There is none. A 21 year old is considered an adult for all purposes in all states, and there is no law necessary at that age.
There is no statute for emancipation in Pennsylvania. You will have to wait until you reach the age of majority. If you are not safe, contact social services for help.
No, there has been no recent change in the law in Indiana regarding automatic emancipation for children at age 19. Emancipation requires a legal process to be followed and does not happen automatically at a certain age in Indiana.
There is no such thing as a pre-law degree, it is a meaningless word, just as a college student claiming to be pre-med. Law schools will accept applicants with any type of college degrees.
Yes, and by law they must offer to make accommodations for you.
No, college and law school (at least in the United States) are two different things. A student is required to have a attended college before applying to law school. Typically college is 4 years and law school is 3 but those numbers can depend on majors, etc.
Maryland does not appear to have an emancipation statute.
There is no emancipation law in Ohio, so there are no forms.
The student records (by law) are kept forever.
In the United States, accredited law schools require strong college-level grades for admission. Most top-tier law schools require a college GPA of 3.33 (B+) or better, while most lower-ranked law schools still require a college GPA of 2.66 (B-) or better. That said, it is possible to gain admission to law school with even lower grades, but it is very rare. Law schools do not look at your high school GPA as part of their admissions decision. They only look at your college (or other graduate school) grades. However, in order to gain admission to a good college---and in order to increase your chances of succeeding in college---a high school student should likely be a B student or better for law school to be a good option.
The president was not actively involved with many clubs in college, but he was the editor of the Harvard Law Review, when he was a graduate student at Harvard Law School.
In 1833 when the emancipation law was passed. It was effective from 1834.
The Emancipation Proclamation was never a law. It was an executive action used as a war measure in the US Civil War.