Word: loyalize
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...loans the committee needs as seed money. In addition, the money collected by Jan. 1 will be immediately eligible for up to $10.5 million in matching funds from the federal Treasury. His advisers think they can raise as much as $16 million using a mailing list of 2 million loyal donors. They want this task to be completed by January, when the party's House and Senate candidates begin their own drives for contributions, so that they do not compete for money at the same time...
...turns more serious when talking of her personal grief. "I was in a sort of period of shock for longer than I realized" after the assassination attempt, she says in a matter-of-fact tone. When that was wearing off, her father, Dr. Loyal Davis, to whom she was always close, became ill. She hugs herself with thin arms at the recollection: "I'd never had anyone close to me die. I'd never been with anybody when they died, certainly not anyone close. Then, I had to go tell my mother, which was probably the hardest thing...
...think that Mr. Knobler does not really understand the Dartmouth spirit, a misunderstanding for which I give him no fault, for one must be a Dartmouth student to appreciate this. We like to win, but as one of our songs says. "Whether in defeat or victory, we are loyal just the same." Loyalty and love for Dartmouth are really important to us. You see, many people attend universities for four years; we are part of Dartmouth for our whole life, and happily...
...last year (the Monitor also distributes a weekly edition to 16,000 subscribers). The paper's readers tend to be faithful, but they have been dying off without being replaced: 39% are 65 or older, while only 28% are under 45. Admits Hoagland: "We should not take a loyal readership for granted." The age of the Monitor's following is in turn a factor in discouraging advertisers, even though the readership is affluent (median household income: $32,000). Thus the paper now contains only about 25% advertising, compared with up to 60% in many other dailies, a level...
Hollywood is volatile, jealous and perhaps sinful. But it is intensely loyal to the little man whom it used to call Charlie before the wide world called him Charlot, Carlos, Cha-pu-rin and as many more variations as there are languages. Had City Lights been a failure, Hollywood would have been personally and bitterly depressed. But Hollywood was not depressed. Neither was it frightened. For though City Lights is a successful silent challenge to the talkies, its success derives solely from the little man with the battered hat, bamboo cane and black mustache. Critics agree that he, whose posterior...