Class And Student Body Officers Picked At Oakland Hiah School lodmifc Youth f TOMORROWS CITIZEN Top Records Of The Week This Lot Two Wtek Wtk Wteki Song nd Ricording Stir Girls Boys 111 It's Now or Never .'. Elvis Presley 1 1 2 3 4 The Twist Chubby Checker 2 3 32 Walk, Don't Run Ventures 4 2 4 2 8 Volare - Bobby Rydell 3 5 5 8 Finger Poppin' Time Hank Ballard 5 4 S S 3 Itsv Bitsv Bikini .... Brian Hyland 7 6 7 7 13 In 'My Little Corner o( World Anita Bryant 6 8 8 17 17 Drcamin' Johnny Burnett 8 8 9 Yogi Ivy Three 12 7 in 8 5 Only The Lonely Roy Orbison 11 10 11 12 14 All ilv Love Jackie Wilson 9 14 12 9 7 I'm Sorry Brenda Lee 13 11 13 IB 15 Please Help lie, I'm Falling .. H. l.ocklin 10 15 14 14 18 Mission Bell Donnie Brooks 16 12 15 13 9 Feel So Fine Johnny Preston 17 13 18 20 Theme - The Apartment Ferrante-Teicher 14 17 17 11 . 12 Walkin' lo New Orleans Fats Domino 19 16 18 18 TaTa Clyde MePhatter 15 20 19 10 11 Image of a Girl Safaris 20 18 20 Never on Sunday Don Costa 21 19 COMING UP FAST: Pineapple Princess Annette New officers were recently elect ed lo olfice at Oakland High School. Student bqdy officers are presi dent, Pat Early; vice president, Helen Wilson; secretary, Peggy Murphy; treasurer, Claudia Imia; sergeant - at arms, Richard Hollamon. Senior class officers are presi dent, Alton Clark; vice president, Dan Baird; secretary. Donna Rob- ison, treasurer, Claudia Inda; ser- gcant-at-arms, Dennis Stevens. The junior class officers are president, Jerry Rogers; vice pres ident, Darold llolcomb; secretary, Gloria Menges; treasurer, Nor man Baird; and sergeant-at-arms, Ann O'Neal. Officers for the sophomore class are president, Jim Archer; vice president, Steve Corbin: secretary uiane reterson; treasurer, Wayne Germond; and sergeant-at-arms, Melvin Jerry. Freshmen officers are president, Kennon Manley; vice president, Paul Johnson; secretary and treas urer, Carole McCollough; and sergeant-at-arms, Pat Murphy. Student body representatives are Frances Hoyle, senior; Ardie Breedlove, junior; Joyce Terry, sophomore; and Jill Lytle, freshman. ! Power Group Okays Construction 5ucr??c'"bTLs,a,e,s . 1 ' Family Night Thursday iOf Round Buffo Dcm Proiect ' Buok.rcsqi..r. num wl 1 VVVI ! hold a family night ThurMlay from I 7:30 to 9:30 p. ill. at its bain near WASHINGTON' (API The Jan. 1, 1932. and the license for i Winchester. Power Commission Monday au- Round Butte will have the same All members are invited to come thorued Portland General Flee- effective date. ami bring their children. Curie y trie Co., Portland, Ore., to build The n0nd Run. it,im,m.i 1 Reynolds will call dances for the will include the largest hdroelec-1 T' . ' h" !?r .'".'l'" trie dam located whoilv within ! information call Mis. Karl Oder- Oregon. KlrK' wno 1S ln cnarge oi arrange RHS Singers Pick Presidents Roseburg High School A Cap pella Choir and Girls' Glee Club members have selected senior Jim Jarvis and junior Julie Rob erts as presidents of the two groups. Both Jarvis and Miss Roberts are second-year members of the respective performing groups. The 1960-1961 Choir is made up of sixty-six singers, with the Glee Club numbering forty-three. Both groups are now preparing for the annual Fall Concert, scheduled for October 25. Members of both singing groups are participating in a boxed- candy sale to raise funds for pur chase and maintenance of choral robes. The candy sale is now in progress, with each member hav ing the nationally-known Almond Roca candy product for sale. BALL SQUAD SELECTED The Glendale High School stu dent body, in an election held Fri day, Sept. 9, elected two Junior Varsity Cheer Leaders, Joan Crews and Gayle Vaughn. Varisty Cheer Leaders, elected last spring, are Sandra Kincaid Sharon Burgoyne, and Sue Long its proposed $70.9 million round on the Deschutes river in Jeffer son county, Ore. The commission ruled that the development