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Vol. 71, No. 9,
September 1998
President's Perspective
Where We Come From, Where We Go
By Susan R. Steingass
As
we planned for our new Bar Center, our association's first full-time executive
director Philip S. Habermann told current executive director Steve Smay
about an all-but-forgotten time capsule sealed within our current facility.
During construction of the Bar Center 40 years ago, a storage box was placed
in the cornerstone. That box, Habermann recalled, contained letters written
by prominent lawyers of the day, predicting the legal profession's future.
On June 30, 1998, having been assured by experts that removing the cornerstone
would not cause the building's collapse, several of us gathered to see what
treasurers were hidden behind the cornerstone. Secreted in that space was
a welded copper box containing, among other things, 22 sealed letters written
in April 1958 by lawyers from around the state, including an admonition
that they not be opened until the year 2050.
A sense of history and respect caused us to leave the letters sealed.
But all that did was increase our curiosity! We hoped the writers of some
of these letters, or their families, might be as curious about their contents
as were we. Besides, the parallels between that time 40 years ago and now
were compelling.
We identified three of these letters to be from lawyers whose place in
our legal history and that of the State Bar goes deep: Janesville attorney
Leon Feingold, who passed away in 1980; Madison attorney Gordon Sinykin,
who passed away in 1991; and our first executive director, Philip Habermann,
who has remained involved in the Bar all these years.
As many of you know, Gordon Sinykin and Leon Feingold were distinguished
lawyers and fathers of lawyers who continue the tradition today. Leon Feingold
graduated in 1937 and was a sole practitioner in Janesville until 1974,
when he was joined in practice by his son David. Leon and his wife had four
children, two of whom also are lawyers. David continues to practice in the
Janesville law office his father founded and is heavily involved in the
State Bar. Russ practiced for many years in Madison and now serves with
distinction as a U.S. senator. Nancy is a psychotherapist in Madison, and
Dena is a rabbi in Kenosha.
Gordon Sinykin was admitted to practice in 1933. He was a founder of
the Madison law firm of LaFollette & Sinykin and a staunch supporter
of the State Bar and the Wisconsin Law Foundation, serving as its director,
executive officer, and president. He and his wife had three children. Daniel,
a lawyer, lives and works in Madison. Phillip is an electrical engineer
and his twin sister Susan works for the State of Wisconsin.
We called the Sinykin and Feingold families and Phil Habermann, seeking
their permission to reveal the contents of these letters early. They were
happy to agree and excited by the prospect.
Susan Steingass and executive director Steve Smay (right)
get the first peek at time-capsule treasures. The items were sealed in the
cornerstone during a ceremony dedicating the then-new Bar Center in 1958. |
With permissions in order, we opened these three letters with great anticipation.
While their full text will be published later, here's enough to whet your
appetite - some of their predictions about the then-future of the profession,
which has become for us its present.
Phil Habermann predicted that the Bar Center would be enlarged by the
addition of a second story in 1970 (it was, in 1969) and that in the year
2000 the "offices will have moved to new and larger quarters"
(they will, in 1999). Experienced as he was in bar administration, Habermann
predicted an exponential increase in the number of Bar members and staff,
though the sheer scope of that increase was unimaginable. By 2050, he predicted,
"Wisconsin will have 12,000 lawyers" (we had 19,000 in less than
half that time) and Bar staff would soar to 16 (we have 85)!
Gordon Sinykin took a more systemic approach, projecting that "something
certainly will have to be done before then to relieve the congestion in
the courts" - a struggle that continues unabated to this day. He pegged
the increase in specialization, predicting that, "Only in the smallest
communities will the general practitioner continue to serve all who may
come to him." He also predicted that the abstract of title would be
a "museum piece," and that attorney's offices would have machines
to file, index, tabulate, photograph, transcribe, "and even do some
research."
Leon Feingold took a more global approach, predicting increased specialization
and that, "Law relating to human relations will be more in the area
of the social sciences such as sociology and economics rather than in the
present categories of the law." He foresaw the increased importance
of international law and order with the then-fledgling United Nations touching
virtually everyone on the planet and curtailing "war and serious threats
of war."
While acknowledging that it was "presumptuous" to predict the
future, the process clearly intrigued him: "... at times one does look
back on the past and does think of the future ... and perhaps my grandchildren
or great-grandchildren ... in the year 2050, may have the opportunity of
reading this letter," predicting that, at minimum, they would find
it amusing.
Well said! No one can predict the future - but these three came suprisingly
close. When their letters are resealed and, with others yet unopened, ensconced
within the cornerstone of the new Bar Center next year, they will be accompanied
by predictions from today's lawyers. May we all have their foresight and
commitment. We all learn from what these three prognosticators have to say
and extend our thanks to them and to their families for allowing us to share.
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