Word: novak
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...know nothing about the course of this affair--only that something in Kimberly Rath shattered when it ended. For she came back finally, to the house on Novak on December 6, 1973. And she asked her mother to take care of her for a while. She needed a rest she said, and then she would look for work again...
...ugly aspect of this situation is the awesome potential of journalistic influence. Crouse fully realizes the power of the press. He relates several stories like that of a Rowland Evans-Robert Novak piece which "helped kill McGovern in Omaha." There is a self-fulfilling nature to a reporter's prophecies, that they not only predict but determine the people's preference...
...been consistent in defending Nixon, but last week, after Nixon's refusal, it editorialized: "When an accused man refuses to produce evidence which would decide the matter, the natural inference is that he does not do it because he dare not do it." Columnists Rowland Evans and Robert Novak interviewed 93 blue-collar workers in Jersey City. N.J., a natural Nixon constituency, and found that by a margin of 2 to 1 they wanted the President to turn over the tapes to investigators...
...other decades. But also in the fact that only two years after Linda Greenhouse there was a different paper and in a sense a different decade of The Crimson to represent as I am sure any of you who has read The New York Daily News or Evans and Novak or Newsweek knows by now that era of The Crimson in which a good third of us here tonight was involved was that of the pinko...
...campaign coverage never worked up even a small measure of suspense. There was plenty of rancorous rhetoric. The New York Times's Tom Wicker lashed out bitterly at Nixon as a preacher of falsehoods whose pious pledges are "obscene"; just as relentlessly, Syndicated Columnists Rowland Evans and Robert Novak belittled the "ludicrously inept" Democratic campaign...