THE UNIVERSITY KANSAN. or you're and. the more ally lity the up s in worth LAWRENCE, KANSAS TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 21. 1: VOLUME VIII. NUMBER 29. STUDENT DISCIPLINE LEFT TO COUNCIL SOME POWER GRANTED TO WOMEN'S ASSOCIATION. As a result of a conference held October 28, between the advisory committee of the Men's Student Council and the faculty committee on discipline and a committee of the Men's Student Council the following plans for the control of discipline of the men student by the Men's Student Council were agreed upon and have since been approved by the Men's Student Council. University Council Relinquished Control of Student Discipline For One Year. 1. That the University Council will relinquish for an experimental period of one year its control of the discipline of the men students of the University. At the meeting of the University Council held last night, it was decided that the Men's Student Council should take over for a year the control of the discipline of the men students of the University. The report of the committee is as follows: 2. That the faculty disciplinary committee be suspended during this period. 3. That the Men's Student Council agrees to take over the control of all discipline of the men students. 4. That it further agrees to report promptly within forty eight hours to the Chancellor its action and recommendation upon all cases of student discipline. 5. In all cases of student discipline not involving suspension or expulsion where no reply to such notice shall be made by the Chancellor to the Men's Student Council within 72 hours after the receipt of such notice, the action of the Men's Council shall be deemed approved and may be at once put in force. 6. All recommendations of the Student Council involving expulsion or suspension shall be first approved by the Board of Regents or by the Chancellor. 7. Any legislation of the Student Council fixing expulsion or suspension as a punishment for its violation must be approved by the Chancellor or Board of Regents before it shall be operative. The same power will be given to the organization of the young women of the University when accompanied by the recommendation of the Women's Advisory Committee. --- Stan Myres, half hack. ARE YOU GOING? Are you going to join the Fighting 500 in Columbia? Coach Hamilton says that next Saturday will see the greatest gathering of rooting Missourians the state has ever known. He also says unless 500 rooters go from here we might as well give the game to the Tigers. Are you going to go? Are you willing to sacrifice a little for a victory over Missouri? The team needs your support next Saturday and we cannot hope to win unless YOU are there. Buy a ticket NOW and meet the rest of the fellows in Columbia. TIN HORN SPORT WRECKED One Bibulous Individual Met Disaster After Insulting Colors. The students on either side of him showed him this way and that way in their eagerness to help the team hold Nebraska. The stranger's muttered comments were lost in the volleys of "hit the line," and "break it up." And so no one saw just when he became tired of the "K" band on his sleeve. He may have come from Kansas City or he may have accompanied the team from Lincoln. At any rate he was filled with the kind of spirit that does not flourish in arid Kansas. But there were a number who saw him make his uncertain way from the bleachers between halves, and all the rooters witnessed the subsequent proceedings. His heel was still on the bit of color when a stick whizzed through the air and sheared the top off the stranger's derby without touching the dome beneath it. The insult to the University colors had been too much for a student who sat on the top row of the bleachers. All kodak fiends in school who have in their possession photographs of groups of students or bits of scenery about the campus or near Lawrence, are invited to turn them in to the Annual room or to any member of the Jayhawker staff. Seniors especially should help in this respect. If you haven't any yourself, take some from your friend's collection. The bibulous one took the rooft- less derby from his head and surveyed the wreck, bewildered. Then he rolled on to the exit. The Mechanical Engineering Society will meet Thursday evening, November 23, 7:00 p.m. m. at 1401 Ohio. Mr. Howard will talk on "The Western Electric Co." of Chicago. Angevine, Elliot airchild, and Wentling will give magazine reports. The Sasnak club entertained informally last Saturday evening with a dancing party in Eagle's hall. A number of visitors at the Nebraska game were guests. Notice. Sasnaks Entertained Jayhawker Board Notice. SPEED DEMONS ARE WORKING ON TRACK KANSAS LOSES THREE OF LAST YEAR'S MEN. Watson and Bower May Return to School—Kansas Will Enter Many Meets. As the close of the football season approaches, the track men at the University are becoming active and each afternoon a bunch of speed demons may be seen streaking around the Gym track or McCook field. The prospects for a wining track team this year are very bright as only three of last year's runners will be missing. These men are Roberts and Hamilton in the dashes, and Watson in the distances. It is possible that Watson will return next term to appear on the cinder path for Kansas. The loss of Roberts leaves a hard place to fill in the 100 and 50-yard dashes. Roberts was one of the fastest men the University has ever had and had he been in school this year would probably be a contender for the American team to the Olympic games. In these dashes the two strongest sprinters are Davis, of last year's team and Jackson, a fast recruit from the freshmen. Kansas will be almost supreme in the high jump. With Captain French jumping in form the Red and Blue should be good for first place against any of the Conference schools and stand a good chance for a place in the Western Conference meet. Tod and Buzz Woodbury and Hazen, a freshman last year, are also strong men in the high jump. The weights will be well looked after by Ammons and Bowers, the star freshman weight man and captain of the freshman track team. He is not in school this term but will return next term to get into shape to land first place in the shot put, hammer throw and other weight events. The pole vault again will be a strong point gainer for Kansas. Tod Woodbury and Pike, who will be in