Inside the Bar
Thrown to the Wolves
Have you ever felt "Thrown to the Wolves"? It doesn't have to be like
that. Other lawyers have knowledge and experience to share. Join your
colleagues at the State Bar's "Building for Success: The Ultimate
'How-to' Seminar for New and Not-So-New Lawyers" in January.
Building for Success dates:
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- Milwaukee - January 14, 2004
- Madison - January 15, 2004
- Wausau - January 30, 2004
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By Thomas E. Dixon
State Bar CLE Director
It was 1970. Was it 3rd Street? Wells? I really can't remember
anymore. I do remember Mr. Jones. He was being evicted from a store he
had run (and lived behind) on the near north side of Milwaukee by one of
the city's most notorious slum landlords. I was a third-year law student
handling cases "under the supervision" of a young lawyer in a poverty
law firm. Ugly metal file cabinets and metal desks, no amenities, no
resources and, most importantly, no know-how.
Mentoring? Under the crush of the caseloads, you were lucky if you
found a few minutes to discuss ideas and theory on a case. Actual skills
training? Didn't exist. Cocounseling? Only if the case had merit as a
law reform case.
If the case didn't merit cocounsel, you were going it alone; a
warrior of intelligence, commitment, concern, and modest legal
knowledge, with almost no time and with few arrows in the quiver of how
to actually practice law on the street.
Sometimes, we won by legal acumen; sometimes we won by pure,
emotion-driven righteousness; we never lost for lack of effort. I can
only imagine how frequently our representation took too long or focused
too intensely on the "issue," when excellence in negotiation strategy or
communication skills could easily have improved our client's position
and perhaps won the day.
Finding a balance between practicing poverty law and living life was
not even a concept. And so we suffered with our clients, and frequently
became immune to the importance of our client's woes as we sank under
the weight of too many examples of man's and woman's inhumanity to one
another. Often, we just burned out and moved on.
Being a little too smart for our own good, some of us may not have
taken advantage of the help that was available. Sink or swim, figure it
out, no one's got time to hold your hand, when the going gets
tough - you know the drill.
It doesn't have to be that way. Even if you're heading out on your
own, other lawyers have knowledge and experience to share with their
colleagues.
The Senior and Young Lawyers divisions want to ensure that lawyers
entering practice, particularly those lawyers hanging out a shingle,
start with a better base of knowledge and a foundation for building a
successful practice. They found a font of enthusiasm in the late Leonard
Loeb, the dedication of the Senior Lawyers' Jack DeWitt and the Young
Lawyers' Laura Dunek, and the commitment of State Bar President George
Burnett, who created a committee of lawyers and judges to develop a
program of practice information and skills that would be particularly
useful to new practitioners and those hanging out their own shingle.
Under cochairs Nathan Fishbach, Whyte Hirschboeck Dudek, and me, the
committee has developed "Building for Success: The Ultimate How-To
Seminar for New and Not -So-New Lawyers," a one-day program that
includes everything from communication skills to networking to growing
with your business clients. If you have ever felt "thrown to the
wolves," join us in Milwaukee, Madison, or Wausau on Jan. 14, 15, or 30,
respectively, for only $59.
Mr. Jones? I managed to get him another six months while he found a
new storefront in the neighborhood with a better landlord. Through my
excellent negotiation and persuasion skills? Nah - the landlord was so
obnoxious, she ticked off the judge as much as she did me. There are
better ways. Join us in January.
Inside the
Bar