Category Archives: Networking

NCBA Bankruptcy Section Social

Join us for a beer!

WHEN: Thursday, February 2, 5:00 – 6:30 p.m.

WHERE: Natty Greene’s, 345 S. Elm, Greensboro

RSVP: Click here to RSVP by January 28

COST: Free for all section members including Bankruptcy Law Student Members!

Also posted in 1Ls, 2Ls, 3Ls | Comments Off on NCBA Bankruptcy Section Social

Wake County Bar Association Young Lawyers’ Workshop

RSVP now for the 2017 Wake County Bar Association YLD Spring Conference and Business Development Workshop! The Conference will be held on Tuesday, April 4, from 12:00 p.m. – 5:00 p.m. at Campbell Law School. The program will focus on topics designed to cultivate effective business development skills and enhance your practice as a young lawyer. You will receive practical networking and time management tips, and discuss common ethical pitfalls for your lawyers. You don’t want to miss this exciting program sponsored by the Wake County Bar Association Young Lawyers Division! If you have any questions, and to RSVP, please contact David Senter at dsenter@youngmoorelaw.com.

Comments Off on Wake County Bar Association Young Lawyers’ Workshop

Women Lawyers of Charlotte

screen-shot-2017-02-10-at-9-39-49-am

Elon Law students have been invited to join the Women Lawyers of Charlotte organization as free members. Students will need to pay their own food cost at events, but otherwise receive a free membership. This is a great opportunity for students to network with future colleagues in the Charlotte area.

For more information, check out the Women Lawyers of Charlotte website here.

Comments Off on Women Lawyers of Charlotte

The 2017 Ms. JD Fellowship

The Ms. JD Fellowship, one of our most popular programs, is now open for applications!

In 2010, Ms. JD partnered with the ABA Commission on Women in the Profession to found the Ms. JD Fellowship.  The Fellowship is Ms. JD’s program to promote mentoring and professional development.  Each spring, Ms. JD selects a group of outstanding second year law students as Fellowship recipients.  In addition to receiving financial support and invitations to ABA and Ms. JD events, each Fellowship recipient is paired with a mentor chosen from among the Brent Award honorees, Spirit of Excellence Award recipients, and ABA Commission on Women in the Profession Commissioners.  Beyond the mentorship, each year, the Fellows tell us that one of the best parts of the Fellowship is meeting the other incredible rising 3Ls.  Many Fellows remain friends long after their fellowship year is over.   To read more about the experience of past Fellows, click here and here.

Here’s what you’ll need to submit to apply for the Fellowship:

1. Resume (Must include a link to your LinkedIn Profile)

2. Unofficial Law School Transcript(s)

3. One paragraph (250 words) answering the question, “There are many mentorship programs for law students; why would you like to participate in the Ms. JD Fellowship?”

4. One paragraph (250 words) answering the question, “Describe how you have demonstrated leadership ability, both in and out of law school.”

5. One paragraph (250 words) answering the question, “If you had to contribute to the Ms. JD community by writing a blog post, what would you discuss and why?”

6. One paragraph (250 words) answering the question, “Describe in detail an event that you would like to organize at your law school that promotes women in the law.”

**Specific application instructions**: All application materials must be submitted in a single PDF file titled “[First Name Last Name] Fellowship Application” with a cover page that lists First & Last Name, Law School, GPA, LinkedIn Profile Link, Email, and Phone Number.  Applications that are not submitted in this format will not be considered.

Why Do You Ask For My LinkedIn Profile?  We’re asking you for your LinkedIn profile because having one is a huge part of your professional identity.  If you haven’t developed your profile yet, now is a great time to start!  Also, from a practical standpoint, there’s a Fellows group on LinkedIn that allows all of the Fellows from the previous classes to interact with one another.

Submit your application to fellowship@ms-jd.org.  Applications are due Friday, March 31, 2017, at 11:59 pm Central Time.  Ms. JD plans to announce Fellowship finalists by the end of April.  Finalists will then complete interviews with Ms. JD Board Members and Staff by the end of May, and the Ms. JD Fellows and their mentors will be announced by mid-July.

