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Word: admits (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1900-1909
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Usage:

...tickets will be $3, except those sold to holders of football tickets, which will be $2. No one may have the privilege of obtaining $2 tickets whose name does not appear on the filed list at the Athletic Office. All tickets will admit to all the University baseball games played at Cambridge this season, with the exception of the Yale game, and the third game with Princeton. The student tickets will include the following privileges...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Tickets for the Baseball Season | 3/30/1907 | See Source »

...clear tendencies run through all the present discussion of athletics in President Eliot's reports and among the undergraduates. They are (1) toward reducing the money cost of all athletic sports and the profitableness of some; (2) toward increasing general participation. Everybody will admit the desirability of at least these two objects of athletic reform. I believe that the two are not antagonistic, or separate, but go together, and that a solution of the financial part of the athletic question,--subscriptions, price of tickets, managerships, etc.,--will remove most of the real difficulties...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Communications | 3/11/1907 | See Source »

...President regrets that athletics have become so largely the business of college life. Mr. Reid frankly takes "the football business" as his subject. His argument in favor of an organized and salaried coaching system is thoroughly sound provided we admit his premise that football now ought to be a business. He explains what has been done, and outlines what remains to be done. If we are to succeed, we must give up all notion of a desultory scheme of amateur coaching. "We did not start out," he says, "with the expectation that after only two years of work...

Author: By H. A. Bellows., | Title: Review of Graduates' Magazine | 3/11/1907 | See Source »

That the training tables are conducted extravagantly I am more than ready to admit; but why attack such an important institution blindly, because of its apparent faults, and entirely disregard its inestimable benefit as a factor in our athletic life...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Communications | 3/9/1907 | See Source »

...Memorial tickets--"Class Day, 1907. Admit one to Memorial Hall and Gymnasium, 8-11 P. M., June...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Designs for Class Day Tickets | 3/6/1907 | See Source »

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