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12) Nrthwstrn Jrnl
14) Black & Jewish
Berkeley Law Open House, September 14-16
Join us for our 3rd Annual (virtual) Berkeley Law Open House, exclusively for UC Berkeley students. Thinking about going to law school? Want to experience a law school class and hear about the law student experience? We hope you will join us for three evenings of sessions designed to introduce you to Berkeley Law and prepare you to apply. Registration is required and is limited to current UC Berkeley students. To register, click on the session link below. All times are PDT.
Monday, September 14
5pm Admissions Information Session: Learn about the law school application process, timeline, requirements, and how to prepare to apply.
6pm Financing Your Legal Education: Learn about the cost of law school, financial resources available, public interest funding, and other ways to help pay for your legal education.
Tuesday, September 15
5pm Mock law class with Professor Catherine Fisk, Employment Law: Should Laws Protect Interns, Volunteers, or App-Based and Other Gig Workers?
Wednesday, September 16
5pm Law Student Panel: Hear from current law students who attended UC Berkeley for their undergraduate degree.
Wed, Sep 16 5:00 pm PDT – 6:30 pm PDT
The Office of Congressman Ted W. Lieu seeks an organized, detail-oriented, and responsible individual with previous scheduling experience to serve as Scheduler in our Washington, DC office.
Responsibilities include managing and maintaining the Congressman’s daily schedule in Washington and Los Angeles, organizing and tracking invitations, planning travel arrangements, keeping the Congressman on schedule throughout the day, and various administrative tasks. This is not an entry level position; it requires someone who is able to be on call and available to assist the Member after regular business hours. Candidates should have prior experience in a similar role, excellent verbal and written communication skills, and a sense of humor.
To apply please send a resume, references, and cover letter to Lieu.Staff@mail.house.gov with “Scheduler” in the subject line. No calls or drop-ins please. Equal Employment Opportunity Employer.
Business/Tech Info Session: Monday, Sept. 14, 8:00-10:00 p.m.
Editorial Info Session: Tuesday, Sept. 15, 8:00-10:00 p.m.
Application Workshop: Sept. 17, 7:00-8:30 p.m.
Applications are found at apply.dailycal.org and are due Friday, Sept. 18 at 11:59 p.m. Contact hiring@dailycal.org with any questions.
[Virtual] First Generation Career Series: Keynote Event
Wed, Sep 16 3:30 pm PDT – 5:00 pm PDT
https://berkeley.zoom.us/j/94701386485
- Career Center Services Overview
- Resume and/or cover letter writing
- Interviewing skills
- How to Use and Maximize Handshake
Cal Students,
We invite you to learn about the Global Poverty & Practice Minor!
The GPP Minor introduces students to the theoretical frameworks, methods, and practical skills necessary to engage with global poverty and inequality in effective ways.
The minor requires five courses and a “Practice Experience.” This experience is a central component of the minor in which students partner with domestic or international non-governmental or community organizations, government agencies, or other poverty or development programs, on various dimensions of poverty action – from food security and sustainable technologies to economic justice and grass-roots political power. The combination of the coursework for the minor and this real world experience allows students to connect theories and practices of poverty action. Funding is available to support students’ practice experiences.
The deadline to declare the minor this semester is Wednesday, October 14th. There are no prerequisites required to declare.
The Declaration Form and additional information about the minor can be found at: http://blumcenter.berkeley.edu/gppminor.
Information Sessions about the minor will be held on Zoom at the following times (Zoom sessions linked):
Contact gppminor@berkeley.edu with any questions.
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12) Nrthwstrn Jrnl
Nrthwstrn Jrnl
Journal Submission Guidelines
The Northwestern Undergraduate Online Journal is Northwestern’s premier undergraduate legal publication. We are entirely managed and staffed by Northwestern University students. It is our mission to highlight the scholarly works of undergraduate students by providing a forum to debate and analyze legal issues. We strive for an interdisciplinary approach to the law, publishing works addressing topics including but not limited to, Supreme Court cases, patent law, legal precedents and history, medical law, and more.
