Word: booklets
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...organization called North East Business Aids, Inc. is currently offering University undergraduates a coupon booklet entitling them to $60 worth of discounts for only...
...organization, whose home office is in Providence, R.I., calls its booklet the "Shoppers' Guide." It claims the advertising campaign is guaranteed...
...mechanism, which is activated by a sound-sensitive diaphragm, that it comes with eight pages of instructions. Fairchild's transistor radio kit ($8.95), which operates on power drawn from sunlight or artificial light, supposedly can be assembled by a nine-year-old, but it includes a booklet of diagramed directions that many a parent will be hard-pressed to decipher. Other toyland marvels include an electronic robot ($8.95) that picks up pieces of metal by remote control and drops them onto a motor-driven conveyor belt; an electronic teletyper ($16.95) that prints messages sent from another room or house...
...H.A.A. won't give itself a chance to be nice. The Bolyston St. boys announce on the cover of the booklet that they will never, never replace it is "lost, stolen, or mislaid." While both Frank O. Lunden and Thomas D. Bolles concede that they would like to replace lost books, they say they don't know how. They ask advice and seem predisposed to listen to the Undergraduate Athletic Council, which meets for the first time next Monday...
Obviously students should be responsible about ticket booklets, but the loss of one should not cost a student free ticket privileges for the entire year. Since entry to athletic events still requires presentation of a bursar's card, possibilities for swindle are limited. It might not be disastrous if a few unauthorized persons watched a Harvard game anyway. One simple expedient might be to make the forgetful student pay for his ticket to one game before he could get a new booklet and have his free ticket privilege restored. If the booklet were lost again, severer penalties might be called...