Word: money
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...following conditions and regulations are announced by the Athletic Association: "Checks and money-orders should be made payable to the Harvard Athletic Association. No application will be received from any person whose name is on the black-list. A large stamped envelope, addressed to the applicant, must accompany each application. Applications for more than the one game must be accompanied by separate remittances and separate envelopes for mailing tickets". Not more than two tickets may be obtained by one person for the Harvard-Yale boat race, while no limitation is made to the number of tickets which may be secured...
...following prices: Sanders, $1 each; Stadium, 75 cents each; Memorial, 50 cents each; Yard, 25 cents each and Senior Spread, $2.50 each. No tickets will be sent out to Seniors before June 3, no tickets will be sent out to graduates or undergraduates before June 10, and no money will be refunded for unused tickets...
...they have had rather an uncertain existence. Although the Exeter Club was founded a long time ago, it did not begin to flourish until within the last few years, several energetic Exeter alumni in College combined for the purpose of putting the club on its feet and raised enough money to establish it in rooms of its own. The Andover Club has suffered mainly through scarcity of members. Both these clubs found that Harvard was not sufficiently well-known or was misrepresented at the respective schools and they conceived the idea of reorganizing under one head for more effectual service...
...appreciated at home. As a result, although it may be said to have won a recognized place for itself, its fight is not yet over. The undergraduate although he has heard of the remarkable performances of the Dramatic Club, is unintelligent enough to prefer to spend far more money to see a play in Boston. Let him remember that plays produced by the Dramatic Club have been, and will be produced in Boston theatres. He is not seeing inferior plays or inferior acting when he attends the dramas to be given in Brattle Hall tonight. The Dramatic Club needs...
...many virtues of the play-writing course now being conducted in Cambridge is that its pupils strive manfully-and none more manfully than the feminine ones--to produce plays that real people will pay real money to see. This admirable virtue has carried the fame of the course to the innermost corners of the Forty-second street Country Club; it has caused naughty managers sitting proudly on their golden thrones to turn eager eyes toward Harvard square. So, scouts are frequently sent from the managerial offices to hunt dramatic talent through the quiet byways of Cambridge. Should such a scout...