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At the time of construction the theatre was known as the King Street, Bristol Theatre, as it did not have a Royal License to operate as a theatre under the Licensing Act 1737, and that is the name displayed on the tickets. Once a license was obtained in 1778, the theatre was renamed to the "Theatre Royal". [6] The tickets read "No. {ticket number}.
German admission ticket for Würzburg Residence (2010) An unseparated ticket for the Kurkino in Berchtesgaden (2005 or earlier) A U.S. basketball ticket from 2006 Boxing fight ticket from 1982 for a fight between Ray Mancini and Duk Koo Kim that ended with the latter's death Inaugural Parade ticket for President Herbert Hoover, March 4, 1929 Ticket machines of China Railway in Zhuzhou Station
Two months later, Mr. Moore turned over the Fare Box to the newly formed American Vecturist Association. John M. Coffee Jr. (died 2012), a history professor at Emerson College in Boston and Unitarian minister, was the Editor of the Fare Box for 60 years.
The original CharlieCards show no expiration date, but expired three to five years after they were first activated. [37] CharlieCards distributed later had expiration dates printed on them and are valid for ten years, [37] with the exception of Student CharlieCards which expire at the end of the school year they are issued. [38]
At that time, the MTA was paid 17.5 cents for each of more than two million tokens that had been collected during the three-year "token war". [112] Tokens were sold until April 13, 2003, after which only MetroCards were used for fare payment. [113] [114] Tokens were phased out in 2003 when the fare rose to $2 (equivalent to $3.31 in 2023). [71 ...
In addition to the basic fare, passengers had to pay a supplement of one ticket or token, or the equivalent value. For example, an adult could pay with two tokens, or one token plus $3.25, or $6.50 in cash. Those transferring from regular routes paid only the supplement. Effective 26 August 2019, riders could pay both fares using the Presto card.
Despite his $145 billion fortune, Warren Buffett values time far more than money. Discover why the iconic investor believes reclaiming time is the best investment anyone can make.
MoviePass, Inc. is an American subscription-based movie ticketing service [2] [3] owned by co-founder Stacy Spikes. [4]The service was launched in 2011 and allowed subscribers to purchase up to a movie ticket a day for a monthly fee. [5]