Definitions

Sorry, no definitions found. You may find more data at krock.

Etymologies

Sorry, no etymologies found.

Support

Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word Krock.

Examples

  • Columnist Arthur Krock speculated on the impact on the Republican Party if Eisenhower decided to be a one-term president.

    Eisenhower 1956 David A. Nichols 2011

  • The Democrats were positioned to argue, Krock wrote, that “the Administration has great culpability for the Middle East explosion and deserves no credit at all for the civil and armed demonstrations in Eastern Europe.”

    Eisenhower 1956 David A. Nichols 2011

  • Truman had returned American intelligence gathering “to the Eighteenth Century,” just when the country needed a modern one for future threats, Donovan wrote the New York Times Washington bureau chief, Arthur Krock, who had been a favorite for his leaks in the past.

    Wild Bill Donovan Douglas Waller 2011

  • And, Krock concluded, the pressure on Chief Justice Earl Warren to reconsider running “will be nation-wide and extraordinarily powerful.”

    Eisenhower 1956 David A. Nichols 2011

  • The Democrats were positioned to argue, Krock wrote, that “the Administration has great culpability for the Middle East explosion and deserves no credit at all for the civil and armed demonstrations in Eastern Europe.”

    Eisenhower 1956 David A. Nichols 2011

  • Donovan managed to get some of his news friends, such as New York Times Washington bureau chief Arthur Krock, to defend him in print.

    Wild Bill Donovan Douglas Waller 2011

  • Donovan managed to get some of his news friends, such as New York Times Washington bureau chief Arthur Krock, to defend him in print.

    Wild Bill Donovan Douglas Waller 2011

  • In 1966, Wicker was named a national columnist, replacing retiring Times' icon Arthur Krock, who had covered 10 presidents.

    Tom Wicker Dead: Former NYT Columnist, Author Dies 2011

  • Truman had returned American intelligence gathering “to the Eighteenth Century,” just when the country needed a modern one for future threats, Donovan wrote the New York Times Washington bureau chief, Arthur Krock, who had been a favorite for his leaks in the past.

    Wild Bill Donovan Douglas Waller 2011

  • This situation, Krock concluded, would be “unique in the political history of first Presidential terms.”

    Eisenhower 1956 David A. Nichols 2011

Comments

Log in or sign up to get involved in the conversation. It's quick and easy.