Container
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Title
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Wis Mss VP
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Part 1 (Wis Mss VP): Original Collection, 1905-1961120.5 cubic feet (276 archives boxes, 15 flat boxes, and 6 card file boxes) The Original Collection is arranged into series as follows: Correspondence, Diaries and Biographical Notes, Research Files, Miscellaneous Files, and Card Files. With the exception of the diaries, written between 1905 and 1911, and one letter, July 30, 1914, the papers in the Original Collection cover the years from 1921 until Witte's death in 1960. They are almost entirely concerned with his professional work and are most voluminous following 1933, after he became a full-time teacher and began to undertake federal appointments. In size, the correspondence constitutes 30 per cent of the collection, and Witte's research files make up another 56 per cent. Miscellaneous files such as articles, addresses, class lectures, and studies account for 7 per cent; and the remainder is composed of his bibliographical card indexes. The small volumes contained in Box 88 add virtually nothing to the size of the collection; but these diaries of his student years have worth and interest that far outweigh their bulk. Correspondence Dr. Witte's correspondents in the years between 1921 and 1960 included former students, teaching associates at Wisconsin and elsewhere, economists and social scientists working for both industry and government, members of Congress, industrialists, arbitrators, and officers of organizations interested in labor legislation and social security. There are occasional letters from strangers referring to an article or speech by Witte, or asking him for advice, but in general, his correspondence was with individuals whom he knew or worked with professionally. There are practically no family letters, although correspondents who were acquainted with his family often made references to different members. As a university teacher, Witte had much correspondence with students working on theses or seeking recommendations. In what were frequently long letters containing suggestions or criticisms for chapters, he often revealed his own thinking concerning social and economic problems. The same is true of his correspondence with other teachers, industrial relations experts, and government personnel, many of whom were once students of Witte's. He sometimes wrote at some length to clarify his position or to argue a point. The extent to which he explained his views is illustrated by a letter of July 14, 1945 to a former student, Joseph A. Todd, in which he discussed the international economic situation. Throughout the correspondence there is information relating to the University of Wisconsin, particularly the Department of Economics, and to committees and studies. Since Professor Witte was often absent from the campus, departmental secretaries as well as other faculty members wrote him of university affairs. During the retirement of John R. Commons, particularly from 1938 to 1944 while he was living in Florida, Witte wrote him long and informative letters relating to the University and the field of economics. There is correspondence relating to problems of the State of Wisconsin, particularly in the 1920s, when Witte was Legislative Reference Librarian, and in the 1930s when he served on the Planning Board and the Labor Relations Board. In 1935, he assisted Governor Philip F. La Follette in preparing legislation relating to the Social Security Act. In fact, Witte was the author of a letter from La Follette to Franklin D. Roosevelt, October 29, 1935, setting forth ideas on appropriations for various federal aids under the act. It was Witte's custom to file separately the correspondence relating to the numerous organizations, boards, and committees of which he was a member. These included private organizations and boards and committees connected with the university, the state, and the federal government. Although letters in these files are usually concerned with the organization or committee involved, many of them touch on social and economic problems beyond the work of the group itself. Since other members of the group were frequently economists also, it was natural that they and Witte should discuss issues when writing each other about organization or committee work. The files of the American Association for Labor Legislation and the Industrial Relations Research Association offer examples of this type of correspondence, where letters exchanged with John B. Andrews, Sumner Slichter, and Merlyn S. Pitzele contain more than just reference to association business. In view of his reputation in the field of labor legislation, there is a surprisingly small amount of correspondence with labor leaders themselves. It is true Witte corresponded with men such as Matthew Woll and William Green between 1925 and 1934 in regard to anti-injunction bills and unemployment insurance, and with Walter P. Reuther between 1957 and 1959 regarding the work of the UAW International Union and the UAW Public Review Board; but there is little evidence in the papers that leaders of organized labor kept in close contact with Witte, tried to influence his thinking, or were consulted by him. A letter of December 4, 1940 may help to explain this. To R.W. Leach Witte wrote, “It is part of my creed that in all matters affecting labor, the employer's point of view should be given just as much consideration as labor's point of view.” This is not to imply that letters dealing with labor problems and legislation are lacking. The labor relations theme is evident throughout the correspondence, as the following examples show: Witte corresponded with John B. Andrews, secretary of the American Association for Labor Legislation, frequently between 1929 and 1937; with Felix Frankfurter and Francis B. Sayer in 1928 in regard to the anti-injunction bill; with Sumner H. Slichter from 1932 to 1956 concerning labor problems; with Dr. Leifur Magnusson of the International Labor Organization in 1938 relative to the attitude of business groups toward labor legislation; with Selig Perlman between 1938 and 1939 regarding the American labor movement; with Senator Paul Douglas from 1946 to 1949 in reference to the closed shop and the Taft-Hartley Act; and with Nathan Feinsinger in 1958 on right-to-work legislation. In his role as mediator in disputes between labor and industry he corresponded to some extent with representatives of both labor and management; but only concerning cases on which he sat as arbitrator, and even then in a routine way. His written decisions, on the other hand, reveal his thinking in connection with labor disputes, as he sometimes went to some lengths to explain himself. He kept in touch with other arbitrators and sometimes referred to cases and decisions. For instance, he and the lawyer David A. Wolff corresponded in 1945 and 1946. Wolff had worked with Witte in Detroit, and was mediator in the Chrysler strike of 1945. Just as the theme of labor legislation runs through the correspondence, so also does the subject of social security. After he directed the writing of the original Social Security Act of 1935, Witte continued, in varying degrees, to keep in touch with its development and expansion. He remained in contact officially by virtue of his membership on the Advisory Council and his position as a consultant to the Social Security Board, and unofficially by reason of his long association with key personnel. Arthur J. Altmeyer, as commissioner of Social Security; I.S. Falk, Ewan Clague, and Wilbur Cohen of the Bureau of Research and Statistics; and Robert J. Myers of the actuarial division either asked for his opinion or sent him information concerning developments. Copies of inter-office communications were sometimes sent to Witte also, especially in connection with the work of the Advisory Council. Social security amendments, financing, and studies were also the subjects of correspondence between Witte and individuals outside the government office. Problems were discussed with other professors such as William Haber of Michigan State, Elizabeth Brandeis Raushenbush of Wisconsin, and Theresa S. McMahon of Washington; with the lawyer Herman Ekern; with the labor legislation expert John B. Andrews; and with senators such as Robert M. La Follette aid Alexander Wiley. A letter, April 15, 1937, to Sir William Beveridge, director of the London School of Economics, discusses Beveridge's factual analysis of unemployment problems as related to the United States. These are simply examples of the many letters relating to the whole field of social security. Topics in the correspondence include almost every phase of the movement: old age and survivor's insurance, unemployment insurance, workmen's compensation, actuarial problems, pension plans, health services and insurance, and public assistance. In general it had been Dr. Witte's custom to keep his correspondence filed alphabetically, by person, although in many instances, notably social security, he kept a separate correspondence file under that title. In addition, he had files of correspondence relating to organizations, committees, and conferences under their respective titles; files of arbitration cases under company or case; and miscellaneous matters under subject or individual. An attempt has been made to draw all of these into an easily usable whole, without completely destroying Witte's original intent. The correspondence in the Original Collection is now organized in seven sub-categories. (1) General Correspondence, 1914, 1921-1961, is chronological by month. (2) Social Security Correspondence, 1934-1954, also is chronological by month. (3) The category on Arbitration Cases is alphabetical by case; correspondence precedes other material on each case and is arranged chronologically by month. (4) Organizations and Committees (except University of Wisconsin and state and federal government bodies) is alphabetical, then chronological by month as are the files for (5) University of Wisconsin, (6) Wisconsin - State Government, and (7) United States - Federal Government. A difficulty for users lies in the fact that the correspondence of some individuals, or that concerning some subjects, may be found in more than one place. The correspondence of Wilbur J. Cohen and the subject of social security is one such example. Cohen was a student of Witte's at Wisconsin and was his research assistant while the Social Security Act was being written. During the years that Cohen remained in the social security offices in Washington, and later when he was professor at Michigan State, he and Witte exchanged long and comparatively frequent letters. Many of these Witte filed with the social security correspondence, and yet some may also be found in the general correspondence. In addition, Cohen and Witte were both interested in some of the same organizations, and under the names of these there will also be Cohen correspondence. Examples are the American Gerontological Congress of 1951, the John B. Andrews Symposium, and the Federal Advisory Council. The researcher is thus cautioned that correspondence relating to a particular person or to a particular subject may require search in more than one place. There follows a list of many of the individuals with whom Witte corresponded. Because it was impossible to index the papers, this is not a complete list, nor do the inclusive years always represent all letters. It is believed, however, that this includes Witte's more significant correspondence, and that the years given will serve as a reliable guide to the researcher. (Letters of tribute, February and March 1957, on the occasion of Witte's retirement, are described with Part 5 of this collection, the Microfilmed Papers. Copies of replies to them appear in the Original Collection in the general correspondence.) Correspondence marked “G” appears in the general correspondence; those marked “SS” are in the social security correspondence. Name | Date | Type | Abbott, Grace | 1937 January | G | Altmeyer, Arthur J. | 1935-1954 | G, SS | Andrews, John B. | 1924-1937 | G, SS | Baruch, Bernard M. | 1958 January | G | Beveridge, Sir William | 1937, April | SS | Blaine, John J. | 1928-1932 | G | Brown, J. Douglas | 1935-1940 | G, SS | Clague, Ewan | 1937-1953 | G, SS | Cohen, Wilbur J. | 1935-1960 | G, SS | Commons, John R. | 1921-1944 | G | Doughton, Robert L. | 1935 | SS | Douglas, Paul | 1946-1949 | G | Dykstra, C.A. | 1937-1943 | G | Ekern, Herman | 1934-1939 | G, SS | Ely, Richard T. | 1941-1942 | G | Epstein, Abraham | 1933-1937, 1950-1953 | G | Evjue, William T. | 1936-1939 | G | Falk, I.S. | 1937-1939, 1952 | SS | Feinsinger, Nathan | 1948-1958 | G | Folsom, Marion B. | 1936 | SS | Frankfurter, Felix | 1925-1934, 1951 | G | Fred, E.B. | 1941-1952 | G | Goldberg, Arthur | 1954 | G | Goldy, Daniel J. | 1939-1943, 1957 | G | Green, William | 1928-1934 | G | Haber, William | 1936-1956 | G, SS | Handley, J.J. | 1933-1939 | G | Hochstein, Irma | 1940-1960 | G | Houghton, Ronald W. | 1939-1959 | G | Kaltenborn, Howard S. | 1941-1959 | G | Kennedy, John F. | 1952, 1957 | G | Keyserling, Leon H. | 1958, 1960 | G | Killingsworth, Charles | 1942-1960 | G | Knowles, William H. | 1948-1957 | G | Kubista, Roy | 1934-1935 | G | La Follette, Philip F. | 1932-1937 | G | La Follette, Robert M., Jr. | 1934-1939 | G, SS | Lampman, Robert J. | 1948-1956 | G | Lawrence, David | 1947 | G | Leiserson, William M. | 1934-1947 | G | Lilienthal, David E. | 1923, 1941-1951 | G | Mackraz, James A. | 1951-1960 | G | Magnusson, Leifur | 1938 | G | Marquand, Hilary A. | 1939-1959 | G | McMahon, Theresa S. | 1936-1959 | G, SS | Morse, Wayne | 1943-1953, 1959 | G | Myers, Robert J. | 1939, 1958-1960 | G | Norris, George W. | 1928-1929 | G | Perkins, Frances | 1936-1948,1958-1960 | G | Perlman, Mark | 1946-1955 | G | Perlman, Selig | 1938-1953 | G | Pitzele, Merlyn S. | 1940-1956 | G | Raushenbush, Elizabeth (Brandeis) | 1937-1946 | G, SS | Raushenbush, Paul | 1935-1939 | G | Reuther, Walter P. | 1957-1959 | G | Richberg, Donald | 1928-1930 | G | Robinson, George Buchan | 1940-1951 | SS | Roosevelt, Franklin D. | 1935, 1942, 1944-1945 | G | Rosenberry, Marvin B. | 1950 January | G | Saks, John | 1945-1952 | G | Saposs, David J. | 1941, 1958 | G | Sayre, Francis B. | 1928 | G | Slichter, Sumner H. | 1932-1957 | G | Taylor, George W. | 1951-1952 | G | Taylor, Henry C. | 1941-1944 | G | Todd, Joseph A. | 1941-1953 | G | Truman, Harry S. | 1945-1949, 1957 | G | Tugwell, Rexford G. | 1953, January | G | Wiley, Alexander | 1942-1948 | G, SS | Winant, John G. | 1935-1936 | SS | Wolff, David A. | 1945-1946, 1959 | G | Woll, Mathew | 1925-1930 | G | Young, Edwin | 1953 | G |
Diaries and Biographical Notes When Edwin E. Witte first entered the University of Wisconsin in 1905 he started keeping a diary, and continued the practice intermittently until June of 1911, while he was a graduate student. He used pocket notebooks, and wrote at length on his impressions and aspirations, as well as on his activities, often including several days in one writing. He made frequent references to teachers, students, lectures, and campus activities such as the debating society and student government. He sometimes wrote on his political viewpoint and his inclination toward specialization in labor legislation. There is evidence in the diaries of 1910 that John R. Commons influenced him in his decision to change from the field of history to economics. There are six personal diaries, and a seventh notebook in which Witte kept a record of meetings of the Athenaean Literary Society. This was a debating society in which he was very active, and between 1906 and 1908 he kept notes on the debates given and his appraisal of them. An eighth volume is a record of speeches rather than a diary. In a book that contains his class rolls for 1921 to 1937, Witte recorded addresses he gave while director of the Committee on Economic Security 1934-1935, in support of the Social Security Act. There are also lists of other speeches given between 1935 and 1937, including further talks on social security. Research Files Dr. Witte kept extensive files for his own use in doing research. The material in them covers practically every phase of his interest in industrial relations, social security, economics, and the relation of government to business. These files include clippings from newspapers, magazines, and the Congressional Record; mimeographed information; reprints of abstracts, articles, and studies; notes Witte made from speeches he heard or articles he read; student papers; and government documents, chiefly proposed Congressional bills and labor and social security leaflets. The Research Files are sub-divided into four categories: Economics, Government, Industrial Relations, and Social Security. Within each category there are sub-categories in alphabetical order. The files comprise Boxes 89-254. As these files originally came to the Archives they contained random copies of letters, articles, and addresses by Mr. Witte. Wherever these were found they were removed and placed in the general correspondence or were filed with articles and addresses. After conversations with associates and government personnel, Witte sometimes jotted down his impressions of what had been said. Wherever these notes were found in the research files they, too, were removed and filed with general correspondence. Miscellaneous Files Materials included in the miscellaneous files are articles and addresses by Witte, examples of his class lectures and notes, studies made or compiled by Witte, student reports and term papers relating to the field in which he was particularly interested, and a manuscript copy of “The Courts and Labor Disputes,“ his doctoral dissertation. Before the Witte papers were given to the Archives, Mrs. Witte made bibliographies of government and non-government publications in the Witte library, and of articles and addresses by Dr. Witte. The latter included particularly articles and addresses relating to social security, injunctions, and trade union law. Copies of these bibliographies are in the miscellaneous files. Card Files The card files kept by Dr. Witte represent bibliographies, with some notes, relating to each of the fields in which he was most interested: government and business, economics, industrial relations, and social security.
