|
1
|
JUDGE BRUNE: From what I understand under your
|
|
2
|
proposal.
|
|
3
|
THE CHAIRMAN: Judge Niles can tell us pre-
|
|
4
|
cisely how it is done.
|
|
5
|
JUDGE PROCTOR: Doesn't Judge Reardon sit for-
|
|
6
|
ever?
|
|
7
|
JUDGE. NILES: Yes. He is not only my friend.
|
|
8
|
He is a friend of a lot of persons present here. He
|
|
9
|
was, he is not now, he is down on the Supreme Court of
|
|
10
|
Massachusetts.
|
|
11
|
JUDGE BRUNE: Supreme Justice Court it is called
|
|
12
|
there .
|
|
13
|
JUDGE NILES: That is right:. That is as
|
|
14
|
clumsy a title as Supreme Court of Appeals, I think.
|
|
15
|
JUDGE BRUNE: Slightly redundant, but go ahead.
|
|
16
|
JUDGE NILES: He has all the powers of an
|
|
17
|
associate judge. He has all of the administrative powers
|
|
18
|
that Judge Brune was mentioning. I talked to him at
|
|
19
|
some length about what he actually did. He said he
|
|
20
|
spends about two-thirds of his time in his administrative
|
|
21
|
duties. He spends the other third of his time in the trial
|
BiV.>.cre 1. M.r,!. = J