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Guide To Social Security ARCHIVES

Papers of Wilbur J. Cohen

 

 

 

Information from Online Catalog

Author/Creator:

Cohen, Wilbur J. (Wilbur Joseph), 1913-1987.

Title:

Papers, 1930-1987.

Quantity:

109.8 c.f. (279 archives boxes),
4 tape recordings, and
photographs; plus
unprocessed additions of 4.2 c.f. and
43 photographs.

Summary:

Papers, mainly 1935 to 1979, of an official in the Social Security Administration (1935-1956), assistant secretary, undersecretary, and secretary of the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare (1961-1969), professor of social work (1956-1960), professor of education and public welfare and dean of the School of Education at the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor (1969-1979), and founder and co-chairman of the Save Our Security coalition. Included are appointment books, personal and professional correspondence, memoranda, reports, minutes, draft legislation, testimony, task force clippings, memoirs, writings and speeches, interview transcripts, photographs, and sound recordings.
Prominent correspondents include Arthur Altmeyer, Robert Ball, J. Douglas Brown, Nelson Cruikshank, John Dingell, Paul Douglas, Robert Doughton, Arthur Flemming, John Fogarty, Aime Forand, John Gardner, Walter George, Burr Harrison, Lister Hill, Hubert Humphrey, Leo Irwin, Henry Jackson, Lester Johnson, Thomas Kean, John F. Kennedy, Edward Kennedy, Robert Kerr, Russell Long, George McGovern, Wilbur Mills, Wayne Morse, Robert Myers, Carl Perkins, Claude Pepper, J. J. Pickle, Merlyn Pitzele, Henry Reuss, Alice Rivlin, Sargent Shriver, Theodore Sorensen, Robert Wagner, Elizabeth Wickenden, and Edwin Witte.
The files document the expansion of the Social Security system; the establishment of the Medicare program; social welfare policy and legislation during the Kennedy and Johnson administrations; Cohen's career as a federal official, academic, expert and consultant on Social Security; and his activities as a writer, speaker, and advocate of government health, education, and social programs.
The processed portion of this collection is described above and dates 1930-1987; there are unprocessed additions.

Finding aid:

Register.

Subjects:

Altmeyer, Arthur Joseph, 1891- .
Ball, Robert M.
Brown, James Douglas, 1898- .
Cruikshank, Nelson H.
Dingell, John D.
Doughton, Robert Lee, 1863-1954.
Douglas, Paul Howard, 1892- .
Flemming, Arthur S.
Fogarty, John E., 1913-1967.
Forand, Aime Joseph, 1895-1972.
Gardner, John William, 1912- .
George, Walter F. (Walter Franklin), 1878-1959.
Harrison, B. P. (Burr Powell), 1904-1973.
Hill, Lister, 1894- .
Humphrey, Hubert H. (Hubert Horatio), 1911-1978.
Irwin, Leo Howard, 1917- .
Jackson, Henry M. (Henry Martin), 1912-1983.
Johnson, Lester R., 1901-1975.
Kean, Thomas H.
Kennedy, Edward Moore, 1932- .
Kennedy, John F. (John Fitzgerald), 1917-1963.
Kerr, Robert S. (Robert Samuel), 1896-1963.
Long, Russell B.
McGovern, George S. (George Stanley), 1922- .
Mills, Wilbur D. (Wilbur Daigh), 1909- .
Morse, Wayne L. (Wayne Lyman), 1900-1974.
Myers, Robert Julius, 1912- .
Pepper, Claude, 1900- .
Perkins, Carl Dewey, 1912-1984.
Pickle, J. J.
Pitzele, Merlyn S., 1911- .
Reuss, Henry S.
Rivlin, Alice M.
Shriver, Sargent, 1915- .
Sorensen, Theodore C.
Wagner, Robert F., 1877-1953.
Wickenden, Elizabeth, 1909- .
Witte, Edwin Emil, 1887-1960.
Democratic Party (U.S.)
Save Our Security.
United States. Dept. of Health, Education, and Welfare.
United States. Social Security Administration.
University of Michigan.
Medicare.
Social problems.
Social security--United States.
United States--Politics and government.

Form/Genre:

Manuscript collection.
Photographs.
Sound recordings.
Speeches.

RLIN Number:

WIHV84-A107

Location:

Archives Main Stacks

Call Number:

Mss 789

Shelf Location:

Box 1-279 MAD 4 /31/R1 - 32/B1, B6-D3

Location:

Archives Sound Holdings

Call Number:

Tape 1237A

Shelf Location:

4 tape recordings MAD Sound/Tape 1237A

Location:

Archives Visual Materials Holdings

Call Number:

Lot 3948-3949

Shelf Location:

Photographs MAD Icon/Lot 3948-3949

Location:

Z:Unprocessed Accessions

Call Number:

M92-046

Shelf Location:

MAD 2M/34/V4

Description:

Photographs of Cohen with his grandson Duncan Cohen, letters memorializing Cohen's accomplishments, address list for Cohen memorial service, and copies of books authored by Cohen. The book titles include "Social Security: Programs, Problems, and Policies" coauthored with William Haber; "Social Security: Universal or Selective?" coauthored with Milton Friedman; and "Readings in Social Security" coauthored with William Haber. Qty: 0.2 c.f. (1 archives box)

Location:

Z:Unprocessed Accessions

Call Number:

M94-347

Shelf Location:

MAD 3 /32/R7

Description:

Additions, 1952-1981 (mainly 1960-1979), including both professional and autobiographical writings; files documenting personal and professional travel, speeches, attendance at conferences, and other public appearances; miscellaneous incoming letters and memoranda; files re Cohen's participation in the electoral campaigns of Democratic Party candidates for the presidency, 1960 to 1972; materials re his service on the Task Force on National Health Insurance and the Commission on Unemployment Compensation; transcripts of oral histories done at Columbia (1974), University of Connecticut (1975), JFK Library (1972), and Harvard's JFK School of Government (1974); and an unpublished manuscript about Cohen by Peter Corning, including transcripts of Corning's interviews with Cohen. See box list with accession form. Qty: 3.0 c.f. (3 record center cartons)

Location:

Z:Unprocessed Accessions

Call Number:

M99-018

Shelf Location:

MAD 4 /44/A1 (box); MAD VMA (photos)

Description:

Additions, 1931-1987, including writings, speeches, personal and professional correspondence, appointment and memo books, publications and reference materials, and annual reports on Cohen's work at the University of Texas on indigent care. Photographs in the addition include formal and informal portraits (particularly with presidents Johnson and Kennedy), and snapshots of Cohen at the 1981 Social Security rally in Washington. Also included is Eloise Cohen's diary of her trip to China in 1976. See box list with accession form. Qty: 1.0 c.f. (1 record center carton) and 43 photographs
Background Information

Register of the
WILBUR J.COHEN PAPERS, 1930-1987

COHEN, WILBUR J. (1913-1987). PAPERS, 1930-1987. 109.8 c.f. (279 archives boxes) 4 tape recordings, and photographs.