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Series: Correspondence
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Subseries: General correspondence : Chronological by month.
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Box
1
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1914 July 30; 1921-1934 May
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Box
2
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1934 June-1936 June
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Box
3
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1936 July-1937 October
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Box
4
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1937 November-1938
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Box
5
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1939-1940 April
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Box
6
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1940 May-1941 September
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Box
7
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1941 October-1942 September
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Box
8
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1942 October-1944 February
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Box
9
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1944 March-1945 September
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Box
10
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1945 October-1946 August
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Box
11
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1946 September-1947 April
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Box
12
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1947 May-November
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Box
13
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1947 December-1948 June
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Box
14
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1948 July-1949 February
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Box
15
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1949 March-October
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Box
16
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1949 November-1950 April
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Box
17
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1950 May-November
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Box
18
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1950 December-1951 June
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Box
19
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1951 July-1952 January
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Box
20
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1952 February-September
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Box
21
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1952 October-1953 February
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Box
22
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1953 March-September
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Box
23
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1953 October-1954 May
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Box
24
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1954 June-December
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Box
25
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1955 January-May
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Box
26
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1955 June-December
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Box
27
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1956 January-May
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Box
28
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1956 June-1957 February
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Box
29
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1957 April-December
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Box
30
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1958 January-October
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Box
31
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1958 November-1959 December
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Box
32
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1960 January-July; 1961 September
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Box
33-35
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Subseries: Social Security Correspondence, 1934 March-1951 January : Chronological by month.
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Subseries: Arbitration cases : Cases arranged in alphabetical order. Correspondence, in chronological order by months, precedes other material on each case.
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Box
36
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A-Glo
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Box
37
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Glo-Hou
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Box
38
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How-Mea
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Box
39
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Mea-Mis
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Box
40
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Mon-Oli
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Box
41
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Pae-Sun
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Box
42
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Uni-Wan
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Subseries: Organizations and Committees : See separate headings below for University of Wisconsin, State of Wisconsin, and United States government.
: Alphabetical by organization, committee, or conference. Within each, material is chronological by month. Exception: NWLB cases are left in original order.
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Box
43
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Administrative Management, President's Committee on, 1921-1938 (unofficial)
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Box
43
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American Arbitration Association, 1941-1943
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Box
43
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American Association for Labor Legislation, 1936-1945
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Box
43
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American Association for Social Security, 1938, 1940-1944
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Box
43
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American Council on Public Affairs, 1940-1944
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American Economic Association
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Box
43
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1938, 1940-1945, 1947, 1951, 1954-1955 November
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Box
44
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1955 December-1956 April
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Box
45
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1956 May-June
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Box
46
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1956 August-December
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Box
47
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1957-1959
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Box
47
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American Motors Corporation, Guaranteed Annual Wage Conference, 1955
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Box
47
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American Motors Corporation, Committee of Economists, 1957
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Box
48
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American Political Science Association, 1938-1947, 1949-1950
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Box
48
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American Society for Public Administration, 1941-1943
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Box
48
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Andrews, John B., Symposium, 1946-1951 3 folders
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Box
48
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Chicago, University of, Industrial Relations Center, 1947-1953
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Box
48
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Commission on Hospital Financing, 1952-1951, 1956
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Box
49
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Committee for Non-profit Health Insurance Plan (Milwaukee), 1953-1954
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Box
49
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Consumer's League, National, 1947-1953
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Box
49
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Council of State Governments, 1933-1951
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Box
49
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Gerontological Conference, Second, 1950 November-1952 January
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Box
49
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“Human Relations in Management,” General Robert Johnson, 1948-1953
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Box
49
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Illinois, University of, Institute of Labor and Industrial Relations, 1946-1953
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Industrial Relations Research Association
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Box
50
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1946-1953
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Box
51
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1954-1956, 1958
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Box
51
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Jersey Roundtable, 1953
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Box
51
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Michigan State Social Security Conference, 1958
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Box
51
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Mid-West Economic Association, 1951-1953
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Box
51
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National Academy of Arbitrators, 1947-1960
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Box
52
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National Electrical Benefit Fund, Board, 1946-1959
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Box
53
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National Foremen's Institute, 1949-1953
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Box
53
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National Institute of Labor Education, 1958
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Box
53
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National Municipal League, Committee on the Primary System, 1949 August-1950 February
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Box
53
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National Planning Association, on improved industrial relations, 1948-1953
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Box
53
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National Social Welfare Assembly, National Committee on the Aging, 1952-1953
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Box
53
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Princeton University, Industrial Relations Section, 1946-1952
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Box
53
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Retirement Advisors Inc., 1958-1960
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Box
53
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Retirement Counsellors Inc., 1957-1960
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Social Science Research Council
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Box
53
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Committee on Public Administration, 1935-1944
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Box
54
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Committee on Social Security, 1939-1942
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Box
54
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Conference on Industrial Relations, 1939
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Box
54
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Society for the Psychological Study of Social Issues, “Industrial Conflict,” 1951 April-1952 July
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Box
54
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Twentieth Century Fund, 1949-1953
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Box
54
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UAW Public Advisory Committee on Social Security, 1939-1956
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Box
55-56
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UAW Public Review Board, 1957 May-1960 May
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University of Wisconsin : Alphabetical by organization, committee, or conference. Within each, material is chronological by month.
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Box
57
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Athletic Board, 1936-1940
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Box
57
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Centennial Committee, Educational Conference, 1948
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Box
57
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Civil Service Employees Joint Council, 1939-1941
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Box
57
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Committees, miscellaneous
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Box
57
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Coordination (Integration) Proposals for Higher Education, Legislative sessions of 1955
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Box
57
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Economics Department, miscellaneous studies and reports, 1933-1953
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Box
58
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Faculty Seminar on the Wisconsin Old Age Problem, 1950-1951
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Box
58
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Graduate School, 1934-1950
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Industrial Relations Center
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Box
58
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1945-1948 November
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Box
59
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1948 December-1956
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Box
60
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Labor-Management Board, 1939-1956
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Box
60
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Lecture Committee, 1946-1950
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Box
60
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Phi Beta Kappa, 1955-1957
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Box
60
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Political Science Department, 1936-1946
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Box
60
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Public Relations, 1934-1949
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Box
60
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Public Service, Sub-Committee on Functions and Policies, 1948
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Box
60
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Requirements in American History and Government, 1951-1952
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Box
60
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Retirement Study, 1950-1953
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Box
61
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School for Workers, 1933-1957
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Box
62
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Sidney Hillman Memorial Lectures, 1955-1956
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Box
62
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Social Security and the University Faculty, 1953-1957
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Box
62
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Special Committee on Speakers before Students, 1952-1953
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Box
62
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University Bills in the Legislature, 1935-1939
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Box
62
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University Club Lecture Committee, 1940-1942
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Wisconsin - State government : Alphabetical by organization, committee, or conference. Within each, material is chronological by month.
