About
The National Black Law Journal (NBLJ) has been committed to scholarly discourse exploring the intersection of race and the law since 1970, when the NBLJ was started by five African-American law students and two African-American law professors. The Journal was the first of its kind in the United States.
Volume 5, Issue 1, 1977
Front Matter
[Front Matter]
Cover includes text:
URBAN PROBLEMS
Phillip J. Murphy, Taunya L. Banks, Chester McGuire, Henry W. McGee, Jr., Hugh B. Price, Michael Johnston, Doris Zelinksy
UCLA EDITION
With Special Supplements on:
The Frederick Douglass Moot Court Competition and
The Minority Candidate and the Bar Examination: Symposium
Table of Contents
Section I: Urban Problems
Acknowledgment [Section I: Urban Problems]
[Includes Editorial Staff]
Section II: The Frederick Douglass Moot Court Competition
Section III: The Minority Candidate and the Bar Examination Sympoisum
Panel Number One: The Bar Examination Process
Panel No. 1, The Minority candidate and the Bar Examination Symposium
Moderator: Samuel L. Williams
1. Model Committee of Bar Examiners:
Clyde O. Bowles
Kenneth D. McCloskey
2. Bar Examination
Clyde O. Bowles
Robert O'Brien
Panel Numer Two: Factors Contributing to Bar Examination Failiure
Panel includes:
William D. Warren, Peter J. Liacouras, Michael Josephson, Steven Daitch
Panel Number Three: "Search for Solutions"
Moderator: Henry W. McGee, Jr.
Panelists: Glenn Carr, David K. Robinson, Peter J. Liacouras, Richard S. Barrett, Craig Polite, Linda Greene, Morris Ballerd, Lennox S. Hinds