Abstract

Papers, mainly 1935 to 1979, of an official in the Social Security Administration (1935-1956), assistant secretary, undersecretary, and secretary of the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare (1961-1969), professor of social work (1956-1960), professor of education and public welfare and dean of the School of Education at the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor (1969-1979), and founder and co-chairman of the Save Our Security coalition. Included are appointment books, personal and professional correspondence, memoranda, reports, minutes, draft legislation, testimony, task force material, draft presidential messages, press releases, printed material, clippings, memoirs, writings and speeches, interview transcripts, photographs, and sound recordings. Prominent correspondents include Arthur Altmeyer, Robert Ball, J. Douglas Brown, Nelson Cruikshank, John Dingell, Paul Douglas, Robert Doughton, Arthur Flemming, John Fogarty, Aime Forand, John Gardner, Walter George, Burr Harrison, Lister Hill, Hubert Humphrey, Leo Irwin, Henry Jackson, Lester Johnson, Thomas Kean, John F. Kennedy, Edward Kennedy, Robert Kerr, Russell Long; George McGovern, Wilbur Mills, Wayne Morse, Robert Myers, Carl Perkins, Claude Pepper, J.J. Pickle, Merlyn Pitzele, Henry Reuss, Alice Rivlin, Sargent Shriver, Theodore Sorensen, Robert Wagner, Elizabeth Wickenden, and Edwin Witte. The files document the expansion of the Social Security system: the establishment of the Medicare program: social welfare policy and legislation during the Kennedy and Johnson administrations; Cohen's career as a federal official, academic, expert and consultant on Social Security: and his activities as a writer, speaker, and advocate of government health, education, and social programs.

Presented by Wilbur J. and Eloise Cohen, Ann Arbor, Michigan and Austin, Texas, 1953-1991.

M60-193; M61-1, -12, -20, 20-1, 20-2, 20-3, 20-4, 20-5: M64-234: M65-002, -050, -176, -349: M66-061, -174, -385: M67-014, -116, -116.1, -166.2, -166.3, -166.4: M68-073, -083, -104, -126, -392: M69-037: M70-270: M71-140: M76-161, -475: M77-244, -279: M78-410: M80-660: M81-149, -216, -263, -271, -472: M82-287, -321; M84-148, -152, -316, -393: M85-410; M87-519: M88-036: M89-378: M91-097.

Processed in 1962 by Margret Hafstad and in 1991 by Cindy Knight.
Copyright information is not available.



TABLE OF CONTENTS

ABSTRACT
BIOGRAPHY
SCOPE AND CONTENT
CONTAINER LIST
PERSONAL PAPERS
Appointment books
Biographical Information
Clippings
Correspondence
Altmeyer, Arthur J.
Alphabetical
Chronological
"Cohen, Wilbur J."
Congratulations
Memoirs
Oral History Transcripts
Photographs
Sound Recordings
Yearbooks, Lincoln High School

PROFESSIONAL PAPERS
Social Security Board /Administration
Correspondence
General
Officie/Bureau Files
Social Security-Related Material
Other Agencies
University of Michigan, 1956-1961
Correspondence
Working Files
Department of Health, Education, and Welfare
Correspondence
Chronological
By Office
Departmental Files
Administration
Civil Rights
Education
Health
Poverty
Social Security
Welfare
Legislation
Bills
Planning
Memoranda
Non-HEW Activities
Phone Calls
Presidential Messages
Task Forces
University of Michigan 1969-1979
Alphabetical Files
Chronological Correspondence
Save Our Security, 1979-1984

WRITINGS AND SPEECHES
Articles and Addresses
Drafts and Loose Material
Memos and Reports

APPENDICES
Index to Articles and Addresses
Index to Memos and Reports

SEPARATION RECORDS


Biography
Wilbur Joseph Cohen, a founder of the Social Security system, was born on June 10, 1913 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, son of Aaron and Bessie (Rubenstein) Cohen. He grew up in Milwaukee's inner city, where the Cohens owned a series of small businesses. In 1930 Wilbur Cohen enrolled in the University of Wisconsin's Experimental College located on the Madison campus. Upon completing the college's two year program, Cohen transferred to the Economics Department, where he earned a Bachelor of Philosophy (Ph.B.) degree in 1934. Cohen's thesis "A History of the International Association of Machinists," won the John L. Mitchell Prize for most outstanding thesis in industrial relations. In addition, he wrote editorials and articles for the campus newspaper, the Daily Cardinal.

Immediately following his graduation in 1934, Cohen went to Washington, D.C. to serve as a research assistant to his major professor, Edwin E. Witte. Witte, an economist and former Wisconsin government official, was executive director of President Roosevelt's Committee on Economic Security, the cabinet-level body charged with drafting the original Social Security Act.

After Congress approved the Social Security Act in 1935, Cohen remained in Washington, D.C. as technical advisor to Arthur J. Altmeyer, Chairman of the Social Security Board (1935-1946), later Commissioner of Social Security (1946-1953). As a research specialist and technical advisor, Cohen was responsible for analyzing and developing legislative proposals and evaluating programs administered by the Board such as old-age insurance, public assistance, and unemployment compensation.

In 1938 Cohen married Eloise Bittel, a professional social worker from Texas. They raised three sons, Christopher, Bruce, and Stuart.

By 1949, Cohere was Altmeyer's chief legislative strategist and liaison in the Congress. He also cultivated important ties to organized labor, professional associations, and other outside interest groups. During the 1950s he played a key role in obtaining passage of amendments which increased social security benefit levels and broadened the program's coverage. He also helped to formulate disability and national health insurance provisions which were later passed into law. In 1953, Cohen was named Director of the Social Security Administration's Division of Research and Statistics.

During his tenure with the Social Security Administration. Cohen held positions in two other federal advisory groups. In 1946-1947, he served as Director of Research to the Advisory Committee on Universal Training, established by President Truman to explore the possibility of establishing a system of compulsory military training in the U.S. Cohen also chaired the Wage Stabilization Board's Tripartite Committee on Health, Welfare, and Pensions, which formulated economic stabilization policies for employee benefit plans from 1950 to 1951. In 1952 and 1953, he chaired a separate committee which administered these stabilization policies. In addition, Cohen represented the United States at six international conferences on social security and two international labor conferences (1946 and 1951).