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Box
63
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Citizen's Committee on Public Welfare, 1936, 1949
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Box
63
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Interim Committee on Taxation, 1934
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Box
63
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Labor Relations Board, 1937-1939
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Box
64
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Legislative Reference Library, 1949-1953
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Box
64
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NRA Codes, 1933-1936
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Box
64
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Old Age Study, 1951-1952
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Box
64
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Public Welfare in Wisconsin - Sub-committee on Administration, 1936
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Box
64
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State Historical Society, 1948-1953
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Box
64
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State Planning Board, 1935-1940
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Box
64
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State Taxation Committee, 1933-1935
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Box
64
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Trade Practices Commission, Wage Survey, 1936-1937
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United States - Federal government : Alphabetical by organization, committee, or conference. Within each material is chronological by month. Exception: NWLB cases are left in original order.
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Box
65
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Commission on Organization of the Executive Branch of the Government, 1948
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Committee on Economic Security, Reports, Studies, and Data, 1934-1935
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Box
65
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Child welfare
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Box
65
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Committee activities
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Box
65
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Committee publications
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Box
66
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Congressional bills and reports
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Box
66
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Congressional debate and comments
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Box
66
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Economic security program (appendices)
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Box
67
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Employment opportunities
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Box
67
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Health in relation to economic security, Volume I, II
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Box
67
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Health in relation to social security-risks due to illness
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Box
68
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Hearings on S. 1130, H.R. 4120
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Box
68
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Medical Advisory Board - Proceedings
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Box
68
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Old age security
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Box
69
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Public employment and relief
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Box
69
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Senate notebook
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Box
69
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Social Insurance, Volume I
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Box
70
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Social Insurance, Volume II
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Box
70
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Staff report (Preliminary, 1934 September)
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Box
70
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Townsend proposals (factual data)
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Box
71
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Unemployment compensation, Volume I, II, III
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Box
72
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Conference on Children in a Democracy, 1939
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Box
72
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Economic Stabilization Agency, Wage Stabilization Board, 1951-1952
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Federal Advisory Council
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Box
72
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1941-1942
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Box
73
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1943-1953
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Box
74
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Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service, 1946-1953
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Box
74
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Health Needs of the Nation, President's Commission on, 1952
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Box
74
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National Defense Mediation Board, 1941-1942
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National War Labor Board (NWLB)
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Box
74
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History, 1940-1946
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Box
74
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Research and statistics reports, 1-31
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Box
75
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Wage statistics, 1941-1946
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Box
75
|
Effects of wage policies
|
|
|
Wage policies
|
|
Box
75
|
1940-1943 August
|
|
Box
76
|
1943 September-1953
|
|
Box
76
|
Wage stabilization, 1943-1944
|
|
Box
77
|
Enforcement, 1944-1945, 1947
|
|
Box
77
|
Policy statements, 1942-1945
|
|
Box
77
|
Board minutes and resolutions, 1944 July-1945 December
|
|
Box
78
|
Significant Board actions, summaries, 1-8
|
|
Box
78
|
Appraisal of work of the Board, 1942-1947, 1954, 1957
|
|
|
NWLB cases
|
|
Box
79
|
A-B
|
|
Box
80
|
C
|
|
Box
81
|
D-G
|
|
Box
82
|
H-Mea
|
|
Box
83
|
Mea (continued)-Mon
|
|
Box
84
|
Mor-Reg
|
|
Box
85
|
Rub-T
|
|
Box
86
|
U-Wis
|
|
Box
87
|
Wit-Z
|
|
Box
87
|
Releases and arbitration opinions by Witte
|
|
Box
88
|
Regional releases, 1943-1944
|
|
|
Series: Diaries and Biographical Notes
|
|
|
Diaries
|
|
Box
88
Volume 1
|
1905 September 26-November 14
|
|
Box
88
Volume 2
|
1906 September 26-November 12
|
|
Box
88
Volume 3
|
1909 September 28-December 21
|
|
Box
88
Volume 4
|
1909 December 3-1910 August 6
|
|
Box
88
Volume 5
|
1910 August 15-October 24
|
|
Box
88
Volume 6
|
1910 October 27-1911 June 22
|
|
Box
88
Volume 7
|
Notes on “Aethenae” (Athenaean) meetings, 1906-1908
|
|
Box
88
Volume 8
|
Classbook, 1921-1937 : Contains a record of addresses given by Witte while executive director of the Committee on Economic Security, 1934-1935, and other addresses, 1934-1937.
|
|
Box
88
|
Biographical notes and information
|
|
|
Series: Research Files
|
|
|
Subseries: Economics
|
|
|
Economic problems
|
|
Box
89
|
American economy of the 1940s-1950s, description
|
|
Box
89
|
Business point of view on aspects of the economy
|
|
Box
89
|
Campaign to sell free enterprise
|
|
Box
90
|
Capitalism and free enterprise, pro and con
|
|
Box
90
|
Economic conditions affecting government and business
|
|
Box
90
|
History of economic trends
|
|
Box
90-91
|
Planning
|
|
Box
91
|
Prices, production, profits, saving 2 folders
|
|
Box
91
|
Radical programs for economic changes
|
|
Box
92
|
Relation of government to business, American viewpoint
|
|
Box
92
|
Significance of economic trends
|
|
|
Economics
|
|
Box
92
|
Commons (John R.) and “Institutional Economics”
|
|
Box
92
|
Economic concepts
|
|
Box
93
|
Economic theory, general 4 folders
|
|
Box
93
|
Economic theories of the future
|
|
Box
94
|
Industrial evolution
|
|
Box
94
|
Inflation and its causes
|
|
Box
94
|
Population problems
|
|
|
Postwar Problems
|
|
Box
94
|
Demobilization
|
|
Box
94
|
Depression
|
|
|
Economic
|
|
Box
94
|
Business prospects and actualities
|
|
Box
94
|
Finances and taxes
|
|
Box
95
|
Foreign countries
|
|
Box
95
|
Inflation and price control
|
|
Box
95
|
Problems of world peace
|
|
Box
95
|
National and international
|
|
Box
95-96
|
Great Britain, policies and proposals
|
|
Box
96
|
Programs for the future
|
|
Box
96
|
Readjustment after World War I and II
|
|
Box
96
|
Reconversion policies, actual and data
|
|
|
Recovery and the New Deal
|
|
Box
97
|
Constitutional aspects
|
|
Box
97
|
Depression remedies, miscellaneous proposals
|
|
Box
97
|
Economic statistics
|
|
Box
97
|
Interpretation of developments in New Deal period
|
|
Box
97
|
Interstate trade barriers
|
|
Box
98
|
Labor and the NRA
|
|
Box
98
|
Legislation and development
|
|
Box
98
|
NRA
|
|
Box
98
|
NRA codes
|
|
Box
98
|
Philosophy of the New Deal
|
|
Box
99
|
Programs of various groups
|
|
Box
99
|
Recovery measures in foreign countries
|
|
Box
99
|
Results of the New Deal
|
|
Box
99
|
State recovery codes
|
|
|
War Economy
|
|
Box
99
|
Allied countries, general
|
|
Box
100
|
Allied countries, labor supply
|
|
Box
100
|
Enemy countries, labor controls and policies
|
|
Box
100
|
Foreign countries, 1939
|
|
Box
100
|
General
|
|
|
Manpower
|
|
Box
100-101
|
General 3 folders
|
|
Box
101
|
Farm labor
|
|
Box
101
|
Industrial training
|
|
Box
101
|
Proposals for legislation
|
|
Box
102
|
War Manpower Commission
|
|
Box
102
|
Women's work
|
|
Box
102
|
Price controls 2 folders
|
|
Box
102
|
Production problems, World War II
|
|
|
Subseries: Government
|
|
Box
103
|
Council of Economic Advisors: Reports to the president
|
|
Box
103
|
Government and Business: Human relations in modern business
|
|
|
Government and Business in Wartime
|
|
Box
103
|
Economy in the United States in 1939
|
|
Box
103
|
General
|
|
Box
104
|
National government in wartime
|
|
Box
104
|
State and local governments in wartime
|
|
Box
104
|
Statistics, World War II
|
|
Box
104
|
Socio-economic effects
|
|
|
Government and Full Employment
|
|
Box
104
|
Bills and proposals
|
|
Box
104
|
In the United States and abroad, general
|
|
Box
105
|
Problems
|
|
|
Government in the Economy
|
|
Box
105-106
|
Agriculture and government 3 folders
|
|
Box
106
|
Government credit agencies
|
|
Box
106
|
Monetary policies, inflation, et cetera
|
|
Box
106
|
Taxes and expenditures, including Wisconsin
|
|
Box
106
|
Trends in relation of government to business
|
|
|
Legislative
|
|
Box
107
|
Bill drafting and budgeting
|
|
Box
107
|
Content, volume, sources of legislation
|
|
Box
107
|
General
|
|
Box
107
|
Improving state legislation
|
|
Box
107
|
Legislative control over administration
|
|
Box
108
|
Legislative procedure
|
|
Box
108
|
Legislative Reference Library of Wisconsin
|
|
Box
108
|
Legislators
|
|
Box
108
|
Lobbying and pressure groups
|
|
Box
108
|
Principles of legislation, judicial review and direct
|
|
Box
109
|
Reapportionment
|
|
Box
109
|
Reference services
|
|
Box
109
|
Unicameral legislature
|
|
|
Powers and Functions
|
|
Box
109
|
Basic economic institutions
|
|
Box
110
|
Business, regulation of
|
|
Box
110
|
Conservation and recreation
|
|
Box
110
|
Education
|
|
Box
110
|
General
|
|
Box
110
|
Government aids to business
|
|
Box
111
|
Government and business in the postwar economy
|
|
Box
111
|
Government in business 2 folders
|
|
Box
111
|
International governmental controls
|
|
Box
111
|
Minerals, atomic energy
|
|
Box
112
|
Price regulation
|
|
Box
112
|
Public utilities
|
|
Box
112
|
Railroad problems
|
|
Box
112
|
Research and information services
|
|
Box
113
|
Role of government in depression and prosperity
|
|
Box
113-114
|
Role of government in the economy 3 folders
|
|
Box
114
|
Theories on relation of government to business
|
|
Box
114
|
Trade and tariff policies
|
|
Box
114-115
|
Trusts and anti-trust legislation 3 folders
|
|
Box
115
|
Trusts and combinations, government policy 2 folders
|
|
|
Problems of Government
|
|
Box
116
|
Communism, especially Russian
|
|
Box
116
|
Consumer protection
|
|
Box
116
|
Fascism, especially Italian
|
|
Box
116
|
Farmers and farm organizations, and the role of government
|
|
Box
116
|
Federal government reorganization
|
|
Box
116
|
General
|
|
Box
116
|
Labor and the role of government
|
|
Box
117
|
Personnel, and opportunities for employment
|
|
Box
117
|
Religious groups and the role of government
|
|
Box
117
|
Training for public service
|
|
|
State Government
|
|
Box
117
|
Federal-state aids
|
|
Box
117
|
Improvement and problems
|
|
Box
118
|
Interstate cooperation
|
|
Box
118
|
Local governments
|
|
Box
118
|
Role of the states in government of the country
|
|
Box
118
|
Structure, and administrative departments
|
|
Box
118
|
Wisconsin state government problems
|
|
|
Subseries: Industrial Relations
|
|
|
Industrial Education
|
|
Box
119
|
Apprenticeship 2 folders
|
|
Box
119
|
General
|
|
Box
119
|
Labor (worker's) education
|
|
Box
119
|
Trade schools, private
|
|
|
Injunctions
|
|
Box
120
|
Damage actions against unions
|
|
Box
120
|
Damage suits against labor unions
|
|
Box
120
|
Federal court injunctions against unions on complaint of employers or public officials
|
|
Box
120
|
Federal injunctions, general 3 folders
|
|
|
Injunctions in labor disputes
|
|
Box
120
|
Federal courts, Volume I
|
|
Box
121
|
State court injunctions against unions, Volume I (continued from box 120)
|
|
Box
121
|
Issued against unions at instance of employers or the government, Volume II
|
|
Box
121
|
Other than actions by employers
|
|
Box
121
|
State courts, actions against labor unions at the instance of employer or government in which no injunctions were issued
|
|
Box
122
|
State courts, injunctions after 1950
|
|
Box
122
|
Wisconsin injunctions
|
|
|
Labor History
|
|
Box
122
|
American Federation of Labor
|
|
Box
122
|
Congress of Industrial Organizations
|
|
Box
122
|
Industrial democracy
|
|
Box
122
|
International trade unionism
|
|
Box
122
|
Labor movement in theory
|
|
Box
123
|
Labor union finances and dues
|
|
Box
123
|
Labor unions and industrial peace
|
|
Box
123
|
Labor unity, AFL-CIO
|
|
Box
123
|
Politics of trade unionism
|
|
Box
123
|
Structure: craft vs. industrial, jurisdictional disputes
|
|
|
Trade unionism
|
|
Box
123
|
Early history
|
|
Box
124
|
In the New Deal period
|
|
Box
124
|
In World War II (in U.S.)