If you have any questions, please contact the Fellowship Coordinator, Maleaha Brown, at fellowship@ms-jd.org.  We look forward to receiving your application!

Also posted in 2Ls, Scholarships, Career Development, Professional Development, Writing Competitions | Comments Off on The 2017 Ms. JD Fellowship

Damali Booker First Year Minority Clerkship Job Fair

The Nashville Bar Association’s annual Damali Booker First Year Minority Clerkship Job Fair will be held on Saturday, January 28, 2017, in Nashville, Tennessee.  This event will begin with a reception for all candidates and participating employers on Friday, January 27, 2017 at 5:30 p.m. at the Waller law firm, 511 Union Street, Suite 2700, Nashville, TN 37219.

Both the reception and the Job Fair will be held at the Waller law firm.

We seek to recruit aspiring diverse attorneys who desire to pursue a summer clerkship and professional career in Nashville.  Interested candidates should review and complete the following information: (1) Nashville Bar Association Diversity Committee Program Information; (2) Projected 2017 Job Fair Timetable; (3) Student Registration Form and (4) Interview Rankings Form.  A list of participating employers is posted on the NBA website for students to review (www.nashvillebar.org).

For all interested students we need: the Student Registration form, Interview Rankings Form, a resume, writing sample, a cover letter and both undergraduate and law school transcripts (unofficial transcripts will be accepted), no later than January 9, 2017. All materials can be mailed to the Nashville Bar Association, 150 Fourth Ave, North, Suite 1050, Nashville, TN  37219 (Attention: Traci Hollandsworth), or it can be emailed to traci.hollandsworth@nashvillebar.org in order to be considered for participation in the program.  Many area employers begin their recruiting process well before they conduct on-campus interviews, and many others do not interview at law schools.  Therefore, it is extremely important that the students adhere to the scheduling deadlines.

Traci Hollandsworth | Programs & Events Coordinator

150 4th Ave N, Ste 1050

Nashville, TN 37219

615.242.9272 | NashvilleBar.org

 

Also posted in 1Ls, Job Fairs | Comments Off on Damali Booker First Year Minority Clerkship Job Fair

ELON GLC UPDATES

Friends & Fans of the Gender and LGBTQIA Center – Some great events as part of LGBTQIA History Month!

Upcoming Events (in chronological order):

 

Mon Oct 10WGSS Meet-and-Greet / 4:00 / EFFECT Office (1st Floor Moseley 105) – Come hang with WGSS students & faculty!  Check out https://www.facebook.com/events/331998707150026/ for event info!

Mon Oct 10Dr. Therese Huston:  What We Should Know (but often don’t) About Gender & Decision-Making

5:00 / Lakeside 2nd Floor

6:30 / Lakeside Dining – Join us for dinner with Dr. Huston and students, faculty, & staff – please RSVP to mbosch3@elon.edu if interested

Tue Oct 11College Coffee / 9:50 / Phi Beta Kappa plaza – Rainbow Sprinkled Donuts & GLC/Spectrum tables as part of National Coming Out Week

Wed Oct 12Ally Training for Faculty & Staff / 11:30-1:30 / Moseley 215 – learn about LGBTQIA histories, language terms, ally tips, & real-life scenarios facing our students and coworkers, for fac/staff only – lunch provided, please RSVP to mbosch3@elon.edu

Thu Oct 13GLC Director speaking at Numen Lumen’s “Stuff Happens” Weekly Series / 9:50 / Sacred Space – Come hear GLC Director, Matthew Antonio Bosch, share stories of life, identity, and resilience as part of Truitt Center’s Numen Lumen weekly series “Stuff Happens.”

Fri Oct 21Deadline to Register for Intersect Diversity & Leadership Conference – check out https://www.elon.edu/onlinereg/conferences/intersect/default.aspx for details, run by Center for Leadership!

Sat Oct 22 LGBTQIA Mimosa Brunch & LGBTQIA Alumni Awards / 12:00 / Oaks 212 – free lunch, mimosas, & chance to connect w/LGBTQIA Elon alumni!  Lunch provided, please RSVP to mbosch3@elon.edu

Also posted in 1Ls, 2Ls, 3Ls, Events, Main Campus, Student Life | Comments Off on ELON GLC UPDATES

DemNC Voter Protection Pro Bono Opportunities

If you are interested in volunteering with Democracy NC, a nonpartisan organization that works to ensure that all voters have an equal opportunity to participate in the political process, there will be an informational meeting Thursday, September 29, 2016, in Room 204 from 12:30 – 1:30.

