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Eighteen hundred members of the University have applied for tickets to the Yale game on November 22, according to the latest report from the Athletic Association. Only 99 students, however, have filed applications for tickets to the Princeton game at Princeton. More than 75 per cent, of these applicants have signed up for two tickets apiece.
The Athletic Association states that it is necessary to enter application before the last few days preceding the game. When many applications pile in at the last minute it is impossible to handle the necessary clerical work, and many may be disappointed. Consequently, the H. A. A. urges all students who still intend to apply for tickets to do so at once.
Mr. Moore calls the attention of al men who have entered College since the last Yale football game to the agreement to be signed by the applicant on the face of his blank, that one of the tickets is to be used by the applicant himself. Violation of this agreement will cause the holder to be blacklisted.
Rules against speculation will be strictly enforced, every student being held responsible for his own tickets. This does not prevent the sale of extra tickets at the regular price where a student applies for two, but in the case of such sale the original applicant should warn the purchaser against resale of the ticket.
In addition to the penalty of blacklisting, anyone who sells a ticket at an advanced price is guilty of a misdemeanor and is liable to a heavy fine for violation of the War Revenue Law, unless the ticket is properly marked and a sworn return made to the revenue office.
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