By the time Cohen left the Division of Research and Statistics in 1956 to become a professor of public welfare administration at the University of Michigan-Ann Arbor; he was regarded as the nation's leading expert on Social Security and an authority on public assistance, federal health insurance, aging, and unemployment compensation. As such, Cohen continued to play an active role in shaping social welfare policy and legislation both at the state and national level. He was an advisor to G. Mennen Williams, governor of Michigan, and chairman of the Governor's Public Health Advisory Committee. Due largely to Cohen's influence, Michigan became the first state to implement a program of medical assistance for the aged. Cohen travelled frequently to Washington, D.C. as a consultant to the Senate Committee on Labor and Public Welfare, the Department of Labor, and several divisions of the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare. On a less formal basis, he advised individual members of Congress, such as Wilbur Mills, Aime Forand, Walter George, John Fogarty, Robert Kerr, and John F. Kennedy.

In 1960, President-elect John F. Kennedy appointed Cohen chairman of his Task Force on Health and Social Security, a group charged with defining the new administration's legislative priorities. One year later, Kennedy named Cohen assistant secretary for legislation of HEW. For the next 4 1/2 years, Cohen formulated, evaluated, and approved legislative proposals, acted as departmental liaison to Congress and the White House, drafted presidential messages, and testified, before congressional committees. He oversaw the enactment of nearly 65 major legislative proposals, including such significant new measures as the Public Assistance and Social Security Amendments of 1961 and 1962, the Higher Education Facilities, Mental Retardation Facilities, Vocational Education, and Clean Air Acts of 1963, and the Economic Opportunity Act of 1964. Cohen was the chief architect and legislative strategist behind the 1965 amendments to the Social Security Act which established the Medicare and Medicaid programs.

Shortly after the adoption of this landmark legislation, President Johnson promoted Cohen to Undersecretary of HEW, where he was responsible for coordinating major polity issues between the executive branch and Congress, and he served as chief public spokesman for HEW programs and initiatives. When HEW Secretary John Gardner resigned in 1968, Johnson named Cohen to the top cabinet post.

After the election of President Nixon in 1969, Cohen returned to academics and the University of Michigan, where he was appointed dean of the School of Education. Cohen also resumed teaching and research as professor of public welfare administration. In 1979 he retired from the dean's office at Michigan to become the Sid W. Richardson professor of public affairs at the Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs in Austin, Texas.

As a private citizen, Cohen was consistent in his efforts to influence federal social welfare policies, through congressional testimony, appointments to federal advisory bodies, leadership in Democratic policy groups and professional associations, writing, consulting, and public speaking. In 1975 and 1976, Cohen was elected president of the American Public Welfare Association, and in this capacity advocated increased federal spending for the poor and elderly. In 1977, President Carter named Cohen chairman of the National Commission on Unemployment Compensation, established to study the adequacy of unemployment programs and develop alternatives. Also in 1977 Cohen joined President Carter's Task Force on Education and from 1978 to 1981 served on the National Commission on Social Security.

In 1979, Cohen formed Save Our Security (SOS), a coalition of organizations representing the elderly, poor, women, minorities, and labor to lobby against the Carter administration's proposals to reduce disability benefits and funding for welfare programs. Composed of over one hundred groups such as the National Organization of Women, the AFL-CIO, and the National Conference of Catholic Charities, the coalition succeeded in blocking many of the proposed reductions. During the 1980s, SOS continued its efforts to defend all aspects of the Social Security system, including Medicare and Medicaid, from budget cutbacks sought by the Reagan administration. Cohen co-chaired the organization with Arthur S. Flemming, former Secretary of HEW under Eisenhower.

Throughout his career as a government official, professor, consultant, and administrator, Cohen was an extremely prolific writer and a popular public speaker. He co-authored and edited several books, and published dozens of articles on Social Security, welfare, aging, education, and health care policies. Cohen received over thirty awards and honorary degrees in recognition of his contributions in these fields and for his long and distinguished record of public service.

In 1987, at the age of 73, Cohere died of a heart attack while attending a symposium in Seoul, South Korea.

Scope and Content
The Cohen papers at the State Historical Society of Wisconsin are a rich source for tracing the expansion of the Social Security system, especially the formulation and adoption of the amendments to the Social Security Act which established Medicare and Medicaid in 1965. They furnish considerable insight into the development of the social welfare policies of the Kennedy and Johnson administrations. They also provide extensive evidence of Cohen's lifelong involvement in social welfare legislation and policy.

The papers thoroughly document Cohen's career from 1935 to 1979 as a government official; his role in state and federal advisory bodies: his activities as a consultant, writer, and speaker: and his participation in advocacy groups and professional associations. Two phases of Cohen's academic career, first as a professor from 1956 to 1960 and then as a dean at the University of Michigan from 1969 to 1979 are extremely well represented. However, the Bentley Library in Michigan holds a segment of Cohen's papers which document certain aspects of his work as a dean, his involvement in school desegregation cases in Michigan, and his participation in the Governor's Task Force on Prevention of Abuse in State Institutions.

Some of Cohen's activities after 1979, most notably his role in Save Our Security and his work for presidential commissions, are well documented by the collection. Far less exhaustive are the records of his teaching career after 1979. Cohen's office files from the University of Texas which pertained to his professorship at the London B. Johnson School of Public Affairs were donated to the Lyndon B. Johnson Library. However, the collection here at the SHSW does contain some correspondence regarding this position. Documentation of Cohen's career prior to 1935 is also fragmentary. Some memoranda, reports, statements, and personal accounts filed among the WRITINGS AND SPEECHES reflect his work for the Committee on Economic Security. In addition, Cohen's memoirs include some recollections of his experiences with the committee. The Edwin Witte Papers held by the SHSW also contribute some insight into Cohen's role as Witte's research assistant during this period.

In addition to the Witte Papers, there are a number of other research collections held by the SHSW which are closely related to the Cohen Papers. The papers of Arthur J. Altmeyer, Merlyn S. Pitzele, Nelson Cruikshank, and Elizabeth Wickenden contain correspondence from Cohen and in the case of the Cruikshank papers, material regarding Save Our Security. There is also a transcript of an oral interview with Cohen located in the Unemployment Compensation Oral History Project, and an audiotape of a speech Cohen gave on medical economics can be found with the records of the American Institute of the History of Pharmacy.

