Some are even quitting
their day jobs as lawyers to become legal tech entrepreneurs.
Finally, I interviewed Trevor Shane, author of Children of Paranoia, on how he manages a demanding
day job as lawyer to a hedge fund with being a first - time published author.
Not exact matches
I juggle a part - time
job as lawyer, and the other half of my
days are spent blogging (all of that is mixed in with my favorite
job (s): new mama and wife).
I didn't relish the idea of taking any leave from my glamorous
job as a U.S. Senate
lawyer, but it was an emergency and I was assured it would only be for a couple of
days.
Here are other links for your consideration: (1) From Courtney Milan, romance author with a
day job as an attorney, comments on B&N hiring
lawyer superstar David Boies for the DOJ case — http://www.courtneymilan.com/ramblings/ (2) From Patricia C. Wrede, young adult author, comments on managing the backlist and long - range thinking
as a writer: http://pcwrede.com/blog/long-range-thinking/
Freshly retired from his
day job as a successful Harvard and Yale - educated
lawyer, Whit Conrad began to take classes at the New York Studio School of Drawing, Painting and Sculpture; what started out
as a lark became a passion.
As for Mootus cofounder Ziegler, a lawyer, he has a very cool day job as manager of special projects at Harvard Law School's Library Innovation La
As for Mootus cofounder Ziegler, a
lawyer, he has a very cool
day job as manager of special projects at Harvard Law School's Library Innovation La
as manager of special projects at Harvard Law School's Library Innovation Lab.
Of course, these
days, I'd add a third category
as well: those who wanted to be
lawyers but simply couldn't find a
job.
But for those
lawyers who view Second Life
as an outlet for imagination that is wasted in a
day job or
as an underutilized way to attract new business, more power to them.
In looking over Blawg Review # 100, I realized that virtually every past Blawg Review alum is still actively blogging, an amazing feat when given that all of these former hosts hold a «
day job,» either
as busy practicing
lawyers, consultants or law students.
At the end of the
day, whether the cause you support is a hot button political issue or a relatively innocuous one, your
job as a
lawyer is not to promote your own interests; it is to protect and advance the cause of your client.
Most of the time when it comes to poetry —
as this particularly appalling ditty is designed to demonstrate — we
lawyers should stick to the
day job.
Mind you,
as Christie Blatchford said in The National Post a week later, imagine the outcry if that statement was made by a man; a «paunchy male defence
lawyer,» or a «boy prosecutor» who would have lost his head and his
job the next
day.
That concession was made in 2011 following a six -
day strike — the first by government
lawyers in Canadian history — in which both Quebec
lawyers» unions walked off the
job in protest over their wages, which were
as much
as 40 - per - cent lower than what provincial
lawyers earned in neighbouring barometer - province Ontario.
On top of that, they all have
day jobs — some
as lawyers and some within the legal tech industry.