Word: ticket
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...embassy in a country much like Hungary. In one extraneous scene, the caterer dresses down an Arab oil sheik for being cruel to his Arab subjects. As the episode suggests, Jews have a slight edge in these comedies, perhaps reflecting the fact that there is a phenomenally low ticket demand for Broadway shows among Japanese gentlemen, Zulus and Arab sheiks...
...course, undergraduates were not the only people to suffer. Many graduate students did not get tickets, and several hundred alumni were furious at being denied good seats, or any seats. But after all, football is an undergraduate sport. And except for the season ticket holders, undergraduates are Harvard's most faithful spectators at the lesser games...
...start almost at midfield and continue into the bleachers at the open end. It would be preferable if student seats started at midfield and continued the other way into the closed section of the Stadium. This would not upset the Faculty Committee on Athletics' order of priority in filling ticket orders. Many students would still be behind the end zone, but they could at least have the benefit of a higher vantage point. Students then would also form a compact section...
Such a change would require that students turn in their applications a week or two earlier so that the Ticket Office could fill the rest of the closed end of the Stadium with alumni and others. The open end bleachers could be used for applicants with priorities lower than students...
This year, according to seasoned observers, the ticket situation is tighter than ever. People at the Harvard Ticket Office, who (seem to) sigh with longing for a return of the bad old days, point out that the team is good this year and alumni want to see it. Yale tickets are not made available to the non-alumni Boston public, but the local newspapers have built up hometown boys Leo and Gatto into the heroes...