Records of the Experimental College, held by the Archives of the University of Wisconsin-Madison include several files on Cohen. These contain reports and papers he wrote as a student as well as detailed evaluations of his character, performance, and abilities written by faculty advisors. Most interesting is a highly introspective autobiographical paper in which Cohen described at length the environment of his youth in Milwaukee.

The collection is divided into three series, PERSONAL PAPERS, PROFESSIONAL PAPERS, and WRITINGS AND SPEECHES.



PERSONAL PAPERS

Appointment Books (Boxes 1-5)

PERSONAL PAPERS begin with appointment books which briefly list Cohen's daily engagements from 1940 to 1960 and from 1969 to 1979. A few also served as diaries and include newspaper clippings and longer narrative passages where Cohen expressed thoughts or described activities in more detail.

Biographical Information (Box 5)

Two folders of Biographical Information contain resumes, biographical sketches, clippings, award certificates, memorials and other materials which summarize Cohen's career and achievements. Also included here are a few scattered documents, such as grade reports, from Cohen's college years.

Correspondence (Boxes 10-22)

The bulk of Cohen's PERSONAL PAPERS consists of chronologically and alphabetically-arranged correspondence. With the exception of a few letters dating from 1935, both files were created while he was assistant secretary of HEW and include incoming and copies of outgoing letters from friends and associates, cards, invitations, thank-you notes, and correspondence regarding articles, speaking engagements, and other non-official activities. While the two files of correspondence are similar in terms of subject, the chronological file contains relatively more incoming correspondence: the alphabetical file contains more outgoing mail. The outgoing correspondence, which was typed by a secretary, is relatively terse and formal: it provides little insight into Cohen's thoughts, activities, or personal relationships. Letters from friends and associates are more lengthy, and the letters from Arthur Altmeyer are especially detailed and informative. These have been filed separately and date from Altmeyer's departure from the Social Security Administration in 1953 until his death in 1972. They reflect Cohen's involvement with legislation, his role in the Social Security Administration, and his longstanding personal relationship with the former commissioner. A small quantity of correspondence regarding employment, family, and financial matters from 1962 to 1978 can be found under "Cohen, Wilbur J.", the heading used by Cohen himself, but again, little is revealed here about Cohen's family or personal life. Also included among the personal correspondence are voluminous files of congratulatory letters and telegrams from family, friends. colleagues, congressmen, and government officials. Material relating to the Senate's confirmation of his secretarial appointment can be found here under the heading "Confirmation".

Memoirs (See p.14 of the Container List)

The single richest source of information in the collection about Cohen's family history and personal life can be found among his memoirs. These consist of a series of hand and typewritten autobiographical fragments, anecdotes, and journal entries Cohen had arranged into chapters with a view towards eventual publication. Included are detailed recollections of his boyhood in Milwaukee, numerous accounts of professional and political experiences, and reflections on being a grandparent and growing older.

Oral History Transcripts (Box 23)

Additional biographical information can be found in the transcribed oral interviews conducted by presidential libraries. In these Cohen is asked to trace his career, to recount key political events, and to assess various individuals and administrations. Additional documentation of Cohen's boyhood and youth can be obtained from his Lincoln High School Yearbooks. These record his extracurricular activities, and the inscriptions from classmates reflect something of his personal relationships and standing at the school.

Photographs

The photographs listed among the PERSONAL PAPERS include group portraits of Cohen with his Experimental College class taken in 1931. Cohen with the Social Security Board taken prior to 1953, and Cohen receiving HEW's distinguished service award in 1956. Other photos depict Cohen with President Johnson, his 1968 swearing-in as secretary of HEW, and Cohen attending conferences marking the thirty-fifth and fortieth anniversaries of the Social Security Act held in 1965 and 1970. Photographs are all located in the Visual and Sound Archives.

Sound Recordings

Two sound recordings conclude the list of PERSONAL PAPERS. One is a tape of a reception for Cohen held at HEW in January 1969 commemorating his service to the department: the other a ceremony at which his portrait was unveiled.

PROFESSIONAL PAPERS

Cohen's office files from the Social Security Administration, HEW, the University of Michigan, and the Save Our Security (SOS) Coalition are grouped under the heading PROFESSIONAL PAPERS and are arranged chronologically by period.

Social Security Administration (Bones 25-54)

The Social Security Administration files document Cohen's work as technical advisor to Arthur Altmeyer and as director of research and legislative liaison for that administration, as well as his work for the Wage Stabilization Board and the President's Commission on Universal Training. Although these papers date from 1935 to 1955, the period from 1940 to 1955 is best represented. With the exception of the correspondence files, Social Security Administration subseries have been arranged alphabetically by subject.

Correspondence (Boxes 25-32)

These files include incoming and copies of outgoing correspondence and memoranda arranged chronologically. The memoranda (blue copies) are primarily from Cohen (or prepared by Cohen for Altmeyer's signature) to others in the SSA. These files are the richest source of information in the collection about Cohen's activities and role in the SSA and are complemented by the Altmeyer correspondence listed with the PERSONAL PAPERS.

General Files (Bones 33-40)

The Social Security Administration Correspondence files are followed by General files which contain memoranda to Cohen from others in the SSA, white copies of memoranda, some advisory committee minutes, reports, statistics, analyses of bills, legislative proposals, suggestions for testimony, and floor statements prepared for the Social Security Board/Administration or relating to the agency as a whole. The files are arranged alphabetically by record type or subject. Much of this material concerns the expansion of the social security system. Presidential messages and reports of the Social Security Board which Cohen helped to draft deal almost exclusively with this topic. Of particular interest in the files on legislation are proposals, specifications, and analyses of national health insurance bills from the 1940s. Records of the Advisory Council on Social Security to which Cohen was technical advisor are fragmentary and incomplete, consisting mainly of minutes from 1936 and 1937. (Cohen deposited most of his papers regarding the Advisory Council at Cornell.)

Office/Bureau Files (Boxes 40-51)

The Social Security Administration Office/Bureau files variously contain memos received by Cohen, reports, statistics, drafts of legislation, white copies of correspondence and memoranda, and advisory committee minutes pertaining to specific departments or programs within SSA. Topics include program evaluation, development, and coordination, coverage, costs, benefit levels, and legislation.

Social Security-Related Materials and Reports (Boxes 51-54)

Most of the files entitled "Social Security-related" consist of research reports Cohen generated or data he collected on various topics. Also included here is a record of the world trip he made to study social welfare. The file contains reports on social welfare in Japan, India, Pakistan. Thailand, and the Philippines based on Cohen's first-hand observations. Evidence here of Cohen's participation in the Inter-American Conferences on Social Security is fragmentary; the file is supplemented by accounts and reports found among the WRITINGS AND SPEECHES.

