NEW ADMITTEE RECEPTION
A
s someone who was newly admitted to the Dayton Bar Association in 1962, I should have felt out of place at the recent New Admittee Reception in the Bar Offices. Happily I felt right at home and refreshed by the energy and intelligence of those who are coming on board to replace, as time goes by, those whose prime is passing. While it’s a tough time to be entering a crowded and changing profession, there are obviously an impressive number of young lawyers who embrace change and can handle a tough world from which no one emerges alive. It was my good fortune to meet new faces and share cold beer and conversation with them. Despite foreign wars, terrorists, and bloviating political candidates, it appears that – as always – the present will pass seamlessly into the future.
By David C. Greer Esq. DBA Editorial Board Bieser Greer & Landis, LLP
24 Dayton Bar Briefs May 2016
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