As Frank Walwyn, president of the Canadian Association of
Black Lawyers points out, it is fear keeping law firms from looking within and being willing to count and make public their demographic statistics.
Not exact matches
I recall quiet Saturday mornings, walking with my father block to block, as he
pointed out the landmarks no one else knew: the spot where the Third Avenue El of old stopped (he
pointed out the supports hidden beneath the
black asphalt); the apartment house where another close - knit family lived in cramped quarters, the three boys studying in dim lights under their mother's watchful eye to become a
lawyer, a doctor, and a priest (and later a bishop); and the double spires of St. Patrick's Cathedral, the place of my parents» wedding and the baptisms of their three boys.
Heavy Electricity Transmission Losses Officials» arguments that the dams are needed to improve living standards and meet energy demands around the country are rebutted by
lawyer Yakup Okumuşoğlu, who
points out that all the dams planned for the
Black Sea region would produce only 2 to 3 percent of the electricity needed in a country with an 18 percent loss rate in electricity transmission.
Frequently my team of brilliant
lawyers will disagree on a
point — which proves that there aren't always
black and white answers to questions.
Some
lawyers, some of the time, will
point out the complexity in a situation that «everyone» knows is simply
black and white (See New Yorker article on the Steubenville case: Was Justice Served in Steubenville?)
Some
lawyers, some of the time, will
point out the complexity in a situation that «everyone» knows is simply
black and white (see New Yorker article on the Steubenville case here).