Word: krock
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...answer satisfied few working newsmen. Snapped the pro-Administration New York Daily News: "A naive, simple-minded stunt . . . Government news is, or ought to be, public property as fast as it breaks." Chimed in the New York Times's Pundit Arthur Krock: "Never before . . . has a decision of this moment been reserved from general circulation by a high official-possibly for days-to help a commercial enterprise get publicity for its wares...
Pundit ARTHUR KROCK in the NEW YORK TIMES: stunning success in Minnesota has tossed Stevenson off the bandwagon, but it has not put the Senator in the driver's seat. Nevertheless, the Senator's opponents see two specific strengths in his challenge: 1) Minnesota is in the farm area where the Democrats hope to repeat the event of 1948; and the participation of many Republicans and independents in its Democratic primary stimulated that hope, especially when the much smaller Republican primary vote is considered. 2) The Democratic Party may be headed for a Southern insurrection; and if this...
...Warren, has ordered an end to racial segregation in the nation's schools." Northern Democrats soon charged that Nixon was dragging the high court into politics; Southern Democrats cried that his statement proved the school decision was political. The New York Times's even-handed Pundit Arthur Krock, who praised Nixon's "otherwise well-documented account" of the Administration's accomplishments, wondered why the offending phrase had been allowed to appear in a carefully prepared text...
...Legitimate. To such G.O.P. reaction, and to the plain fact that whether the Republicans like it or not, their conduct of foreign affairs will be an issue in the 1956 campaign, New York Timesman Arthur Krock last week addressed himself. Wrote Pundit Krock: "Republicans who have been indicating that international perils require the opposition not to attack even the measures and methods by which foreign policy is being conducted by the Administration would sound a little more grown up if they would acknowledge the realities of politics in a free land and the duty of the party out of power...
...fact, Krock noted, it would not even be good politics for the Republicans to take foreign policy out of the campaign. For perhaps the greatest asset of the G.O.P. derives from the very heart of foreign policy-and the fact that since 1953 the U.S. has not been...