3. On and after the day on which a course begins, any tickets left over for that course may be obtained at the office of the Lowell Institute, 491 Boylston street, between the hours of 9 A. M. and 4 P. M.; or by sending to the curator (with a specific request for such left-
over tickets) a stamped addressed envelope; but, inasmuch as it is intended to distribute tickets chiefly by mail, no tickets will be given out at the office of the Lowell Institute for any course before the day on which that course begins.
4. Persons attending the first lecture of any course may, just before entering the hall, exchange their admission tickets to the first lecture for tickets good for reserved seats for the entire course.
5. In order to give all applicants an equal opportunity, all reserved seat tickets are placed beforehand in envelopes some containing one ticket good for one reserved seat, some containing two or more tickets good for adjoining reserved seats. These envelopes are then shuffled and at the first lecture of any course all who desire to do so may exchange their first-lecture admission tickets at tables in the vestibule for envelopes, drawn by lot, containing course tickets good for reserved seats.
6. Two or more persons wishing to sit together may, by surrendering together their first-lecture admission tickets, exchange these before entering the hall for envelopes containing course tickets for adjoining reserved seats.
7. A limited number of applicants with-out tickets of any kind may as heretofore obtain admission to the Hall (and almost always good seats) for any lecture by waiting in line in the vestibule at the foot of the stairs.
8. At all lectures in Huntington Hall the doors are closed when the lecture begins, and no one is afterward allowed to enter.
Ticket-holders are requested to return promptly to the curator or to the office for the benefit of others tickets which they find they cannot use.
The free lectures in King's Chapel on current topics in theology will be given under the auspices of the Harvard Divinity School, the Andover Theological Seminary and the Episcopal Theological School of Cambridge. For these lectures no ticket is required. The dates and subjects will be announced later.
President Lowell is trustee of the Lowell Institute, and the curator is W. T. Sedgwick. The Institute was founded by John Lowell, Jr., in 1836, and was opened to the public in 1839