Lions in the Street
Lions in the Street: The Inside Story of the Great Wall Street Law Firms is a 1973 book by Paul Hoffman.Overview
The book describes the great Wall Street law firms of the 1970s, prominent cases, traditions, and a community of high-profile lawyers. Some famous names discussed: Cravath, Swaine & Moore; Davis Polk & Wardwell; Lord Day & Lord; Donovan, Leisure, Newton & Irvine; Cleary, Gottlieb, Steen & Hamilton; Carter, Ledyard & Milburn; Coudert Brothers; Covington & Burling, and others.
The name of the book might be inspired by Celebration of the Lizard, a performance piece written in 1970 by Jim Morrison, frontman of The Doors.Contents
- The Congress of Vienna Sits on the Fifty-seventh Floor
- Downtown, Midtown, All Around the World
- The $100-an-hour Toll Collectors
- Some Partners are more Equal than Others
- The Care and Feeding of Corporate Clients—I
- The Care and Feeding of Corporate Clients—II
- "As my Lawyer, Dick Nixon, said the Other Day..."
- The Workers Are the Means of Production
- A Lot Goes on Behind Closed Doors
- The Green-goods Councel as the Big Board's Cop
- The Public Servant as Private Lawyer
- The Private Lawyer as Public Servant
- The Greetings of the Bar Association
- On Different Wavelengths
Official information
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