should be licensed as a part of the company's existing Pelton project, which is located immediately downstream, instead of as a separate project. PG&E had sought a separate license fo Round Butte but the commission said it should be a part of the Pelton project, since the two dams will be operated as a unit. The 50-year Pelton project li cense bears an effective date of Tuei., Sept. 13, 1960 The News-Review, Roieburg, Or. 9 The Crossword Puzzle For Today Scientist Answer to Prtviout PujiI Ia clfelfel Douglas School Enrollment Larger There has been an increase of 27 students at Douglas High school in the student body, according to Ray L. Talbert, principal. The enrollment as of Sept. 8 is 360; The breakdown on the students in classes is freshmen, 127; sopho mores, 79; juniors, 77; and sen iors 77. Further inrollment increases are expected, Talbert said. The first school function was held Saturday night when the school an nual staff held their first annual autograph party. Admission was a 1960 or 1961 an nual receipt. A door prize of a paid-up order for a 1961 annual was given. Refreshments were served and music from records were used for dancing. Canyonville Group To Meet Thursday The first meeting of the Can yonville Band Boosters has been scheduled for 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the music room of the school, according to Robert Graf, director of music. Election of officers to replace two vacancies is first on the agenda, reports Virginia Proctor, correspondent. ruty-one students make up the school A band with some 35 to 40 in the B band, Graf said. The school owns 25 instruments, all of which are rented out to band mem bers. The Boosters work to fi nance uniforms and olher "extras" for the entire music program of tne scnoot. NUZUM MAKES PFC Richard Nuzum. son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Nuzum of Camas Val ley, recently completed his basic training for the U.S. Marine Corps and graduated with top honors. Nuzum was one of seven out of his platoon who received Private First Class rating. m on est i .iih; s Tradtmirfc Riittrd V. I FaUat OArt hii ,h. ,1CV0n,W'1 ,1",0,t d""' The Buckcroo Club will start its ' . PlU tfJ"'e, c,m",a" s fall square dance lessons Oct. 18 se en existing hydroelectric proj- j and 19 from g ,0 10 p. ,. Any- " 1 one interested in learning is in- Round Butte will have installed i vited lo attend. For more informa capacily of 247.U50 kilowatts, wilhjtion call Mrs. W. P. Wilson on an estimated average annual out-1 Rainbow Avenue or Norman P. Pit of 925 million kilowatt-hours. ! John, club president. FROM NINE TO FIVE m Bv o Fischer Two Youths Enlist In US Marine Corps Douglas Lee Frisbie and Gerald Lee Handy enlisted in the U.S. Marine Corps recently and are now at Marine Corps Recruit Depot, San Diego, California, un dergoing recruit training. Frisbie is the son of Mr. and Mrs. F'red L. Frisbie and Handy is the son of Mr. Henry L. Handy, both of Roseburg. Re-enlisting in the Navy were Raymond J. Buda and Howard A. Dunlap. Buda, Roseburg, re-en listed as a Radioman First Class and Dunlap, Roseburg, a Av!ttinn Metalsmith Second Class. Br I will go on to service schools before re assignment. Griffiths Gets Execution Stay SAN' FRANCISCO (ApS-A stay of execution and a new trial were ordered Monday for a convicted Washington State murderer by the L. S. Court of Appeals. Th'e man is Henry M. Griffith. convicted of shooting A. B. Davis in a field near Lind, Wash., Oct. 4, 1956. Grillilh was is at ine lime ana on parole from the slate reforma tory after a forgery conviction. A three-judge panel upheld Grif fith's contention that he had been convicted on a confession taken while he was without counsel and under the influence of drugs. Judges William E. Orr, Fred erick G. Hamley and Oliver D. Hamlin noted Griffith had been turned down on appeal by his own stale supreme