Question
How can I find interviews with people that lived in the time of WWII?
Answer
Bush's moderate politics became more complicated in time. In terms of issues he generally agreed with New York Governor Nelson Rockefeller, but personally disliked the man, despite the close relationship his father Samuel P. Bush had with the Rockefeller family. When Rockefeller divorced his first wife and remarried to a woman about twenty years his junior with whom he had been having an adulterous relationship while married to his first wife, a scandal that hurt his campaign for the 1964 Republican nomination for President, Bush denounced Rockefeller for his behavior. Bush attended the Republican convention with the intent of backing the moderate Pennsylvania Governor William Scranton, although his son George, then running for the Senate from Texas, was a confirmed delegate for conservative Senator Barry M. Goldwater of Arizona. George had read Goldwater's book the The Conscience of a Conservative, after Prescott had recommended it. George Bush also disliked Rockefeller and wrote in a letter later published in his book All the Best that he found "Rockefeller's brand of liberalism" unacceptable and that "under no circumstances will Texas take Nelson Rockefeller".
— Source: Wikipedia (www.wikipedia.org)