|
|
Box
124
|
Pro and con
|
|
Box
125
|
Value to employers
|
|
Box
125
|
Union practices
|
|
Box
125
|
Union responsibility to public
|
|
Box
125
|
Various unions
|
|
Box
125
|
White collar employees
|
|
Box
125
|
Wisconsin's labor movement
|
|
|
Labor in Politics
|
|
Box
126
|
Earliest period to 1890
|
|
Box
126
|
1890-1905
|
|
Box
126
|
1905-1919
|
|
Box
126
|
1919-1932
|
|
Box
126
|
1933-1942
|
|
Box
127
|
1943-1947
|
|
Box
127
|
1947-circa 1951
|
|
Box
127
|
1952 campaign
|
|
Box
127
|
1952-1960
|
|
Box
128
|
Foreign labor parties
|
|
Box
128
|
General 2 folders
|
|
Box
128
|
Lobbying, legislative activities
|
|
Box
128
|
Maps showing voting of Union Labor Party, 1880s
|
|
Box
128
|
Miscellaneous topics
|
|
Box
128
|
Unions and the Taft-Hartley Act
|
|
|
Labor Law
|
|
|
Anti-trust cases against unions and leaders
|
|
Box
129
|
General
|
|
Box
129
|
After 1836
|
|
Box
129
|
Enforcement
|
|
Box
129
|
Martial law, and the law on strikes
|
|
Box
129
|
Norris-LaGuardia anti-injunction laws
|
|
Box
130
|
Picketing 2 folders
|
|
|
Policy questions
|
|
Box
130
|
Regarding industrial relations
|
|
Box
130
|
Regarding regulation of internal union affairs
|
|
Box
130
|
Regarding restrictions on unions
|
|
Box
130
|
Regarding right to strike and limitations
|
|
Box
131
|
Regarding union incorporation and responsibility, suability of unions
|
|
Box
131
|
Regarding union relations to their members, intra-union rows
|
|
Box
131
|
Regarding union responsibility under trade agreements--no strike provisions
|
|
Box
131
|
Public emergencies caused by strikes (other then public utility strikes)
|
|
Box
131
|
Public employees and unionism
|
|
Box
132
|
Public employment, collective bargaining adjustment grievances
|
|
Box
132
|
Property rights involved in labor cases
|
|
Box
132
|
Summaries of current law
|
|
Box
132
|
Statutes concerning labor combinations
|
|
Box
132
|
Working papers for “Labor and the Law”
|
|
Box
132
|
“Yellow Dog” contracts
|
|
|
Labor Legislation
|
|
Box
133
|
Administration 2 folders
|
|
Box
133
|
Administration, U.S. Department of Labor
|
|
Box
133
|
Anti-injunction legislation before 1930
|
|
Box
133
|
Anti-injunction legislation after 1930
|
|
Box
134
|
Book, proposed chapters
|
|
|
Child labor
|
|
Box
134
|
Federal legislation
|
|
Box
134
|
In agriculture
|
|
Box
134
|
In wartime
|
|
Box
134
|
Laws, state and foreign
|
|
Box
135
|
Need for restriction
|
|
Box
135
|
Street trades
|
|
Box
135
|
Treble compensation
|
|
Box
135
|
Employment contract
|
|
Box
135
|
Fair employment practices legislation
|
|
|
Fair Labor Standards Act
|
|
Box
136
|
History
|
|
Box
136
|
1935 proposals for changes 2 folders
|
|
Box
137
|
Farmers and protective labor legislation
|
|
Box
137
|
Federal anti-injunction bill, 1928
|
|
Box
137
|
Foreign countries, general; United Nations, Economic and Social Council
|
|
Box
137
|
General
|
|
Box
138
|
History, proponents and opponents
|
|
Box
138
|
Hobbs Anti-Racketeering Act, 1946
|
|
Box
138
|
Home work and sweat shop labor
|
|
|
Hours
|
|
Box
138
|
Studies of problems
|
|
Box
138
|
Women's hours legislation
|
|
Box
139
|
Immigration and naturalization
|
|
Box
139
|
In foreign countries
|
|
Box
139
|
Injunction bills in Congress, 1895-1932 : Witte wrote on the original folder, “Important.”
|
|
Box
139
|
International action on labor legislation, particularly the I.L.O.
|
|
|
Labor in wartime
|
|
Box
139
|
Foreign countries
|
|
Box
140
|
Hours
|
|
Box
140
|
Labor legislation in Wisconsin
|
|
Box
140
|
Labor relations, development, 1947-1948
|
|
|
Labor relations, legislation
|
|
Box
140
|
Legal cases arising under restrictive state laws
|
|
Box
140
|
Positions of different groups and discussion of problems, 1947
|
|
Box
140
|
Landrum-Griffin Act, 1959
|
|
Box
140
|
Lea Act, 1946 (anti-Petrillo bill)
|
|
Box
140
|
Legal aid
|
|
Box
140
|
Legal basis, effects
|
|
Box
141
|
Men's hours, legislation (including movement for the 8-hour day) 2 folders
|
|
Box
141
|
Migratory workers, problems of
|
|
Box
141
|
National Labor Relations Act, first NLRB, 1931 May-1935 July
|
|
Box
141
|
National Labor Relations Act, second NLRB, 1935-1936, developments up to Supreme Court decision
|
|
|
National Labor Relations Board
|
|
Box
141
|
“Appropriate bargaining unit” issue
|
|
Box
142
|
Changes proposed, 1937-1941
|
|
Box
142
|
Developments in , 1940-1941 sessions of Congress
|
|
Box
142
|
Evaluation
|
|
Box
142
|
General, 1942
|
|
Box
143
|
Interpretation 2 folders
|
|
Box
143
|
Interpretation of Section 7(a)
|
|
Box
143
|
Legislative proposals terminating in act of , 1935
|
|
Box
144
|
Policy issues
|
|
Box
144
|
Trade agreements
|
|
Box
144
|
Status
|
|
Box
144
|
Union obligations, restrictions, employer interference, collective bargaining
|
|
Box
144
|
New Deal Board, 1931
|
|
Box
145
|
Norris-LaGuardia Act
|
|
Box
145
|
Price and wage controls, 1952
|
|
Box
145
|
Prison labor
|
|
Box
145
|
Public employees, laws regulating
|
|
Box
145
|
Public utilities
|
|
Box
145
|
Public utility strike legislation other than Wisconsin
|
|
Box
146
|
Railroad and maritime labor acts 2 folders
|
|
Box
146
|
Railroad employees, special laws
|
|
Box
146
|
Restrictive legislation, proposals in Congress, 1945-1947
|
|
Box
147
|
Right to work laws
|
|
|
Safety and sanitation
|
|
Box
147
|
Coal mines
|
|
Box
147
|
General
|
|
|
Safety
|
|
Box
147
|
Application of safety laws
|
|
Box
148
|
Employment prohibited to women
|
|
Box
148
|
Fire prevention
|
|
Box
148
|
Industrial diseases
|
|
Box
148
|
Safety laws and their administration
|
|
Box
148
|
Seamen's labor laws
|
|
Box
148
|
Standards
|
|
|
States
|
|
Box
148
|
Hours of labor for men
|
|
Box
149
|
Labor relations
|
|
Box
149
|
Safety and sanitation legislation
|
|
Box
149
|
Summaries of legislation
|
|
|
Taft-Hartley Act
|
|
Box
149
|
Analysis
|
|
Box
149
|
Appraisal and operation of the law
|
|
Box
150
|
Boycotts 2 folders
|
|
Box
150
|
Coal industry disputes after T-H Act
|
|
Box
150
|
Collective bargaining
|
|
Box
151
|
Communist affidavit requirements
|
|
Box
151
|
Company union cases and favoritism
|
|
Box
151
|
Congressional Labor-Management Committee, 1947-1952
|
|
Box
151
|
Damage suits
|
|
Box
151
|
Developments affecting T-H after passage, 1947 July
|
|
Box
151
|
Discrimination against union members
|
|
Box
151
|
Effects on employees
|
|
Box
152
|
Emergency strikes (exclusive of coal)
|
|
Box
152
|
Employers, rights of free speech before and after T-H
|
|
Box
152
|
Featherbedding
|
|
Box
152
|
Health, welfare, and pension plans
|
|
Box
152
|
Injunctions
|
|
Box
152
|
Interpretations and forecasts of effects
|
|
Box
152
|
Jurisdictional disputes
|
|
Box
153
|
Labor developments subsequent to passage of the Act but not directly related to it
|
|
Box
153
|
McClellan investigations. Labor scandals, 1957
|
|
Box
153
|
Miscellaneous specific provisions of the T-H Act, and their effects
|
|
Box
153
|
NLRB jurisdiction under T-H 2 folders
|
|
Box
153-154
|
NLRB under T-H Act 2 folders
|
|
Box
154
|
Picketing
|
|
Box
154
|
Procedural issues
|
|
Box
154
|
Proposals for changes
|
|
Box
154
|
Representation questions under T-H : Includes craft severance.
