Kim's comments are in italics.

Death of Henry Loomis, VOA director 1958-1965.

Mr. Loomis, named Voice of America director in 1958, "realized that English was becoming an international language and was eager for it to be more accessible to VOA's international audience. He pushed for the development of Special English, for listeners learning the language. The news was delivered at a slower pace of nine lines a minute, spoken accurately, and with a vocabulary limited to 1,500 words. Mr. Loomis quit as VOA director in 1965 after a falling-out with President Lyndon B. Johnson during the Vietnam War. Johnson demanded that VOA keep quiet about American planes flying over Laos. Believing that VOA had an obligation to report the news, Mr. Loomis resigned in protest." Washington Post, 8 November 2008.-- See separate page for biographical account by his widow, Jacqueline Loomis, with additional comments by former VOA program director Alan Heil. -- See also Ted Lipien, Blogger News Network, 8 November 2008.
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