Boxing, Wrestling On Independent j Smoker Program! '•* *. — Riggs, Former Football Star, to Box With Blackwell Tumbling Act ami Features On F urday Lineup Tlirci’ ! i;\\ ig bouts, two wrestling matches ,iikI an exliibition of tumb ling are sheduled for tlie indepcnd enf men's smoker Saturday night at Ho’cloek in the men’s gymnasium. ! The smoker will lie open to all men on the rumpus but is especially de signed to bring together iinaffiliated men. An admission charge of Id cents will be made to cover cost of refreshments, etc. Frank Higgs, former Oregon foot ball star and boxer of note, will give a four round exhibition with Joe Blackwell, Eugene professional. Blackwell has fought several main events at the Kugeiie armory. Biggs and Blackwell arc middle weights. Landles to Tight Matched with Buzz Bandies, pro fessional, will he either Jimmie Bee, university student and professional, or Bay Jacobs, Eugene fighter. The bout will lie four rounds exhibition and in either case should lie a well matched affair, it is the opinion of campus fight fans. Two university amateur boxers, Red Carrol . and Wallace Faust, will fight three rounds in a preliminary to the other bouts. They are 12li pounders. Louis Feves nfcd Clair Moisei, pounds, and Norville May and Floyd Bowers, 14K pounds, will be featured in two wrestling bouts of seven minutes. These bouts should be fast and show plenty of action to please the crowd. The bone crushers, all of whom are miller the tutelage of Earl Widmer, wrestling instructor at the university, have been going out regularly for prac tice and are said to be in the besl of condition. Tumbling Slated Tumbling and acrobatic sliinls are the specialty of Wesley (lilinorc and Walter I’ritchard, tumbling team who will exhibit their ability. These boys are planning to make , the trip to Seattle for the minor sports carnival the lust of next week and have worked up a good net. Feature numbers on the program J will probably include a tap dancing stunt, a string quartet, and a jazz, specialist at the piano. Eats will consist of “tint dogs” and peanuts. By LAVINA HICKS 0.---,- if Tlir spring term series of Wom en’s league tens began Thursday afternoon when Chi Deltn sorority meinhers were hostesses ;it the VVoin ,• in’s building. Florence McXeriicy, • assisted by Flennor l‘'Iti ua<>:ui and Marjorie Chester, was in charge of the tea and Kline Olsen was chair man for tin- sorority entertaining. Irma Logan played' a piano nolo during the afternoon and Ann Hughes and Winona Irving sang a duel. A quartet of Chi Delta mem bers, composed of Fillet Mackey, (trace Ash, Marian \ an Sicoyoc and j Margaret Knapp, sang. A decorative scheme of veiled' was carried out. with long da ITit'dils | used about the tables of the long hall. WHAT. . . They Say MATO I’l'MlSlI M HXT is a deter -I s| rent when it comes to murder. Murders are committed under the in fluence ol liquor, or some over powering emotional urge, such as jealousy, hate or greed. Today 's tendency is toward an increase in punishment .... that is going to mean more killings of policemen . . . . no penalty will stop men when they know arrest means spending the rest of their lives in prison." I'rot . Uaymond Al.oley, Columbia, in tin' X. A . F\ oiling I Vsl. *‘r|'M 11! NAil.Oli of former days -*■ who wore a beard and carried a knife in his belt would turn over I in his grave if he could see the mod j| i in sailor and marine with his wrist It watch and fountain pea,” IJev, IS. W. S.i hsbui \, chaplain, in the llroek lyn Fugle. Oregon Track Hopes Bright This Season (Continued from Vinje One) dr*dh, another <I».>i ns thrower, start ( •I th*' prac tit-«• reason hy throwing 111*■ di en> 1 10 trot. K*‘lley, who w oil th*1 high Uurlhs iguiml \\ .t sli i t»u t on Mate lost n *:ir in I: I, w ill l*o pressed t I»»^ .'eat l»\ lid \vill'll Migiunud. a sophonioie. Neigimmd took both 1 hi' I»• j. * 11 hurdles and tin* low hurdles m dual meets with Oregon Mate an-J Washington 1 ioIiiiumi in IUL's. Crawford Has High Jump Bill < raw t'onl still has tin* edge iu t In* high .jump, Imt seconded hy ImiImi f l!. tits ot Diego, who ha * Incn rh ai ing I ho bar aroiiad si a f*ut. thaw ford phuod fourth in (hi1 coast moot last season and tii‘d tor second against O. JS. C. pKmkrjfun 'vuu the 100 : „"i.L i . AMENDMENTS UP FOR STUDENT BODY VOTE To amend Article