Henri Bourassa's speech, La Langue Française au Canada: ses droits, sa nécessité, ses avantages, given at the National Monument in Montréal, 19 May 1915. The speech was printed that same year by the Imprimerie du Devoir in Montréal.
This collection contains materials relating to Hon. Clement Deschambault's law enforcement and political careers in the city of Biddeford. It is comprised of clippings, correspondence, photographs, awards, and speeches he delivered in both French and English. The bulk of the materials cover the years 1957 to 1964.
Draft of a letter from Madeleine Giguère to Walter Fridinger, acting President of the University of Maine at Portland-Gorham, announcing her resignation from Affirmative Action Committee. There is a note that the letter was never sent.
Letter from Madeleine Giguère, Associate Professor at the University of Maine at Portland-Gorham, to Helen Batchelor, Coordinator of Equal Opportunity at the University of Maine at Portland-Gorham, concerning Franco-Americans and their recognition as minorities under the Affirmative Action Program.
Letter from Madeleine Giguère, Associate Professor at the University of Maine at Portland-Gorham, to Ruth Benson, Director of Equal Opportunity at the Office of the Chancellor, concerning the collection of minority group-type data for Franco-Americans.
The fifth in a five-part series in which authors select and discuss a book that impacted their life. Russell Banks discusses Jack Kerouac's On the Road. Also included on the disc are other segments of the show, The Connection, broadcast on Boston NPR station WBUR.