Word: ownership
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...mother during an uprising. She is pursued endlessly over mountains and rivers, all because the child is a valuable object. Despite her suffering, Grusha refuses to desert him, which serves to show (in terms of character) how good she is, and (in terms of politics) what the right of ownership really entails...
...event that the varsity can almost to with pride of ownership is the 400 freestyle relay, where Hunter, Zentgraf, Kaufmann, and Alan Engel- smashed pool and Harvard marks weeks ago against Navy with a 3:17.7. , against a Bulldog...
...monopoly press: Pittsburgh, for example, had seven dailies in 1923; now there are only two, one morning and one evening. Cleveland, another city of more than a half million, is in the same situation, while Albany, the capital of New York State, has two papers, both under the same ownership. Along with the death of the dailies and the spread of one-paper towns, the past few decades have seen the rise of absentee ownership of newspapers, as the older chains like Hearst, Scripps-Howard and Gannett are joined (and occasionally superseded) by shrewd newcomers like Samuel Newhouse...
...absentee owner is not a citizen, and therefore chains (or "groups" as some sensitive owners like to call them) are not good for newspapers, for local autonomy within a chain is always an illusion, as Lindstrom shows in his case study of the Hartford Times under Gannett chain ownership. But the chain is not the only source of weakness: neither the Boston Globe nor the Boston Herald is a chain paper; yet they have grown as fat and lazy as any chain or monopoly sheet...
...week was hit with lawsuit No. 7 stemming from the conflict-of-interest charges that brought on the firing of President William C. Newberg last summer. This suit came from Jack W. Minor, a Chrysler marketing director ousted when it was found that, like Newberg, he had profited from ownership in the automaker's suppliers. And like Newberg (TIME, Jan. 27), Minor claimed that Chrysler had known about his relations with the suppliers, said he was a scapegoat for top company officials to cover up their own sins, and asked $200,000 for damages and money he said...