Word: ticket
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Coffey originally claimed a "real big victory for the U.C." when a second ticket deadline for the Harvard-Yale game was offered. Yet as Harvard officials reminded The Crimson, the second ticket offering is a long-standing tradition. "We just do it like we do it every year The Game is held at Harvard," explained Edward J. Carey, ticket manager for the athletic department...
Last week, we reasoned thus: "unless the athletic ticket office is launching some diabolical conspiracy against Coffey, we can only conclude that Coffey attempted to take credit for something that he did not do." Well, it does not appear to be a conspiracy (certainly not diabolical). Rather, as Carey explained, the Crimson article was "above the board" and his mischaracterization of the issue a "an honest mistake...
...give 21 dramatic readings of A Christmas Carol. This is Stewart's third New York Christmas in four years, and each time his show has sold out, leading to successively larger venues. This year he will fill the 1,400-seat Richard Rodgers Theatre at $40 and $50 a ticket. Thus does Captain Picard of the 24th century reach back to the 19th -- for one man who made a profitable career of reading A Christmas Carol onstage, in both England and the U.S., was Dickens himself...
...they trek to the Christmas tree in Rockefeller Center (and to its sibs at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, in Trump Tower and at Lincoln Center). They see a holiday show: the Radio City Christmas Spectacular, which will attract a million patrons this year at $25 to $55 a ticket, or another family entertainment (the Big Apple Circus, Shari Lewis' Lamb Chop on Broadway). And they window-shop on Fifth Avenue -- a promenade that remains the city's most bustling theatrical experience...
...more obvious message of the new Carol is that it's big and pretty -- holiday candy for the whole family at $19 to $55 a ticket. It was confected by Broadway's top talent, including set designer Tony Walton, costume designer William Ivey Long, choreographer Susan Stroman and lyricist Lynn Ahrens. Some are working at half speed. Menken's melodies are less inventive than his scores for the Disney cartoons The Little Mermaid and Beauty and the Beast. He gets a B+ for hummable ballads and ho-humbuggable comic turns. Stroman's jazziest ideas are reprises of her dancing...