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Word: loyalities (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
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Usage:

...Cambodia after Lon Nol's ouster as a kind of self-styled elder statesman. The Khmer have given little indication of what role they expect Sihanouk to play, but it seems that their current support is part of a long-term strategy of building a popular front including patriots loyal to Sihanouk...

Author: By Chris Daly, | Title: Ours To Lose | 3/7/1975 | See Source »

...their commitment to a cooperative venture. Co-op residents have countered the anonymity and pressure of a large university by sharing the closeness of a smaller community. The experience of working together leads to a psychological commitment that holds most people in a co-op until they leave here, loyal to a way of life that continues in separation--but not isolation--from the mainstream of Harvard...

Author: By Marilyn L. Booth, | Title: Finding a Home Away From a House | 3/5/1975 | See Source »

...magazine printed a table of contents. Soon afterward, a bold pro motional campaign was launched, an nouncing that The New Yorker, yes, The New Yorker - which in palmier days had had a waiting list of advertisers - was actually soliciting business. Fortunately, the enterprise had accumulated enough wealth - and enough loyal writers, art ists and subscribers - to weather hard times. Today, in a recession period, The New Yorker enjoys much, if not all, of its old stature. Circulation (487,000) has never been larger. Yet full restoration of the old magazine is, happily, impossible...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Time Essay: The New Yorker Turns Fifty | 3/3/1975 | See Source »

Last year the Crimson dealt Cornell its first home Ivy loss in 44 games, and the Big Red skaters had anxiously awaited the chance to avenge that defeat this season in front of their loyal supporters...

Author: By Elizabeth P. Eggert, | Title: Harvard Varsity Skaters Humiliate Big Red, 8-2 | 2/20/1975 | See Source »

Rick Dillon (Keir Dullea), small time hockey hero and man-about-the-small-town of Delisle, Sask. (pop. 700), knocks around a good deal, getting up to no good. He rouses the passions of a loyal barmaid named Loretta (Elizabeth Ashley), even while leching after the daughter of the hockey-team owner (Dayle Haddon) and making up to a raucous number who works in the bowling alley over in the next town. Implausibly, Dillon has enough energy left over from these various pursuits to carouse with his lumpish buddy Pov (John Beck) and play a fierce, albeit mediocre, game...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Hockey Punk | 2/10/1975 | See Source »

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