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  • Tag > Digital item (remove)
  • Series > Transcripts of LBJ Library Oral Histories (remove)
  • Subject > 1964 Campaign (remove)

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  • Kong, the more mature, older, some of the World War II and Korean [War] vintage correspondents out of Hong Kong, Tokyo, Bangkok, points east and west who would come in periodically to cover. Even Time magazine's bureau chief at that time, a fellow
  • not frequently but once in a while during the war [World War II]. Army. I was here [Washington] about three and half years in the He went into the Navy for a tour of active duty. I saw him a few times during the war; saw him more often after the War, but my
  • airline received a trans-Pacific , air route and that President Nixon rescinded it. lid like to get at is: Now then, the point does the President, can the President, exert any pressure for that sort of grounding, or is this a matter of cold economics
  • ; the transition; the 1964 campaign; Walter Jenkins and the effect of his leaving the staff; LBJ’s staff and JFK’s staff relations; Bill Moyers; staff loyalty to LBJ and how it affected Sinclair’s family life; Lloyd Hand; relationship between airlines and politics
  • , and we worried lest both the kids and the faculties were becoming lethargic. F: Yes, I remember that complacent generation. It worried me as a history professor. M: After World War II, we always blamed it on World War II because you had a double