The Atlanta Lawyer - Official Publication of the Atlanta Bar Association Jan/Feb | Page 19

“ Celebrating 125 Years Do You Remember When... The Bar won the American Bar Association Harrison Tweed Award The Courts Were Not Open for Trials During the Summer My best memory is the collaboration between Legal Aid and the Atlanta Bar in representing the Mariel Cubans. In a story that I have told many times (and which is on our documentary), I got a call one day from Frank Strickland, Atlanta Bar President in 1984. He wanted to meet with me but would not tell me what it was about, except finally he said “Cubans”. We had been representing the Mariel Cubans for a number of years and I was nervous that some people, including Frank who I did not know well, might not be happy about that. So I was concerned. The next day I met with Frank, and he told me that Judge Marvin Shoob asked him to get volunteers from the Bar to represent the Cubans in individual cases. Frank asked for our help and money. I literally started laughing, and said “Frank, those folks in Washington want conservative Bar presidents like you to rein in radical legal aid directors like me, and you are asking me for help in representing the Cubans?” We of course did give help and support, and 400 Atlanta lawyers ended up representing about 1200 Cubans. The Bar won the prestigious American Bar Association Harrison Tweed Award for promoting access to justice for indigents. During 1978, as a very young lawyer, I was appointed Law Day Chairman for the Atlanta Bar. We began our planning at about the same time the Fulton County Superior Court decided to have a program of its own, and named then Judge Charles Weltner Chairman. Because our Bar committee decided to put on an open house at the Courthouse, we discovered that Judge Weltner had planned activities at the Courthouse as well, and through the leadership of President Neal Batson we merged the programs and it became a most successful endeavor, being recognized by the State Bar and the ABA as the best Law Day program in our category. Years later, then Justice (later Chief) Weltner called me to discuss how much impact that Law Day event had on both of our careers, but the most interesting aspect of our conversation was his complaint about what is now a universally accepted and necessary convenience of our everyday lives—air conditioning. He went on to describe his early years of being a lawyer, when everyone had to get by with cooling off by blocks of ice driven by fans or perhaps a jump in the lake at Piedmont Park. The courts were not open for trials and hearings during the summer months, and life for trial lawyers back then consisted of reading the law, catching up on appellate decisions, and perhaps writing for publications during those hot and humid periods. Air conditioning made the courthouses cool and bearable in the summertime, and consequently they could remain open for the business of trials and related litigation, now of course a requirement. As Judge Luther Alverson used to say, the lights are on (and presumably the a/c) so I am ready to try your case. Ah, for the quietness of a (cool) summer day without the hustle and bustle of court appearances, just so I can keep up with my Daily Reports that remain piled high on my desk! Steve Gotlieb Atlanta Legal Aid Society Jimmy Carter Spoke at the Atlanta Bar Annual Meeting In May 1992, at the Atlanta Bar Annual Meeting, we were privileged to have Past President (and Atlanta Bar Social Member) Jimmy Carter as the main speaker. I served on a commission he appointed when he was Governor. As you know, the Annual Meeting is always well-attended and this was especially so. We were, as always, on a tight schedule and so with more than a little heartburn, Diane O'Steen and I arrived at Hotel Penta in advance of the noon starting time only to find the doors to the ballroom locked! It seemed the Secret Service had underestimated the amount of time it would take for its agents to "sweep" the room. Diane and I made small talk with t