Word: ticket
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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Every undergraduate may obtain a free Yard ticket and a free Stadium ticket at the Co-operative on and after June 11. These special Stadium tickets are not good unless the holder marches with his class. The number of tickets to be sold to undergraduates will be limited to five of each kind. Graduates will receive one free Yard ticket and special Stadium ticket when his regular application is filled. As the supply of Sanders tickets is very limited, announcements will be made in the CRIMSON from day to day, as to the number of Sanders tickets still for sale...
Every person who wishes to enter the Yard on Class Day after 2 P. M. must be supplied with a Yard ticket. Attention is called to the fact that Memorial tickets do not admit to the Yard. Yard and Memorial tickets are good until 11 P. M. After 9 P. M. no Yard tickets will be given out to people leaving the Yard, and before that time only upon request. However, each person leaving the Yard after 9 P. M. will be allowed to purchase one return ticket at 25 cents. 1907 CLASS DAY COMMITTEE...
...Seniors who signed the blue-book for the Senior Picnic on the tug boat last Saturday, and did not pay at the time, are requested to do so at Leavitt & Peirce's, where a ticket will be given at the time of payment. Those who did pay will be sent tickets by the Committee. 1907 PICNIC COMMITTEE...
Eight of the new tennis courts on Soldiers Field are now ready for use. Tickets will be sold at the Locker Building to any member of the University wishing to use the courts, and no one will be allowed to play without buying a ticket. Contrary to the custom at Jarvis and Holmes Fields, men playing by the hour must buy a ticket, instead of paying in cash. Hourly tickets may be bought at 10 cents each, and twenty-hour tickets at $1.50 each...
...procession passed through. For some reason, or perhaps for no reason at all, this custom has been forgotten, the Newell gate is kept locked on such occasions, and the undergraduates pass through the regular entrances. Without pretending to pass finally on the practicability of re-adjusting the ticket-taking and seating arrangements now in use, we think that the custom is too good to allow to die, and that, if revived, it will recall to future College generations the memory of a Harvard man so deserving of perpetuation...