Other Agencies (Boxes 55-58)

Cohen's positions in two federal agencies outside the Social Security Administration--the Commission on Universal Training and the Wage Stabilization Board--are well-documented through correspondence, minutes, and reports. Records of the Pension, Health, and Welfare committees of the Wage Stabilization Board, which Cohen chaired, are especially complete.

University of Michigan, 1956-1961 (Boxes 59-73)

Cohen's activities from 1956 to 1961 at the University of Michigan are documented through two interrelated sets of files. The first is alphabetically-arranged correspondence containing incoming and yellow copies of outgoing correspondence. The second consists of "working files" arranged alphabetically by subject. Subjects treated include organizations, committees, and topics of legislation, and the files variously contain white copies of outgoing correspondence, some original incoming correspondence, reports, minutes, notes, legislative proposals, and course material. Since Cohen was not consistent in filing his incoming correspondence, it may be necessary to look at both sets of files. Together, the two sets of files reflect Cohen's teaching and research activities as a professor of public welfare at the University of Michigan, his role as a consultant and advisor to Congress and HEW, and his participation in various advisory committees and organizations including the Democratic Party. The correspondence here documents in particular Cohen's activities in developing and promoting social welfare legislation through his contacts with Congress. Prominent correspondents include Wilbur Mills, Lister Hill, Henry Jackson, Wayne Morse, Aime Forand, Henry Reuss, Leo Irwin, Burr Harrison, Hubert Humphrey, Robert Kean, Robert Kerr, Lester Johnson, and John F. Kennedy. Also of special interest are the files on the Task Force on Health and Social Security, which Cohen chaired. These records include drafts of Cohen's report to President Kennedy on national health insurance for the elderly and other social welfare reforms. Two separate files of letters from the public ("fan letters" and "Social Security letters") offer examples of public opinion regarding Social Security. Many of the letters in the second file are detailed and often poignant appeals for Cohen's help in collecting benefits.
Department of Health, Education, and Welfare (Boxes 74-195)

The Department of Health, Education, and Welfare materials extensively document the three posts Cohen held in that agency from 1961 to January 1969. The records are arranged alphabetically by record type.

Correspondence (Boxes 74-104)

The HEW subseries begins with chronological correspondence which contains yellow copies of outgoing correspondence and memoranda from Cohen to others in the department. Also included here are separate files of "signer's copy" correspondence and memoranda prepared by others for Cohen's signature. Photocopies of incoming correspondence and attachments are sometimes found with the outgoing correspondence. An additional set of correspondence exists for the period Cohen served as secretary (March 1968 to January 1969). This file consists of copies of correspondence and memoranda filed by the office or division to which it pertained. Included here as "White House drafts" are Cohen's weekly reports to the President on significant developments in health, education, and welfare. The files designated as "White House general" consist of copies of memoranda and reports to the President or White House staff.

Departmental Files (Boxes 105-137)

HEW Departmental files are alphabetically-arranged subject files which reflect Cohen's involvement with specific policy issues and the analysis, development, implementation, and coordination of HEW programs. They largely contain incoming correspondence, white copies of outgoing correspondence, memoranda (mostly to Cohen), reports, and statistical data, and are grouped according to the major types of programs administered by the department. In addition to the categories of health, education, and welfare, there are separate files on Social Security (including Medicare), civil rights, and poverty. Files regarding interdepartmental activities, subjects or policy issues concerning HEW as a whole, as well as budget and personnel matters are found under the heading Administration. The volume and completeness of the Departmental files varies greatly. Files regarding the implementation of civil rights legislation and the Medicare program are especially voluminous, while those on education are less numerous and more fragmentary. There is also some subject overlap between major groups of files. For instance, papers regarding the implementation of the Economic Opportunity Act are found under Poverty (because it established anti-poverty programs), as well as Administration (because the programs involved interdepartmental cooperation).

Legislation (Boxes 138-170)

The most complete and substantial files in the HEW subseries are those regarding legislation. These have been organized into two groups--bills and planning--although there is some overlap between the two. Bill files concern the drafting, sponsorship, presentation, hearings, and movement through Congress of specific pieces of legislation, and they variously contain drafts, analysis, specifications, cost estimates, bill summaries, comparisons, sample testimony, memoranda, and incoming and white copies of outgoing correspondence. Files on individual bills or types of bills are arranged chronologically by year, and within each year, by subject.

Planning files document the annual development, coordination, and assessment of the department's overall legislative program. Included here are legislative proposals gathered from the various divisions, reports on policy issues, and white copies of reports on bills made to members of Congress and the Bureau of the Budget, all filed by year. Also included are Cohen's confidential reports to Secretary Celebreeze for 1964, weekly reports to the White House outlining the department's legislative activities, schedules of congressional hearings and schedules and agendas for meetings with White House staff. Congressional relations files document Cohen's meetings with members and committees.

Memoranda (Boxes 171-173)

These files mostly contain memos to Cohen from others in the department which apparently were never filed. The majority date from 1967 to January 1969 and concern policies, programs, issues, and legislation.

Non-HEW Activities (Boxes 173-174)

Files found here reflect some of Cohen's activities outside of the department. The majority concern the publication of articles and include correspondence, drafts, and final copies of the articles.

Phone Calls (Boxes 175-177)

A typewritten daily log of incoming phone calls and visitors to Cohen's office can be found in the Phone Calls file. The log lists the name of the caller and their message or the subject of their call, and often includes a brief note about the action taken or Cohen's response. As a result this serves as an unusually complete and detailed source of information about communications which typically go unrecorded.

Presidential Messages (Boxes 178-183)

Cohen was involved in drafting presidential messages to Congress and speeches for occasions such as bill signing ceremonies which commemorated the passage of significant legislation: the presidential message files detail this involvement. They contain handwritten and typed drafts, background material, and suggestions for language, and often include lists of people to be invited and suggestions on the timing and location of signing ceremonies. The files are arranged chronologically by year, then alphabetically by subject.

Task Forces (Boxes 184-195)

During his tenure at HEW, Cohen participated in task forces and committees that advised the department and the President on matters of policy and legislation. The task force files variously include incoming correspondence, memoranda, drafts of reports and recommendations, occasional minutes, and lists of potential members. The documentation is most exhaustive for those task forces Cohen chaired, such as education, health care, health insurance for the aged, income maintenance, older Americans, and public assistance. The files are arranged alphabetically according to subject. Copies of findings and final reports of these groups may also be found in the departmental and legislation files.

