Summary of Telephone Conversation Between Mason Green and Thomas Corcoran
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OCR Page 1 of 2PR SUMMARY
Washington, D. C.
June 18, 1945
5:00pm MASON GREEN to CORCORAN.
C--You've got this prospective permanent retirement in front of
you. That must keep you buoyed up.
G--Well, I feel very good today on account of the BRIDGES decision.
C--I thought you would like that. If you noticed, FELIX was wrong.
G--Yeah, yeah, yeah. That's the last straw, boy.
C--Who was with BILL?
G--Well, he had BLACK, RUTLEDGE, MURPHY, REED. The good five.
MURPHY wrote a separate concurrence.
C--I told you REED was a good guy, didn't I?
G--Yeah, I agreed with you. I was sorry as hell you lost those
Bundists cases. I can't understand why
C--The Bund cases. That broke my brother's heart. We worked
really hard on those cases, fellow.
G--That was terrible.
C--How did the A.P. come out today?
G--I understand the A.P. took a beating. The decision below was
affirmed.
C--FRANCIS won?
G--That's right. It was a 5 to 3 decision.
C--Well, there's only one reason I'd be glad about that among
others and that is, I'm glad to see FRANCIS come out with
two great victories. If he came out with A.P. and if he
came out with Montgomery Ward, as he did, boy, he goes out
justified, doesn't he?
G--Yeah, but he took one hell of a beating today on the BRIDGES
case. That's where he got stupid advice, Tom.
C--Listen, he didn't get stupid advice.
G--Boy, I wouldn't have taken that beating from anybody.
C--He didn't get advice. He got orders.
G--I saw him sit in that court this morning, Tom, listening to
that opinion of DOUGLAS and taking the beating of his life
and then MURPHY looked at him when MURPHY wrote his separate
concurrence and he said, "I'm calling down upon you the
wrath of the Constitution" - in those words.
C--Yeah, I know, but it wasn't out of him.
G--That poor boy took it.
C--Well, he has to take it.
G--And for a guy that's supposed to be a liberal, to go out with
that sort of a stigma.
C--Yeah, I know, but on that one, boy, he had no choice. I told
you about that one.
G--Yeah but
, I don't believe it, Tom.
C--I know it. I know it, see. I know all about it.
G--Well, maybe I'll forgive him if I know the real facts.
C--Well, that's true. I know that's true. I told you that a
long time ago.
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