UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN MAY 12, 1919. University Coaches Advocate Intercollegiate Basketball For Women Miss Hazel Pratt Returns from Meeting of Women Physical Directors Association Standardize Kansas Rules Urge Formation of Woman's Athletic Associations to Aid Work Miss Hazel Pratt, coach of Women's Athletics attended the meeting of the Women Physical Directors of Colleges in Kansas, which was held at Emporia Saturday, May 10. This meeting was for the purpose of regulating and standardizing inter-college athletics for women in the state of Kansas. At the meeting Saturday of the physical directors these regulations were drawn up, which are to be presented at the next meeting of the deans of women of Kansas for approval. The regulations in brief are: At a meeting of the deans of colleges which was held at a previous date it was decided by the deans that inter-collegiate athletics for women were beneficial. RULES FORMULATED 1. The coach shall be a woman 2. A thorough physical examination shall be made twice a year. 3. A series of intra-mural games must be played first and from these teams a Varsity picked. 4. Colleges of 200 women students or more may not play freshmen in inter-collegiate basketball ball, but in inter-collegiate basketball schools which have less than 200 may. 5. Only two trips may be made during a season. 6. Schools entering the conference must have a Woman's Back Association to help back up the finances. 7. The visiting team pays its own railroad fare and the home team entertains them. 8. The fee of the referee is divided among competing teams. 9. The referee must be a woman. 10. The chaperone must be approved of by the dean of all players must be passing in the minimum amount of work required and have no outstanding conditions or failure. 12. Games must open to the entire student body. 13. A uniform set of rules drawn up by a rules committee must be adhered to. WANT ATHLETIC ASSOCIATIONS WANT ATHLETIC ASSOCIATIONS The provisions of more extensive intra-mural basketball and the idea of a Women's Athletic Association strong enough financially to back all the work came from the University of Kansas. The Woman's Athletic Association in the University is much stronger in these two things than almost any other college in the state. NEW BASKETBALL GAME At the suggestion of Dr. James Naismith, Miss Pratt submitted for approval a new style of basketball game for women. This style, when worked out, will give all players an opportunity to throw goals during part of the game, which will give an all-around development. NEW BASKETBALL GAME It is a one-line game dividing the field into two parts and the centers have to play in their own half of the court. This style of game met with much approval and was thought by those present at the meeting to be far ahead of the two line game. It was further decided at this meeting that inter-collegiate basketball with adequate supervision and training has its physical, educational, social and moral value and should not be eliminated from the training for women. Tigers Won Dual Meet from Kansas 49 to 60 (Continued from page 1) An audience of four hundred saw the evidence. The K.U. band, led by J. C. McCanles, played in the intermissions between events. 100-yard dash—Haddock K. U. first. Cliff, K. U. second. Time 10-1-5. The summaries: Clift, K. U., second. 10 1-5. Mile run - Dewall, K. U., first; Good win. M, U. second. Time: 4:44 4-5. 440-yard run—Barrow, Missouri, bret 440-yard run—Barlow, Missouri, first Clift, Kansas, second. Time, 51. 120-yard high hurdles—Minton, Missort, nort; Sr. Steyler, Missouri, sec. Discus- Haddock, Kansas; first, Iowa; Missouri, second. Distance, 120 feet. mur mile = Parker, Missouri, first Rocky, Kannan, second. Time 4:05. Liam Clift, Kansas, second. Time: 22-3-5. Pole, vault - Marshall and Lewis Missouri, tied for first. Eleven feet 6. inches. | Name | Team | | :--- | :--- | | Innes, Kate | Missouri, third; Sylvester, Missouri, first; Minton, Missouri, second. Time to go. | | Cunningham, John | Missouri. | Two-mile run—Eckel, Kansas; first, goodwin, Missouri; second, Time. Hump Jump—Welly, Kansas, and Lewis, Missouri, tied for first. Height Broad jump--Hodkey, Kansas; brat; Stylier, Missouri; second, Distancea. Broad jump--Hodkey, Kansas; brat; Stylier, Missouri; second, Distancea. Shot. put—Lewis, Missouri, first; araxen, Kansas, second, Distance, 382. (See also *N.*) Indy—Won by Missouri (Edwards, Brownie, Parker and Barlow). Time Karl Schademan of Baker acted as referee and starter. Judges of finish were Lieut. Col. Harold E. Burdick, Profs. J. J. Wheeler, M. Ferguson, W. J. Baumgartner. Timers were Hugh Blair, Lieut. Leon McCarty, and Prof. H. W. Nutt. Harry Turner, Arthur Longbond and Bert Judkins were judges of jumps. J. E. Bond, Stem Foster, John Bunn and Jack Sterling acted as judges of weights. Kansas Sport Writer Takes Offense At Star For Dual Meet Story Blame for Loss of Meet Should Not go to Athletes Who Train Faithfully By Edgar L. Hollis J. J, Laird, former K. U. student and present assistant sport editor of the Kansas City Star, accuses Kansas athletes of cigarette smoking and other forms of breaking training. Laired covered the Saturday meet for the Star and adversely criticised the whole Kansas team. The Kansas team may need adverse criticism in many places, but men on the Hill feel that most of the track men, who have observed the strictest training rules, should not be classed with those who broke training. Is it true that the whole K. U. team cares nothing for the glory they can bring Kansas on the athletic field? Is it true that Kansas lost the host because training was