|
|
Box
154
|
State-federal relations under T-H
|
|
Box
155
|
Strikes after passage of the Act, 1947
|
|
Box
155
|
Strikes--legal questions
|
|
Box
155
|
Supervisory employees and plant guards
|
|
Box
155
|
Union coercion, violence, et cetera
|
|
Box
155
|
Union reaction and policies after passage of the T-H Act
|
|
Box
156
|
80th Congress, proposals for changes 4 folders
|
|
Box
156
|
81st Congress, proposals for changes
|
|
Box
157
|
83rd Congress, proposals for changes
|
|
Box
157
|
83rd and 84th Congresses, labor relations legislation
|
|
Box
157
|
85th Congress, labor relations legislation
|
|
Box
157
|
86th Congress, proposals for changes
|
|
Box
157
|
Theory
|
|
Box
157
|
Union labor, preference to
|
|
Box
157
|
Union regulation in labor disputes
|
|
|
Wages
|
|
Box
158
|
Minimum wages, effects and arguments
|
|
Box
158
|
Minimum wages, general
|
|
Box
158
|
Minimum wage legislation for minors, apprenticeship
|
|
Box
158
|
Minimum wage legislation, methods of administration
|
|
Box
158
|
Minimum wage legislation, U.S., general
|
|
Box
158-159
|
Minimum wage scale and minimum wage movement in the U.S. 2 folders
|
|
Box
159
|
Public Contracts Act, prevailing wage
|
|
Box
159
|
Regulation for men : Existing legislation--foreign and American.
|
|
Box
159
|
Wage payment and collection laws
|
|
Box
159
|
Women's Equal Rights Amendment, equal pay for equal work laws
|
|
Box
159
|
Women's hours of labor, flexible
|
|
Box
159
|
Women's hours of labor and wages : Wisconsin pea canneries.
|
|
Box
160
|
Women's wages
|
|
Box
160
|
Women's work in industry, general
|
|
Box
160
|
Wisconsin “employment peace act,” data on operation of the law
|
|
Box
160
|
Wisconsin “employment peace act,” 1939
|
|
Box
160
|
Wisconsin labor relations, changes in the law after 1939, and proposed changes
|
|
|
Labor-Management Relations
|
|
Box
161
|
Changes in labor conditions
|
|
Box
161
|
Conference, 1945 December
|
|
Box
161
|
Cooperation
|
|
Box
161
|
Developments and trends
|
|
Box
162
|
Employer associations
|
|
Box
162
|
Employer ideas and policies
|
|
Box
162
|
Employers and collective bargaining
|
|
Box
162
|
Essentials for satisfactory relations
|
|
Box
163
|
Management rights as an issue in collective bargaining
|
|
Box
163
|
Personnel management
|
|
Box
163
|
Psychology
|
|
Box
163
|
Sociologists approach
|
|
Box
163
|
Welfare
|
|
|
Labor Problems
|
|
Box
164
|
Arbitration 3 folders
|
|
Box
164
|
Compulsory
|
|
Box
164
|
General 2 folders
|
|
|
Arbitration
|
|
Box
165
|
Handling by state boards
|
|
Box
165
|
History of
|
|
Box
165
|
Issues, notes on decisions
|
|
Box
165
|
Municipal labor boards
|
|
Box
165
|
U.S. Conciliation Service to 1947, and Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service after 1947
|
|
Box
165
|
Its influences on guaranteed wages and social changes
|
|
Box
166
|
Automation, its influence on guaranteed wages and social changes
|
|
Box
166
|
Boycotts
|
|
Box
166
|
Collective bargaining
|
|
Box
166
|
General
|
|
Box
167
|
History, theory, legal nature
|
|
Box
167
|
Industry-wide bargaining
|
|
Box
167
|
In operation, appraisals
|
|
Box
167
|
In particular industries
|
|
Box
167
|
“Portal to Portal” pay, travel time, clothes changing
|
|
Box
168
|
Productivity
|
|
Box
168
|
Contracts, modification and extension
|
|
Box
168
|
Disputes in Wisconsin
|
|
Box
168
|
Disputes, public policy
|
|
Box
168
|
Employment market
|
|
Box
168-169
|
Employment of older people 3 folders
|
|
|
Employment offices
|
|
Box
169
|
Private
|
|
Box
169
|
Public 2 folders
|
|
Box
169
|
Employment planning by government
|
|
Box
170
|
Employment relations in Wisconsin
|
|
Box
170
|
Employment services in foreign countries
|
|
Box
170
|
Employment statistics
|
|
Box
170
|
Fringe benefits
|
|
Box
171
|
General
|
|
Box
171
|
Government labor relation policies
|
|
|
Grievance adjustments
|
|
Box
171
|
Including arbitration, NWLB
|
|
Box
171
|
Machinery in trade agreements
|
|
Box
172
|
Guaranteed wages and employment 3 folders
|
|
|
Guaranteed wages and employment
|
|
Box
173
|
Actual plans 2 folders
|
|
Box
173
|
Including severance and dismissal pay
|
|
Box
173
|
Insurance
|
|
Box
173
|
Hours
|
|
|
Housing
|
|
Box
173
|
Foreign countries
|
|
Box
174
|
U.S. 2 folders
|
|
Box
174
|
Independent company unions, employee representation
|
|
Box
174
|
Independent company unions under NIRA (1 and 2) 2 folders
|
|
Box
175
|
Industrial spying and private detective agencies
|
|
Box
175
|
Injunctions in labor disputes
|
|
Box
175
|
Labor statistics
|
|
Box
176
|
Labor unionism, general
|
|
Box
176
|
Methods of coping with unemployment
|
|
Box
176
|
Picketing
|
|
Box
176
|
Productivity, problems and trends 2 folders
|
|
Box
177
|
Profit-sharing
|
|
Box
177
|
Public employee, rights as an employee 2 folders
|
|
Box
177
|
Racketeering 2 folders
|
|
Box
178
|
Seniority
|
|
Box
178
|
Stabilization of employment
|
|
|
Strikes
|
|
Box
178
|
General aspects
|
|
Box
178
|
Their social significance
|
|
Box
178
|
Employment of strikebreakers
|
|
Box
178
|
Sit-down and other anti-social strikes
|
|
Box
178-179
|
Statistics
|
|
Box
179
|
Unemployment before World War II 2 folders
|
|
Box
179
|
Unemployment during and after World War I
|
|
Box
180
|
Unionization of foremen
|
|
Box
180
|
Violence in disputes
|
|
Box
180
|
Wage issues, labor and employee positions
|
|
Box
180
|
Wage statistics
|
|
Box
181
|
Wage theories 3 folders
|
|
Box
182
|
Wages, union policies
|
|
|
Labor Relations in Foreign Countries
|
|
Box
182
|
Australia and New Zealand
|
|
Box
182
|
Canada
|
|
Box
182
|
Hawaii
|
|
Box
183
|
General
|
|
Box
183
|
Great Britain
|
|
Box
183
|
Labor law (except British, Canadian, Australian)
|
|
Box
184
|
Latin America
|
|
Box
184
|
Occupied countries after World War II
|
|
Box
184
|
Post World War II : Other than occupied countries.
|
|
Box
184
|
Scandinavian
|
|
Box
184
|
Soviet Union
|
|
Box
184
|
Western Germany
|
|
|
Labor Relations in Postwar Period
|
|
Box
185
|
Disputes, adjustments after V-J Day
|
|
Box
185
|
Disputes, fact-finding boards, 1945-1946
|
|
Box
185
|
General 2 folders
|
|
Box
185
|
Policy discussions, 1945 August-1946 December
|
|
Box
186
|
Strikes: coal strike, 1947 July
|
|
|
Wage controls
|
|
Box
186
|
Controversies and agreements
|
|
Box
186
|
Government action
|
|
Box
186
|
Policies and discussions prior to V-J Day
|
|
Box
186
|
Policies and discussions following V-J Day
|
|
|
Labor Relations in Wartime
|
|
Box
187
|
General
|
|
|
Korean War
|
|
|
Defense Production Act
|
|
Box
187
|
1950
|
|
Box
187
|
1951
|
|
Box
187
|
Inflation situation
|
|
Box
187
|
Labor disputes, 1950-1952
|
|
Box
187
|
Labor disputes and WSB action
|
|
Box
187
|
Labor in defense effort, 1950-1951
|
|
Box
187
|
Price stabilization
|
|
Box
188
|
Steel disputes and strike, 1951
|
|
Box
188
|
Reconstituted Wage Stabilization Board
|
|
Box
188
|
Wage stabilization and first Wage Stabilization Board
|
|
Box
189
|
Wage Stabilization Board -- orders and interpreters
|
|
Box
189
|
Wage Stabilization Committee, 1952 December-1953 March
|
|
Box
189
|
War mobilization -- manpower problems, 1950
|
|
Box
189
|
War mobilization plans, circa 1950
|
|
Box
190
|
Meat packing industry, Chicago
|
|
|
NWLB
|
|
Box
190
|
And independent unions
|
|
Box
190
|
Disputes cases
|
|
Box
190
|
Jurisdiction
|
|
Box
190
|
Policy of strikes and threatened strikes
|
|
Box
190
|
Representation and recognition
|
|
Box
191
|
Railway labor
|
|
Box
191
|
World War I
|
|
|
World War II
|
|
Box
191
|
Adjustments of labor disputes
|
|
Box
191
|
General
|
|
Box
191
|
Labor problems before Congress previous to Smith-Connally Act
|
|
Box
191
|
Mediation
|
|
Box
191
|
National defense, 1940
|
|
Box
192
|
Mediation proposals, 1940-1941
|
|
Box
192
|
Right to strike, restrictions after Pearl Harbor 2 folders
|
|
Box
192
|
Smith-Connally Act
|
|
Box
193
|
Strikes and near strikes
|
|
Box
193
|
Strikes subsequent to Smith-Connally Act
|
|
Box
193
|
Wage problems
|
|
|
Labor Union Policy Issues
|
|
Box
193-194
|
Communism in the unions 2 folders
|
|
Box
194
|
Disputes between unions
|
|
Box
194
|
Farmers, attitudes
|
|
Box
194
|
Labor's support of education
|
|
Box
195
|
Monopoly and the unions
|
|
|
State Labor Relations
|
|
Box
195
|
Labor union policy issues -- monopoly and unions, non-legal aspects
|
|
Box
195
|
Legislative proposals, 1946-1947
|
|
Box
195
|
“Little Wagner” acts
|
|
Box
195-196
|
Restrictive acts by states 2 folders
|
|
Box
196
|
Wisconsin Labor Relations Act, 1936-1939
|
|
|
Union Security
|
|
Box
196-197
|
After passage of Taft-Hartley Act (other than NLRB and court cases) 2 folders
|
|
Box
197
|
As an issue before NWLB
|
|
Box
198
|
Cases before NWLB 2 folders
|
|
Box
198
|
Check-off of union dues
|
|
Box
198
|
Closed shop and open shop issues
|
|
|
Subseries: Social Security
|
|
|
Advisory Council
|
|
Box
198
|
Miscellaneous reports and recommendations, 1947-1952
|
|
Box
199
|
Recommendations, 1937-1939
|
|
Box
199
|
Studies and reports, 1937-1939 3 folders
|
|
|
Children's Security
|
|
Box
200
|
Aid to dependent children regarding mother pensions
|
|
Box
200
|
Crippled children's services
|
|
Box
200
|
Family allowances
|
|
Box
200-201
|
Historical and general 2 folders
|
|
Box
201
|
Committee on Economic Security: General
|
|
|
Disability Insurance
|
|
Box
201
|
Cash sickness compensation
|
|
Box
201
|
Cash sickness insurance
|
|
|
General
|
|
Box
202
|
Administration, federal and state
|
|
Box
202
|
Articles and discussions
