opportunities to receive discounted or free applications, and the more schools to which you apply, the more offers of acceptance you're going to receive.

 

Fee Waivers for LSAT & Credential Assembly Service

Fee waivers for the LSAT are available for students experiencing financial need.  If you are approved for a fee waiver, you receive 2 free administrations of the LSAT, one registration for the Credential Assembly Service, and 4 law school reports.  Normally, those things together would cost $447.

More information can be found here: http://www.lsac.org/jd/lsat/fee-waivers

 

Accommodated Testing

If you have ever received an accommodation on a standardized test or at the college or high school level for any sort of physical or cognitive disability, you may be eligible for extended time or another accommodation on the LSAT. You must be registered for the LSAT before requesting an accommodation.  You can find more information here: http://www.lsac.org/jd/lsat/accommodated-testing


Texas Law Schools

Baylor University School of Law: http://www.baylor.edu/law/ps/ 

University of Houston Law Center: http://www.law.uh.edu/admissions/homepage.html 

SMU Dedman School of Law: http://www.law.smu.edu/Prospective-Students 

St. Mary's University School of Law:  

South Texas College of Law: http://www.stcl.edu/admissions/index.html 

The University of Texas School of Law: http://www.utexas.edu/law/admissions/ 

Texas Southern University - Marshall School of Law: http://www.tsulaw.edu/admissions/ 

Texas Tech University School of Law: http://www.law.ttu.edu/prospective/admissions/ 

Texas A&M School of Law: http://law.tamu.edu/

University of North Texas Dallas College of Law: http://lawschool.untsystem.edu/

 

Legal Employment/Volunteerism

If you're looking for a law job, or just looking to volunteer within the legal community, here are a few good places to start.  I'm only including links to agencies or organizations without a specific political agenda.  There are many advocacy organizations on the right or left (like ACLU, Planned Parenthood, NRA, etc.) that are certainly worth researching on your own, but you'll find these orgs relatively non-partisan:

Employment:

https://www.oag.state.tx.us/agency/jobs_ag.shtml
http://www.co.travis.tx.us/human_resources/jobs/opportunities.asp
http://austin.craigslist.org/lgl/
http://jobs.monster.com/v-legal-q-paralegal-jobs-l-austin,-tx.aspx
http://www.careerbuilder.com/Jobs/TX/Keyword/Paralegal/

Volunteer:

Texas Access to Justice Foundation (which everyone calls T-Jif): http://www.teajf.org/donate/volunteer.aspx
Court Appointed Special Advocates of Travis County (CASA): http://www.casatravis.org/volunteer
Texas Civil Rights Project: http://www.texascivilrightsproject.org/?page_id=468
Mothers Against Drunk Driving (MADD) has a pretty active court monitoring program: http://www.madd.org/local-offices/tx/
Texas RioGrande Legal Aid (Traw-La): http://www.trla.org/
Texas Advocacy Project: http://www.texasadvocacyproject.org/
Safe Place (women & children's shelter): http://www.safeplace.org/Volunteer