Virtual CLE: “Embracing Technology and Avoiding Burnout”
This CLE is pending approval for one hour of general/technology credit and one hour of substance abuse/mental health credit. It is free for members of the Campbell Law Alumni Association. The cost is $75 for non-Alumni Association members.
Agenda
9:00-10:00 a.m. “Litigation Technology in the COVID Era” by Susan Kittle and Shannon Skoog, Chaplin and Associates
10:00-11:00 a.m. “Burnout and Alcohol Overuse” by Brett Bowers, North Carolina Central University School of Law
Presenter Bios
Susan Kittle
Susan Kittle was born in Memphis, Tennessee. She earned her BA degree from Carson Newman University and her MBA from Lincoln Memorial University. After receiving her MBA, she worked for 16 years in finance and mortgages. Then in 2017, she transitioned to proofing transcripts and then reporting with Chaplin and Associates. Over the years, Susan developed experience in all areas of litigation, from family law t
To continue the work of inclusivity with the fashion scope, the New-York city based lifestyle brand Alife has partnered with retail conglomerate Urban Outfitters for a special project. In conjunction with Black History Month, the pair have delivered an HBCU collection highlighting historic Black colleges. The capsule, which was produced by collegiate licensing company CLC will be available next week. “Alife for me has always been a creative outlet and a way that I can propel things that I find important into apparel,” Alife partner Treis Hill tells ESSENCE.
Working with Alife since 2005, Hills has lead shoe design as well as special projects for the brand. The curator’s latest adventure consist of spearheading the HBCU x Alife capsule collection. “I’m an HBCU graduate, I went to Hampton University,” says Hill when asked why this collection is important to him. The designer included that his grandfather, Robert Bond become the first graduate of North Carolina Central Uni
T. Greg Doucetteâs Crusade Against Hypocrisy, Police Violence, And Big Government
T. Greg Doucette in front of the Durham courthouse
Editorâs note: This story was produced through a partnership between the INDY
, which is published by journalism students at Duke Universityâs DeWitt Wallace Center for Media & Democracy.
It was five days after the killing of George Floyd by Minneapolis police officers, and T. Greg Doucette was mad.Â
Doucette, a criminal defense and small business attorney in Durham, was angry with the way police were treating protesters: beating them, pepper-spraying them, and, in one case, even trampling them with a horse. And so, around noon on May 30, Doucette did what he often does when he wants to gripe: he tweeted, creating a thread of 10 videos showing instances of police brutality toward protesters.Â
T Greg Doucette s Crusade Against Hypocrisy, Police Violence And Big Government indyweek.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from indyweek.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
She hired her first employees a week before the pandemic arrived. How has business fared since then?
Destini Gilliam s story is indicative of a much bigger narrative that has impacted Black businesses, specifically those owned by Black women.
Destini Gilliam, founder of Creative Reading Coach LLC, received a $10,000 small-business grant through the City of Charlotte s Access to Capital program to assist business owners impacted by the coronavirus pandemic. Photo: QCity Metro
Destini Gilliam had big goals for her small business in 2020.
After launching Creative Reading Coach LLC, in the spring of 2018, and operating as a solopreneur for the first year and a half, she declared 2020 as the year she’d finally hire some help, so that she could focus more on growing the business.