Message from the Ticket Office

Started by Beeeej, October 09, 2006, 06:12:22 PM

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Beeeej

Dear hockey season ticket holder,

The Athletic Ticket Office will begin mailing season ice hockey tickets today. Mailings will be sent alphabetically so don't become overly worried if your friends have received tickets and you have not (if your last name begins with a letter significantly later in the alphabet).  Our goal is to have all tickets mailed by this Thursday so they will be received by all ticket holders sometime early next week.

If you do not receive your tickets by next Tuesday afternoon please contact the ticket office so we can track their whereabouts. If you have requested that your tickets be held at will call please call to ensure the tickets are ready to be picked up before you visit the office.

Since a fair portion of season ticket holders do not use email please pass this message on to any ice hockey ticket holder you may be acquainted with.

Note: a change has been made to this season's home schedule.

The home game vs. Robert Morris has been set for THURSDAY, Oct. 26 at 7 p.m. It had been originally scheduled for Friday, Oct. 27.

Finally, it looks most likely that all home games will be played at Lynah Rink. Please check regularly on CornellBigRed.com for updates regarding the status of Lynah Rink and the men's ice hockey schedule. I will also send an email when the opening of Lynah is official.

Thanks for your patience in this year of change for Lynah and its affect on men's ice hockey ticket holders,

Gene M. Nighman '81

p.s. The Red & White game is at 7:30 p.m. this Friday evening. The CHA will be accepting donations at the door.
Beeeej, Esq.

"Cornell isn't an organization.  It's a loose affiliation of independent fiefdoms united by a common hockey team."
   - Steve Worona

Free11Skier

Hrrm, I got this email even though I'm on Co-op and couldn't get tickets.  Thanks for rubbing it in Athletics.  :`(
Lynah Faithful in exile - Co-op '06

MAE '08

L-J

Hmmm... maybe they're even sending out the e-mail in alphabetical order, mine still hasn't arrived yet. But they did finally cash my check last Tuesday.

L-J

Cactus12

Athletics is a mess. They sent that email twice to all the students with line numbers as well. Then they sent a correction email saying to ignore the initial messages.

jtwcornell91


jaybert

[quote Cactus12]Athletics is a mess. They sent that email twice to all the students with line numbers as well. Then they sent a correction email saying to ignore the initial messages.[/quote]

pfft...at least you had a line #.  I am an alumni who didnt get a line # obviously, nor do I have season tickets.

ftyuv


jtwcornell91

[quote ftyuv]GrammarCop(tm) says:
an alumnus[/quote]

Latin grammar cop, no less.  Here's a woman for you:

http://tomatonation.com/sincerelyii.shtml

:-D

ftyuv

That's a sic page (<-- pun not typo).  I would disagree with "I could care less" being wrong, though.  I think it's valid to throw it in with the corpus of sarcastic idioms, a la "yeah, right" to mean "no way."

I would like to see a rain of terror.  The question-begging cartoon was great!

Lauren '06

[quote ftyuv]That's a sic page (<-- pun not typo).  I would disagree with "I could care less" being wrong, though.  I think it's valid to throw it in with the corpus of sarcastic idioms, a la "yeah, right" to mean "no way."

I would like to see a rain of terror.  The question-begging cartoon was great![/quote]
I think it's safe to say that when people use "I could care less," they're not doing it sarcastically, they're doing it incorrectly.

Liz '05

[quote ftyuv]That's a sic page (<-- pun not typo).  I would disagree with "I could care less" being wrong, though.  I think it's valid to throw it in with the corpus of sarcastic idioms, a la "yeah, right" to mean "no way."

I would like to see a rain of terror.  The question-begging cartoon was great![/quote]

The rein/reign distiction drives me nuts when I see it misused, especially when it should've been caught by the newspaper editor.

My other peeves are the misuse of "for all intents and purposes," which makes sense, while "intensive purposes" usually doesn't, and the non-verb "to orientate."  It's being derived from "orientation," but guys, there's already a verb form of that noun, and it's "to orient."

She caught them all :)

jtwcornell91

I have a few she didn't get to:

"wave off", not "waive off" (Note: I am deliberately employing a different comma usage from the standard one.  I believe my usage is consistent.)

"That car passed me," not "That car passed me up."  (The latter means the car declined an opportunity to do something to you.)

I think "orientate" might actually have become correct usage in the UK, BTW.  But then they pronounce the "h" in "herb", so what do they know.

ftyuv

[quote Section A Banshee][quote ftyuv]That's a sic page (<-- pun not typo).  I would disagree with "I could care less" being wrong, though.  I think it's valid to throw it in with the corpus of sarcastic idioms, a la "yeah, right" to mean "no way."

I would like to see a rain of terror.  The question-begging cartoon was great![/quote]
I think it's safe to say that when people use "I could care less," they're not doing it sarcastically, they're doing it incorrectly.[/quote]

I bet lots of people don't get the irony of cheering "Safety school!" against Harvard, either.  Doesn't mean that those of us who do get it can't use it :)

I like what that woman said in her first article -- that she's allowed to break the rules she sets forth, cause she knows them pat.  I'm fine with people taking liberty with language, as long as they know they're doing it.

RichH

[quote jtwcornell91]I think "orientate" might actually have become correct usage in the UK, BTW.  But then they pronounce the "h" in "herb", so what do they know.[/quote]

Why can't the English teach their children how to speak?

I think there are enough fellow grammar nerds here to have a grammar forum.  :-)  I still get caught in tricky spelling traps now and then, and since I'm an engineer, I lost time in keeping up with my grammar education.  Ever since I was reminded about the proper use of the subjunctive mood (which blew my mind), I've been delving deeper and deeper into the world of grammar geekery.  I still have a lot to learn (or re-learn).

Chris '03

You should also read Eats, Shoots & Leaves by Lynne Truss.

http://eatsshootsandleaves.com/
"Mark Mazzoleni looks like a guy whose dog just died out there..."