Not exact matches
With stunning consistency, virtually every indicator of civic engagement currently available shows the same pattern of
increase followed by stagnation and decline — newspaper reading; TV news watching; attending political meetings; petition signing; running for public office; attending public meetings; serving as an officer or committee member in any local clubs or organizations; writing letters to the editor; participating in local meetings of national organizations; attending religious services; socializing informally with
friends, relatives or neighbors; attending club meetings; joining unions; entertaining
friends at home; participating in picnics; eating the evening meal with the whole family; going out to bars, nightclubs, discos or taverns; playing cards; sending greeting cards; attending parties; playing sports; donating money as a percentage of income;
working on community projects; giving blood.
and in less than 3 days all my problems were over and I «m very happy in my marriage and my husband left his girl
friend and came back to me.She also gave me powerful magic pot to boost my business and its stability and paid all my debts, ring to protect me from my enemies, magic wallet to
increase my financial blessings and promotion
at work.
«We probably won't be as radical as [previous activists], since we want to
work within the system rather than be confrontational,» says Cynthia
Friend, the sole woman chemist on Harvard's faculty and co-founder of a new panel seeking to
increase the number of women researchers
at that university.
(i) BMO reducing its roster of firms from about 800 to 200 with further reductions planned; (ii) the clients of seven sister firms hiring me to help them get control over their legal spend and forge stronger and more value based relationships with their firms; (iii) the many small and mid-sized businesses who hire accountants to do all of their tax and structuring
work because it is cheaper than dealing with lawyers; (iv) firms hiring me to help them figure out how to budget, set and meet client expectations without losing money; (v) «clients» who never become clients
at all as they do their own legal
work based on precedents that
friends share with them; (vi) the various forms of outsourcing that are now prevalent (from offices in India to Tory's office in Halifax); (vii) clients hiring me to figure out how to
increase internal capacity without
increasing headcount in order to reduce external spend; (viii) the success of firms like Conduit, SkyLaw and Cognition (to name a few) who are taking new approaches to «big» and «medium law»
work; (ix) the introduction of full time project managers in many firms; and (x) the number of lawyers throughout the profession who regularly don't docket chunks of their time in order to avoid unpleasant fee conversations with their clients.
At the Innocence Project of Florida, we are always looking for new ways to better communicate with our
friends and supporters, as well as
increase awareness about our
work.