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Fact and Rumor.

The Crimsons play the Volunteers to-day at 10.30 o'clock.

Harvard is scheduled to play Tufts at College Hill to-day.

The freshmen will play the Boston Latin School on Jarvis to-day at 4 p.m.

Twenty-one will enter Harvard and ten enter Yale from Exeter next year.

The Harvard Cricket Club will play the Longwood Club at Longwood next Saturday.

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At the annual Spring Meeting at Brown last week members of the faculty officiated as judges.

Mr. F. S. Mead, '87, has been appointed captain of the Crimson nine, vice Faulkner, '87, resigned.

Goodale, L. S., who broke his finger in Wednesday's lacrosse game, will be unable to play again this season.

Bob Cook thinks Yale's success in the 'varsity boat race this year is rather doubtful. "Brer Fox, he lay low." - Ex.

The Baby Ansons are making a strong effort to win the amateur cups. They practice daily on Jarvis, and expect to have a strong team.

Through a misunderstanding the CRIMSON is unable to print the score of the Princeton game yesterday. A full account will appear to-morrow.

Ellis Ward, for six years trainer of the University of Pennsylvania crew, has resigned, owing to a difference of opinion with the regatta committee in regard to the stroke to be taught.

The "Mikado" had a run of two months in Berlin this winter. Mikado teas and parties were the feature in Prussia's aristocratic society.

Lectures in Dr. Hart's section of His-20, will begin again on Wednesday at 10 o'clock. Hereafter there will be but one lecture a week in Prof. Shaler's section of Natural History 4.

The freshmen will play the following team against the Latin School to-day: Codman, l. f.; Slade, c. f.; Sabin, r. f.; Vila, 1b.; Young, 2b.; McLeod, s.s.; Wardner, 3b.; Kielty, p.; Vaughan, c. Bales, '90, will umpire the game.

The Harvard Union meets this evening to discuss the Coercion Bill. The following gentlemen are principal disputants: Affirmative, Mr. Charles Warren, '89, Mr. W. C. Green, '89; negative, Mr. A. P. Butterworth, '89, Mr. Walter Coulson, Sp.

James King Newton, A.M., professor of Modern Languages at Oberlin College, has just issued a pamphlet on the necessity of a treaty-revision between the United States and Japan. It is a pamphlet of some twenty-five pages and gives many admirable arguments in behalf of a new treaty.

The Crimson maintained its high standard of steady play by winning a practice game from the Victors yesterday morning. At the beginning of the ninth inning the score stood 14 to 7 in favor of the Victors. By heavy hitting and judicious coaching the Crimsons piled up eleven runs and won the game, 18 to 14.

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