The NULJ does not honor any personal attacks or articles with offensive content or language. We reserve the right to remove any articles that violate our guidelines. Selections for the NULJ are competitive and selective. If you have any questions about why your article was not selected, feel free to email nulj@u.northwestern.edu for feedback.
Submission Guidelines
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Submissions must be 20 to 100 double-spaced pages, not including citations and Works Cited.
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We only accept works written from undergraduate students. Authors from the classes of 2018, 2019, and 2020 may submit manuscripts written during their undergraduate years.
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All submissions must include a Works Cited section. All works will be published in accordance with the Bluebook citation style The Bluebook: A Uniform System of Citation (20th ed. 2015), copyright by the Columbia Law Review Association, the Harvard Law Review Association, the University of Pennsylvania Law Review, and the Yale Law Journal. Accepted manuscripts will have both the text and citations edited to conform to the Bluebook citation style.
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Authors may submit multiple works.
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Papers need not be on American law; they can be on the laws or legal system of any country.
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We accept senior theses, past class assignments, and independently researched works.
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Senior theses should be submitted in their entirety; we prefer completed pieces to excerpts.
How to Submit
All works must be submitted using this form. Submissions for the Journal should be double-spaced in a Microsoft Word document and should include footnotes as well as a Works Cited section. Works submitted as PDFs will not be accepted.
In the document, please also include the following information:
-
Your name
-
Current email address
-
Title
-
250-word abstract
Deadline: 11:59 PM CST on Monday, January 25, 2021
Journal Submission Guidelines
Submissions for the Spring 2021 Issue are Now Open
The Northwestern Undergraduate Online Journal is Northwestern’s premier undergraduate legal publication. We are entirely managed and staffed by Northwestern University students. It is our mission to highlight the scholarly works of undergraduate students by providing a forum to debate and analyze legal issues. We strive for an interdisciplinary approach to the law, publishing works addressing topics including but not limited to, Supreme Court cases, patent law, legal precedents and history, medical law, and more.
The NULJ does not honor any personal attacks or articles with offensive content or language. We reserve the right to remove any articles that violate our guidelines. Selections for the NULJ are competitive and selective. If you have any questions about why your article was not selected, feel free to email nulj@u.northwestern.edu for feedback.
Submission Guidelines
-
Submissions must be 20 to 100 double-spaced pages, not including citations and Works Cited.
-
We only accept works written from undergraduate students. Authors from the classes of 2018, 2019, and 2020 may submit manuscripts written during their undergraduate years.
-
All submissions must include a Works Cited section. All works will be published in accordance with the Bluebook citation style The Bluebook: A Uniform System of Citation (20th ed. 2015), copyright by the Columbia Law Review Association, the Harvard Law Review Association, the University of Pennsylvania Law Review, and the Yale Law Journal. Accepted manuscripts will have both the text and citations edited to conform to the Bluebook citation style.
-
Authors may submit multiple works.
-
Papers need not be on American law; they can be on the laws or legal system of any country.
-
We accept senior theses, past class assignments, and independently researched works.
-
Senior theses should be submitted in their entirety; we prefer completed pieces to excerpts.
How to Submit
All works must be submitted using this form. Submissions for the Journal should be double-spaced in a Microsoft Word document and should include footnotes as well as a Works Cited section. Works submitted as PDFs will not be accepted.
In the document, please also include the following information:
-
Your name
-
Current email address
-
Title
-
250-word abstract
Deadline: 11:59 PM CST on Monday, January 25, 2021
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Instill your passion about any subject to high schoolers around the Bay Area! Splash is a student organization that brings over 400 high school students to Berkeley’s campus for a day of unlimited learning through classes taught by Berkeley students (YOU)! This year, Splash will be online via Zoom on Saturday, October 31st 2020
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14) Black & Jewish
Black & Jewish
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