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If you are still in school or just out, academic letters hold the most weight (according to most law school admissions counselors). You probably should also avoid letters from "important" people from short internships, the experience would show on your resume anyway. Your professors are likely to know you better, write stronger letters, and again, academic letters are more valuable from someone in your position.
It's funny how i understood the 'loophole' yesterday and found this post today. I feel like i just fully realized what I was being asked to do on LR questions. Previously I focused on how to attack premises or conclusions but I now see that assumptions are key. Now I'm much faster in answering questions because I don't consider wrong answer choices for more than a second or two. I now spend most of my time understanding the stimulus and go straight for the right answer. Understanding the stimulus is key! If you don't understand the stimulus before moving on to the answer choices, your likelihood of getting the answer right is already greatly sunk. In JY's words, if you think any LR argument makes sense, you've already been baited into making an unwarranted assumption.
BR stands for Blind Review.
I purchased a whole bundle package. It's a few bucks saved, not a whole lot, but it has everything you need to apply if you're only applying to six schools. School application fees are still separate though.