|
|
Box
202
|
Development of social security
|
|
Box
202
|
Economic security, general approaches
|
|
Box
202
|
Farmers and farm workers, social security for 2 folders
|
|
Box
203
|
Financial data
|
|
|
Insurance
|
|
Box
203
|
Group and auto
|
|
Box
203
|
Life and industrial
|
|
Box
203
|
Miscellaneous
|
|
Box
203
|
Need for social security
|
|
Box
204
|
Objectives of social security
|
|
Box
204
|
Payroll taxes, incidence and effect
|
|
Box
204
|
Philosophy of social security
|
|
Box
204
|
Public welfare organizations, state and local
|
|
Box
204
|
Social assistance
|
|
Box
204
|
Social insurance
|
|
Box
205
|
Social Security Act, defense of the law
|
|
Box
205
|
Social security development, appraisal and prospects
|
|
Box
205
|
Social security legislation, effects
|
|
Box
205
|
Social work and social security
|
|
Box
205
|
Statistical data
|
|
Box
205
|
“Welfare State” and social security
|
|
|
Health Insurance
|
|
Box
206
|
Compulsory
|
|
Box
206
|
Disability insurance
|
|
Box
206
|
Health security data 2 folders
|
|
Box
206
|
Medical care for public assistance recipients
|
|
Box
206
|
Medical service plans in industry
|
|
Box
207
|
National health programs
|
|
Box
207
|
Pros and cons
|
|
Box
207
|
Public health services
|
|
Box
207-208
|
Sickness risk, statistical 3 folders
|
|
Box
208
|
Voluntary health insurance, general
|
|
Box
208-209
|
Voluntary pre-payment 4 folders
|
|
|
History of Health Security
|
|
Box
209
|
Campaigns of , 1948-1952
|
|
|
Compulsory health insurance
|
|
Box
209
|
History
|
|
Box
209
|
Movement, 1936
|
|
Box
209
|
Developments, 1952-1953
|
|
Box
209
|
Disability and health insurance
|
|
Box
210
|
Health aspects of Wagner-Murray-Dingell Bill, 1943-1945
|
|
Box
210
|
Health insurance in Wisconsin
|
|
|
Health security proposals
|
|
Box
210
|
1945
|
|
Box
210
|
1947-1949
|
|
Box
210
|
1950
|
|
Box
211
|
1953-1956
|
|
Box
211
|
General
|
|
Box
211
|
Hospitalization benefits, Ewing proposals, 1951
|
|
Box
211
|
Legislative developments, general
|
|
Box
211
|
National health program, 1938-1942
|
|
Box
212
|
President's Commission on Health Needs of the Nation
|
|
Box
212
|
Proposals favorable to health insurance, 1950
|
|
Box
212
|
Proposals on the federal level, 1935-1945
|
|
Box
212
|
Public Health Service
|
|
Box
212
|
Voluntary health insurance
|
|
|
History of Social Security
|
|
Box
212
|
Committee on Economic Security, 1934-1935, and Social Security Act, , 1935
|
|
Box
213
|
Freezing “payroll taxes” in the 1940s
|
|
Box
213
|
General developments after , 1935
|
|
Box
213
|
History through proposed changes in Social Security Act, 1940-1953
|
|
Box
214
|
Labor and social security legislation
|
|
Box
214
|
Old age security legislation
|
|
Box
214
|
Social Security Act
|
|
Box
214
|
Social Security Board, work and progress under the act of 1935
|
|
Box
214
|
Social security legislation
|
|
|
Legislation and Development
|
|
Box
215
|
Arden House Conference on Social Security, 1953
|
|
Box
215
|
Bills in Congress other than administrative--Townsend and Lundeen Bills, 1934-1935
|
|
Box
215
|
Changes in OASI, 1949
|
|
Box
215
|
Changes in social assistance legislation, 1949
|
|
Box
215
|
Compilation of social security laws, 1954, 1956, 1958
|
|
Box
215
|
Congress' universal pension proposals, et cetera, 1949
|
|
Box
215
|
Employer programs, 1941-1945
|
|
Box
215
|
Miscellaneous proposals for changes in the Social Security Act
|
|
Box
215
|
National Resources Planning Board, 1942-1943
|
|
Box
216
|
Social security legislation, historical material
|
|
|
Social Security Act, 1935
|
|
Box
216
|
History and ideas
|
|
Box
216
|
Amendments proposed, 1930s
|
|
Box
216
|
Amendments proposed and passed, 1930s
|
|
Box
216
|
Amendments proposed by unofficial groups, 1930s
|
|
Box
217
|
Amendments proposed by Congress, 1939-1940
|
|
Box
217
|
Amendments proposed, 1945
|
|
Box
217
|
Amendments, 1946
|
|
Box
217
|
Amendments discussed by 81st Congress, 1949
|
|
Box
217
|
Amendments, 1950
|
|
Box
217
|
Amendments proposed in H.R. 600, 1950-1951
|
|
Box
217
|
Amendments, 1952
|
|
Box
217
|
Amendments proposed, 1952-1954
|
|
Box
218
|
Amendments proposed, 1954
|
|
Box
218
|
Amendments of , 1954 2 folders
|
|
Box
218
|
Amendments proposed, 1955-1956
|
|
Box
219
|
Amendments of , 1956
|
|
Box
219
|
Amendments regarding OASI, 1956
|
|
Box
219
|
Amendments proposed and passed, 1958
|
|
Box
219
|
Changes proposed, 1939, unofficial
|
|
Box
219
|
Changes in the 1940s, historical material
|
|
Box
219
|
Changes proposed, 1941-1942
|
|
Box
220
|
Changes proposed, 1941-1942, unofficial
|
|
Box
220
|
Changes proposed after , 1942
|
|
Box
220
|
Changes proposed by administration, 1943-1945
|
|
Box
220
|
Changes proposed, 1943-1945, and the campaign for passage of amendments
|
|
Box
220
|
Changes proposed by administration, 1953-1954
|
|
Box
220
|
Changes proposed by Democratic party and Labor, 1953-1954
|
|
Box
220
|
Changes proposed by U.S. Chamber of Commerce, 1953-1954
|
|
Box
221
|
Changes proposed in health security, 1954-1958
|
|
Box
221
|
Comments in, 1939
|
|
Box
221
|
Congressional hearings after passage of the original act, 1935-1939
|
|
Box
221
|
Curtis subcommittee of House Ways and Means Committee, on H.R. 6863, 1953-1954
|
|
|
Old Age Security
|
|
Box
222
|
Civil Service retirement system
|
|
Box
222
|
Developments in old age assistance after , 1935 3 folders
|
|
Box
222
|
Federal OASI after , 1954
|
|
Box
223
|
Federal OASI after 1954, views of “experts” and critics
|
|
Box
223
|
Financing, tax rates, et cetera
|
|
Box
223
|
Legislation on the old age problem, other than social security
|
|
Box
223
|
Old age assistance in California
|
|
Box
223
|
Old age insurance, 1935 law and policy questions
|
|
|
OASI
|
|
Box
224
|
Coverage
|
|
Box
224
|
Eligibility and benefit problems; retirement age; survivors and dependents benefits
|
|
Box
224
|
Financial aspects
|
|
Box
224-225
|
Reserves 3 folders
|
|
Box
225
|
Under the Social Security Act
|
|
Box
225
|
Pension plans and annuities (churches, trade, veterans)
|
|
Box
225
|
Population trends and problems
|
|
|
Public employees
|
|
Box
225
|
Inclusion in social security
|
|
Box
226
|
Retirement plans (other than teachers)
|
|
Box
226
|
Railroad retirement plans
|
|
Box
226
|
Retirement of older workers
|
|
Box
227
|
Teachers, retirement plans
|
|
Box
227
|
Wisconsin, data peculiar to
|
|
Box
227
|
Personnel, general
|
|
|
Physically Handicapped
|
|
Box
227
|
Disability insurance under OASI
|
|
Box
227
|
Disabled permanently and totally
|
|
Box
227
|
Security for the blind
|
|
Box
227-228
|
Vocational rehabilitation 2 folders
|
|
Box
228
|
Health and welfare funds
|
|
Box
228
|
Industrial pension, health, welfare plans
|
|
Box
228
|
Industrial pensions
|
|
Box
229
|
Investigations of health, welfare and pension funds
|
|
Box
229
|
Pension and welfare funds under wage stabilization
|
|
Box
229
|
Public regulation of health, welfare and pension plans
|
|
Box
229
|
Sick leave, group insurance, pension plans--War Labor Board
|
|
Box
229
|
Social security by contract--collective bargaining
|
|
Box
230
|
Union-company joint health, welfare, and pension plans 2 folders
|
|
Box
230
|
UAW health, welfare, and pension plans
|
|
|
Public Assistance
|
|
Box
230
|
Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC)
|
|
Box
230
|
Direct relief (state and local) after Federal Emergency Relief Act (F.E.R.A.) and prior to World War II
|
|
Box
231
|
Emergency employment and wages
|
|
Box
231
|
Federal Emergency Relief Act (FERA)
|
|
Box
231
|
Federal Emergency Relief Act, work programs and CWA
|
|
Box
231
|
Food stamp plan
|
|
Box
231
|
General
|
|
Box
232
|
History of relief previous to depression of 1930s 2 folders
|
|
Box
232
|
National Youth Administration (NYA)
|
|
Box
232
|
Proposals for permanent relief program
|
|
Box
232
|
Public works plans for foreign countries
|
|
Box
233
|
Relief during the depression of the 1930s 2 folders
|
|
Box
233
|
Relief in relation to social insurance
|
|
Box
233
|
Rural rehabilitation (FSA, Resettlement Administration, et cetera)
|
|
Box
234
|
Works Progress Administration (WPA)
|
|
|
Radical Plans
|
|
Box
234
|
General Welfare Act, H.R. 5620; H.R. 4199; H.R. 1410
|
|
Box
234
|
Miscellaneous
|
|
Box
234
|
Social credit movement
|
|
Box
235
|
Townsend Plan I, before 1938
|
|
Box
235
|
Townsend Plan after 1938, and “baby” Townsend Plan
|
|
Box
235
|
Social Security and Politics: Campaigns, 1936, 1938, 1940
|
|
|
Social Security Board
|
|
Box
236
|
General
|
|
Box
236
|
Social Security Act, changes recommended by the Board, 1939
|
|
|
Social Security in Foreign Countries
|
|
Box
236
|
All foreign plans
|
|
Box
236
|
Australia and New Zealand
|
|
Box
236-237
|
Canada 4 folders
|
|
|
England
|
|
Box
237
|
Law of , 1948 and its operation
|
|
Box
237
|
National Health Service to , 1948
|
|
Box
238
|
Prior to Beveridge Report
|
|
Box
238
|
Beveridge Report and postwar social security 2 folders
|
|
Box
238
|
Unemployment insurance
|
|
Box
239
|
France
|
|
Box
239
|
Germany
|
|
Box
239
|
Health insurance, general
|
|
Box
239
|
International action
|
|
Box
239
|
International comparisons
|
|
Box
239
|
Japan
|
|
Box
239
|
Latin America
|
|
Box
239
|
Old age security in foreign countries, general
|
|
Box
239
|
Public assistance in foreign countries, general
|
|
Box
240
|
Russia
|
|
Box
240
|
Scandinavia
|
|
Box
240
|
Social insurance in foreign countries, general
|
|
Box
240
|
