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2.41 MB

Extraction Summary

12
People
3
Organizations
3
Locations
2
Events
2
Relationships
3
Quotes

Document Information

Type: Draft manuscript / memoir page
File Size: 2.41 MB
Summary

This document is page 48 of a draft manuscript (dated 4.2.12), likely written by Alan Dershowitz, recounting his time as a law clerk for Chief Judge David Bazelon in Washington D.C. starting in the summer of 1962. The text describes the political atmosphere of the Warren Court era and details Bazelon's social circle, specifically weekly lunches hosted by liquor distributor Milton Kronheim attended by Supreme Court Justices and Senators. The page concludes with the beginning of a joke about Kronheim's fame.

People (12)

Name Role Context
The Narrator Author/Law Clerk
Likely Alan Dershowitz based on biography (clerked for Bazelon 1962-63); describes himself as a young liberal lawyer ...
David Bazelon Chief Judge
Court of appeals judge, mentor to the narrator, socially connected figure in Washington.
Milton Kronheim Liquor Distributor / Host
Hosted weekly lunches for high-profile political and judicial figures; lived to 97.
Earl Warren Chief Justice
Guest at Kronheim's lunches.
Thurgood Marshall Justice
Guest at Kronheim's lunches.
William Brennan Justice
Guest at Kronheim's lunches.
William Douglas Justice
Guest at Kronheim's lunches.
J. Skelly Wright Judge
Guest at Kronheim's lunches.
Abe Ribacoff Senator
Guest at Kronheim's lunches.
Jacob Javits Senator
Guest at Kronheim's lunches.
Lee Harvey Oswald Historical Figure
Mentioned in opening sentence regarding his murder.
John F. Kennedy (JFK) President
Mentioned in the context of the Kennedy Administration and a joke about Kronheim.

Organizations (3)

Name Type Context
The Warren Court
Referenced as a period of liberal judicial activism.
Kennedy Administration
Time period when the narrator arrived in Washington (1962).
House Oversight Committee
Indicated by the footer stamp 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT'.

Timeline (2 events)

Summer 1962
Narrator arrives in Washington D.C. to clerk for Judge Bazelon.
Washington D.C.
Narrator David Bazelon
Weekly (approx 1962-1963)
Lunches at Milton Kronheim's office restaurant.
Kronheim's office restaurant

Locations (3)

Location Context
Setting of the narrative.
Location of weekly lunches.
Mentioned in a joke about Kronheim.

Relationships (2)

Narrator (Likely Alan Dershowitz) Clerk/Mentor David Bazelon
Narrator calls Bazelon a mentor and says he was his senior clerk and protégé.
David Bazelon Friend/Social Milton Kronheim
Bazelon attended weekly lunches at Kronheim's office.

Key Quotes (3)

"It was a heady time for a young liberal lawyer to be in the nation’s capital."
Source
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_017135.jpg
Quote #1
"He saw me as a protégé and he took me with him everywhere that it was appropriate for me to go."
Source
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_017135.jpg
Quote #2
"“There was a guy named Kronehiem who bragged he was so famous he could be photographed with “anyone in the world.”"
Source
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_017135.jpg
Quote #3

Full Extracted Text

Complete text extracted from the document (3,109 characters)

4.2.12
WC: 191694
assassinated and Lee Harvey Oswald was murdered. I had personal connections to each of these momentous events.
Those years were also eventful in terms of judicial decisions. Many of the most important civil rights, criminal law and freedom of speech cases were decided during my tenure as a law clerk. It was a period of liberal judicial activism—the Zenith (or for those more admiring of judicial restraint, the Nadir) of The Warren Court. It was a heady time for a young liberal lawyer to be in the nation’s capital.
My year of clerking for Judge Bazelon
Even more important than my substantive experiences in working with these two important judges, was the personal impact they both had on my life. Each was to serve as a mentor, though in very different ways, throughout their entire lives. Indeed, I continue to be influenced by them even years after their deaths.
I arrived in Washington during the summer of 1962, in the midst of the Kennedy Administration. Although Judge David Bazelon was a court of appeals judge—early in my clerkship he became Chief Judge—he was at the center of Washington life, both socially and politically. He knew everyone. He socialized regularly with Senators, Congressmen, cabinet members, White House staffers, Supreme Court justices, diplomats and other movers and shakers.
He had two clerks, but I was very much his senior clerk, and he didn’t much like or respect his junior clerk. He saw me as a protégé and he took me with him everywhere that it was appropriate for me to go. At the center of his social life were the weekly lunches at the office restaurant of a local liquor distributor named Milton Kronheim, whose personal chef would prepare simple but superb lunches for “Milton’s boys.” Kronheim himself was in his mid-seventies when I met him. (He would live to 97, pitching in his weekly company softball game until his late 80s). His frequent guests, in addition to Judge Bazelon, included Chief Justice Earl Warren, Justices Thurgood Marshall, William Brennan and William Douglas, Judges J. Skelly Wright, Senators Abe Ribacoff and Jacob Javits and many other judicial and political notables. The small lunchroom where Milton’s entertained had photographs of Kronheim with every president since Harding. Hundreds of other wall-to-wall photographs showed him with just about every important political, business and sports figure of the Twentieth Century.
Judge Bazelon once told me a joke about Kronheim, which, with a change of name, from Kronheim to “Katz,” became a standard part of the Jewish joke cannon.
“There was a guy named Kronehiem who bragged he was so famous he could be photographed with “anyone in the world.” A skeptical friend challenged him. “You can’t be photographed with the President!” Within days, Kronheim was standing on the White House balcony with JFK, as photographers snapped pictures.
“Ok,” the friend conceded “maybe in the United States, but not in other parts of the world!” He then issued another challenge: “You could never be photographed with Israel’s Prime Minister
48
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_017135

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