Word: loyalities
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...Honor, is somewhat deficient in the paternal paranoia that has helped earn the gang international clout and an annual gross income of $1.7 billion. However, he took out his first Prizzi foe when he was only 13, and has been earning great respect ever since. He is unswervingly loyal, has a voice like "a talking brewery horse" and boasts "the best bowels of anyone in the Prizzi family." He can also shoot straight...
...Radcliffe's primary intention to get people to sign up as loyal instant Radcliffe women," says Mary Cox, vice president for development. "We don't care if they have a Radcliffe banner in their room or not "President Horner also says that Radcliffe is not concerned about what level of allegiance women undergraduates show toward Radcliffe. "I care why women say they go to Harvard," she says. "It's like immigrants who change their names. I care if they are denying a part of themselves...
Nonetheless, their leaders are in unanimous agreement that President Reagan has sent them a budget for fiscal 1983 (which begins Oct. 1, 1982) with deficits so high that they simply cannot, and will not, approve it. Even Reagan's most loyal aides know that their boss must accept a compromise budget package that will sharply lower those deficits, but they live in fear that he might...
...long and skinny, and nobody is very far away from somebody else." Almost every publisher faces a rival whose territory stretches to within a town or two of his own. Second, many of the new arrivals are affluent and thus are enticing to advertisers; many others are elderly and loyal, lifelong readers of newspapers. Third is the tourist trade, which in smaller markets can augment circulation by as much as 30%. Fourth is a tradition of operating papers as public institutions, not just money-making machines, set by the late owners of the two biggest and best Florida dailies, John...
...image at home as a bold and decisive leader. It was a daring stroke by a man who has some times been underestimated by his countrymen. During the ill-fated administration of Eduardo Viola, Galtieri quietly engineered the "retirement" of two rival generals and replaced them with men loyal to him self. The move assured Galtieri's path to the presidency last December. A military man who states his views explicitly with few ifs, ands or buts, Galtieri has been compared to U.S. General George S. Patton and former Argentine President Juan Perón, with whom he shares...