III, Section 2, Clause d; by striking out “one of whom slmll be a member of the Board of Regents,” and also; “and in. ease there is no satis factory person available who is both an alumnus and a regent of the university, the committee named is at liberty to appoint another member of the Board of Regents.” To amend Article til, Section six, Clause one to road: I’ublications Committee: Membership: This committee shall consist of seven members. One member from the faculty of the school of journalism who shall net as adviser for all stu dent publications. One member of the alumni of the university. One mcmbci of the faculty at large. The editor of the Kmerald. The editor of the Orcgana. The Vice-president of the As sociated Students. The President of the Associ ated Students shall act as chair man. The. .Graduate Manager shall act as secretary but shall he non voting. The appointive members of tipis committee shall be appointed by the retiring President and President-elect, of the Associated Students and President of the university not .later than .June 15 of each year. Clause 2; Duties; to remain as now defined in the present Con stitution, April 11, !92!». To add Clause ii to read: 1 be Staff of Publications: Kvery member of the Associated Students is eligible to be a mem ber of the staff of any publicii Inm of the Associated Students. Ksch year during the third week in April the present editorial stall ot each publication shall meet and nominate not more than four peIsons for (lie office of editor for the coming year ac cording |o procedure proscribed by the Public,it ions Committee. The nominees’ (mines shall be handed to I he Publicat ions Com mittee immediately. Hy a peti tion of not less than one hundred students, further nominees may he named by the students at huge and handed to the chair man of the Publications Com mittee not later than the first week in 'May. From the whole group of nominees the Publica tions Committee Shall recommend , not later than the second week . in May one person to the Execu tive Council for final approval to occupy the office of editor. If the Executive Council should reject the recommendation, the Publications Committee shall re consider the original group of nominees and recommend another person to the Executive Council ! for final approval. To amend Article VIII, Sec tion one: by striking it out and inserting the following: “Two regular meetings of the Associated Students shall be held each year on dates provide® in Article VI, Sections one and'four, at which time student nomina tions and committee reports and installation shall take place.” To amend Article III by mak ing the present sections eleven, twelve, and thirteen lie known as sections four, five, and six respectively; present section four to become section seven; present section five to become section eight; present section six to be come section nine; present sec tion seven to become section ten; present section eight to become section eleven; present section ten to become section twelve; to strike out Article IV and all per taining to it and add the follow ing to Article TIT, to be known as Section thirteen: Student Affairs Committee: Clause one; membership: This committee shall consist of five members. Senior Woman from the Exec utive Council. 1 i One member from the faculty at large. Vice-president of the Associ ated Students. President of the Women’s League. President of the Associated Students shall act n-s Chairman. Secretary of the Associated Students shall act as Secretary (non-voting). Clause two; Duties: * 1 ho same as specified in the present Constitution, April II, lit Jit, under Article IV, Section ■i, parts 1, 4, 0, 6, 7, 9, and 8 to read us follows: “To assume charge of all other ■it<'ins of importance in which students may Do directly inter ested and which are specifically’ delegated to- it. by the Executive Council.” This committee shall take over, all other duties which in the present Constitution, April 11, L9J9, are prescribed to the Stu dent Council. To amend Article VI, Section four, Clause two, to read: I In* Treasurer of the respective classes shall act as business itiun | ager for his class. He.shall file j with tlie Graduate Manager the j class budget as approved l>v the -advisory, committee of his class. , The Graduate Manager shall is sue all requisitions