Word: easiest
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...hour earlier than last week's game, which had to be called before the end of the fourth period on account of darkness. At 1 o'clock North Harvard street from the Stadium to Western avenue, and Boylston street to the bridge will be closed to vehicles. The easiest route for automobiles from Boston will be to Barry's Corner in Brighton, and then up Western avenue to Everett street, which connects with the Charles River Speedway. From Cambridge the best route is from Central square up Western avenue to the same Everett street. Two entrances for automobiles have been...
...each made a slip up which was very costly. Shaw's bunt down the third base line was allowed to roll in hopes that it would cross the foul line, and with the bases full Bartholf hit Pendleton. This combination of misfortunes enabled Princeton to score three of the easiest runs that will probably ever come its way. In the first inning Princeton scored one run, when Laird singled, was sacrificed to second, and came home on White's single. The Tiger's last tally came in the ninth. Parker was walked, reached second on a sacrifice, and scored...
...short play by David Carb '09, which follows Mr. Eaton's article, is a specimen of what our eager young dramatists are planning to give us, a more efficient censorship than that sporadically exercised by the Mayor of Boston will be necessary. "The Easiest Way" was a brutal play, dealing frankly with a brutal subject, but it at least succeeded in making vice hideous. Mr. Carb's play, "The Other Side," attempts to inform the reader (the play is fortunately too short for the stage) that for a woman there is more chance of happiness in vice than in unmarried...
Mayor Fitzgerald's recent suppression of "The Easiest Way" brought into prominence the mayor's power of censorship. Leaving out of consideration the wisdom of this particular prohibition, there can be no doubt that there have appeared, unchallenged, numerous dramatic productions calculated to feed on human weaknesses. Such plays as the "Follies" which excite the baser passions of mankind by their sensuous dances and flippant jests in regard to breaches of the Seventh Commandment and to drunkenness have been allowed to vulgarize and debase their audiences...
...lower classes than upper-class men. This is because a year or two's experience usually suffices to show an undergraduate that to take a course merely because some friend has confided to him that it's a "cinch" is not likely to prove in the end the easiest way to a degree...