Kenya Myers, Voting and Special Project Consultant with Democracy North Carolina, will be here to answer questions, provide training information, and sign interested students up for shifts. Please see below for further details regarding available opportunities. For more information about Dem NC, please visit their website: http://nc-democracy.org/

Student Pro Bono Opportunities – Election Protection

Early Voting – October 20 – November 5*

*The recent federal appeals court decision returns the early voting period to 17 days instead of just 10 days. *

During early voting students will have the opportunity to staff the voter protection hotline and answer questions on voter registration, voting and election law. The students will be supervised by the DemNC experts and attorneys from the Southern Coalition of Social Justice (SCSJ) who will be in our office manning the hotline phones. Students must travel to the DemNC office in Durham, NC to participate in this volunteer opportunity. There will be shifts available on weekdays between 8:45 am – 6:00 pm and on weekends from 9:00 am – 2:00 pm.

Students volunteering for the hotline will be required to complete the online interactive training provided by the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law and review the supplemental documents and materials.

Election Day – November 8

On Election Day students will have the opportunity to serve as poll monitors for one or multiple 3-hour shifts in any of the counties previously covered by Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act (VRA) and major urban counties. Poll monitors provide assistance at precincts by passing out voter rights wallet cards, conducted exit polling to learn about incidents suffered by voters and directing voters to the hotline to solve questions regarding the voting process and redirection another precincts. On Election Day the hotline is staffed by civil rights attorneys and voting rights experts. Poll monitors are also charged to ensure that all voters in line by 7:30 PM be allowed to vote.

We are adding groups of NC licensed attorneys who will be “on call” to be “dispatched” to troubled precincts on Election Day for 4-6 hour shifts. DemNC is working with the Lawyers’ Committee to recruit attorneys. We agree that adding law students to this venture will expand the number of precincts that can be covered as well as reduce response time.

Any law students who volunteers as a poll monitor or as a part of the on call dispatch teams will have to complete BOTH the DemNC poll monitor training and the online interactive training provided by the Lawyers’ Committee.

Day of Canvass- November 15

The county canvass is the meeting where election results in a county become official. Students will have the opportunities to observe and document how the provisional ballots are researched after Election Day and if the provisional voter is determined to be eligible to vote and his/her ballot counted. Over 40,000 provisional ballots were cast during the primary election – only about 29,000 were counted. That’s more than 11,000 voters whose voice was silenced.

Law students can observe and document in any county, however we are prioritizing the 40 former VRA and major urban counties. The process begins at 9:00 in every county and will end when the last provisional ballot is reviewed. Students scan sign up for one or multiple 2 hour shifts.

Online webinar training for the Day of Canvass will be provided by DemNC and SCSJ attorneys AFTER the election.

Please contact Kenya Myers at Kenya@democracy.org to sign up.

DemNC is nonpartisan and works to ensure that all voters have an equal opportunity to participate in the political process.

 

 

 

Also posted in 1Ls, 2Ls, 3Ls, Events, Pro Bono, Professional Development | Comments Off on DemNC Voter Protection Pro Bono Opportunities

Networking Event: Transformative Projects in Downtown Greensboro

Wednesday, March 23, from 5:30-7:30pm

Greensboro Regional Realtors Association

23 Oak Branch Dr., Greensboro, NC 27407

Cost: $10 (Includes two drinks and hors d’oeuvres)

Join the synerG Young Professionals and the Greensboro Realtors Young Professionals Network for this special networking event on transformative projects in Downtown Greensboro with a keynote address by Kathy Manning. Ms. Manning is a local attorney and chairing the fundraising effort for the new Tanger Center for the Performing Arts and her keynote will give a quick update on the Center and her community involvement in the Greensboro. Special guest will be networking with attendees to discuss information and opportunities with Downtown Greensboro Inc., Greensboro Downtown Parks Inc., Tanger Performing Arts Center, Union Square Campus and the Downtown Greenway.