court, and had sought unsuccessfully a writ of review from the V. S. Supreme Court. But the judges said these appeals were on different ques-1 lions. The Court of Appeals reviewed the man's attempt lo commit sui-l cide in Spokane two days after the alleged murder. It noted that a confession taken from him as he lay bleeding on the street from a gunshot wound in the abdomen was thrown out of court. The appeals court said a second confession taken Oct. 11, 1956, while he was still undergoing a series of operalions for his abdom inal wound, was taken without a lawyer being present and without Griffith being asked if he wanted a lawyer or told he could have one. Furthermore, said the opinion, he had just been given 75 milli grams of demerol lo alleviate his pain and some medical testimony held this could have inlluenced his confession. Students At Riddle High Get School Newspaper Riddle high school students re ceived a first day two-page edition of the school paper, the "Green R," put out by Carol Stuart, edi tor of the school annual "T h e Shamrock," and Sandy Fowler, ed itor of the literary publication "The Leprechaun, outlet for original writings of high school students. The editor of the "Green R" for this year is senior Peggy Koerner who is recuperating from ma.ior surgery performed recently at Mer cy hospital, Roseburg. Woman's Club Holds Special Group Meeting "I'd like fo turn my old one) in on a new model!" Jkf" Hi"' H -r C, ' ' i " a -r- Education Board Names Architects SALEM (AP) The stale Board of Higher F.ducation Building Committee today appointed archi tects lo plan for expansion of the campus of Portland State College, and to expand dormitory facilities at Oregon State College. Skidmore, Owings and Merrill, Portland, were appointed to do the Portland Stale planning, including selection of the site for a proposed $2,340,000 science building. The same firm was named to plan a dormitory at Oregon Col lege of Education. Burns, Bear, McNeil & Schnei der, Portland, was the firm hired for the OSC dormitory study. The committee awarded a SI, 543,578 contract to Ross B. Ham mond Co. Portland, to construct a medical research building at the university's Medical School in Portland. It confirmed award of a $340,- A4H .nn,pnnt In, a mpiul sill- Recommendations made at an;denls aormjtory at Oregon State executive board meeting of (he Roseburg Woman's Club recently, made it necessary that the presi dent, Mrs. N. C. Wallin. call a special meeting of the club. After some discussion, the mem bers agreed to accept the recom mendations of the board whereby the rental policy of the club will have to be adjusted to meet the rising cost of taxes, utilities, main tenance and repairs of the club house. Members were reminded of the membership tea scheduled for Tuesday. The first regular meeting of the club will be Oct. 4, at 1:30 p. m. at the clubhouse. -The executive board will meet at 10:30 that morning. College. The contract went lo Wood. Johnson & nose, and Clyde D. Rose, Corvallis. 5 KU 4 t E T '-'-1 ms 4 American Colleges Bid For African Students NEW YORK (API A program for, bringing between 100 and 200 African students each year to the United States was announced Fri day by 24 American colleges. The colleges are to provide tui tion, room and board and olher essentials. The students' govern ments are to underwrite travel ex penses. Colleges taking part are Am herst, Barnard. Brandeis, Brown, Bryn Mawr, Columbia. Cornell, Dartmouth, Harvard, Haverford, Minnesota, Mount Holyoke, No tre Dame. Oberlin, Pembroke, Pennsylvania. Princeton, Radcliffe, Smith, Stanford, Swarthmore, Vassar, Wellcsley and Vale. HEAT ON JUDGE GOOCHLAND, Va. (AP: The heat was on Judge C. Champion Bowles when he opened court here on a muggy morning with a crowd ed docket. But the heat didn t come from the docket. Court employes found that someone had stolen the fan. .