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Textual folder
Bernard L. Boutin Personal Papers
BLBPP-MF23-002
This folder contains material pertaining to speeches given by individuals other than Bernard Boutin. The speeches were collected by Boutin along with related correspondence. Authors include James K. Carr of San Francisco; Senator Thomas J. McIntyre of New Hampshire; Governor John W. King of New Hampshire; Philip L. Graham of the Washington Post; FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover; President John F. Kennedy; C. Douglas Dillon, Secretary of the Treasury; Charles J. Hitch, Assistant Secretary of Defense; and William McC. Martin, Jr., Chairman of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. There are also numerous White House press releases of remarks by President Johnson; the platform booklet from the 1964 Democratic National Convention; and three items published by the Democratic National Committee: "Some Hard Questions about the Civil Rights Act," "A Goldwater Primer in Five Parts," and "Goldwater Contradictions and Shifts." Note that file contains some draft statements about the General Services Administration that were written by Boutin for other government officials.
Textual folder
Bernard L. Boutin Personal Papers
BLBPP-MF14-018
This folder contains material pertaining to human rights and civil rights issues at the General Services Administration (GSA). Topics include implementation of the Civil Rights Act, an exhibit on "Eleanor Roosevelt and Human Rights" at the National Archives, employment of minorities in the federal government and the GSA specifically, non-discrimination in government contracts, equal employment opportunity, and desegregation in government-leased buildings. There are several reports and memoranda about GSA activities surrounding the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom, including one titled "Planning Report on Civil Rights Demonstration, August 28, 1963."
Textual folder
Bernard L. Boutin Personal Papers
BLBPP-MF10-015
This folder contains a booklet titled "To Join Hands," which is about the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom on August 28, 1963. It was published by the United States Information Service.