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Clarence R. Decker PapersDates: 1943-1967.
Assistant Director for the Far East, Mutual Security Agency, 1952. The Clarence R. Decker Papers document his service in 1952 with the Mutual Security Agency as the Assistant Director for the Far East, and part of his tenure as President of the University of Kansas City. The Decker Papers consist of two series, a Correspondence File and a Miscellaneous Materials File, both arranged alphabetically. The Correspondence File consists of personal and government-related correspondence created while Decker was with the Mutual Security Agency, the University of Kansas City, the Advisory Committee for the Truman Library, and Fairleigh-Dickinson University. The Miscellaneous Materials File mostly consists of a scrapbook and photos accumulated while Decker was with the Mutual Security Agency.
Size: Less than one-half of one linear foot (approximately 400
pages).
The Clarence R. Decker Papers mostly document Decker's seven months of service in 1952 as Assistant Director of the Mutual Security Agency for the Far East. Decker was then on a leave of absence from the University of Kansas City, where he served as president from 1938 to 1953. Some aspects of his career as a university administrator are also documented in this collection. The Decker Papers consist of two series, a Correspondence File and a Miscellaneous Materials File, both arranged alphabetically. The Correspondence File consists of letters to and from President Truman, personal correspondence, and material regarding the groundbreaking for the Harry S. Truman Library (Decker was on the Advisory Committee for the Library). The two most substantial folders in this series relate to Decker's service with the Mutual Security Agency and with his role in arranging the visit of Mexican President Miguel Alemán to Kansas City in 1947. Much of the correspondence in the folder concerning the Mutual Security Agency consists of thank you letters to various dignitaries in Asia, acknowledging their hospitality during Decker's visits. The extensive folder of material concerning President Alemán's visit to the University of Kansas City, where he received an honorary Doctor of Laws degree, reflects the extent to which the arrangements were fraught with misunderstandings and protocol problems. The second series, the Miscellaneous Materials File, consists of itineraries, photographs, speeches and printed material, and the contents of a large scrapbook on the Mutual Security Agency. One item, the "Book of Gold" is written in Spanish and covers the visit of President Truman to Mexico and President Alemán's visit to the United States. Only the first few pages are included in the folder-the entire book is located in the Library's parallel file. The Asian trip photographs consist of nineteen black and white images, which are cross referenced to the Audio-Visual Archives. The largest part of this series is the scrapbook, which makes up two folders and consists of newspaper and magazine clippings, speeches, three photographs, programs from events, a transcript from a radio broadcast, correspondence, a biographical sketch, and informational brochures about the mission and activities of the United States in Southeast Asia. Related materials in the Truman Library collections are the papers of Albert H. Huntington and Edwin Arnold, both of whom were associated with the Far East Program Division of the Mutual Security Agency. The papers of Arthur Z. Gardiner and George McGhee will also have information regarding the Far East, as they worked at the State Department in the Bureau of Near Eastern, South Asian, and African Affairs.
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