Wednesday, March 18, 2020

Without one, half of our country would be in prison for crimes

An attorney is a privilege given to us by our government. Without one, half of our country would be in prison for crimes that they didn't commit. But when do you need a lawyer? And how do you go about finding one? Most people have no idea how to answer these questions, but everyone who lives in this country should know these answers. Why should anyone have this privilege and not know how to use it? I will discuss the steps needed to find and hire an attorney. First of all, a lawyer is needed in many situations. Some are easily apparent while others are not that obvious. The easiest to recognize is when you are charged with a crime, whether it be a felony or misdemeanor. A civil suit, usually for personal injury, is another time when an attorney is needed. In order to end a marriage, a lawyer is needed to get a divorce. After you've had a car accident and you insurance company refuses to pay, you may need to seek a lawyer's help. Before you purchase real estate, an attorney needs to review documents to determine the validity of the purchase. A person beginning a business or company needs to consult a lawyer in order to get all of the legal documents signed. Also, a person wanting to write a will or to plan their estate must have it legally bound by a lawyer. Big corporations and organizations also must have an attorney to prosper. An attorney's work is plentiful with all of these different specialities around. After you have determined that you need an attorney, you must find a lawyer that fits your legal needs. Many lawyers specialize in certain fields, while others have a wide range of abilities. But where do you look to find a lawyer? Many places are obvious. They are ordinary things found around the house. First of all, a phone book will give you a list of lawyers around that particular area. Another great way to find an attorney is in your local library. It houses a book,

Monday, March 2, 2020

Writing Contests Are Good Practice

Writing Contests Are Good Practice Writing Contests Are Good Practice Writing Contests Are Good Practice By Guest Author This is a guest post by Mary Hodges If you want to write for Daily Writing Tips check the guidelines here. There are some writers who wouldn’t dream of entering a writing competition. They consider such things beneath their dignity. I’ve even come across someone who refused to take part in competitions because â€Å"someone has to lose†. My response to this would be â€Å"someone has to win, and it might be you. But if you don’t enter, you certainly won’t win.† My own feeling is that writing for a competition is helpful for these reasons: You have to write to a word limit. You have a deadline to meet. You often have to write on a given topic. Even if your work is not among the winning entries you have a finished story article or poem that you can adapt for another market Writing competitions seem to be a growth area. A Google search for â€Å"writing competitions† came up with over a million hits! Prizemagic includes some interesting details about Michael Shenton and his book Stiff Competition based on his experience of entering competitions. The poetrykit site includes a link to story and other competitions and a warning to beware of scams. There are numerous print magazines with titles like Competitors’ Companion but these include only a few writing contests. They are mainly devoted to general consumer competitions where the entrants need to provide proof of purchase and concoct advertising slogans for particular products. Some points to remember when entering competitions: Always read the rules for entry carefully. State age, sex, ethnicity, place of birth or residence, and whether or not your work has been published. – I’ve seen all these used to restrict who is eligible to enter. Look carefully at the deadline. There’s no point in sending your work off too soon and making it unavailable for other uses any longer than necessary. Look for contests that give a clear date by which the winners will be notified. Once that date has passed, you know you can submit your work elsewhere or enter it in another competition, Note the prizes and the entry fees – if any. Remember, a bigger prize might attract more entries; you might have a better chance of winning in a smaller local comp. albeit with a smaller reward. Contests you can enter by email are to be preferred every time over those that require hard copy entries. Some ask you to send an S.A.E for an entry form, requiring wo lots of unnecessary postage. Look carefully at what the organizers say they will do with the non-winners. I’ve come across one contest where the entrants granted the organizers â€Å"a worldwide, irrevocable, perpetual license to feature any or all of the submissions in any of its publications†. Do you really want to give your work away when you might submit it to another publication or enter it for another contest? Keep a copy of your entry and a record of where you sent it. I should come clean and say I haven’t won lots of writing competitions. I seem to get to the runner-up stage quite often, but don’t make the big time. Of course prizes in writing competitions are not always in the form of cash. You might win a holiday, a place on a writing course in some exotic location or as I did many years ago you might win a lavatory seat! I’m not kidding. This was part of a prize for writing a poem about Convent Garden in London. Prizes were items from the various shops in Covent Garden including one that specialized in wooden loo seats with the owner’s initials on the lid! But when all’s said and done it’s not the winning that counts, it’s the taking part. Mary Hodges has published poems in The Oldie, Freelance Market News and Quantum Leap magazine. She edits the Garstang Arts Centre Newsletter and is Press Officer for her local Women’s Institute. She also writes plays, one of which was produced for the Women’s Institute Drama Festival. Although computer literate and interested in the web, she has not yet set up her own website or blog. Two sites she’s found particularly useful are PrizeMagic and The Poetry Kit. Want to improve your English in five minutes a day? Get a subscription and start receiving our writing tips and exercises daily! Keep learning! Browse the Freelance Writing category, check our popular posts, or choose a related post below:"Because Of" and "Due To" Comma Before ButA Yes-and-No Answer About Hyphenating Phrases