Word: ekes
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...article could rouse an alumna, that article would be the one published in TIME, Oct. 1, on Mount Holyoke. . . . If it were possible, I would like to run an excursion for all those interested in viewing the poor "always studious," "always hard up," "drably" dressed students who eke out "drab" lives under the "stern"-pardon me-"the large, stern" shadow of Mary E. Woolley. It is a pitiful case. I never realized what the four years in which cramming for quizzes was offset by weekends in New York and Boston, dances, dates, athletics, horse shows, class entertainments, concerts, lectures, movies...
...four years. Inasmuch as we have only one member who has spent more than two years in Germany during the last year of the Weimar Republic and the first year of Hitlerism, and we cannot afford the four years abroad he generously recommends, we have been forced to eke out our experience of twenty-seven months in Germany with the study of books, newspapers, and periodicals...
...afternoon on the couris behind the Business School. The Puritans chalked up their second victory in a row by swamping the Brooks House team by a score of 5-2, with only one of the matches being defaulted, this time by the Brooks men, while the Elephants managed to eke out a 4-3 win over the Adams House aggregation. No matches had to be decided by the flip of a coin, as has been the case before, since all the games were over before darkness made further play impossible...
...inning game on Wednesday, the Junior Varsity baseball team managed to eke out an 8-7 victory over the Cambridge High and Latin School. In the first four innings, the Crimson nine managed to get a five point lead. This was wiped out when the Cambridge batters staged a six-run rally in the fifth. A run by the High School team in the ninth tied the score and pushed the game to ten innings; one tally by Harvard finally won the match. Gallagher and Colony collected three hits apiece for the Jayvees...
Worcester first heard Edward Elgar's music but did little to encourage him. Nor did England, until after Europe had approved him. Nor did Edward Elgar's father, who, in spite of being the town's best organist, had to keep a music shop to eke out a living for his seven children. Elgar's early talent was extraordinary. He learned to play the organ by watching his father Sunday mornings, taught himself the bassoon well enough to play in local festivals. But Father Elgar was not impressed. He set the boy to work...