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Recently the following challenge was sent to the Yale News by the Harvard Cricket Association:-
"Gentlemen: We wish, in the name of the Harvard University Cricket Association, to challenge, through your paper, Yale University to play a match game of cricket next spring, the date and place to be arranged here-after. The challenge will remain open until Feb. 1, 1888. Hoping that we shall soon have a favorable answer, we are yours very truly,
JAMES B. MARKOE, President.
T. WILLING BALCH, Treasurer.
REYNOLDS D. BROWN, Secretary."
There is no regular cricket eleven at Yale, but there must be many men who have played the game either at St. Paul's School or elsewhere before going to college.
In connection with the above challenge, the New York Times says editorially:-
"The challenge of Harvard to Yale to meet her in a match at cricket would have more chance of acceptance were not this sport one of the few in which the New Haven institution as yet makes no pretensions to expertness. The great cricketing college is the University of Pennsylvania, which is very easily first in it. The laurels of base-ball, foot-ball, boating, tennis, or field and track athletics may pass from one institution to another during successive years, but no American college meets Pennsylvania on the wicket with much prospect of coming off victor. Haverford, Columbia and Harvard, however, often put fine elevens in the field, and it would probably give a great impulse to one of the most beneficial and least objectionable of college pastimes if Yale should now accept the Harvard challenge, pick out a team of cricketers, and with the opening of spring begin field practice in earnest."
No response has as yet been received by the management of the association.
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