White House Press Release, Correspondence Between President Harry S. Truman and J. W. Studebaker
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IMMEDIATE RELEASE
JUNE 29, 1948
The President yesterday sent the following letter to
Dr.
J.
Studebaker, Commissioner of Education, accepting his resigna-
tion:
dear Dr. Studebaker:
This will acknowledge receipt of your letter
of June twenty-first, in which you submit your resignation
as Commissioner of Education, effective not later than
July 15, 1948. The Federal Security Administrator,
Mr. Oscar R. Eving, had previously advised me that you
planned to resign because of the financial sacrifice
which your continuing in government service involves.
I regret that you are compelled to resign for this reason
but I can fully understand the situation and am, accord-
ingly, accepting your resignation effective at the close
of business on July fifteenth next.
I certainly congratulate you on your fourteen
years as Commissioner of Education -- years filled with
events that have had tromendous impact on education in
America. During this time your office has made great
contributions in the cause of education. Not the least
of these contributions was its part in the training of
some fourteen million men and women for war jobs. It
was this program that broke the bottleneck caused by the
lack of trained workers and made possible the vast
production of planes, ships, tanks and guns which con-
tributed so much to our victory. You and all others who
helped make this program succeed deserve the everlasting
gratitude of the American people.
As you leave public office to resume private
NARA
pursuits, please be assured that I wish you every pos-
sible success.
With cordial regards, believe me,
Very sincerely yours,
(Sgd) HARRY S. TRUMAN"
Dr. Studebaker's lotter of June twenty-first to the President
follows:
"My dear Mr. President:
On June 4 last I wont to Administrator Oscar R.
Ewing's office to notify him that I desired to leave the
Government service. I found that he had left the city to
be gone until June 14. On June 14 I did so notify him.
Increasingly after I began my work as U. S.
Commissioner of Education in 1934, it became clear that
the position offered great opportunities, in cooperation
with my colleagues and with citizens in general, to
increase the strength and accelerate the progress of our
country and to assist in the establishment and perpetua-
tion of world peace. The position, therefore, was to me
one of such fundamental importance as to re wire continuity
of purpose and effort covering enough years to secure
within the Office of Education three major results:
(OVER)
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