Word: constantly
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...economic dynamism otherwise capable of increasing production and absorbing the ever-growing labor market. These companies and the state monopolies acquire such credit and fiscal privileges that they can, at will, kill any private competition. It is the state−that is, the community−which bears the almost constant losses...
Albizu can never be absolved of the blame for the attack. Had it not been for his executive direction of the Nationalist Party since 1932 and constant endorsement of violence, the type of fanatics who carried out the attempt would most likely never have been spawned...
...economic and political co-operation among West European nations is likely to increase under the pressure of Soviet intransigence, Cheever emphasized. The Western alliance remains firm in the face of constant Soviet diplomatic efforts to dissolve it, he said...
...note of the rumors. A presidential palace representative quietly asked the morning newspaper Clarin to publish a story reporting that "in the U.S. also there exists a mania for attributing bad health to [President] Eisenhower." The story pointed out that in both the U.S. and Great Britain there are constant rumors that Eisenhower and Churchill are sick, but these should be dismissed as the inventions of political enemies...
...through the holes in its roof after V-E day while a motley crew of 8,000 refugees and former soldiers grubbed about in the ruins. Half were cleaning up rubble; the others were virtually hand-tooling a few vehicles for the British occupation army. Falling bricks were a constant menace; live wires lay tangled in the mess. The British occupiers offered the remains of the equipment to British automakers and other businessmen of the Commonwealth. They all turned it down. Says Heinz Nordhoff: "Volkswagen didn't even smell good enough for the Russians," whose occupation zone begins only...