Word: year-round
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They have come from every continent, including the European iron curtain countries. Leading the list are those from Canada, with 35, five of them regular year-round Harvard students...
Thanks to music-loving tourists, including matinee crowds in shorts and shirt sleeves, the old opera house (capacity: 737) generally held more people at last week's performances than there are in the year-round population of Central City...
...taken him the whole ten years to get there. Playing between chores as a ball boy did not give Savitt (rhymes with have it) anywhere near as much practice time as the youngsters in the year-round California tennis foundries. At Cornell, where he majored in economics and became captain of the tennis team, winters are rugged; Savitt's tennis developed slowly, not nearly as fast as his heavyweight boxer's body (6 ft. 3 in., 185 Ibs.). In his junior year (1949), slow-footed Dick Savitt won the Eastern Intercollegiates, mainly by overpowering his opponents...
...were able to reflect at last that hard work, diligence, and long-suffering would be rewarded in the end. Katz finished out his year and received a warm letter of commendation from the President. Then, after resigning as ambassador, he took a job with the Ford Foundation, run by his friend Paul Hoffman. As a result, he would go right on being a European expert-but this time at home in Pasadena, Calif., center of year-round marbles, and a place where Johnny's three-year-old brother, Peter, could be cured of the un-American habit of speaking...
Between July 4 and Labor Day, vacationers swarm to the Cape, renting every available room, boat, and bath house. The year-round residents either retire to moderate solitude or turn themselves zealously to the business of draining every possible dollar from the summer trade...