Word: ticket
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...agree to occupy personally one of the seats applied for or return them to the Association." Every Yale game ticket-holder must live up to this compact...
Because of the large number of two-ticket applicants within the College, many graduates each year are restricted to a single seat. The injustice done to other Harvard men, when tickets are sold to speculators, must be obvious. There should be no need for a blacklist. A gentleman's agreement should be of sufficient force to keep all tickets within the University...
...case of undergraduate ushers, ticket takers, members of the football squads and coaches, and in a very few cases where special permission has been given, this agreement is waived. In all other cases it must be strictly complied with. Failure to comply with it may render the applicant ineligible to receive tickets thereafter. Even with this restriction, it is necessary every year to out down to one seat each the allotment of many graduates who have applied...
Announcement was made from the Athletic Association office last night that 3000 more seats for the Harvard-Yale football game had been applied for than are in any way available. Therefore it will be necessary to limit many of the ex-members of the graduate schools to one ticket each. However, this will not affect the undergraduates nor graduates of the College, as every one of the latter is sure of his two tickets if he has applied for that number...
...clock last evening 62 transportation tickets to Princeton had been sold. Men desiring to purchase tickets may still do so at Leavitt and Peirce's today on tomorrow until 4 o'clock. The rate for the ticket from Boston to Princeton is $7.26 each way, including war tax. State-rooms sell at either $1.62 or $2.16, depending on their size and location...