STATE HISTORICAL SOCIETY UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN T O P E K A K N VOLUME XI. NUMBER 126 HASH HOUSE LEAGUERS MUST BE AT MEETING Every Team Must Be Represented When Schedule Is Adopted--Commission PREPARES TENTATIVE RULES Commission Draws up List of Regulations to Submit at the General Meeting Thursday Night No team that is not represented at the general meeting of the Hash House League in the Student Union can become a member of the League. That is the rule passed by the Hash House League Commission at its meeting in the Daily Kansan office last night. "A schedule will be formally adopted at the meeting Thursday, and it is necessary that every team be represented," a member of the Commission said today. "If a team is representing an representative at the meeting, it probably wouldn't have pep enough to finish the season." The Commission also prepared a list of rules to submit to the general meeting Thursday night. They are expected to meet later. The Commission anticipates considerable discussion on the rules governing outside players. Number and Eligibility of Players Rule 1. Players on the Varsity will be required to play some position other than their regular positions on the Varsity. Any队 playing a Varsity player in his regular position shall forfeit the game or games to its opponent. Rule 2. Section 2. No club may enter more than six outside players. Rule 2. Section 3. The manager of each team, when handing in the name of players, shall be required to report every person on the team, and which are outside men. Rule 2, Section 1. Any club which has less than 13 able-bodied men as qualified players shall be allowed to play until the men until 13 men have been secured. Rule 2. Section 4. When any new members come to a club they shall be allowed to play after their turn and to approved by the Commission. Grounds Rule 2. Section 5. The Commission shall have the power to decide on the eligibility of players, both club members and outside players. Rule 2. Section 6. Any team playing other than qualified players shall forfeit the game or games to its opponent, unless the captains or coaches of opposing teams have agreed before hand that an ineligible man may play. Time of Playing Rule 1. The grounds upon which the games are to be played shall be designated on the official schedule. If for any reason the field is not available at that time, it shall be the mission to notify the managers of each team at least 12 hours before the time scheduled for the game. Rule 1. The managers of two teams change the time for joining game. Rule 2. Any team which fails to appear within 15 minutes of the scheduled time of the game, or fails to commence play when the umpire calls "Play Ball." shall forfeit the game. Umpire Rule 1. The umpire shall be sealed for joint agreement of the umpire. Protested Games Rule 1. The Commission shall have power to decide all protested games, each team to be represented at the meeting of the Commission when the case comes up for consideration of the Commission shall constitute a quorum the chairman to have no vote except in case of a tie. List of Players Rule 1. The manager of each team shall prepare a list of players and place it in the hands of the Commission, who shall keep it on record. No addition shall be made to this list without the consent of this Commission. Ralls Rule 1. Each team shall provide a ball for each game that will pass the inspection of the opposing pitcher. Number of Innings Rule 1. The managers or captains (Continued on page 4) UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON,APRIL1.1,1914. PEACE REPRESENTATIVE CALLS ON UNIVERSITY Harry Erwin Bard, director of the Pan-American division of the American Association for International Conciliation visited the University this week. Mr. Bard's purpose is to interest the universities of the United States and international institutions of the Latin countries of Central and South America. It is now planned to take a party this summer to South America for the purpose of study in the Spanish and Portuguese universities. At first only professors or graduate students will go. This is because the South American