'Popular Photography' Honors UofO Co-ed In Photo Contest A perusal of Popular Photogra '• phy magazine revealed a familiar name yesterday. „ The name is that of Sally Schil ling, junior in business administra tion and a transfer from Stephens college, Columbia, Missouri. She was first place winner in the sec ond Annual National Collegiate Photography exhibition until her , picture was technically disqualified because it had been made three months prior to the time set by rules. The picture, called “Wabash Special” shows a train pulling into the station at Columbia. The par allel roofs of the station and train are coated with thin slushy snow. Meeting to State Plans for Odeon Interested students and faculty are asked to attend a meeting at 4 p. m. Wednesday in 107 Friendly hall to discuss plans far the com ing year’s Odeon magazine pro gram. Started in 1942, this will be the sixth annual Odeon. As in former years it will include original short plays, prose, poetry, short stories, modern dance selections, and var ious forms of Art works. Director of speech and drama, W. AvDahl berg will act as chairman and Bob Litten, junior in liberal arts, will be student chairmans Those wishing to contribute prose or poetry for Odeon publi cation are urged to begin work im mediately. Although the Odeon program is not presented until spring term, the magazine goes to press at the end of winter term. Check Mail Approved Students living in dormitories may pay room and board bills through campus mails by check. Envelopes for this purpose may be secured from the cashier’s of fice or from housemothers. ■ f— - A few bundled-up passengers are hurrying on and off. Said one of the judges, “Here the photographer saw and felt a pic ture. . . .it is a photograph that has feeling and meaning for every one. Miss Schilling took the picture with a three dollar camera for a photography class assignment. She developed the picture but never printed it. The next year it was discovered by one of the instructors while thumbing through back files looking for pictures to submit to the contest. As no one knew the owner of the negative is was sub mitted as property of “Suzie Stev ens,” a Stevens college equivalent of Betty Coed. When the winning snap was an nounced, it took a long distance call to Miss Schilling’s former in structor in New York to place its ownership. The camera department head presented Miss Schilling's picture printed with criticisms in the Oct ober issue of Popular Photography. These prints are also being dis played at various high schools and colleges throughout the country. Newman Club to Initiate New members will be initiated into the Newman club tonight at 6:30 in the Y.M.C.A. according to Cy Laurie, club president. Old members are also asked to be pre sent, and those who have not paid dues are requested by the treas Language Majors Meet All juniors and seniors major ing in foreign languages are asked to meet in room 20, Friendly hall from 7 to 8 p. m. on Thursday, Dr. D. M. Dougherty, head of the lan guage department, announced yes terday. COPY DESK: Ginger Denecke Ruth Wilson • Ethel Kamara Jim Bernhard, Editor Campus and Personal Printing, Business Stationery Cards, Envelopes, Letterheads — Service without delay — VJL PRIDTIDG COmPIMY V Echvard. V. Duke Harry F. Garret 76 W. Broadway Phone 169 COME ON IN ! GET YOUR STUDY STAY at the UNIVERSITY GROCERY 790 E. 11th Phone 1597 Doughnut Centennial With dunking now officially approved for local eating establish ments, campus "coffee and" enthusiasts might well pause a moment during their next between-class snack today and think of the man who made all this possible by poking out the soggy center of a friedcake, thus creating the hole in the doughnut. One hundred years ago this week Sea Captain Hanson Gregory of Glen Cove, Main, invented the "sinker.” While watching his ' mother make friedcakes young Gregory saw that they were not ‘ cooking in the middle. With one epic thrust of a fork he solved j his mother s culinary problem and produced the life-ring pattern of today’s doughnut. To commerate the centennial of the doughnut’s birth Charles Gregory, second cousin of the captain, and selectman Arthur Walker last Sunday placed a 12-by-14-inch plaque in the sea wall of the Glen Cove cottage that witnessed the making of the world's first doughnut a century ago. WORLD HEADLINES By United Press TOPEKA, Kan., Nov. 3 Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower today was the first choice of a limited group of persons in his native Kansas who answered a newspaper postal card poll of president;* preferen ces. Gov. Thomas E. Dewey of New York was second, Sen. Robert Taft third and President Harry S. Truman fourth. LONDON, Nov. 3. Stanislaw Mikolajczyk arrived in England in a Royal Air force plane today and said he had fled Poland 12 days ago because “I did not want to be shot and killed like a sheep.” He charged the Communist-dom inated Warsaw government plan ned to bring him to trial before a military court and then execute him. MOSCOwT Nov. 3. The Com munist organ Pravda said to day that Maj. Gen. Richard Hil ton, British Military Attache, was detained by guards four hours Thursday after he alleg edly photographed a Soviet mil itary factory. A letter to Prav da signed by four factory work ers claimed Hilton was “disguis ed in a ragged waistcoat and working boots” when he was ap- I prehended. Oakland, Cal., Nov. 13. The un American activities committee of the California legislature was told today the Hollywood writers mob ilization is a pro-communist org anization, and that the president of the CIO Marine Cooks and Stewards union once openly ad mitted he was a communist. The committee, seeking to uncover com munist activities in California, heard its investigator, Richard Coombs, testify that the HWM is “an organization controlled by pro communists, although all members aren’t Communists. SALEM, Ore., Nov. 3. Oregon ians and neighboring state officials today paid last respects to Oregon’s late Governor Earl Snell, Secretary of State Robert S. Farrell, Jr., and State Senate President Mar shall Cornett, who died in a plane crash last week. The Governors of Idaho, Washington, Nevada, and California were among those who gathered in the chamber of the Oregon house of representatives to hear the Rev. Lloyd T. Anderson of the Salem First Baptist church offer the invocation which opened the services. PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 3. Den nis Cardinal Dougherty, arch bishop of Philadelphia, today gave two Central City theaters 48 hours to withdarw showings of “Foiever Amber” and “The Outlaw” under threat of a Cath olic boycott of the two movie houses. The prelate warned that unless his warning was heeded, he would order the estimated 1,000,000 Catholics in the 10 county Philadelphia ^rctydiojcese to boycott the theaters for one year. lake SUCCESS, N.Y., Nov. 3. Russia proposed today that Great Britain give up control of Pala stine Jan. 1, 1948, letting the Uni ted Nations split the holy land in to Arab and Jewish states that would receive full independence by the end of next year. During the transitional period, UN would ad minister Palestine through a spe cial commission composed of the 11 nations on the UN security council. MANCHESTER, N H.. Nov. 3. James F. O’Neill, national com mander of the American Legion, tonight defended the House Un American Activities committee and demanded “outlawing of the Communist party in America.” The Manchester police chief, Page 7 Co-op Orders Now Being Filled Miss Ada Zinser. head of th>3 textbook department at the Co-op, requested Monday that students who have placed special orders for texts either call for the books or cancel the orders. If the text is no longer needed, rays Miss Zinser, the dollar de posit will be refunded to the stud ents and the book can be sold to someone else. Highland, Rebecca, ZTA Pose Today Residents of three living organ izations. Highland house, Rebec house and Zota Tan Alpha, will have Oregana pictures taken today at Kennell-Ellis studio. Other houses scheduled for this week are: November 5: University house, Zeta Hall. November 6 and 7: Hendrick1) hall. November S: Minturn hall. New Director of 0. T. T. Dean Paul B. Jacobson, dean of the school of education, has re cently been named director of the Oregon teacher training program. He succeeds Dr. J. R. Jewell, the former dean of education, who held the same post. Dean Jacob son's main duty will be to coor dinate the University of Oregon and Oregon State college teacher training programs. speaking over a nation-wide ra dio hookup, said the committee, currently investigatingCommunf ism in Hollywood, was "being belabored by those who would benefit from its dissolution.'’ • ■ ■■■.— .1 L. 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