on class funds- but only in conformity with tin* term* of the budget. I’Ik* class Teens liver shall approve all claims. Duplicate requisitions and invoices shall lie turned over to the Treasurer of the Associ ated (Students for payment. (). S. (last your, in 10.4, but Howard Low iv, ex-.loffcrson high runner, vvlio was the outstanding fresh sprinter last year, has been breaking the tape at 10 Hat. Herl Tuttish ami Francis Ili'H, sopho mores, are good sprint prospects. Imye Metier, a lettennan in the hardies, is out this year and will he ('minted on for some of Oregon’s points in both the low and high hurdles. Met lee made his letter ill 10-7, but failed to make enough points last year to gain his second stripe. Hamaker Issues Instructions For Building' of Floats (Contiuut'd from I'uijc One) building of artistic limits for this youl s Fete is the fact that three of the prize winners will be filmed as a part of the campus movie the morning after the Fete. Also, it present plans materialize, an Inter national \i ws operator with a '■ talkie’’ recorder will film the on tire canoe fete on t lie night of the contest, and tin- pictures will be sliowti nil over the United fcitutes. I here will lie only fourteen flouts in tin Kele this year instead of the fifteen previously announced. Be en use of lack of organization Friend ly hall an I the Three Arts club have withdrawn from the contest. Theta Khi, the alluded partner of the I hive Arts club, will be- paired in stead with Kappa Delta, formerly pained with the hall. Classified KoK KM XT Now, for l(i month lease, the Boodi-Seiterf home on Birch lame. New furnace, fine fireplace, electric range. Five rooms and two student rooms. Key next door. (78 1 W). Wild, I’KHSON who bought "La j V erdad Sospectioso” the other day between U lLl at the auction sale pleace call former owner at | -788, as book was not meant to | be sold. I Special Delivery Service Our idea is to give you good service and good goods at the right price Our two delivery truck'' leave at these hours: Morning 8:i5 9:30 I I :00 Afternoon 2:00 4:00 Please have jour orders iu 1 •"> minutes hel'ore tie-so hours Phone 93 UNDERWOOD & ELLIOTT GROCERS ! Kith and Patterson 1 H. H. Jasper Gels Article Published On Campus Life Working Man Will Finally Get Justice, Believe 0 ' . Oregon Students Herbert H. Jasper of Eugene, i graduate assistant in the psychology : department, has written an article 'entitled “Optimism and Pessimism l in College Environments,” which appears in the American Journal of Sociology. The article is a compila j tion of answers to questions asked a group of students from four col leges in Oregon. Mr. Jasper found in his research work that about 20 per cent of the students believed that justice would ultimately come lo the working man <50 per ci-nt thought it possible, am 20 per cent that it was impossible Thirty-two per cent saw a briglr outlook for the United States, i>! per cent were rather halfway o the subject, and 11 per cent be | lieved something very disastrou: | will happen. Eighteen per cent be lieved that war will be abolished it the future, 52 per cent that it wil decrease, and MO per cent pessimisti cally predicted that war would be i come more horrible. As to presen. day morals, Ml per cent though them better than those of the past Cl per cent believed they wen much the same ns they use# to br and 8 per c'cnt thought them being on the downward trend. Nearly all of those answering th questions thought that American marriages were moderately success t'ul, just a few thought them gene tally a failure, and a very few-be I lieved it was really s.ieeessful. ! Eighty-three per cent had never ! seriously considered committ ing sui 1 ,-ido, 15 per cent contemplated it | occasionally and only 2 per cent j who. had thought about doing it i oft en. He's Brought in Quite A Fete of These Beasts SEATTLE, Wash.