The comments on this are great:<p>> Dear sir, I am looking for a person who owns master rights of SING ALONG WITH JFK."Let us begin beguine" was a smash hit in Japan in 1964.I would like to release CD of SING ALONG WITH JFK here in Japan. Any information will be very much appreciated. Best regards, Junichi Miyaji<p>> Posted by: Junichi Miyaji | April 21, 2010 at 10:28 AM<p>It's amusing to think recordings of JFK were extremely popular overseas. I suppose the 1960's were the biggest era of American pop culture export?<p>I think American culture is thoroughly pervasive to the point the international branches of its evolution are being imported again. K-pop, for instance.
My favourite is <i>Trumpet</i>: <a href="http://blogfiles.wfmu.org/KF/0510/jfk/05_-_Sing_Along_With_JFK_-_The_Trumpet.mp3" rel="nofollow">http://blogfiles.wfmu.org/KF/0510/jfk/05_-_Sing_Along_With_J...</a><p>Maybe of interest:
<a href="https://www.thoughtco.com/ted-sorensen-on-speech-writing-1691843" rel="nofollow">https://www.thoughtco.com/ted-sorensen-on-speech-writing-169...</a><p>> "the construction of sentences, phrases and paragraphs in such a manner as to simplify, clarify and emphasize."<p>> "He liked to be exact. But if the situation required a certain vagueness, he would deliberately choose a word of varying interpretations rather than bury his imprecision in ponderous prose."<p>> "He used none of the customary word fillers (e.g., "And I say to you that is a legitimate question and here is my answer")."