the varsity track work for the first time, will look after the vaulting. In the quarter mile Black, Coach Hamilton's find of last year, looks like a strong point winner. The best opening for green runners is in the long distance events. The distance men from last year's team Patterson, Murray and Osborne are all good but at least six men are needed in the distances. There is a chance for men who have never run before to make a long distance runner by hard work as this is practically the only necessary feature to the long hikes. Coach Hamilton expects to develop some good long distance runners from comparatively green material. The Kansas track team will enter a large number of meets this year. The first preliminary meet will be with Baker about the middle of February. Nebraska will run here and the Tigers will be met in Columbia, Mo. The Missouri Valley relay race will be at Des Moines. Kansas has lost several meets on the relay and Coach Hamilton plans to strengthen this part of the track team. All of last year's relay men will be out and will be pushed hard by new men. The Western Conference will be held at Purdue and the University will undoubtedly be represented there. The Olympic tryouts will be held in the spring and any exceptionally strong men will enter this meet. THEY WON FOR KANSAS Bert Kennedy Held Dinner Party For Football Captains. After the Nebraska game Dr. A. R. Kennedy, former Jayhawker coach, entertained eight captains of Kansas eleven to a dinner party at his home. The place cards for the football players gave the score of the big game the year they were captains. The following were the men present and the scores: Dr. Kennedy, 97, K. U. 16—M. U. 0. “Shorty” Hamil, '96, K. U. 12—M. U. 0. Albert Hicks, '04, K. U. 29—N. U. 0. Bert Pooler, '05, K. U. 8—M. U. 0. Donald, '06, K. U. 8—N. U. 0. Carl Rouse, '07, K. U. 4—M. U. 0. “Tub” Reed, substituting for “Pat” Crowell, '08, K. U. 20—N. U. 5. Carl Pleasant, '09, K. U. 6—N. U. 0. Earl Ammons, '11, K. U. ?—M. U. Earl Ammons, '11, K. U. ?—M U. ?. WILL ADDRESS MEN A. J. Eliot of Chicago Will Give Three Lectures. Mr. Eliot will also go over the University work with Mr. Roy Stockwell, the new secretary, Mr. Stockwell arrived in Law, rence yesterday morning and will take hold of the work immediately. Mr. A. J. Eliot, of Chicago, international secretary for the western division of the Y. M. C. A. will address three meetings of men in Myer's hall this afternoon. The first meetings is for members of the faculty at 4:30, the second meeting at 6:45 for the men students, and the third meeting for ministers at 8 o'clock. Mr. Eliot in his lectures will take up the work of the Y. M. C. A., in general but will discuss particularly the special meetings which will be held in the University during the month of February. C. W. Whitechair, state secretary from Topeka, will take part in the meetings. 1910 CLASSMEN BANQUETED Civil Engineering Society Held Reunion at Eldridge House. At a meeting of the Deutcher Verein yesterday, Professor Engle spoke on "The Training of the Common Teacher in Germany." Next Monday Professor Borsch of the department of music at Baker, will give a song recital before the Verein to which the public is invited. Deutcher Verein Meeting: A banquet and reunion of the 1910 class of the University Civil Engineering Society was held at the Eldridge house Saturday night, November 18, following the Kansas-Nebraska game. Sixteen members of the class of '11, together with Dean Frank O. Marvin, Prof. W. C. Hoad, Prof. H. A. Rice, Prof. Harry Gardner, of the School of Engineering, and H. L. Wilson, T. C. Schwartz, and H. V. Becker, of the class of '12, spent the evening telling stories and relating their experiences since leaving school. Everyone present responded with a speech. The following men of the class of 1911 were present : L. N. Bush, J. Van den Brock, Ross E. Hall, K. F. Troop, R. C. March, A. W. Young, W. E. Brunn, H. J. Burger, F. L. Joste, V. V. Long R. Schreiner, R. Poterfield, E. R. Tibbetts, Roy Spear, W. E. Scamell, and C. E. Moon. HAWORTH REPORTS ON GAS SUPPLY COMPILES DATA ON KAN- SAS-OKLAHOMA FIELDS. It is Result of Annual Winter Gas Shortage at Kansas City and Vicinity. The report on the Kansas-Oklahoma gas supply, which Prof. Erasmus Haworth, Dean of the chool of Mining, has been preparing for the Kansas City Utilities Commission, will be given out tomorrow, when Professor Haworth goes to make his report before the Commission, sitting in Kansas City. This report is the result of the annual winter gas shortage in Kansas City and vicinity. Every winter in recent years the gas flow has fluctuated and gone down below the living point during bad weather; last winter the shortage was increasingly serious. To find out the causes of this—whether the gas supply is giving out, or whether it is poor management or inferior equipment, the Kansas City Utilities Commission hired Professor Haworth last September to make a thorough investigation of the entire Kansas-Oklahoma field, with its various branch pipelines and pumping stations. The material for Professor Haworth's report, which consists of six volumes of carefully compiled data on all gas wells, producing or pumped out, and two large detail maps of the entire gas and oil field of southern Kansas and northern Oklahoma, has been gathered since Sept. 1 by a corps of fifteen assistants scattered throughout the whole gas district. Experienced gas and oil operators, among them Representative Kerr of Independence, were called by Prof. Haworth to cover the fields and pipelines in detail, the result of their work being compiled here by Prof. Haworth. Prof. P. F. Walker, of the Mechanical Engineering department of the School of Engineering, together with a squad of students, assisted materially in the pipeline inspection, gathering data concerning the pressure and flow of gas on the Kansas Natural Gas Co.'s lines during the past month. Detailed maps of all oil and gas territory from which Kansas City obtains its fuel supply, were prepared and sent in to Prof. Haworth who has worked and incorporated this material in to this report. So complete and detailed is this report (Continued on page 4). Red Milton, Lightest Center Kansas ever had. FIRST JUNIOR PARTY PRICE, $1.00 RAY HALL'S ORCHESTRA FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 24 F. A. A. HALL