University of Michigan, 1969-1979 (Boxes 196-247)

Cohen's position as Dean of the School of Education and his activities from 1969 to approximately 1981 are documented in the University of Michigan materials. The series is composed of two interrelated sets of files, both reflecting (to varying degrees) his work as administrator, professor, consultant, and writer; his public appearances; and participation in various organizations.

Alphabetical Files (Boxes 196-238)

The Alphabetical files contain incoming and white copies of outgoing correspondence, as well as memoranda, reports, papers, clippings, printed material, and drafts of articles. The file headings here include individual correspondents, organizations, and subjects, and there is considerable overlap and inconsistency in the way Cohen filed this material. For instance, although a file may exist for a particular individual, additional correspondence with that individual may also be found in the general alphabetical correspondence, or it may be filed with the organization they represent. Prominent correspondents here include congressmen such as Edward Kennedy, Hubert Humphrey, Wilbur Mills, Russell Long, George McGovern, Claude Pepper, Jacob Javits, Walter Mondale, Daniel Rostenkowski, John Dingell, and Carl Perkins: federal officials such as Sargent Shriver, Joseph Califano, Alice Rivlin, Arthur Flemming, and Robert Ball: and friends such as J. Douglas Brown, Nelson Cruikshank, and Elizabeth Wickenden. A sound recording of Cohen discussing President Nixon's welfare proposals is listed under the heading "Welfare Bill".

Chronological Correspondence (Boxes 239-247)

The chronological correspondence files contain yellow copies of outgoing correspondence and memoranda, although from 1969 to 1970 some incoming correspondence was also included. These files reflect relatively more about Cohen's role as an academic administrator than the alphabetical files, while the alphabetical files more thoroughly document his other activities. That portion of Cohen's alphabetical files which relate to his work as a dean, (which presumably document more thoroughly such activities as budgeting and faculty appointments) was donated to the Bentley Historical Library in Michigan. Papers concerning Cohen's involvement in school desegregation cases in Michigan during this period and his participation in the Governor's Task Force on Prevention of Abuse in State Institutions are also housed at the Bentley.

Save Our Security Coalition (See p.56 of the Container List)

SOS records provide substantial insight into Cohen's role as co-chairman of this organization from 1979 to 1984, and thoroughly document its functions and activities from 1981 to 1984.
Correspondence files include incoming and drafts and copies of outgoing correspondence and memoranda, largely with coalition members, congressmen, and government officials. Weekly financial reports contain detailed breakdowns and analysis of contributions and fund raising campaigns as well as annual statements of receipts and disbursements. Minutes are mainly those of the Executive Committee but also include occasional minutes of the SOS Education Fund and other committees. Reports and congressional testimony, position papers, informational brochures, and publicity materials such as press releases and newspaper advertisements can be found in the files of printed material.

WRITING AND SPEECHES (Boxes 248-273)

Copies of virtually all of Cohen's speeches and written works from 1934 to 1979, both published and unpublished, can be found in the WRITINGS AND SPEECHES series. Cohen himself compiled this material, arranged it chronologically in two sets of volumes, numbered the items, and created a table of contents citing the title, number, date, and place submitted, published, or delivered. A copy of this table of contents has been appended to the register and serves as an index to the two sets of volumes. The first set of volumes, Articles and Addresses, contains approximately 1232 items and includes articles, speeches, congressional testimony, statements, reviews, press releases, conference papers, transcripts of interviews, pamphlets, and reports from 1934 to 1979. The second set, Memoranda and Reports, contains 88 items and includes memoranda, reports, minutes, testimony, statements, and proposals from 1947 to 1969. Although there is some overlap in genre between the two sets, specific titles are not duplicated. Many of the items, however, can also be found elsewhere among Cohen's professional papers. Not duplicated are the annual reports of the School of Education from 1969 to 1979, the minutes of American Public Welfare Association meetings, congressional statements and testimony Cohen gave as a member of APWA's Welfare Policy Committee during the 1950s, and reports he wrote as a delegate to the Inter-American Conferences on Social Security. Also filed among WRITINGS AND SPEECHES are several folders of drafts and miscellanous reports, testimony, and articles dating primarily from 1975 to 1987, which do not appear in the compiled volumes. Copies of Cohen's Daily Cardinal articles from 1931 to 1933 and his college thesis have also been included here.
Container List
Mss
789

PERSONAL PAPERS

BOX

FOLDER

 
  Appointment Books
1   1941-1953
2   1954-1956, 1960, 1969, 1970
3   1971-1974
4   1975-1979
5 1-2 Biographical Information, 1931-1934, 1956-1987
  3-17 Clippings, 1965-1979
  Correspondence
6 1-7 Altmeyer, Arthur J., 1947-1969, 1972, n.d.
  Alphabetical, 1962-1968
  1-7 A-I
8 1-9 J-T
9 1-3 U-Z
  Chronological
10 1-10 1935, 1961-1966
11 1-9 1967-1968
12 1-7 January-April 1969
13 1-9 April 1969-June 1971
14 1-7 July 1971-April 1974
15 1-7 May 1974-1981
16 1 1982-1987, n.d.
  2-4 "Cohen, Wilbur J.", 1935, 1962-1978, 1984, 1986 (re:
employment and financial matters)
  Congratulations
Alphabetical, 1968
17 1-8 A-F
18 1-6 G-M
19 1-8 Mc-T
20 1-3 U-Z
  By occasion, 1953-1968
21 1 Medicare passage, 1965
  2 Miscellaneous, 1957-1969
  3 National Assoc. of Social Workers award, 1965
  4-5 Rockefeller public service award,-1953-1967
  Secretary, 1968
  6 Confirmation
  7-8 Nomination
22 1 "Not answered"
  2 "Special letters"
  3 Swearing-in
  4-9 Undersecretary, 1965
  Memoirs
278 1 Cohen family genealogy, 1972, n.d.
  2 Early memories and influences, 1978, 1981, n.d.
  3 Growing older, 1978-1986
  4 Miscellaneous, 1985, 1987, n.d.
  Professional and political experiences
  5-11 1954-1986
279 1-2 1987, n.d.
  3 Religion, marriage, and family, 1976, 1981
  4-6 Social Security, 1959, 1968-1969, 1981, n.d.
23 1-3 Oral History Transcripts, 1968-1972, 1976
Photo Lot
3948   Photographs, 1931, 1955, 1956, 1961-1968, 1975, n.d.
TAPE REEL  
1237a 1-2 Portrait unveiling ceremony, September 1970
  3 Reception in honor of Secretary Cohen, January 1969 
BOX FOLDER  
24   Yearbooks, 1927-1930