universities correspond to American graduate schools. SOCIETIES WANT A MEMORIAL Sachems and Skull and K Endorse Plan for a Senior Class Monument The seniors will have a memorial if the support of the two senior societies means anything? Both the Skull and K and the Sachems have endorsed the plan and will push the matter in the class. Sam Fairchild, president of Skull and K, said that this organization was behind the proposed memorial, or anything the class saw fit to leave, and was anxious to see the matter brought before the class. "We have endorsed no particular memorial," said Elmer Whitney, president of the Sachems, "but the Sachems are enthusiastic for some reason. We will probably discuss the altar proposition at our next meeting." GIVE TWO TEAS FOR WOMEN Pan-Hellenic and Ladies of the Faculty to Hold All University Recentions Two teas will be given for the University women Thursday and Friday The ladies of the faculty will close their series of receptions for all University women thru 5:30 p.clock after dinner to 5:30 p.clock in Haworth Hall. Friday afternoon from 3:30 to 5:30 the Women's Pan-Hellenic will entertain with an informal tea at the Kappa Alpha Theta house for Mrs Eustace Brown. All University girls are invited. Juniors Want Dues "Dues from members of the junior class for the prom are not coming in as fast as they should. I will be at the check stand in Fraser, Friday at chapel time," said Bat Nelson, one of the managers, "and would like to have as many juniors as possible see me at that time to pay their dues." Y. M.'s to Hike The old and the new cabinets of the Y. M. C. A. will take a hike into the country tomorrow afternoon for a general mixup and outing. They will talk over the work that has been accomplished this year and will discuss plans for the coming year. Violin 'Cellist At Festival He was formerly a member of the Damrosch New York Symphony Orchestra and the New York Symphony. First 'celist of the St. Paul Sym- phytum' which will give a coneget hert April 31. PAUL MORGAN When 7 years old he was admitted to the Conservatory of Leipsic, the youngest pupil that ever entered that institution. After two years of study there, he went to Berlin, where Robert Hausmann, 'cells of the Joachim quartet, gave him instruction for your years.' COUNCIL BEGINS WORK ON PERMANENT UNION Authorizes President to Select Committee to Make Preliminary Arrangements The University will have a permanent Student Union if the plans of the Men's Student Council carry out. A motion was passed at the meeting of the Council last night to empower the president of the Council to appoint a committee of three men to work for the establishment of a museum. The second men will be appointed tomorrow. President Dodd is considering men that will have time to look after the men. This commission will get ground plans for a Union, inquire into the Union's plans and make its tempt to get legislation looking to a permanent establishment on the hill. Begin at Once, Says Sec'y of Alumni Assn. "I think that the Student Union committees should begin at once to make definite plans for a permanent Union building," said Prof. L. N. Flint, secretary of the Alumni Association, today. "The time to begin a permanent union is right now, but they should formulate a set plan, get designs for the buildings and estimates of the cost. Then it could be presented to the alumni at their regular meeting at commencement, or if they get their plans soon I would be glad to present the matter to the alumni through the magazine right away. "I believe that the alumni will aid the project if it is presented to them in a definite form, and now is the time to mature the plans." LAW DEAN TO SPEAK HERE H. M. Bates, of Michigan University, Will Talk in Chapel The next two chapel speakers will be deans of law schools. Dean Henry M. Bates, of Michigan, will give an afternoon Friday dealing with the relation of a college education to a professional education. The value of having an education in the liberal arts is that it affords a live question in educational circles, and Dean Bates has made a study of the problem. Next Tuesday Dean William D. Lewis, of the law school of the