wolf, his most famous cases was korematsu versus the u.s.. how do you think coolidge would have respond to that case, which decided on japanese internment? what are some cases that really exemplify legal philosophy and might that philosophy how should that philosophy applied today? i don't i am not familiar with coolidge expressing himself in terms of legal philosophy. i know he practiced a small town type of mixed practice law. it curious to me, i've wondered whether he ever discussed legal philosophy with stone. i do not know about that. i'm sure he would have disagreed. as far as korematsu goes as well, here on, i believe, coolidge, out to the african-american community. he reached to the american indians. they were then called. i doubt that he would have that an entire community of at least to 100,000 people should be segregate it any more than. i know whether he expressed himself about the prejudice against germans during world war one, or at least i've forgotten if i read about that. but korematsu is definitely a black mark in our legal