<p>SSvPS,</p>
<p>Law school admissions, generally speaking, depend much more heavily on GPA and test scores than undergraduate admissions. For most candidates, EC's probably have no influence on the admissions decision. In rare cases, they may make a great deal of difference. Bill Walton did three semesters at Stanford Law School in the early eighties before his stress factures healed enough to permit him to resume his basketball career. It wouldn't surprise me to learn that his extra curricular activities played a relatively decisive role in Stanford's decision to offer him admission. </p>
<p>Michigan used to fill half its class with people based primarily on their GPA and LSAT scores, and the other half based primarily on non-quantitative factors (chosen from a group of people who had met a fairly high minimum threshhold on those quantitative factors.)</p>
<p>People who do well on the LSAT tend to have done well on the SAT.</p>