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1. Before
you begin, determine your objective. What point do you wish to make?
How will you make your point? Stick to one central point!
2. Keep
it short and simple. The longer your letter, the greater the chance
the editor will abbreviate it -- and take out the most important
parts. For a list of newspapers and their length limits use the
links on the right.
3. Understand
the paper's protocol. If the paper requests that you include specific
information with a letter, do so. If the paper restricts you to
one published letter in a given period of time, know this limit.
You can't win if you don't know the rules of the game.
4. Write
about a timely issue and be prompt. If you wish to respond to something
the paper has printed, do it immediately. If you wait two weeks,
the chance that your letter will be published decreases drastically.
For some topics of recent interest visit the news
section.
5. Humor
is good. Include a funny line or two if it is relevant.
6. Include
all of your contact information including address and phone number.
These won't be printed, but are needed by most editors.
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