University of Pennsylvania, will be the speaker. Dean Lewis is a progressive authority on trust regulation. He aided the government in solving some of its trust problems a few years ago. Send the Daily Kansan home. SENIOR HONOR SOCIETY WILL INITIATE THIRTEEN The Sachems, honorary senior class, society will meet tonight at Eagle's Hall to initiate the thirteen new members elected at the last meeting. The process will begin at eight o'clock and continue till the last man is finished. The victims are: Cale Carson, Freeman Alexander, Art Weaver, Baldwin Mitchell, Duke Kennedy, Vic Carter, Joe McCarthy, Morrow, Hail Curran, Chiree O'Donnell, Bat Nelson, Blair Hackney, and Charles Smith. BULLETIN Agreeable politicians will be present in full force. The program, including cartoons by Ward Lockwood, music by a new quartet, student speeches and other stunts is of interest to all sophomores. The second sophomore stag party will be held at the Student Union tonight. Some subjects as the Sophomores and some caps will be open to free discussion. The baseball game between the Varsity and the Kansas City Athletic Association teams has been postponed until Saturday afternoon, because of the wet condition of the diamond. POLITICIANS AND ART TO ENTERTAIN SOPHS Laws Paddle Freshmen Armed with paddles of ever shape, size, and form, the Laws padd several freshmen this morning before eight o'clock classes. FIVE SCHOLARSHIPS OFFERED K. U. WOMEN Prizes of Varying Amounts Will be Awarded University Girls Applications for the scholarships open to women students for 1914-15 should be made to the committee before April 15. The applications will be received by Mrs. W. A. Griffith and Miss Isaac Olivey for the Laundry Department, Scholarship, and Professors Hyde, Oliver, and Galloo, for the others. The Marcella Howland Memorial Scholarship, $87.50. Open to young women of the junior and senior classes of the College. The scholarships offered are: The Eliza Matheson Innes Memorial Scholarship. $100. Open to women students of the College above the Graduate School and students of the Graduate School. The Daughters of the American Revolution Scholarship. $100. Open to women students of the College or University near your home. Student of the Graduate School. The Association of Collegeg Alumnae Scholarship. $50. Open to women of the junior and senior years of the College. The Lucinda Smith Buchan Memorial Scholarship maintained by the alumnae of the Pi Beta Phi sorority is a loan scholarship of $200. It is open to women students of the College. MINING ENGINEERS TO HAVE NEW TROPHY CASH The mining engineers are installing a large trophy case just inside the main entrance of Haworth Hall. The eight cups which the miners throw at the mining site as soon as it is ready. The cups are now in the mineral exhibit room. Although the number of mining engineers is small in comparison with the number enrolled in the other engineering schools, the miners have always won a number of the trophies offered for baseball and track events on the annual Engineers' Day. Last year they won cups, and the year before, three. HARSHBERGER APPPOINTS MEN FOR ENGINEERS' DAY E. L. Harshberger, president of the Civil Engineering Society, announced this afternoon the following committees for Engineers' Day Parade, P. K. Bunn, Buster Brown Donne Ackee, Chaucey Hunter; Track, George Smee, Bill Weldline; Baseball, Chu Painter, A. J Groft, Carl Nielay; Tug-o-War, R. C. Keeling, W. A. Burton, Tony James; Dance, D. G. Reid, Alfred Grave, Paul Diehl. The men on the parade committee and the chairmen of the other committees are asked to consult with theberger at their earliest convenience. A memorial, containing the history of the entomological collection at the University which was started and developed by the late Francis Huntington Snow, has just appeared in a five hundred page number of the Science Bulletin of the University of Kansas. HISTORY OF F. H. SNO COLLECTION IN BULLETIN The book was edited by Prof. S. J. Hunter and contains several other articles on entomological subjects contributed to by Professor Hunter, Hunter, F. J., Williams, Dwight Isley, Prof. H, B. Hungerford, and W, T. Emery. The