Socialized medicine, developments abroad
|
|
Box
241
|
Unemployment insurance other than England and Canada
|
|
Box
241
|
World War II
|
|
|
Social Security in the States
|
|
Box
241
|
Public welfare in Wisconsin, also social security
|
|
Box
241-242
|
Relief in Wisconsin, problems and program 2 folders
|
|
Box
242
|
Wisconsin and social security
|
|
|
Social Security in Wartime
|
|
Box
242
|
Korean War, 1950
|
|
|
World War II
|
|
Box
242
|
Aid to soldiers
|
|
Box
242
|
Developments in social security
|
|
|
Unemployment Insurance
|
|
Box
242
|
Benefits, adequacy of dependents allowances
|
|
Box
243
|
Benefits and taxes 2 folders
|
|
Box
243
|
Changes at state level, 1949
|
|
Box
243
|
Changes by 83rd Congress, 1951-1952
|
|
Box
243
|
Changes proposed prior to , 1945
|
|
Box
244
|
Compensation: federal-state relations, other than issue of Federalization
|
|
Box
244
|
Compensation in the U.S. after enactment of state laws (excluding New York and Wisconsin)
|
|
Box
244
|
Coverage problems
|
|
Box
244
|
Disqualifications
|
|
|
Experience rating
|
|
Box
244
|
1937-1940
|
|
Box
245
|
1941-1947
|
|
Box
245
|
After , 1947
|
|
Box
245
|
Federal unemployment insurance law changes, 1937-1945
|
|
Box
245
|
Federalization
|
|
Box
245
|
Finances and tax rates
|
|
Box
246
|
Fraud and malingering
|
|
Box
246
|
Historical data since , 1935
|
|
Box
246
|
Interstate migration and claims
|
|
|
Legislative developments
|
|
Box
246
|
1944-1945
|
|
Box
246
|
1953-1957
|
|
Box
246
|
1959
|
|
Box
246
|
Lundeen-Frazier Bill
|
|
Box
247
|
Miscellaneous
|
|
Box
247
|
Operation and effects
|
|
Box
247
|
Private plans
|
|
|
Proposals for Social Security Act
|
|
Box
247
|
Wagner-Lewis Bill, 1932-1935
|
|
Box
248
|
1934-1935
|
|
Box
248
|
Railroad employees, dismissal wages
|
|
Box
248
|
Reinsurance
|
|
Box
248
|
Relief as related to unemployment
|
|
Box
248
|
Seasonal and partial employment
|
|
Box
248
|
State developments during World War II, 1942-1945
|
|
Box
248
|
State laws 2 folders
|
|
Box
249
|
Strikes and strike jobs
|
|
Box
249
|
Supplemental unemployment benefits
|
|
Box
249
|
Temporary insurance: recession of , 1957-1959
|
|
Box
249
|
Unemployment compensation in the Social Security Act
|
|
Box
249
|
Unemployment compensation law changes, 1931-1941
|
|
Box
249
|
War displacement benefits
|
|
Box
250
|
Wisconsin unemployment law of 1934
|
|
Box
250
|
Wisconsin unemployment law, early years
|
|
Box
250
|
Wisconsin unemployment insurance after , 1938
|
|
|
Veterans' Security
|
|
Box
250
|
Disabled veterans
|
|
Box
250
|
Unemployment insurance for veterans
|
|
Box
251
|
Veterans' benefits 2 folders
|
|
Box
251
|
Veterans' problems
|
|
|
Workmen's Compensation
|
|
Box
251
|
Compensation and accident insurance in foreign countries
|
|
Box
251-252
|
History of workmen's compensation 2 folders
|
|
Box
252
|
Insurance
|
|
Box
252-253
|
Non-insurance under workmen's compensation 3 folders
|
|
Box
253
|
Occupational diseases
|
|
Box
253
|
Railroad employees
|
|
Box
253
|
States (other than Wisconsin)
|
|
Box
254
|
Status and problems, 1950s
|
|
Box
254
|
Theory and purpose
|
|
|
Series: Miscellaneous Files : Arranged alphabetically, by type of material
|
|
|
Subseries: Articles and Addresses
|
|
Box
254
|
Authors other than Witte, 1934-1958, 1963
|
|
Box
254
|
Clippings regarding Witte articles and addresses, 1917-1956
|
|
Box
254
|
Economics, economic problems, taxation, 1926-1957
|
|
Box
254
|
Government, and government and business, 1925-1957
|
|
|
Industrial relations
|
|
Box
255
|
1909-1929
|
|
Box
255
|
1930-1939
|
|
Box
255
|
1940-1946
|
|
Box
255
|
1947
|
|
Box
256-256A
|
1948
|
|
Box
256-256A
|
1949-1951
|
|
Box
256-256A
|
1952-1953
|
|
Box
256-256A
|
1951-1960
|
|
Box
257
|
Miscellaneous articles and addresses by Witte, 1924-1960
|
|
|
Social Security
|
|
Box
257
|
1921-1935
|
|
Box
257
|
1936
|
|
Box
257
|
1937-1938
|
|
Box
257
|
1939
|
|
Box
258
|
1940
|
|
Box
258
|
1941-1944
|
|
Box
258
|
1945-1949
|
|
Box
258
|
1950-1951
|
|
Box
259
|
1952-1953
|
|
Box
259
|
1955-1956
|
|
Box
259
|
1957-1959
|
|
|
Wisconsin
|
|
Box
259
|
1921-1934
|
|
Box
260
|
1935-1953
|
|
|
Subseries: Bibliographies
|
|
Box
260
|
Government publications in the Witte library
|
|
Box
260
|
Non-government publications in the Witte library
|
|
Box
260
|
Witte on injunctions and trade union law [articles and addresses listed by Mrs. Witte before papers were given to the State Historical Society]
|
|
Box
260
|
Witte on social security [articles and addresses listed by Mrs. Witte before papers were given to the State Historical Society]
|
|
|
Subseries: Class lectures
|
|
Box
260
|
Economic problems in Wisconsin, 1933-1940
|
|
|
Government and business
|
|
Box
260
|
1949-1950
|
|
Box
261
|
1959-1960
|
|
|
Government and labor
|
|
Box
261
|
1937-1940
|
|
Box
261
|
1940-1941 2 folders
|
|
Box
262
|
1941-1943
|
|
Box
262
|
Miscellaneous notes and lectures
|
|
Box
262
|
Government economic problems, seminar, 1940-1941
|
|
|
Government in the economy, role of
|
|
Box
262
|
1957
|
|
Box
262
|
General
|
|
Box
263
|
Government in the states, 1946-1947, 1953
|
|
|
Labor problems
|
|
Box
263
|
1946-1947, 1953
|
|
Box
263
|
1955
|
|
Box
264
|
Legislation lectures, 1947
|
|
|
Social insurance
|
|
Box
264
|
1935-1936
|
|
Box
264
|
1937-1938
|
|
Box
264
|
1939-1942
|
|
Box
265
|
1941-1942, 1945-1946
|
|
|
Social security
|
|
Box
265
|
1940-1950
|
|
Box
265
|
1947-1950, 1954-1955
|
|
Box
265
|
1950-1951
|
|
Box
266
|
1958-1959 2 folders
|
|
Box
266
|
1960
|
|
Box
266
|
Economics of, 1957
|
|
Box
267
|
Bibliographies, outlines, readings, 1941-1958
|
|
Box
267
|
Seminar data, 1938, 1947
|
|
Box
267
|
Seminars, 1940-1957
|
|
Box
267
|
Trade unionism and the law, undated
|
|
|
Subseries: Manuscript
|
|
Box
268
|
“The Courts and Labor Disputes,” a manuscript copy of Witte's Ph.D. dissertation, with added notes, undated
|
|
|
Subseries: Studies and Compilations : Arranged chronologically, by month
|
|
Box
268
|
Economics, government, industrial relations, social security, 1924-1956
|
|
|
Wisconsin
|
|
Box
268
|
1922-1925
|
|
Box
268
|
1926-1934
|
|
|
Subseries: Student Reports
|
|
Box
269
|
Economics
|
|
Box
269
|
Government in the economy
|
|
Box
270-272
|
Industrial relations
|
|
Box
272-274
|
Social security
|
|
Box
275
|
Wisconsin
|
|
|
Series: Card Files : Reboxed, but filed just as Witte kept them.
|
|
|
Government
|
|
Box
276
|
Government and business
|
|
|
Economics
|
|
Box
276
|
Theory and history
|
|
|
Industrial Relations
|
|
Box
277-278
|
Adjustment of labor disputes
|
|
Box
278
|
Labor law, foreign
|
|
Box
279
|
Injunctions
|
|
Box
280
|
Labor law I
|
|
Box
281
|
Labor law II
|
|
Box
282
|
Labor in politics
|
|
Box
282
|
Labor legislation
|
|
Box
283-287
|
Labor problems
|
|
Box
288
|
Trade unionism
|
|
|
Social Security
|
|
Box
289
|
General, in U.S. and in foreign countries
|
|
Box
290(a)-290(c)
|
Health security
|
|
Box
290(a)-290(c)
|
Unemployment security
|
|
Box
291(a)-291(c)
|
Workmen's compensation
|
|
Box
291(a)-291(c)
|
Relief and public works
|
|
Box
291(a)-291(c)
|
Old age security
|
|
Box
292
|
General
|
|
Wis Mss VP
|
Series: Part 2 (Wis Mss VP): 1963 Additions, 1903-1961 1.2 cubic feet (3 archives boxes) and 1 volume : The 1963 Additions date 1905-1961, and consist mainly of correspondence, reports, research material, appointment books, and a diary.
|
|
Box
293
|
Correspondence, 1916, 1923, 1929, 1932-1949, 1956-1961 2 folders : Included is an exchange of letters with Richard T. Ely, 1916; with Wilbur Cohen, 1956-1960; and with Wayne Morse, 1958-1959. The correspondence of the 1930s and 1910s is composed chiefly of letters of appreciation for speeches, instruction, and publications by Witte.
|
|
Box
293
|
Two reports written by Witte while he was a student at the University of Wisconsin (between , 1903 and , 1912)
|
|
Box
293
|
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace; Confidential Report of Economists, 1931 December 3
|
|
Box
293
|
President's Committee on Administrative Management, “The Preparation of Proposed Legislative Measures by Administrative Departments,” by Witte (printed), 1937
|
|
Box
293
|
Seminar on Human Relations, Pennsylvania State College, “Milestones and Developments” by Witte, 1951 October
|
|
Box
293
|
Bibliographies of Witte publications--holdings by institutions other than Wisconsin : Annotated by Mrs. Witte.
|
|
Box
293
Volume 9
|
Diary, European trip with economists financed by Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, 1931 June 24-September 30
|
|
|
Appointment books
|
|
Box
293
Volume 10
|
1957
|
|
Box
293
Volume 11
|
1958
|
|
Box
293
Volume 12
|
1959
|
|
Box
293
Volume 13
|
1960
|
|
|
The Development of the Social Security Act
|
|
Box
294
|
Confidential Memorandum on the history of the Committee on Economic Security, and the drafting and legislative history of the Social Security Act, by Witte, prepared for the Committee on Public Administration of the Social Science Research Council, 1936 July
|
|
Box
294
|
The [First?] draft of the , 1962 publication
|
|
Box
294
|
Manuscript and proofs of book by Witte, with foreword by Frances Perkins, the University of Wisconsin Press, Madison, 1962
|
|
Box
295
|
Textbook on Social Security and a history of Social Security manuscripts [in progress at the time of Witte's death] : In 1963, Robert Lampman of Wisconsin was working to complete the textbook and Fred Slavick of Cornell was planning to write the history of Social Security.
