Word: krock
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...wailed loudly that the toll of the Army's first week with the airmail was too high a price to pay for "purging" commercial aviation of some wrongdoing that was not yet satisfactorily proved. At the Capitol the White House was accused of "legalized murder." Able Correspondent Arthur Krock reported for his New York Times: "For the first time since the President was inaugurated ... his administration seems really on the defensive. . . . The signs grow that the Administration feels the airmail is a bear it has by the tail. It is anxious to let go. ... The problem...
...best informed U. S. opinion on the subject was summed up last week by able Arthur Krock, Washington correspondent of the New York Times: "In the War and Navy Departments there is a division of opinion among our high command as to the imminence of a military crisis between Japan and Soviet Russia. But . . . their disagreement is only as to time: most of them expect...
Firm and factual is most Essary correspondence. He lacks the colorful readability of Arthur Krock (New York Times) or Clinton Wallace Gilbert (New York Evening Post) but his touch is lighter than that of Leroy Tudor Vernon (Chicago Daily News) or George Gould Lincoln (Washington Evening Star). Thoroughly experienced in national politics, he sometimes gives routine stories a special twist to lift them out of the obvious. Unlike his Sim colleague Frank Richardson Kent, he has no sharp sting in his pen. He specializes on complex railroad merger stories, leaves foreign affairs mostly to his smart assistant. Drew Pearson...
...Julius Ochs Adler, nephew, 36, vice president and treasurer. Mr. Sulzberger has four children-three girls and Arthur Ochs Sulzberger. Mr. Adler has one son-Julius Ochs Adler Jr. Looming on the Board of Editors as a potential heir to power if not to stock is able Arthur Krock, onetime chief of the Louisville Times, onetime aide to Publisher Ralph Pulitzer of the New York World...
Percy Hammond?"Mr. Hopkins, the respectable producer, was a little ashamed of the God damns and Jesus Christs in the dialogue, and he apologized in the playbill. . . . Mr. Arthur Krock, who is an editorial companion of the authors on the staff of The New York World, describes their play as a barrack-room ballad. . . .1 thought that Miss Leyla Georgie's characterization of a, frail French girl, skipping gracefully from marine to marine, was a little masterpiece...