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[Begin Tape 1, Side A]
Currie: This is number four; can you believe it?
Payne: Yeah.
Currie: And we're only up to 1955.
Payne: Yeah.
Currie: I think last time we stopped—
Payne: You were going to ask me about Bandung.
Currie: Your first foreign correspondent assignment.
Payne: My first foreign assignment.
Currie: Right. Can you tell me a little bit about how you got the assignment?
Payne: One morning I was in bed at my apartment in Washington, and I got a call from John Sengstacke in Chicago, and he said, "How would you like to go to Indonesia?"
Well, I was half asleep, so I said, "Indo who?"
And he said, "Yes, Indonesia. You know, there's a great conference going to take place there." He said, "It's the first conference of darker people of the world. And we thought that you would be the person to go and cover it."
So I said, "Yes? When?"
He said, "Well, like yesterday." And he laughed. But this was in the middle of March, I think, and the conference was going to open on April 15th, I believe.
Currie: 1955.
Payne: 1955. So I had to rush and get ready, get shots, get visas, because of all of that. In the meantime, with all these complications, I went back to Chicago to get instructions and to lay out the itinerary, and they decided that they wanted me to take in some other places. So we added on—I think it was nine countries in Europe and Asia, and we could include it all in the one-price ticket. So I started out. I left from Washington, and I flew to San Francisco, and I got a—I think it was a TWA flight from San Francisco that was going to Manila, the Philippines. And it was a commercial flight. I remember that the trip was so slow, you know, it was not like today, you get over there in a matter of eight or ten hours. But I think it was