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Reply To: | Anthony J. Buffa |
Date: | Wed, 21 Mar 2001 07:36:33 -0800 |
Content-Type: | text/plain |
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Hey Nathan and all others who might be interested,
My application (which came as a total surprise, to be included with all
the continuous folks :-), starts with an E. The only tourney I have been
to is the Anaheim one in 1999..... so perhaps it just means the NUMBER
of years out of the last five?
Does anyone know the rules? If you dont buy in a five year stretch, are
you deleted? Almost makes me want to try for tickets, and then sell
them, just to stay on the list. What if you apply, but dont get tickets.
Are you booted off the list?
Tony Buffa
RPI '64
==================
[log in to unmask] wrote:
>
> Lets experiment. I got two 2002 ticket applications. One has a "Priority
> Ticket Renewal" number that starts with the letter E and the other with the
> letter B. Since this is a five year priority ranking, I'm assuming the E
> letter is for Albany tickets (only) while the B signifies that I've gone to
> every one of the past five save for Providence. Can anyone else verify that
> the letter is inversely related to the number of years of previous ticket
> purchases, (i.e., E=1, D=2, C=3, D=4, and A=5 years of continuous ticket
> purchases).
>
> This difference, if it exists, could be very important to people sending in
> group orders. For instance, I want 8 tickets anyway and I'd rather send the
> order in seperately so that the 4 under the B letter have a better probability
> of winning a lottery than sending (4 or) 8 under the E letter. The risk of
> setting in seperate parts of the (wonderfully beautiful) arena is less than
> the risk of not getting seats at all.
>
> Nathan Hampton
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