Word: tickets
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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Applications for tickets to the Princeton game, including $5.00 for each extra ticket, are due at the H.A.A. office by 5:00 p.m. today in brown envelopes. There will be a "very special effort to make sure all Houses have enough envelopes," Frank O. Lunden, ticket manager, said yesterday. The money for the extra tickets may be paid by check or by cash, depending on the whim of the individual student...
...their dates will still be forced out of rooms in the Houses at 8 p.m. Wealthy students--and the College still has some--can then take their girls to Boston and spend $10 to $20 for an evening's entertainment. Undergraduates who, after buying their date's football ticket, still have $3.60 to spend can push their way into a House Dance. But students who dislike gaudiness, crowds, or exorbitant prices would still prefer to remain in their rooms, where they can entertain inexpensively and maturely...
...applications for Cornell and Dartmouth seats are alike. . . (A) Undergraduates who want one seat, for themselves, an H.A.A. ticket admits, but only to a seat in the cheering section. . . (B) Undergraduates who want one seat, not for themselves, must put an application for one seat, enclosing the full amount ($1.50). . . --Harvard CRIMSON...
...least some of the hundreds of men who stood outside the Union yesterday afternoon while the cold north-easter trickled down their necks, must have felt that some simpler way of applying for football tickets might be devised. And it is not probable that their feelings would be much altered by the confusion and delay of the ticket office, which is hardly preferable to the weather outside. Granted that foresight would have brought them to the ticket office earlier in the week, human nature dictates that the vast majority will always put the matter off until the last minute...
...impossible to improve the present condition by extending the system used in handling the graduate applications through the mails. . . . But it would seem that a perfectly workable system of distributing the application blanks developed. . . By distributing the blanks through the envelopes and having them sent to the ticket office by the applicant, the greater part of the evils of the present system would be eliminated...