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3 Poly L. Rev. 1 (1977-1978)

handle is hein.journals/polylawr3 and id is 1 raw text is: Poly
Law
Review

Volume 3 no 1 Autumn 1977
£1.25

Contents
Legal Education
Rt Hon Lord Justice Ormrod
United we stand ?
Michael Zander
Looking at Lawyers
Charles Wegg-Prosser
Communications Satellites
Robert L. Brown
Book Reviews
Books Received

EDITORIAL

Law is being pressed to catch up with life and some of the results
are unsettling. The fact that the Royal Commission on Legal
Services is looking hard at long-standing practices seems to have
encouraged actual changes as well as radical proposals. The rule
that a silk must always have a junior has been abolished, and the
7     new President of the Law Society is arguing for a form of con-
tingency fee to make legal representation more available. Stirring
up litigation by champerty and maintenance was a crime until ten
years ago; it is still generally considered unethical for lawyers to
have a financial stake in the outcome of a case.
10      Legal education is changing nearly as rapidly as the law itself.
This autumn the Polytechnic of Central London and the City
University have taken over from the Inns of Court the job of
giving a grounding in the law to graduates from other disciplines.
The Ormrod Committee stimulated this change among others,
and its Chairman, Lord Justice Ormrod, discusses the education
21      of lawyers in his article. Heretically, he concedes that it is
possible, though boring, to learn law from the nutshells
scorned by lecturers.
In our interview, Professor Michael Zander argues for abolishing
the division between barristers and solicitors. In addition to all
27      the practical advantages of fusion, he asserts that it is demeaning
for solicitors to be considered second-class lawyers, a difference
in status - quite irrespective of the merits of the individual
lawyers involved.
Charles Wegg-Prosser, a first-class solicitor (and by no means a
second-class lawyer!), looks at lawyers through history, in par-
ticular the recent development of neighbourhood law centres. In
a wide-ranging article, he derides the Marxist theory of law, and
notes that radio programmes seem to be better than television or
the press at presenting legal issues. He also mentions the ancient
Chinese way of discouraging litigation: all the parties and wit-
nesses (though apparently not the officials) were tortured.
Robert Brown's article on law and commercial satellites des-
cribes how international law has responded to the space age in
order, among other things, to bring World Cup football to the
world. It is also something of a trailer for our next issue on law
and communication.
May you live in interesting times is an old Chinese curse. The
new developments in law and legal practice make legal life more
interesting and less remote - more of a blessing than a curse.

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