broken? Is it true that Kansas athletics are as bad as he makes them out in his story? K. U. students say it is not true. O'Leary and Haddock do not train, but Laired did not ride these men in his article. Haddock is a Kansas City man and took firsts in the three starts he made. No criticism was made of Haddock, yet he attended the Soph Hop the night before the meet, as did O'Leary, while the other track men slept. Who ever saw Ralph Rodkey smoke? He never uses tobacco in any form. Cliff is one of the cleanest athletes the university has ever produced, and trains hard and faithfully, yet he is placed along with those who did break training in the Star story. Loren Dewall trains with Rodkey the year round and is always in good trim. Dewall is a clean athlete and does not know what it means to be out of coalition. Liggett has worked two years for a letter and trains faithfully. Surely these men have their University at heart or they would not work year in and year out so faithfully, and not get anything out of their work Carl Eckel has made himself by training only. The Kansas student body should be criticised as it does not support athletics, but the blame for the loss of the meet should not go to these clean men who have worked to put their Alma Mater on the plane it should be. Something is wrong with K. U. athletic, but it is not the lack of training on the part of more than two or three men. March 26-28, 1919, employers asked us to recommend 387 teachers for the best schools in twenty states and Hawaii. Before and after this date the most progressive Colleges and Schools in forty-two states and four foreign countries used our service because they have learned to appreciate THE BEST. We recommend ONLY WHEN ASKED TO DO SO BY EMPLOYERS. That is why OUR MEMBERS are usually chosen. They are wanted. No enrollment fee necessary. Register today for the best salaries. Ask for a copy of "STEPPING UP-WARD". 387 TEACHERS NEEDED IN THREE DAYS The Western Reference and Bond Association 768 Scarrit Bldg. Kansas City, Mo. —Adv. Kansas Outhit Haskell Friday And Won Game By A 14 to 0 Shutout Slawson and Marxen Pitched Airtight Ball While Capt. Foster Garnered 5 Hits The Kansas baseball team had their batting eye with them in the game against Haskell Friday and slammed the Indian pitcher all over the lot. The K. u. team connected for 19 hits. The final count was $4 to 0. Foster was the star with the bat, getting five clean hits out of six times up. The Kansas sluggers started working in the first inning and batted twelve men for a total of six runs. Foster hit the first ball pitched into the south side bleachers for two bases. Bunn and Smith got and all three men came in on Lashley's three-base blow. In the second inning Oyster walked and came home on Harm's two-base hit. Weltmer followed with another two-bagger, which scored Harms. No more scoring was done until the fifth, when Foster led out with a hit, stole teammate on the ball. Lonborg gave a hit on advanced Bunn to second. Bunn was out on a player's choice at third when Smith hit one to the pitcher. Lonborg, however, scored on Lashley's single. This ended the scoring for the inning. The sole score in the seventh was Dutch Lonborg's long homer to the left field fence. In the eighth inning, the Tampa Bay Rays scored nine runs, coring three more tallies. The Indians, with the exception of Whitetree, were unable to connect with any of either Slawson's or Marxan's offerings and were retired in one, two, three order, except in the fourth and eighth innings, when K. U. slaben allowed four up to the plate. But one Haskell runner got past second game during the whole game, and but I've got on base at all. The score by innings: R. H.E. Haskell .. 000 000 000 - 0 3 4 K. U. .. 620 020 138-14 19 3 Batteries; Busy and Anderson for Haskell; Slawson, Marxen and Welt- tmer for Kansas. Liberty Tube and Tire Co. Opposite Masonic Bldg. Phone 991 VULCANIZING Umpire—Wedell, K. U. Tires Re-Solved and Re-Treaded Get the "Russell Tire Service" Every Job a Masterpiece SUITING YOU is my business SCHULZ the TAILOR 917 Mass. St. Phone 914 Drop in to the AUGUST J. PIERSON CIGAR STORE A full line of cigars, tobacco and pipes, also pipe repairs. 902 Mass. TheWords of the Returning Soldier Boys TO THE EFFECT THAT Our Prices are the Best (For Them) They have seen in their Journeys Home is music to us but not unexpected for it is due to SKOFSTADS SELLING SYSTEM For all departments of school work. School officials are electing now. Maximum of Service at a MINIMUM Commission rate, commission 4 per cent. Write for literature today. TEACHERS WANTED OWN YOUR OWN Electric Iron HEUER TEACHERS AGENCY Cedar Rapids, Iowa. Varsity Friday-Saturday "TARZAN of THE APES" You will never regret the purchase of a good electric iron, because its use will save you time and money— You can press a waist, or a tie, a dress or a suit in a very few minutes and you will then have the satisfaction of appearing neat and well dressed. KANSAS ELECTRIC UTILITIES COMPANY Don't Borrow—Own Your Own Cool Underwear—Athletic style—in a great assortment of different fabrics—All sizes — Better select yours now, just as the season begins. $1 to $5 Special Sale and Showing of Dancing Frocks All the Dainty Evening Shades Charmeuse, Georgette Chiffon,Taffeta and Colored Nets 20% Discount Innes. Bullene Hackman Lunches at Bricks Don't go down the hill on these dark, stormy days, but eat your lunches at Brick's— The Oread Cafe is here for your convenience, and you can secure a hot inviting meal here for it's Just a Step from the Campus THE OREAD CAFE E. C. BRICKEN, Proprietor K.U.-Ames Games called at 4 o'clock BASEBALL Monday and Tuesday