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8 Young Law. 1 (1952-1953)

handle is hein.journals/ynglwr8 and id is 1 raw text is: Published for Young Lawyers by the        X             --
Junior Bar Conference                           American Bar Association
VOL. VIII                                 FEBRUARY, 1952                                     No. 1
MABAJ/orBar Sec//on A     Sraagr to tfhe 3         tunior liar         Awards of Merit Go To
Elects Ella Ihomas               3ronm    the Nationat Olhairman          Dallas and Connecticut

Washingtonian Unanimously
Chosen Section Chairman
at Montevideo
The first meeting of the Junior Bar
Section of the Inter-American Bar As-
sociation was held in Montevideo, Uru-
guay, November 21 to December 2,
1951, in conjunction with the Seventh
Conference of the
I.A.B.A. At this
meeting, Mrs. Ella
C. Thomas of
Washington, D. C.,
was unanimously
elected the first in-
ternational chair-
man of the Section
and Rachael
Woody Hanes of
tLLA c. THOMAS  Washington w a s
chosen as U. S. representative on the
Executive Council.
Mrs. Thomas has taken a leading role
in the JC movement to establish a sec-
tion for young lawyers in the I.A.B.A.
She served as Secretary of [lie JBC
Committee on the Inter-American Bar
during the period 1948-1950 and was
chairman of the Committee for 1950-
1951. She is The Law Librarian at the
George Washington University, and is
making preliminary plans for the second
meeting of the Section which will be
held in Caracas, Venezuela, in 1953.
Miss Hanes, who is at present the Vice-
Chairman of the JBC Committee on the
Inter-American Bar, served with Mrs.
Thomas on the Organizational Commit-
tee and presented a paper on behalf of
the JBC at the Montevideo meeting. She
is an attorney at the Federal Trade
Commission.
Other officers of the Section elected at
Montevideo include Dr. Pedro J. Man-
tellini, Caracas, Venezuela, Dr. Enriquc
Vescovi, Montevideo, Dr. Aido Busot,
Havana, Cuba, and Dr. Pessoa da Silva,
Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Vice-Chairmen;
Dr. Esperanza Puente, Mexico City, Sec-
retary; and Dr. Mario Nin, Montevideo,
Treasurer.
In addition to Mrs. Thomas and Miss
Hanes, the JBC was represented at the
Montevideo meeting by Eileen C. O'Con-
nor, Washington, D. C., and Paul N.
Temple, Jr., New York City.
P.I.P. Subcommittee
ro Aid ODM Program
Paul Lashly, Chairman of the Junior
Bar Conference, has appointed a sub-
committee of the Public Information
Committee, headed by Ben Paul Noble,
to participate in the Defense Mobiliza-
tion Program of the Junior Bar Confer-
ence.   The function of the Committee
is to assist the Office of Defense Mobili-
zation in carrying the facts of mobiliza-
tion to the American public through the
medium   of Community Forums, the
members of which will give weekly 4-
minute talks to the public in every con-
munity in the United States. Lashly
appointed Russell G. Bowers of Flint,
Michigan, Fred Schillinger of St. Louis,
Missouri, and John Grabber and Harry
Breithaupt of Washington, D. C., as
Vice Chairmen.

-             -.. .- -.. .. . . . . . - -.. . . . .

St. Louis, Mo.
February, 1952.

PAUL W. LASHLY.

Richard Ii. Bowerman, National Vice  constantly in need of executive and per-
Chairman. has announced     that the  sonal assistance in those places where
Junior Bar Conference this year will, for  he visits. In other words, said Mr.
the first time, perform a direct and per-  Bowerman, Ie needs those services
sonal service to the President of the  which in military parlance are per-
American Bar Association. The Presi- formed by personal aides-de-camp. The
dent's duties require him to travel at-  Junior Bar has been asked to provide
most constantly throughout the country  this type of assistance and these indi-
on affairs of the Association; he is, con.  viduals who will be knon t as the Presi-
sequently, constantly under pressure and  dent's attaches.

State and Local Honors Are
Conferred by Lashly and
Burton
The Junior Bar Association of Dallas
was presented on December 14, 1951,
with the highest award trat such an or-
ganization can receive the Award of
Merit for the best Junior Bar organiza-
tion in the United States for the period
1950-1951.  This Award is annually
made by the Junior Bar Conference of
the American Bar Association, and is
highly coveted as a recognition of
achievement among Junior Bar Asso-
ciations throughout the country.
Mr. Paul W. Lashly, Chairman of the
National Junior Bar organization and
a St. Louis attorney, presented the Award
to the local group at a luncheon meeting
held at the Dallas Y. M. C. A. Mr.
Lashly was introduced by Mr. R. G.
Storey, Jr., a member of the Council of
the Junior Bar Conference and spoke
on the challenge of the tiies to the
younger lawyer.