Space is limited so RSVP here. Questions? Email info@synerG.org

Special thanks to our event sponsors:

Greensboro Realtors Young Professionals Network, Akwari & Co, Geico, Homespectors & Benchmark Mortgage

Also posted in 1Ls, 2Ls, 3Ls, Events, synerG Young Professionals | Comments Off on Networking Event: Transformative Projects in Downtown Greensboro

2016 Young Lawyers Division Conference and Business Development Workshop

MARK YOUR CALENDARS!

The Wake County Bar Association Young Lawyers Division
INVITES YOU TO ATTEND THE

2016 YLD Spring Conference and Business Development Workshop
April 7, 2016
12:00 pm – 5:00 pm
Wake County Justice Center
Room 2700, County Commissioners Room
300 S. Salisbury Street
Raleigh, NC 27601

Join the Young Lawyers Division for an exciting program that will focus on topics designed to cultivate effective business development skills and enhance your practice as a young lawyer. Whether you are in a large firm, small firm, or no firm, learn from experienced leaders in the legal community on how to succeed as a young lawyer. Connect with other young lawyers during our networking lunch and be sure to attend the YLD After-Work Social following the Conference.

Admission is FREE

In addition, come hear about the advantages of your YLD membership and how you can become more involved in the Wake County Bar Association Young Lawyers Division. WCBA members and non-members welcome.

*If you are interested in attending, or for more information, please contact David Senter at dsenter@youngmoorelaw.com or 919-782-6860.*

Also posted in 1Ls, 2Ls, 3Ls, Events, Professional Development | Comments Off on 2016 Young Lawyers Division Conference and Business Development Workshop

Live broadcast of “The State of Things” from downtown Greensboro

You are invited to attend the next live broadcast of “The State of Things” on Tuesday, March 8 at the UpStage Cabaret at Triad Stage. Admission to the live show is free but reservations are required as seating is limited. 

RSVP to WUNC at rsvp@wunc.org with the number of guests attending or give them a call at 800-962-9862. Bring a bag lunch or stop by Jimmy John’s or Pizzeria Italiano just adjacent to Triad Stage!

The State of Things

Tuesday, March 8th from 12noon – 1pm

doors open at 11:30am

232 South Elm Street, 3rd floor
Here’s a preview of the show…

Healing Concussions As A Cultural Condition: The NCAA reports college athletes suffer more than 10,000 concussions a year, but perhaps more alarming is the fact that about three-quarters of these cases are not reported to coaches or team doctors. Two public health experts at UNC-Greensboro have received grants from the NFL and NCAA to help encourage these players report their injuries, and change the culture of concussions. We’ll talk with Jeff Milroy and David Wyrick, public health professors at UNC-Greensboro, about changing the culture of concussions.

The Continuing Fight For A Living Wage:  An estimated 20 percent of North Carolinian’s  earn less than a “living wage.” Advocates refer to that term as the household income needed to cover housing, food, child care, healthcare, transportation, taxes and other necessities. A new interactive video exhibit from the Center for Documentary Studies at Duke University tells the stories of these workers and explores the options for new policies that might help them. We’ll hear from Ashlyn Nuckols, a sophomore at Duke University; Bruce Orenstein, the exhibit’s producer; Tazra Mitchell, policy analyst at the North Carolina Justice Center; and Meredith Sawyer, an early childhood educator in Greensboro who is featured in the exhibit.

Admission to the live show is free but reservations are required as seating is limited.You can respond to this email with the number of guests attending or you can give us a call at 800-962-9862. 

Doors open at 11:30 a.m. and we ask that you be in your seat by 11:45 a.m. in time for the start of the show at noon. Parking is available in the Greensboro City-owned Greene Street Parking Deck at 211 South Greene Street, adjacent to the rear of the Triad Stage’s building, The Pyrle Theater. Enter the deck from either West Washington Street or South Greene Street. You can find complete directions here.

Future Dates for WUNC’s State of Things live show in Greensboro:

April 5 & May 17

Also posted in 1Ls, 2Ls, 3Ls, Events, Student Life | Comments Off on Live broadcast of “The State of Things” from downtown Greensboro