PROFESSIONAL PAPERS

  Social Security Board/Administration
  Correspondence, 1934-1955
25 1-7 August 1934-August 1940 
26 1-9   September 1940-December 1944
27 1-9   January 1945-December 1947
28 1-9  January 1948-March 1949 
29 1-9  March 1949-May 1950
30 1-10  June 1950-February 1952 
31 1-8   February 1952-November 1953
32 1-3  32 1-3 December 1953-January 1956
  General
  Actuarial data 1941-1955
33 1-2  Estimates, 1941-1946
  3-4 Memoranda, 1948-1955
  5 Advisory Council on Social Security, 1936-1937, 1947, 1954
  6 Appropriations, 1948-1949
  7 Benefit formulas, 1942-1943
  8-9 Curtis Subcommittee investigation of Social Security, 1953
34 Federal-state coordinated social insurance plans, 1943-1948, 1950, 1953 
   Legislation  
  2-8 1939-1945 
35 1-6  1945-1948 
36 1-7   1948-1950
37 1-10   1950-1954
38 1955 
  2-3 Legislative program, 1953-1954 
  4-7 Presidential messages, 1940-1948, 1953-1954 
    Reports of the Social Security Board 
  8-9 1937-1940
39 1-6  1941-1955
  7-8 Statistics, 1944-1955
40 1-2  Tax and fiscal estimates, 1941-1942
  Bureau/Office Files
  3-4 Children's Bureau, 1942, 1949-1955
  5  Employees' Compensation, 1942-1954
     Employment Security, 1941-1942
  6 ABC plan 
  7 Day plan and dependent's benefits 
41  1  Federal-State Relations, Office of, 1939-1948
     Old Age and Survivor's Insurance (OASI), 1937-1955
  2-3 Actuarial studies, 1941-1948 
  Consultative Committee on Social Security, 1953   
  4 Minutes, March-June 
    Reports 
  5-7 April-May 
42 1-2  May-June 
  Cost data  
  3 Administrative costs, 1938-1953
  4 Cost estimates, 1939-1943
  5 Estimates for HR 2893 and HR 6000, 1949-1950
  6-8 Coverage, 1940, 1947-1949, 1950-1952
  Disability
43  1 Cash benefits, 1949
  2 Foreign experience, 1939-1941
  3 Freeze, 1953
  4-8 General, 1939-1956
44 1-2  Fiscal estimates, 1940-1950
  Legislation  
  3-4 HR 6000, 1950
  5 Jackson bills, 1945-1953
  6 Kean bills, 1949-1954
  7 Reed bill, 1953 
  8 1954 Amendments 
   Miscellaneous  
  9 1938-1949 
45  1-4 1940-1954 
  5  Old-Age benefits, 1937
   Pensions  
  6 Double decker plan, 1945-1950
  7 Flat plans, 1940-1941
46 General, 1948-1954
  2-4 Private plans, 1946-1955
  5 Townsend plan, 1939
  Relationship between OASI and Public Assistance  
  6 1938-1939 
  7 Stamp books prototypes, n.d. 
  8 Veteran's benefits, 1947-1950 
   Public Assistance  
  9 Confidentiality of records, 1952 
47  1  Costs, 1949
  2 Cost analysis of formulas for reducing federal funds for public assistance, 1953 
  3-5 Formulas, 1953-1954 
  Legislation
  6  Aid to the blind and Indians, 1948, 1950
   Amendments to the Social Security Act  
  7 1940-1941 
48  1-3 1943, 1950
  4 Connally bill, 1940-1941 
  5-6 Drafts, 1941-1942, 1946, 1949 
  7-9  HR 6000, 1949
49  1 Vocational rehabilitation, 1949 
  2-6
Legislative program. 1947-1954
  7-8 Medical care for the needy, 1954-1955
  9 Old age assistance, 1953
  10 Plans and data, 1940-1951
50  1 Policy and statistics, 1941-1952
  2 Political analysis, 1953
  3 Research, 1954 
  4 Unmet need, dependent children and disabled, 1941-1942 
   Variable Grants  
  5-9 General, 1938-1940, 1946-1954 
51 1-2 Old Age Assistance, 1938-1944
  3 Welfare data by states, 1951-1952
  4 Unemployment Compensation, Bureau of, 1937
   Social Security-Related Materials and Reports  
  5-6 Chamber of Commerce plans for Social Security, 1952-1953 

