|
Correspondence to Hurst from La Follette and Sinykin Law Offices regarding the court limitations of governor partial veto authority. |
Correspondence |
|
Correspondence from Hurst to the Rockefeller Foundation regarding a proposal for a constitutional history program. |
Correspondence |
|
Correspondence from Hurst to Professor Stephen B. Presser of Northwestern University regarding legal history. |
Correspondence |
|
Correspondence from Hurst to Professor Avi Soifer of Boston University regarding a manuscript review. |
Correspondence |
|
Correspondence between Hurst and Dr. William F. Thompson of the Wisconsin State Historical Society regarding volume VI in the History of Wisconsin series. |
Correspondence |
|
Correspondence to Mari J. Matsuda of the Georgetown University Law Center regarding her work involving law and gender, racial and ethnic divisions. |
Correspondence |
|
Correspondence from Hurst to Pendleton Herring of the Social Science Research Council regarding funding for a study of TVA. |
Correspondence |
|
Correspondence to Hurst from Tom Moses expressing appreciation of a speech delivered by Hurst. |
Correspondence |
|
Correspondence from Hurst to Williams College recommending a Harold Metzgar. |
Correspondence |
|
Academic Staff Scholarly Activities Report. |
Document |
|
Correspondence between Hurst and Philip H. Person regarding his opinion of Hurst and Prof. Bunn's discussion of the place and function of the 5th amendment. |
Correspondence |
|
Royalty Statement from Little Brown and Company regarding The Growth of American Law. |
Correspondence |
|
Report of the Association of American Law Schools' Committee on the Teaching of Law in the Liberal Arts Curriculum, 1955 and Hurst's outline for the encouragement of research and writing in the liberal arts curriculum. |
Report |
|
Correspondence between Hurst and Rodney Robertson regarding Little, Brown, and Company Publishers' decision not to print the Hurst Lectures. |
Correspondence |
|
Correspondence between Hurst and H.M. Yates concerning West Publishing Company's decision not to print the Hurst Lectures. |
Correspondence |
|
Correspondence between Hurst, Scott Van Alstyne, John Tichie, J.D. Hyman, Edward Levi, Harold C. Havighurst, and E. Blythe Stason concerning Alstyne's interest in a law faculty position. |
Correspondence |
|
Correspondence from Lewis R. Mills to Hurst requesting a transcript. |
Correspondence |
|
Correspondence between Hurst and Harold C. Havighurst regarding possible publishers to print the Hurst Lectures after Little, Brown declined to publish. |
Correspondence |
|
Correspondence between Hurst and Lewis R. Mills concerning Mills' thesis. |
Correspondence |
|
Correspondence between Hurst and Allan H. Perley concerning the recommendation of a law student to the Office of Legislative Counsel. |
Correspondence |
|
Correspondence between Hurst and Melvin G. Shimm discussing a submitted article to the Journal of Legal Education. |
Correspondence |
|
Correspondence between Hurst and Harold J. Berman regarding a round table meeting of the members of the Committee on the Teaching of Law in Liberal Arts Curriculum. |
Correspondence |
|
Correspondence between Hurst and William B. Lockhart discussing the possibility of the University of Minnesota Law School selecting Jack Ritchie as the school's dean. |
Correspondence |
|
Correspondence to Hurst from Thompson Webb, Jr. informing Hurst that the University of Wisconsin Press will publish the Hurst Lectures. |
Correspondence |
|
Correspondence between Hurst and Arthur Wood concerning Wood's manuscript and application for a Fulbright Research award to study criminal law in England. |
Correspondence |