IN THE EARLY 1990S, when Nowell D. Berreth was an undergraduate at the University of Georgia and playing in a rock band at bars and fraternity parties to help pay his way through college, he had no plans to attend law school. “I had the idea that I wanted to be either a writer or in public relations,” he says.
It was a logical step for Berreth, whose father was the director of public affairs at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. But after getting a degree in journalism and landing a job as a writer and editor for the CDC, Berreth began talking to lawyers at the center. “That’s when I realized that law school was something to take a stab at.”
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