As legal consultant Edwin Reeser recalls, when he started as an associate at the Wall Street firm Thacher Proffitt & Wood in 1976, corridors were narrow and lined with portraits of the firm founders as well as paintings of sailing ships and foxhounds.
“Partners had a nice desk, and they almost always had a conference table that sat four to six people,” Reeser says. “It was very common for lawyers to have client meetings in their offices.”
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