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How are Your Exams Going?
Read These First Class Tips Before You Submit
Ambition Chronicles — Your Friday Inspiration
If you’re a visual learner and want to be inspired by success stories, check out my other newsletter, Ambition Chronicles.
Every Friday, 123.000 members learn the story of a successful individual.
Some members started their own businesses. Others became content creators. Some just seek inspiration.
Everyone is welcome.
The best part?
It’s visual. It’s quick. It’s free.
It’s visual. It’s quick. It’s free.
It’s visual. It’s quick. It’s free.
Alright I think you get the point.
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PS: If you join, let me know who you’d like covered next!
Hey,
I hope your exams are going well.
In the Resources section below you will find some useful tips and structures I have used to get First Class results in all of my exams so far. Wishing you the best of luck!
Continuing the interview series
What Methods Can a Law Firm Use to Acquire New Clients? — Equal Opportunity
Until next Sunday,
Alin George
📚 Other newsletters I’m recommending you read
Ambition Chronicles — Visual Work Biographies — See here
Next Breakthrough — Life advice that doesn’t suck — Read here
Bay Area Times — Commercial Awareness — Sign up & Read Here
⚒️ Resources
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⚖️ This week in Law History
You can now read previous editions in one go. They are accessible in the navigation bar if you are on the website, or:
When reading these facts, try to think about the wider implications each had.
12 May 1969 — Minimum voting age in Britain was lowered from 21 to 18 through the Representation of the People Act 1969
13 May 1787 — The first fleet of ships carrying convicts to the new penal colony of Australia left England. The Criminal Law Act 1776 suspended the transportation of convicts to America as it under revolution, so they switched to Australia.
14 May 2013 — R v Stuart Hazell is decided, sentencing Stuart Hazell to 38 years in prison for the murder of Tia Sharp, a 12 year old.
15 May 1536 — Trial of Anne Boleyn is held. She is accused of incest, sleeping with four men and plotting to kill her husband, King Henry VIII. (Why relevant? Well, the guy changed the law AND established his own church so that he could marry her three years prior)
16 May 1983 — London starts using experimental wheel clamps for illegally parked vehicles. Read the debate here.
17 May 1536 — George Boleyn, brother of Anne Boleyn and alleged lover, and her four other alleged sexual partners were executed.
18 May 1812 — John Bellingham was found guilty and sentenced to death for the assassination of the British Prime Minister Spencer Perceval.
📆 Upcoming Law Events — Compiled by Anca Andreea
To gain access for free to all the AllAboutLaw events mentioned below, sign up for free here.
Monday 13 May
AllAboutLaw x The University of Law - No Vac Scheme? What can I do now?
Tuesday 14 May
LawCareers.Net and BARBRI masterclass: SQE1 & SQE2 exams explained.
TargetJobs x ULaw - Solicitor vs Barrister: Choosing the Career for You
Wednesday 15 May
Vantage x Burges Salmon - Overview of Burges Salmon and application top tips!
Thursday 16 May
The University of Law postgraduate law open day: part-time focus
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