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Permission to publish or publicly disseminate reproductions of any material obtained from the University Archives must be secured from the University Archives and any additional copyright owners prior to such use. Please see Conditions Governing Reproduction and Use of Material for additional information.
Records of the Notre Dame Law School's Center for Civil and Human Rights, including reports, audio and video recordings, photographs, and printed material.
OPEN FOR USE.
Dropfiles containing all sorts of printed material (including reports, articles, magazines, newsletters, mailings, essays, transcriptions of addresses and speeches, clippings, press releases, etc.) by government offices, non-governmental organizations, interest groups, academics, and other individuals, concerning civil and human rights issues in the United States and around the world, mainly dating between the mid 1970s and early 1980s. Arranged alphabetically with many countries grouped by continent. All these files are open for use.
OPEN FOR USE.
Almost entirely briefs and opinions of US Federal and Supreme Court cases relating to civil rights. Box ten is described in the William R. Valentine "Directory of the Theodore M. Hesburgh Civil Rights Collection" (Notre Dame, 1976), pages 371-384, and is arranged according to the description. Boxes eleven and twelve have been numbered in the same scheme as box ten but were neither arranged nor described; boxes thirteen through sixteen are later material that was neither numbered, arranged, nor described by the Civil Rights Center. Boxes ten through thirteen have also been known as (parts of) the Howard A. Glickstein Collection. It is not clear if any of this court material deserves permanent retention. All are open for use.