3 folders
|
|
Volume 14
|
Photostatic copies of clippings relating to the UAW Public Review Board, 1957
|
|
Wis Mss VP
|
Series: Part 3 (Wis Mss VP): 1968 Additions, undated 0.8 cubic feet (2 archives boxes) : The 1968 Additions consist only of manuscripts for An Institutionalist Looks at Labor Problems: Selected Papers of Edwin E. Witte, edited by Merlyn S. Pitzele.
|
|
Box
296
|
Manuscript: Rough drafts for An Institutionalist Looks at Labor Problems: Selected Papers of Edwin E. Witte, edited by Merlyn S. Pitzele
|
|
Box
297
|
Manuscript: Final copy for An Institutionalist Looks at Labor Problems: Selected Papers of Edwin E. Witte
|
|
Wis Mss VP
|
Series: Part 4 (Wis Mss VP): 1969 Additions, 1920-1964 2.2 cubic feet (6 archives boxes) : The 1969 Additions date 1920-1964, and consist primarily of lecture notes, articles, and other writings.
|
|
|
Series: Lecture Notes
|
|
Box
298
Folder
1
|
Economics of Collective Bargaining, 1948-1949
|
|
|
Government and Labor
|
|
Box
298
Folder
2
|
Lectures and Harvard Seminar, 1941-1942
|
|
Box
298
Folder
3
|
Lectures and University of California Seminar, 1947-1948
|
|
Box
298
Folder
4
|
Michigan State University Seminar, 1958
|
|
Box
299
Folder
1-2
|
Lectures, 1956-1959
|
|
Box
299
Folder
3
|
Lecture outlines and examinations, 1948-1949
|
|
Box
299
Folder
4
|
Lectures and Industrial Relations material, 1947-1949
|
|
Box
300
Folder
1
|
Industrial Relations Seminar (UCLA), 1948-1949
|
|
Box
300
Folder
2
|
Labor and the Law Lectures, 1934
|
|
|
Labor Legislation notes
|
|
Box
300
Folder
3
|
1921-1928
|
|
Box
300
Folder
4
|
1936-1957
|
|
Box
300
Folder
5
|
1920, 1940-1951
|
|
Box
301
Folder
1
|
1939-1942
|
|
Box
301
Folder
2
|
(Current), 1940
|
|
Box
301
Folder
3
|
Labor Legislation outlines and reading lists, 1921-1939
|
|
Box
302
Folder
1
|
Labor Legislation printed material, 1937-1958
|
|
|
Series: Articles
|
|
Box
302
Folder
2
|
“Industrial Conflict in Periods of National Emergency” by E.E. Witte, 1954
|
|
Box
302
Folder
3
|
“Edwin E. Witte's Concept of the Role of Government in the Economy” by W.J. Samuels, 1964
|
|
|
Series: Miscellaneous Papers
|
|
Box
303
Folder
1
|
Industrial Relations Center papers, 1953
|
|
Box
303
Folder
2
|
Theories of Value, incomplete manuscript
|
|
Box
303
Folder
3
|
Theories of Distribution, incomplete manuscript
|
|
Box
303
Folder
4
|
Rent, Wages and Profit, incomplete manuscript by William A. Scott
|
|
Box
303
Folder
5
|
F.W. Taussig's System, incomplete manuscript
|
|
|
Series: Part 5 (Micro 404, Micro 405): Microfilmed Papers, 1916-1961 2 reels of microfilm (35 mm) : Microfilmed Papers consists of two reels copying papers loaned for microfilming by Mrs. Witte in 1962-1963; the papers date 1916-1961 and include correspondence, diary excerpts, a speech in Beirut, scrapbooks, and letters of tribute on Witte's 1957 retirement.
|
|
Micro 404
|
Materials loaned by Mrs. Witte in 1962 : Included are selections from the private papers of Edwin E. Witte, economist, including letters by him from Europe, 1931, 1935, and from Washington, 1935, 1938; letters from friends, 1960-1961; excerpts from diaries kept in Europe and the Middle East, 1935, 1954, 1958; speech made at the University of Beirut, 1954; and three scrapbooks recording his life, 1916-1961.
|
|
Micro 405
|
Letters of tribute to Edwin E. Witte, Professor of Economics, University of Wisconsin, on the occasion of his retirement from the University, 1957 February and March,
|
|
M71-304
|
Part 6 (M71-304): Additions, 1915-1970 0.6 cubic feet (2 archives boxes) and 38 photographs (in 1 archives box) : Additions, 1915-1970, consisting of biographical materials; miscellaneous correspondence and correspondence to Mrs. Witte; lectures and published works; book reviews; assorted memorabilia; scrapbooks documenting Witte's death and the construction of the Witte dormitory on the University of Wisconsin-Madison campus; a retirement book comprised of letters from friends and colleagues; and photographs of Witte and from an article appearing in Business Week on November 26, 1955.
|
|
Box
1
Folder
1
|
Biographical materials, 1955, 1960, undated
|
|
|
Correspondence
|
|
Box
1
Folder
2
|
Correspondence to Mrs. Witte, 1960-1970
|
|
Box
1
Folder
3
|
Miscellaneous, 1931-1960
|
|
Box
1
Folder
4
|
Lectures and published works, 1926-1960
|
|
Box
1
Folder
5
|
Book reviews, 1962-1965
|
|
Box
1
Folder
6
|
Memorabilia, 1931-1961
|
|
|
Scrapbooks
|
|
Box
1
Folder
7
|
Witte dormitory, 1963-1966, undated
|
|
Box
1
Folder
8
|
Obituaries, 1960
|
|
Box
2
Folder
1
|
Retirement memoir - correspondence, 1957
|
|
Box
3
Folder
1
|
Photographs of Witte from Business Week article, 1955
|
|
Box
3
Folder
2
|
Photographs and some newspaper clippings of Witte at home, in uniform, and on vacation, photographs from his youth, and photographs from Witte's professional life, including group photos, 1915-1960, undated
|
|
M73-121
|
Part 7 (M73-121): Additions, 1922-1960 1.0 cubic foot (1 records center carton) : Notes and typescripts, 1922-1960, by Witte and others on Social Security, including the Social Security Act and the history of Social Security. Also included are a series of handwritten notes taken from various publications on social welfare.
|
|
M76-131
|
Part 8 (M76-131): Additions, 1948-1953 2.0 cubic feet (2 records center cartons) : Case files which include legal records, correspondence, reports, et cetera, concerning the work of the President's Commission on Labor Relations in Atomic Energy Installations, 1948-1949, and of the Atomic Energy Labor Relations Panel, 1949-1953, both of which Witte served upon.
|
|
|
Series: President's Commission on Labor Relations in Atomic Energy Installations, 1948-1949
|
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Atomic Energy Labor Policies Committee
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Box
1
Folder
1
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Correspondence
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Box
1
Folder
2
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Notes
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Box
1
Folder
3
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Plants - general and miscellaneous
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Box
1
Folder
4
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Labor views
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Box
1
Folder
5
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Hanford Works - Los Alamos
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Box
1
Folder
6
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Oak Ridge and miscellaneous
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Box
1
Folder
7
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Meeting minutes
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Box
1
Folder
8
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Argonne Laboratories
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Box
1
Folder
9
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Commission's report
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Series: Atomic Energy Labor Relations Panel, 1949-1953
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Box
1
Folder
10
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General
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Box
1
Folder
11
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Meeting minutes
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Box
1
Folder
12
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Correspondence and reports of secretary
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Box
1
Folder
13
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Reports on cases, situations and problems, 1949-1950
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Box
1
Folder
14
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General records relating to cases
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Box
1
Folder
15
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General notes, 1951-1952
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Box
1
Folder
16
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Atomic energy labor relations since Labor Relations Panel, 1953
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Cases
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Argonne National Laboratory
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Box
2
Folder
1
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International Guards' Union - case number 45
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Box
2
Folder
2
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International Association of Machinists - case number 46
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Box
2
Folder
3
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Argonne Council, American Federation of Labor (AFL) - case number 48
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Bendix Aviation Company
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Box
2
Folder
4
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Case number 38, 1952
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Box
2
Folder
5
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, 1950 case
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Box
2
Folder
6
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Dana plant, Newport, Indiana
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Hanford
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Box
2
Folder
7
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Case numbers 22-23, 31, 39
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Box
2
Folder
8
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Case for the Conciliation Service
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Box
2
Folder
9
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Los Alamos
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Box
2
Folder
10
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General Electric Company, Schenectady - case number 51, 1950-1952
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Oakridge
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Box
2
Folder
11
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K-25 case with the Chemical Workers, Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO), 1952
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Box
2
Folder
12
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Cases and situations - closed matters
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Box
2
Folder
13
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Case numbers 25-28, 1957 September
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Box
2
Folder
14
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Sandia office employees' union - case number 33
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M76-168
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Part 9 (M76-168): Additions, circa 1937-1954, 1957, 1963 0.3 cubic feet (1 archives box) and 14 disc recordings : Copies of addresses delivered at a Symposium on Labor and Government at the University of Wisconsin Memorial Union on March 27-28, 1957, honoring Witte; miscellaneous personal correspondence of Witte and his wife Florence, concerning the University of Wisconsin, the University of Wisconsin Economics Department, Witte's students, et cetera, circa 1937-1954 and 1963.
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M85-461
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Part 10 (M85-461): Additions, 1905-1911 0.2 cubic feet (1 archives box) : Typescript of Edwin E. Witte's 1905-1911 diaries prepared for possible publication, and one folder containing materials collected by editor William C. Haygood, including a chronology of Witte's life and transcripts of interviews with people who knew Witte, including a high school classmate and a cousin.
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M85-536
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Part 11 (M85-536): Additions, 1934-1935 0.1 cubic feet (1 folder added to box with M76-168) : Copy of “Social Security in America,” summarized from staff reports by Witte, 1934-1935, when executive director of the President's Committee on Economic Security.
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M2005-076
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Part 12 (M2005-076): Additions, 1952-1960 0.1 cubic feet (1 folder) : Additions, 1952-1960, consisting of correspondence between Witte and John Kuhlman, a graduate student in economics at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, who eventually became a professor in the School of Business Administration at the University of Richmond. The correspondence relates to Witte's efforts in finding a faculty position for Kuhlman during the mid-to-late 1950s as well as some personal letters between Kuhlman and Edwin and Florence Witte.
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