TY - GEN AU - Blackmun,Harry A. TI - Harry A. Blackmun papers, KW - Bezoier, Robert A. KW - Bright, Myron H. KW - Burger, Warren E., KW - Connolly, Daniel C. KW - Eckman, James Russell, KW - Frankfurter, Felix, KW - Griswold, Erwin N. KW - Halladay, Henry Earnest, KW - Jewell, Russell C. KW - Keith, A. M., KW - Merry, Robert E. KW - Mersky, Roy M. KW - Morris, Norval KW - Sanborn, John Bell, KW - Simon, James F. KW - Turow, Scott KW - Wright, Charles Alan KW - Harvard Law School KW - Aspen Institute KW - Harvard University KW - Students KW - Judicial Conference of the United States KW - Advisory Committee on Judicial Activities KW - Mayo Association KW - Mayo Clinic KW - United Methodist Church (U.S.) KW - United States KW - Court of Appeals (8th Circuit) KW - Supreme Court KW - Abortion KW - Law and legislation KW - Administrative law KW - Adoption KW - Civil rights KW - Constitutional law KW - Corporal punishment KW - Criminal law KW - Fetal tissues KW - Research KW - Labor laws and legislation KW - Law KW - Practice of law KW - Minnesota KW - Minneapolis KW - Prisons KW - Reverse discrimination KW - Taxation KW - Watergate Affair, 1972-1974 KW - Saint Paul (Minn.) KW - History KW - Jurists KW - itoamc N1 - Open to research N2 - Correspondence, appointment books, memoranda, case files, legal papers, subject files, speeches, and writings chiefly documenting Blackmun's career as associate justice of the U.S. Supreme Court (1970-1994) and as judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals (8th Circuit). Also includes material relating to his boyhood in Saint Paul, Minn., his undergraduate and law school studies at Harvard University, his private law practice in Minneapolis, Minn., his work as counsel for the Mayo Clinic and Mayo Association, and his association with the Advisory Committee on Judicial Activities for the Judicial Conference of the United States, Aspen Institute, and the United Methodist Church; U.S. Court of Appeals case topics include taxation, civil rights, and labor, administrative, constitutional, and criminal law. Documents Blackmun's decision to declare the use of corporal punishment in prisons unconstitutional; Subjects in the Supreme Court files include abortion rights, adoption, research use of fetal tissues, reverse discrimination, and legal issues stemming from the Watergate affair; Correspondents include Robert A. Bezoier, Myron H. Bright, Warren E. Burger, Daniel C. Connolly, James Russell Eckman, Felix Frankfurter, Erwin N. Griswold, Henry Earnest Halladay, Russell C. Jewell, A. M. Keith, Robert E. Merry, Roy M. Mersky, Norval Morris, John Bell Sanborn, James F. Simon, Scott Turow, and Charles Alan Wright UR - http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.mss/eadmss.ms003030 UR - http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.mss/eadmss.ms003030.3 UR - http://www.loc.gov/rr/mss/blackmun/ ER -