tOM a numerical point of view, the Conference stands at a high point in
its history; over 7500 members scattered throughout the United States
and its possessions. This truly is an achievement of which those who
have gone before us and those who are active in the Conference now are justly proud.
Viewed substantively, however, this splendid record still leaves much to be ac-
complished. Necessarily, during the years of intensive membership recruitment,
emphasis had to be laid upon obtaining members, and thereby equal attention could
not be given the problems inherent in an expanding, dynamic association such as
the Junior Bar Conference. We have now reached a point where, although our
efforts must be continued unremittingly and expanded constantly to add new
members in order to maintain our vitality and insure the development of trained
Bar workers to take our place, still we must, out of consideration to those who have
joined, look about for means of improving our services and facilities.,
The uppermost aim of the American Bar Association has ever been to maintain
and promote the administration of justice. With that we are heartily in accord.
The JBC has always undertaken as its additional function the task of administering
to the needs of the younger lawyer. It was rt mere accident that this Section de-
veloped its first concrete activity in the Unauthorized Practice Committee, which
undertook to stamp out the encroachments by banks, trust companies, real estate
agents, undertakers, accountants, etc., upon the field of practice normally open
and most accessible to the young lawyer. We can take sound satisfaction in the
situation today that these fields are largely freed from such encroachments to the
younger practitioner.
In similar fashion, our Committee on Continuing Legal Education has cooperated
with other groups to maintain and raise the standards of admission to the bar.
The Justice of the Peace Committee has established on a nationwide basis a drive
to see that such courts of limited jurisdiction are staffed only by lawyers. The drive
has been successful in over a third of the states. The Procedural Reforms Commit-
tee has undertaken hs-Jssttandardization and improvement of procedural law in each
state. Many other similar examples can be adduced to show the successful impact
of the organized work made possible by our joining together in the JBC.
Today's problems are no less and no fewer than those of past years
but are brought more sharply into focus by our greatly expanding mem-
bership. I fear we have never formed sufficiently close contact with our
newer members and our newer Junior Bar Groups. Perhaps we have
even lost contact with some of our more established members and groups.
Thereby hangs our greatest problem and one which it will be the prime
aim of this administration to solve.
We must become, if you will a Grass Roots organization. We must
open and maintain closer channels of communication between our na-
tional committees engaged in their respective missions and the local and
State organizations through whom       these committees should execute
their duties. It must, of course, be a two-way street: we cannot super-
impose our ideas of what the local or State groups need; we must listen
rather than direct, then assist and coordinate.
This, therefore, spells out the necessity that each of our newer mnetnhers and
our newer groups, as well as our older groups, tell us whether or not our present
program fails to encompass all needed objectives. Where is our program lacking?
What additional services or facilities can we furnish the local and State groups?
in what way can we go about the improvement of the services and facilities which
we now have?
In short, I earnestly solicit and invite each reader to let me, any of the Execu-
tive Councilmen, or any of the National Committee Chairmen have his frank views.
We need then, and want them. Equally, we need and want your help, cooperation
and assistance. Let us know in what field or fields of organized bar work you
would like to engage.
Address your letter to me, with copies to your circuit representative and State
chairmen, if you know them. If you don't, send all three copies to me and I will
see that they are forwarded. If you will enclose an extra copy in each field of work
in which you would like to engage, I will see to it that each of these copies is
forwarded to the appropriate national committee chairman. Most of all, let us
habe your letters today if possible.
Sincerely yours,

Past W. Lamhly (left) pras..s.aards. merim is
Walter Spr-dl.  Prasidaet, Dallas JunIor Bar.
The presentation ceremony was wit-
nessed by a large group, including Judge
W. H. Atwell, United States District
Judge for the Northern District of the
State of Texas, and representative judges
of the various Appellate, District and
County Courts in Dallas, together with
the officers of the Senior Dallas Bar.
(tCsntird on Page Three)
Executive Council Holds
Mid-Winter Meeting
On Saturday and Sunday, February
23rd and 24th,,the Mid-Winter Meeting
of the Executive Council ,f [lie Junior
Bar Conference will be held at the Edge-
water Beach Hotel in Chicago, Ill. This
meeting, at which the National Chair-
man, Paul W. Lashly, will preside, will
be attended by the national officers of
the Conference, members of the Execu-
tive Council for each of the ten Judicial
Circuits, and the chairmen of the na-
tional committees.
The preliminary agenda for the meet-
ing is as follows:
1. Reports of committees and Council
members.
2. Review recently adopted appoint-
ment procedure in general, more partic-
(Continued on Page Three)

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