University authorities have decided not to put a light at the foot of the library cut-off, but will put a rail along the lower flight of steps. LIBRARY CUT-OFF WILL HAVE LOWER HAND RAH The place is considered by many students to be dangerous after dark, but the authorities could find no evidence to show that the cut-off was used enough after night to warrant the expenditure of $225 for the light. To Lecture on Gardening Herbert Hare will give his second lecture before the Living Plant class on Landscape Gardening, Thursday afternoon, at 4:30 in Snow Hall. Students who have been used. Those who are interested in this subject are invited to attend. Hawks Postnone Meeting Hawks Postpone Meeting The Hawk Club will meet Tuesday night, April 7th, instead of tonight as originally announced. LAWRENCE MERCHANTS TO ENTERTAIN STUDENTS Fifteen members of the Lawrence Merchants' Association have planned a spring style show for the students of the University to be held along Massachusetts street next Thursday evening. The fifteen merchants will dress their windows with their most attractive wares and keep open house all evening. Arrangements have been made for each merchant to have music for his visitors all evening, and nearly every musical organization in town will be represented. Some organizations will go from one store to another giving a short program to the students at each place. WOMEN TO BE BIG SISTERS Y, W. C. A. Starts Popular Movement in Meeting Yesterday—25 Have Signed Pledges This movement, which is comparatively new has been tried with great success at Leland Stanford, Minneapolis, Colo., and other large universities. K. U. women are to act as Big Sisters to the freshmen next year, Great enthusiasm was shown in the movement which was the subject of the Y. W. C. A. meeting yesterday afternoon. Twenty-five women have signed cards promising to look after one or more new students next year. The purpose of the movement is to keep the freshman girls from being lonesome and to help them for the first few days. The duties of a Big Sister consists in calling on the new girl, taking her to church, Y. W. Friars, Public School and etc. Her duties are not merely in helping the new girl but she must keep in touch with her throughout the year. Evelyn Strong, leader of the meeting, Naomi Simpson, Eloise Stevenson, and Mona Claire Huffman, gave talks on the movement and plans for the spring campaign were discussed. The work this spring will consist in securing Big Sisters for next year and in writing summer letters. SHE WOULD GIVE WOMEN K'S "The awarding of 'Ks" to women students of the University will be presented to the University faculty at the earliest opportunity," said Mrs. Cora G. Lewis of the Board of Administration, following the announcement that the athletic girls of the Kansas State Normal would receive "Ks" for their prowess at open-air-games. Mrs. Lewis believes that the lack of interest shown by women students in athletics is due to the fact that there is nothing to work for. She believes the women should be urged to compete for letters in the same manner as the men now compete for their athletic honors. Mrs. Cora G. Lewis Believes University Girls Should Receive Athletic Emblem for Merit ENTOMOLOGY EXPERTS TO INSPECT IMPORTED TREES H. B. Hungerford went to Rosedale yesterday where he will inspect three consignments of fruit trees shipped into Kansas from Chateenay, France. The entomology department has three men who are regularly employed in its inspection of shipments of various trees in different parts of the state. Mechanicals to Meet George H. Vansell, of the department of entomology, is in Parsons, today inspecting two shipments of forestry from Boskoop, Holland. Under the law passed, in August, 1912, the department here inspects all shipments coming into the state from foreign countries. The inspection is made at the point of destination. A meeting of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers will be held at the home of Prof. F. H. Sibley, 1607 Tennessee street, at 7 o'clock tomorrow evening. Papers are available on request read: Machinery, Scientific Americanism, Engineering Records, and Exhaust