Club Presents its 2007 Harold Hitz Burton Award to Bruce W. Sanford, Esq.

Club Presents its 2007 Harold Hitz Burton Award to Bruce W. Sanford, Esq.

Club Presents its 2007 Harold Hitz Burton Award to Bruce W. Sanford, Esq.

The Club met January 23 at the law offices of Baker & Hostetler on Connecticut Ave., N. W., in Washington to present its 50th Anniversary Year Harold Hitz Burton Award to Bruce W. Sanford. Bruce is one of the nation's preeminent attorneys on the First Amendment, libel and media law.

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Club members filled the elegant Sugarman Room of the law firm where Managing Partner Bill Schweitzer welcomed them and made remarks on how the firm was started by Newton D. Baker in Cleveland shortly before he was called to Washington to serve as President Wilson's Secretary of War. Stuart Taylor, a long-time friend of Bruce and a writer for the National Journal, then humorously but poignantly outlined Bruce's career defending journalists, newspapers and politicians, as well as his civic and community work. Trying to summarize Bruce Sanford in three minutes is like trying to summarize the Roman Empire in three minutes, Taylor said at one point. He also recounted a time when a federal judge, after hearing an appellant argument from Bruce, admitted that he had been wrong and reversed his previous decision.

Brooke Stoddard presented the Award to Bruce, who then discussed his work, beginning in the early 1970s in Cleveland and his successful efforts to expand the Cuyahoga County Library System. He pointed out the challenges that new technologies are imposing on existing law, which tends to change slowly, and described a sampling of the more than one thousand cases he has handled.

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Colleagues of Bruce arranged for two cakes in Bruce's honor to celebrate his receiving the 2007 Burton Award. One had a picture of Bruce as a young attorney in Cleveland and was the source of a good deal of amusement.

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Literate City

We all knew it anyway, but Cleveland ranks as one of the most literate cities in the nation. Taking into account such factors as branch libraries per capita, volumes per capita, library book circulation per capita, Cleveland ranks 14th. Cleveland ranks 1st in library support, holdings and utilization. See the Central Connecticut State University study at www.ccsu.edu/amlc06/Library/top10.htm

Reflections from 50 Years of the Cleveland Club of Washington, D.C.

Since March 20th, 1957, the Cleveland Club of Washington D.C. has hosted over one hundred gatherings, mainly luncheons, featuring such honored speakers as George Szell, Anthony J. Celebrezze, Frank J. Lausche, George V. Voinovich, and Harold H. Burton, to name but a few. As the club prepares to celebrate the 50th year bringing together Washington men and women who share a keen interest in Cleveland, we share some highlights from our past, and encourage members to make suggestions of speakers and activities for the future. Please feel free to contact club president Brooke Stoddard with your suggestions for the future, as you enjoy these reflections from the past.

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The Cleveland Club representatives above are: The man in the middle is the incomparable Otto Graham. The men on left and right are Club founders Ed Seitz and Joe Gambatese. This Club meeting was held in the late 1960s.

The Cleveland Club representatives above are: The man in the middle is the incomparable Otto Graham. The men on left and right are Club founders Ed Seitz and Joe Gambatese. This Club meeting was held in the late 1960s.