Word: pay
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...given next Monday afternoon in the New Lecture Hall at 4.15 o'clock are at the phenomenally low rate of twenty-five and fifty cents, for the simple reason that Mr. Pauer is glad to have the honor of playing specially to Harvard students and wishes to pay this compliment to the active musical life in our midst. Harvard is now so universally recognized as an important musical centre that many distinguished visiting artists are willing to play and to sing for us at merely nominal rates provided that they meet with an enthusiastic response on the part...
...compared with fourteen for the gymnastic team, which shows that the interest in both sports is about the same. Yet of the two only the wrestling team has a coach. The present objection to having a coach seems to be that the Gymnastic Association is not on a paying basis, and that more expense is not warranted. Is this reason more valid for this branch of sport than for the wrestling, which also yields a deficit annually? Besides, the gymnastic associations do not pay in the colleges where they have coaches. With good gymnastic teams, furthermore, the added expense...
...sold this year, the admission being 50 cents for main floor seats, and 25 cents for balcony and gallery seats. No free seats will be issued to students as in former years. This departure from the custom of allowing each student a free seat is made in order to pay the expenses of the debates without making subscriptions necessary. Tickets were on sale yesterday at Memorial Hall. About half of the amount necessary to send the team to Princeton was realized. The sale will be continued today at lunch in Memorial Hall and Foxcroft. Tickets may also be obtained from...
...since all the other organizations have been relieved of the necessity of calling upon the students to contribute to their support, the Debating Team has found an existence dependent upon student generosity very precarious. Some income is received from the Coolidge Fund, but it is far from sufficient to pay the annual expenses of the teams. This year the debating management has adopted the experiment of holding a sale of tickets for the debate with Yale, hoping thereby to obviate the necessity of soliciting subscriptions...
...part to insufficient financial support by the student body. If the University wants to continue this splendid record, it must support its teams financially. At Yale, debating is supported by the college office, and at Princeton by two debating societies to which most of the students belong and pay annual dues. At Harvard it is true that the Coolidge Fund pays part of the expenses of the debaters, but it is not large enough to pay them wholly. Therefore there will be a sale of tickets and no canvassing as in former years...