Word: constantly
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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Dean Shaler has been resting comfortably since Monday night, and although no material change has as yet been noticed in his condition he is holding his own. Dr. G. F. Jewett of Cambridge was in constant attendance during the night...
...upon the actual detriment to service which would result from the policy of municipal ownership. He showed that in the street railway business success is impossible unless the management has continuity and efficiency, and he pointed out the fact that in New York City with its frequent upheavals and constant political uncertainty, these qualities could not be preserved. He cited the failure of the Staten Island Ferries, recently taken over by the city, as an example of the inability of city officials to cope with undertakings of this nature...
...will play its first game with Cambridge Manual Training School this afternoon in the Gymnasium at 2 o'clock. The large proportion of experienced men in the second squad this year indicates that the team will be strong. The development of team play, however, has been prevented by the constant changes made in trying out material and, in consequence, the outcome of today's game is doubtful. J. W. Appel `06 has been appointed captain of the second team...
...cannot be determined accurately, but in our opinion it is probable that this season is not markedly worse than preceding ones. We are confirmed in this opinion by interviews with other men who previously have had medical charge of the football squad. One or the other of us was constantly present at the field, from half past three or earlier until dark. The men were very carefully observed and many injuries were recognized which would have escaped less close observation. In comparing the figures in this paper with those of other institutions where no constant surgical attendance is maintained...
...speech was an arraignment of the capitalist class for its mismanagement of society. The cave man, he said, had the crudest implements and lived under constant danger from enemies yet could get enough food to maintain himself without working all the time. The modern man, however, removed from hostile environment in a state of society which by the aid of machinery enormously multiplies production, cannot, even by working incessantly, get enough to eat, and must live in a state of wretchedness which no cave man ever knew. Ten million people in the United States are unable to obtain enough food...