Junius WIlliams a graduate of Amherst College and Yale Law School has worked in, and for, Newark for four decades, and his memoir the Unfinished Agenda, has been described as a "road map for addressing poverty, failing schools and crime." Williams was accepted into one of the hardest law schools but he knew the difference he wanted to make in the black community. He was more into learning skills that will be useful to him in the movement in Newark. Segregation during the time of the 1950s has been extremely harsh. Williams journey as a young black boy included facing many tribulations to improve his life and move onto better stages as political black lawyer in the 1970s and 1980s in Newark, New Jersey. From looking at chapter 6, one can experience