52 Hoover Commission report on the organization of the executive branch, 1948 
  2 Inter-American Conferences on Social Security,1948, 1952, 1953, 195 
  3  Life insurance, 1943-1944, 1949, 1952
  4  Medical and hospitalization insurance, 1941-1942, 1952-1953
  5 National health insurance program outlines fordiscussion, 1946 
   Opposition and support for social security from outside groups  
  6-8 1935-1947 
53  1-2 1948-1955, n.d. 
  3 Social insurance and manpower mobilization, 1942 
  4 Social Security Charter Committee, 1944
  Social security in foreign countries
  5-6 Forms, n.d. 
  Plans and data   
  7-8 1939-1946 
54  1  1947-1949
  2 Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands, 1946,1949-1950 
  3 United Mine Workers welfare and retirement fund study, 1946 
  4-5 United Nations Social Commission, 1945-1948 
  6 WorldTrip, Cohen-Ewing, 1952-1953
   Other Agencies  
  Commission on Universal Training, 1947
55 1-5  Correspondence
56 1-3  Reports
  Wage Stabilization Board, 1950-1953
  Correspondence
  4-7 1951-1952
57 1-3  1952-1953
  4-6 Minutes, 1952-1953
58 1-6  Reports, 1951
  University of Michigan, 1956-1961   
  Correspondence
59 1-7  A-B
60 1-5  C-Em
61  1-5  En-Har
62 1-6  Har-J
63 1-5  K-Lon
64 1-6   Lor-Mor
65 1-6   Mor-P
66 1-5   O-Sha
67 1-6   Sha-Weil
68 1-6   Wein-Z
     Working Files
69 1-2  Advisory Council on Public Assistance, 1959
  3 American Public Health Association, 1961
  4 Articles, 1946-1961
  5 Catholic University, 1961-1962
  6 Child Welfare Services (Title V), 1960
  7-8 Committee for Economic Development study of low incomes, 1956-1958
  9 Council on Social Work Education, 1958-1959
  Course material  
  10 Assignments; 1956-1960
  11 Exam questions, 1956-1960
  Outlines
  12 1956-1959
70  1 1959-1960
  2 Current Trends in Social Welfare Institute, 1957
  Democratic Party
  3 Congressional campaigns, 1952, 1954, 1958
  4 Kennedy-Johnson campaign, 1960
  5 National Convention, 1956
  6 Disability Insurance Bill, 1956
  7 Experimental College Alumni Group, 1950-1965
  8 Faculty Seminar on Income Maintenance, 1956-1957
71 Fan letters, 1956-1960
  2 Gerontology Committee, 1956-1958
274   Health insurance for the aged
  9 American Hospital Association bill, 1957
  10-11 Forand bills and amendments, 1958-1960
  12  Legislative proposals, 1956-1960
71 3 International Youth Service (Peace Corps Proposal), 1960 
  4 Louisiana ADC Case, 1960 
  5 McNamara Subcommittee on Aging, 1959 
  Michigan Public Health Study Commission, 1956-1957  
  6 Correspondence
  7 Minutes
  8-9 Reports
  10 National Federation of Settlements and Neighborhood Centers, 1956-1958
72  1 Permission letters, Haber-Cohen book, 1960
  Public Assistance
274 1 Child welfare, 1959
  2 Exemption of earned income, 1958-1959
  3 General, 1956-1959
  Medical care  
  4 APWA research project, 1954
  5 Article, 1957
  6-7 Legislation, 1957, 1960
  8 Personnel training, 1956-1957
72 2 Rehabilitation Act (HR 3465), 1959
  3 Retirement Advisors Inc., 1958-1961
  4 Santa Cruz project, 1957
  Social Security  
  5 Blanketing-in, 1959-1960
  6 Financing and wage base, n.d.
  7 Hart bills, 1959
  8 Legislative proposals, 1956-1961
  9 Letters, 1958
  Task Force on Health and Social Security, 1960-1961  
  10 Correspondence
  11 Cost material
  12 Reports
73  1 Unemployment studies and proposals, 1957-1963
  2  University of Michigan social welfare research,1957-1962
  3-5  Washtenaw County (MI) Public Welfare Project,1959-1962
   Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1961-1969  
   Correspondence  
  Chronological
74 1-12  January 1961-July 1961
75 1-12  August 1961-January 1962
76 1-11  February 1962-July 1962
77 1-5  July 1962-September 1962
78 1-13  October 1962-April 1963
79 1-10  April 1963-October 1963
80 1-12  October 1963-April 1964
81 1-11  April 1964-September 1964
82 1-10  October 1964-February 1965
83 1-8  February 1965-June 1965
84 1-7  June 1965-August 1965
85 1-7  September 1965-November 1965
86 1-7  November 1965-January 1966
87 1-7  February 1966-April 1966
88 1-8  April 1966-June 1966
89 1-7   July 1966-September 1966
90 1-9  September 1966-December 1966
91  1-7  December 1966-March 1967
92  1-8 March 1967-June 1967
93 1-7  June 1967-September 1967
94 1-6  September 1967-December 1967
95 1-6  December 1967-February 1968
96 1-6  March 1968-May 1968
97  1-9 June 1968-October 1968
98 1-8  October 1968-January 1969
  By Office, 1968-1969
99  1-4 Education, Office of, March 1968-January 1969
  5 Food and Drug Administration, March 1968-January 1969
   Public Health Service 
  6-9 March 1968-October 1968
100 1-2  November 1968-January 1969
    Secretary's Office 
  3-12 March 1968-July 1968
101 1-9  August 1968-December 1968
102  1-4 December 1968-January 1969
  Social and Rehabilitative Services  
  5-9 March 1968-December 1968
103  1 January 1969
  Social Security Administration  
  2-7 March 1968-January 1969
  White House  
104 1-3 Drafts, March-August 1968
  4-8 General,March 1968-January 1969
   Departmental Files  
   Administration  
  Budget
105  1-5 Fiscal Years 1966-1970
  6 Memoranda, 1961-1967
  7 National Teachers' Corps-supplemental appropriations, 1965-68
  General  
106 1 American Public Welfare Association, 1964-1968
  2-3 Articles, 1967-1968
  4 Assistant Secretaries' meetings, 1966-1968
  Cabinet meetings  
  5 1963-1968
273 5 1968
106 6 Census (1970), 1967-1968 
  7 Center for Community Planning, 1967
  8 Confidential reports on trips, 1963
  9 Consumer protection, 1961-1968
  10 Copyright and patent policy, 1965-1968
  11 Drugs, 1967-1968
107 Economic impact of federal activities on local governments, 1963-1964
  Economic Opportunity Act
  2 Administration, 1964-1967
  3 Coordination of HEW responsibilities under
  EOA, 1964-1967  
  4 Equalizing opportunity for the disadvantaged,1963-1964
  5 Office of Economic Opportunity-HEW organizational changes, 1966-1968
  6 Field coordination, 1965-1966
  7-9 Goals, 1964-1966
  10 Grants-in-aid, 1962-1967
  11 Guaranteed annual income, 1966-1967
  12 Hagadorn, Jack L., M.D., misquote of Secretary, 1968
108 History of HEW, 1965, 1967, n.d.
  2 Immediate steps to improve life in urban ghettos, 1967
  3 Improving public communications, 1965-1966
  4 Interfaith group, 1961-1965
     Intergovernmental relations
  5 Advisory commission, 1961-1968
  6 General, 1966-1967
  7 Governor's conference, 1967
  8 Inter-American Committee on Social Security, 1967-1968
  Tax sharing, 1965-1967
  9 International, 1961-1964, 1967
  10 International Conference of Social Welfare
  11-12 Ministers, 1968
  13 Kennedy Library, 1963-65
  Kerner Commission report on civil disorders, 1968  
  14 Analysis
  15 Letters
109 Labor Department, 1962, 1963, 1967 
  2 Los Angeles.(Watts) - possible projects, 1965 
  3 Management committee, 1967
  4 Medical care costs, 1966-1968
  5 Meet the Press-Cohen appearance, 1968
  6 Memoranda to President Johnson, 1968
  7 Miscellaneous papers received, 1962-1969
  8 Model Cities program, 1968
  9 Natl. Assoc. for Retarded Children, 1964-1965
  10 Natl. Assoc. of Social Workers, 1961-1963, 1968
  11 Natl. Conference on Social Welfare, 1962-1965
  12 National Governors' Conference, 1968
  13 Natl. voluntary organizations, 1962-1963, 1967
  14 Negro, 1967-1968
  15 New program ideas for Democratic platform, 1964