Word: ticket
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1890-1899
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...price of the course ticket will be $2.50; of single admission tickets, 50 cents...
...tickets sent to Yale are in the centre of the North Stand. Those sent to the Harvard Club of New York fill one entire section near the centre of the South Stand. The players, coachers and others in the preceding table are regarded as privileged, and special seats were reserved for them in the centre of the South Stand. Thus 8265 tickets were disposed of before the applications of the season ticket holders were considered. When we add the 7835 seats sold to them, we have 16,100 persons who desire seats between the goal lines. As there...
...have special privileges and the sale of seats to them this year has but slightly exceeded that of the large games in 1897 and 1898. The reason why the allotment for this game compares so unfavorably with that of previous years is due to the large sale to season ticket holders. It exceeds that of last year by 4000 tickets. If we subtract 4000 from the 16,100 mentioned above, we should have only 12,100 to be seated in the two stands, leaving 1900 seats to spare. The legitimate grounds for dissatisfaction seem therefore to be in the indiscriminate...
...condition which graduates and undergraduates have helped to create, and which the chairman of the Athletic Committee could have modified. 1. To players, coaches, etc. 3,860 2. To the Harvard Club of New York 704 3. To the Yale Football Association 3,701 4. To season ticket holders 7,835 5. To graduates and undergraduates not season ticket holders 12,534 6. To members of the press 284 7. Seats taken out for exits, etc. (not sold) 698 8. Tickets remaining on hand Nov. 14 4,158 Total 33,774 The first group is made up of the following...
...seems to me that this whole system which has borne such bad fruits this year is wrong. A man who plays in a game ought to have tickets enough for the people whom he wishes to have come to see him play. But surely this is all. Harvard undergraduate organizations are not commercial in spirit, nor are they like those in a political ward. The men who deserve favors at the hands of the College are those who would be the last to demand them, especially if they knew them to be granted at the cost of most...