—(IP)—If all the oysters which Professor Trevor Kincaid of the University of Wash ington has imported from Japan re cently were plured in a stew it would take a pot the size of a good sized college hall to contain them. Professor Kincaid to date has im ported 10,000,000 of the little ani mals for the purposes of transplant ation in the flats of Willapa harbor. Five Proposals to Alter Constitution Suggested (Continued from l'agc One) ] Friday is an unfavorable day to get I students to attend, i The University of Oregon band ! pt'esontod a program both before and after the business meeting. The i “March Foutastique” by Julius Fuick, and Selections of Comic' Opera Songs, by Alfred G. Robyn, j were especially well rendered. The program: Oregon Song “ As I Sit and Dream at Evening” ^Complimentary to Dean John Straub Marche de Concert ‘‘March Fantastique ’’..Julius Fuick! Selections of Comic Opera Song 1 "Alfred G. Robyn j Valso des Fiancailles ‘‘Eternelle Iveresse "...Louis Cannej Salon Piece ‘‘First Heart Tlirohs”. .Richard Ejleuberg Overture •‘Stradella” . F. V. Flatow ‘‘Mighty Oregon” s ifimcRSj By OSBOBNE HOLLAND Unusual motion pictures arc wcl omo as a rule, but “Sunrise,” now :t the Colonial is an outstanding ex ception to this rule. Probably the eason it has,, never been shown in t.'ugeno before is that most theaters iiaven’t the "herve to feed such stuff ■ o the public. George O’Brien and lanet Gnynor make an excellent pair of .-tars and deserve some praise, but their efforts are almost ntirely discredited by very poor di recting and the weakness of plot. Cheater goers can’t be kept now a days without either notion or ouiedy and “Sunrise” is sadly lacking in both. U one has a particularly good case of humor, he might enjoy the antics of O Brien and Miss Guvnor and speculate on whether the*lat Spring Cleaning Paint Varnish Lumber Veneers WILL LIGHTEN YOUR WORK PHONE 782 TWIN - OAKS LUMBER CO. “THOSE YELLOW TRUCKS” Largest and best equipped renewing shop in the northwest . Jim the Shoe Doctor Quick, Courteous, Dependable Service 4^ i|> fjl fjl rjl 986 WILLAMETTE EUGENE. OREGON KEN MAYNARD i V%CMIfOBNlA TODAY and SAT. MATINEE NIGHT MANHATTAN PLAYERS present “COHEN’S AND CASEY’S” lev's blonde wig will finally slip | and exp'ose either a bald liea'd or > black tresses. The love scenes are just as out of 'date as the rest of , the film and could only get by be fore an andienoe of old maids or very young children. Although “Sun rise” has been hailed by critics as outstanding,Osensational and power ful in its. appeal, it seems to me, more like highljrow opera .produced by amateurs with laryngitus. MCDONALD—Monte B'hie and II. B. Warner in “Conquest,” an all talkie. Also “The Collegians,” star ring Oeorge Lewis, and Vitnphone Vodvil. COLONIAL—“ Sunrise, ’ ’ fcatur ing George O’Brien and Janet Gay-1 nor. Also “Off Again,” comedy, , and first run Pat'he news. RES — The Manhattan players present “The Cohens awl the ’ Casevg” mi the stage. On the screen, “The California Mail.” ITEII.IG-—Tlie Taylor players pre-; sent “Twin Beds.” Pictures to Be Shown Albert Jourdan, Portland photog rapher, has made arrangement to ex hibit a collection of international photographs in the little art gal lery, that has recently been released from the Portland galleries. Drippings From The Keg Spigot _Edited by : : Mike Griffin SPANISH GOLD By G. A. Birmingham A famous talc of btffied Spanish 0 0 • doubloons with all the romantu- ad ventures of Stevenson’s “Treasure Island,” combined with a sly in gratiating Irish humor that it- ir resistible is “Spanish C<i!d,” re printed in the Sun Dial library of famous fiction by tile Garden City Publishing company. When stolid, kindly Major Kent and J. J., otherwise known as the Rev. John Joseph Woiljoi:, ik A. of T. C. P., s t sail to discover the Spanish Gold that a shipwrecked captain of the Armada buried on Inishgowlnn, they sailed head on into a series of adventures includ ing a tiff with the home secretary and a race with the villainous and equally well reformed Sir Giles that exercised all of J. J.'s glorious gift of fabrication and diplomacy. No one but an Irishman, could have had such an adventure and no one but an Irishman could have told it with such gusto.—G. it. TONIGHT ! and SAT. j TAYLOR PLAYERS — IN — “TWIN BEDS” Bargain Matinees every Saturday and Sunday COMING SUNDAY “PIGS” w' * i/fyi And What A CAST LOIS WILSON H. E. Warner Edmund Breese Tully Marehall Monte Blue VLSO — VITA PHONE ACTS ami WORLD NEWS LILAC TIME” Is Xcxt 21 Times a Week .'Oil eat food prepared by the same eook. and at ter a while you 're bound to S?ot tired of it and want a change. •Inst come down to the Eugene Hotel M>me week-end for one of our special dinners and see what excellent food and distinctive service we have to offer. T™ EUGENE HOTEL *