Word: kraft
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...presidential policy statement might in fact have helped to clear things up for the columnists, who could not seem to agree on what to make of the re-escalation. Where Joseph Kraft had Nixon "courting confrontation" with Moscow, James Reston spoke of a "temporary expression of presidential frustration and anger rather than a calculated plan to force a showdown." Victor Zorza, the London-based Kremlinologist, saw the bombing strategy as "a deep game designed to exploit the differences between the hawks and the doves in the Kremlin in order to maneuver Moscow into bringing about a peace settlement in Viet...
...business manual lists 284 subsidiaries of ITT subsidiaries, but others are untabulated, and there are also subsidiaries of subsidiaries of subsidiaries, or sub-sub-subs. -Columnist Joseph Kraft nevertheless insisted last week that the Administration genuinely feared in the spring of 1971, when the economy and a number of overstretched Wall Street brokerage houses were in trouble, that an ITT-Hartford breakup would have hurt the economy badly enough to damage President Nixon's political stature...
...Adams House and Los Angeles. Cal: Rohn S. Friedman of Dunster House and St. Louis Park. Minn: John P. Gibbons of Lowell House and Marblehead: Patrick J. Glynn III of Winthrop House and Chicago, III.: Jeffrey C. Herrmann of Quincy House and Clark's Summit, Pa.: Steven A. Kraft of Winthrop House and Princeton. N.J.: Rowell S. Melnick of Lowell House and Littleton. N.H.: Peter J. Rusthoven of Eliot House and Indianapolis. Ind.: Samuel I. Scheffler of Mather House and Newton: and Robert J. Waldinger of Adams House and Des Moines. Iowa...
More perceptive observers-among them Organizer Saul Alinsky and Columnist Joseph Kraft-understood him better. They realized that his fears for his safety were justified and, more significant, that he had genuine economic grievances. With that, the Forgotten American had arrived, and the Republicans were the first to seize him. In 1968 he was metamorphosed into the Silent Majority and took a suitable place in a sort of faded Norman Rockwell portrait lit by a harsh new light. Even while denouncing and fearing the left-wing radicals, he himself grew impatient with politics as usual, and seemed ready to resort...
...promise of cultural exchanges (beginning with permission to let TIME'S Jerrold Schecter and Syndicated Columnist Joseph Kraft stay on for a while longer in China), trade and diplomatic contact created a mechanism that could produce further and future agreements. And there is always the possibility that there is more to the talks in China than meets the eye in this communiqué. A beaming Kissinger insisted that the U.S. was very pleased: "It exceeded our expectations." That may well be so, but expectations tend to be in the eye of the beholder, and for some, the Shanghai communiqu...