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...redder: $750,000. Worse, according to Fanning's lawsuit, Times Publisher Robert B. Atwood and his staff have tried to kill the competition by scaring off potential Daily News advertisers and subscribers, mismanaging the paper's financial affairs and letting its distribution system go to pot Says Kay Fanning, who took over the paper on her husband's death in 1971: "Of the 22 other joint operating agreements in the U.S., to our knowledge this is the only one not working to the benefit of both newspapers...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: A Feud in Anchorage | 3/21/1977 | See Source »

Atwood points out that the News got into deep trouble only when Frederick ("Ted") Field, Kay Fanning's son by her first marriage to wealthy Chicagoan Marshall Field IV, stopped subsidizing the paper last October. Fanning agrees that the loss of the $500,000 annual subvention was a jolt and that she is seeking that amount to keep the News afloat for a year. But she blames Atwood for most of her current trouble. Says she: "What it comes down to is that the Times has absolute management control with no accountability...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: A Feud in Anchorage | 3/21/1977 | See Source »

...MODERNIZE THE FAMILY: HERMA HILL KAY, 42, of the University of California, Berkeley. Educated at Southern Methodist and University of Chicago Law. Clerked for California Supreme Court Chief Justice Roger Traynor. Married to a psychiatrist (her third husband); no children...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Law: Ten Teachers Who Shape the Future | 3/14/1977 | See Source »

...sixth-grader back in Orangeburg, S.C., Kay was the only student willing to debate in favor of the resolution that the South should have lost the Civil War. She argued for that heresy so well that the teacher advised her to become a lawyer. She was the driving force behind California's Family Law Act of 1969, which first established the principle of no-fault divorce. She teaches courses in family law, sex discrimination (she and Ruth Ginsburg collaborated on a widely used casebook on the subject), and joins with Berkeley Anthropologist Laura Nader in a seminar on anthropology...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Law: Ten Teachers Who Shape the Future | 3/14/1977 | See Source »

...campus during weekends, that no meals are serviced in university facilities on Saturday or Sunday. Options run only from Monday to Friday, and all contracts are voluntary. The options do not differ according to the number of meals offered per week; rather, they constitute a "cash equivalency plan." Kay Knipers, General Manager of Food Services, says students receive their nourishment in exchange for tickets, which are good not only in the dining hall but in the university pub. It sounds good, but as elsewhere this special offering depends on unique circumstances, and Harvard is not a commuter school...

Author: By Anne E. Bartlett and Honey Jacobs, S | Title: The Politics of Meal Planning | 3/2/1977 | See Source »

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