Turbine Stimulants. Get Tickets Now Friday, April 3. is the last day that tickets may be secured for the Uncle Jimmy Day banquet, Monday the 6th. The tickets have been going rapidly and the usual good time with them has elapsed. Hodges, Chief Justice Johnston, and Congressman Neeyle are to be among the speakers. The Achoth sorority will entertain with an indoor picnic supper tonight at the chapter house. STUDENT UNION NEEDS ALL PLEDGE MONEY Home for Students Must Have Its Bills Paid Or Move Out FEWER THAN HALF HAVE PAID Only 260 Have Given Their Money —The Rest Can Pay at Union or to Committee "All the money must be in by April 10, or we shall be forced to send around a collector for it. We need the money and do not care to be kicked out." "The Student Union committee must have the money pledged by the students," said Duke Kennedy, chairman of the committee today. "For the rent is due and the committee's are much less than its liabilities. Up to date about 260 students have paid their pledges, or less than $35 each. And the Union is kept going, and its bills paid the money must be turned in. Payment may be made to the man at the Union building or to Kennedy or other members of the committee. The following have naid: Frank C. Ackers, Howard Adams, Wm L. Ainsworth, Irw A. Allen, Benjamin H. Asher, Chester A. Badger, Austin Bainley, Irwin Baker, William R. Baker, Willis R. Banker, Walter Barger, Howard S. Barnaby, Martin Barch, Ellwood W. Beeson Jo. D. Berwick, L.C. Bell, J.L. Bliss, Kenneth G. Bishop, Fred E. Blachy, Edgar P. Blanton, E.M. Middington, Arthur L. Boman, J.Vernon Boothe, Victor Bottomly, Vernon J. Bowesrock, Roland E. Boynton, James A. Buchanan, E.M. Middington, Buck, Cale O. Buckles, Jesy Y. Burbank,Edmund C. Burke, Martin Burke, Ross E. Busenbark William S. Cady, John H. Calbeck, Willis N. Calkins, Adrian B. Campbell, Fred C. Campbell, Fred W. Campbell, Paul C. Carlton, Clark B. Carpenter, John W. Carson, Clarence Carpenter, John W. Carlisle, L. Clark, Gilbert M. Clayton, Ross H. Clayton, Neil F. Pline, Harold C. Coffman, Claude L. Coggins, Olin Dorwan Collier, Curtis T. Collinson, Claude O. Conkey, Vernon G. Corn- ley, Michael K. Creighton, Ralph S. Crow, Walter V. Cullison, John E. Curran. Eugene Wilson Davis, Philip Lind Davis, Herry E. Day, Harold L. DeBenham, Fred S. Degen, David Dergue, Paul A. Diehl, Oscar A. Dingman, Kennech C. Doddierden, Donna F. Doddierden, Preston F. Dubach, Merle Dubach, Arthur W. Duston, Junius W. Dyche, Paul L. Dyche, James H. Eggleston, Ray L. Eldridge, Frank B. Elmore, Cecil P. Embry, A. G. Edwards, G. H. Fairley, Charles C. Fairchild, Samuel G. Fairchild, Ocho J. Fisk, Lee J. Eckert, Antoine A. Frank, Richard R. Frank, Hugh Frutzmacher, W. W. Ferguson. Joseph E. Gaittskill, Jesse F. Gardner, George R. Gear, Clyde R. Gelvin, Charles E. Gibson, Willard M. Glassey, Guy C. Glenn, Roy Graham, Harry T. Gray, Roy I. Grayson, Edmond M. Guillefoy, Ray S. Gilford, Guilfoyle, E. B. Hackney, J. M. Hainbach, G. G. Hall, Reese A. Hall, Harry W. Hanson, Herbert C. Hansen, C. W. Harding, Winfred Harkerrad, G. B. Harrell, D. R. Harrison, L. A. Harsh, L. B. Hayes, J. M. Harsh, Hilton V. Holston, C. B. Holm, V. H. Holston, T. L. Howden, J. L. Hunt, Fred Hurd, H. B. Hutchings Samuel R. Ingals, H. C. Jackson, Lloyd E. Jackson, Leland H. Jenks, Clare B. Johnson, John M. Johnson, Samuel A. Johnson, Ogden S. Jones, D. J. Doseph, K. W. Kaiser, G. J. Kampert, Sherwin F. Kelly, James R. Kennedy, Harlen D. King, L. S. kingsbury, L. W. Winear, N. J. kielhege, L. W. Knapp, N. J. d. H. Lackey, L. L. Laird, L. A. Lambert, Walter A. Lambert, V. K. Meret, O. M. Larimore, W. M. Latimer, E. L. Lindera, W. H. Lindsey, W. M. Lowe, E. H. Lapton, E. I. Eldor R. W, MacGregor, W, W.Mack, J. C, Madden, W, C.Magathan, W, J. Malcolmson, D, Henry Maloy, J. A. Molssed, A. R. Malbaty, C. Maris, G. Malsoff, A. B. Mossel, M. Marshall, Francis I. Martin, H, F. Mattton, B. L. Means, D'Laskie Miller, John M. Miller, Lewis R. Miller, Lyle M. Miner, Verne E. Miner, J. Roffaff, D. Claire Moffitt, H. C. Morgan, G. Morrow, M. Morrow, F. M. McMeilland, R. T. McCluggage, W. H. McClure, Malcolm McCune, John A. (Continued on page 4)