ANGERED PRESIDENT: Frank McCulloch once enraged President Johnson when he reported that the administration planned to increase U.S. forces in Southeast Asia to 545,000.
McCulloch died Monday at a Santa Rosa nursing facility where he’d been treated for a brief illness, according to Warren Lerude, a longtime friend and colleague.
The son of a rural Nevada rancher, McCulloch got his start in journalism at the Sagebrush, the student newspaper of the University of Nevada, Reno.
He covered crime, sports and politics for the Reno Evening Gazette starting in the late 1940s and later served as Saigon bureau chief for Time-Life News Service during the Vietnam War.
President Lyndon Johnson was enraged by McCulloch’s reporting in 1966 that the administration planned to increase U.S. forces in Southeast Asia to 545,000, Lerude said.
“I wasn’t any genius,” McCulloch later told the University of Nevada alumni magazine. “I just had the sources.”
McCulloch wrote several Time magazine cover stories, including a 1955 piece on Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall.
Lerude said McCulloch was the last reporter to interview Howard Hughes when, in 1958, the reclusive billionaire took him on a flight in one of his new planes.
He is survived by two daughters and several grandchildren and great-grandchildren.
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