- - ;! .".' . '. I. - "If I could only moke os much os I spend, I might be oble to save a little." HUBBY ISN'T INTERESTED ' Mrs. Jessie A. Johnson who is 30 ooses outside a Los 1 Angeles courtroom Wednes- j catch, a 301 - 'SitiM 3ftk7 Wit 3. Grand Bahama Utand Arthur Bowers, Jr., 13, has reason to smile. The youJWul ftjherman of Troy. N.H.. landed the large one on a 60-pound. t wire luie after a battle laitui; an hour and W minuiei. NAVY SPONSORS EDUCATION The U.S. Navy'a Bureau of Med icine and Surgery is sponsoring I training program to qualified stu dents which provides financial as sistance while completing Ph. I) obv. Rnh iu-i ovca i s ooy otter appearing of a pre- Roseburg Navy Recruiter in- divorce hearing. Mrs. John nounced. SOr, SOy5 her husband George Lewis staled that randidate t -.pw rfncac in must be between 21 and 3 'a years : wno ,S on,y 59 retus ,0 of afre. muot be within two r'alen- 'poy ony ottention to her. dar years of completing all rc-'She testified Ot the hearing TJirementa for VHD including, Tnot ever1 her poems hove internship, and must he the to; , . . . r i u. meet other mental and physical ! ,0,,ed to jolt Gtorge from h($ requirement!. lethorgy. (AP Virephoto) ACROSS 1,6 Scientist, 11 Makes into law 13 Take ill H Reiterate 15 Salt of oleic and 18 Rare cours circuit 17 Shormaker'i implement 19 Kootlike part aoCovdfd fabric 22 Southern feneral 23 Weight of India 24 Removed moisture 2(1 Conjunction 27 Paid notices in newspapers 28 Stir 29 Seine 30 Persian gateway 31 South Ameriran w ood sorrrl 32 Halley'it, for instance 34 Before 35 Because 36 Deputy (ab.) 38 Append :id Compass point 40 Scottish sailyard 12 Her hujhand's first name 15 Matures !8Kxalted 19 Island in New York Bay i0 Removes 31 Anoint DOWN' 1 T, .iropean blackbird 2 Close (poet,) 3 Knocked 4 frozen water 5 (iteek letter 6 Celeoiated fab.) 7 Kniplov 8 Hanested 9 Bury ID .Summers (Fr.) 12 l.edst fresh 1J She played a prominent as a physicist niiin her life 18 Marry hVSTn Ir A T 5 neaP;.agit- mt- ' 5 j E. x W M EW jjEljn 3 O v. Oir lTe "lU fMlTjOl L I S" 21 SwaiKer 2i Breathed noisily in sleep 2S Notion '26 Kirst man 28 Idolizers 31 Trying expenenct 32 Regard studiously 33 Rounded 34 Roman urban ftrficial 35 Graze 37 Saddle pat 38 Mimicked 41 Hireling 4.t Route (ab ) 44 Legal point . 46 (Greenland Kskimo 47 Cooking; utensil 1 I 3 14 h I j0 I? 8 19 110 n u rr - T? . 1" j" 20" zi 22 a 27 Ba , . 42 U hi i 46 4J 48 ! 49 50 51 I I I I I I I I I I 13 M:4P.U'R KTRRritl!: Am?!, It Your Paper Hat Nat Arrived By 6:15 P.M. Dial OR 2-337.1 Between 6 & 7 P.M. (VLL vJ2 VIRSINIA! CALL ACS AIM IOMORHOW! pvn ni-W I DIDN'T KNOW VIRGINIA WAS ONE OF YOUR rl CLOSE FRIENDS.' r J I ( WELL. SHE tS- " BUT I'VE BEEN HAVINS 1 1 '' ," SO I'M-'ifi A LITTLE TROUBLE r MNARMING B I f l HERI AT A ROAOIIOCK THT A REP I I l ArRUlB THE WE 100! AW, THIS WU5T HE SAlO ONE OF 'EMMS "1 I CAM: SHOW V0U ,y M PANEL TRUCK, SEEN LEAVIUG THE BASE Rt0 WHO TOOK 86 THE PLOT MR. 0SUKA TRAILBO TO A FARM I QUICKER. IT 5 15 7 ' IMER Vat oawn, ha seem traced 20 mm m wouio cover wa wins to uncovers iwlbs frow the basci wiles, awavi on IN TOKVOitASV.N-ji N0RTH ON THE MAO TO KIT01-W THEIR TRAIL SETTER SO THE SU4PECT HE'D HOW CAN I FlNO IT1 A C0UWTR.V IAN6 i TL.egi amv Km , in -1 111.H 1 -T THAN THAU ySHAOOWED, THEN LOST, IW - ,, THAT WIND5 PAST TtF V1 nz 7 Did you HAve ol) may WEBEfe THAT ) CtlTOt CHARGE OFTHE j SAY WE sruMPie ? r-s -fh- MASCOT VrooMED O I I TPROUSH rf TivjFrLjce 1 j-l u T7- "tOU TEACH HIM ALL SORTS OF TWVC7 1 -iv-.i'w Yep.' ce AMY SP6CIAL. OME-or INTER EST To m TtS! wf lik-ep MM BETTER. WHEN HE DIDIMT Ftvru! i.V - I -7?iiSJIftVjt 60 96E IP YCANT frlB I Of COURSE Hk WILL,, ' YKNOW, FOCEY, SOMb- f 3 1 KINBIV flMP GUZ K ..T JLIST e UMP, AAT lUeOOM THiHKTIMES r PON T THIMK. I I V, I - -..J CEBTAINLY WXT KFORE IT GETS Wil SUMPIN'S L. TOO... AN' WEU. -tOU BOTH 1 MAI fiOT ANY SEMSE I J I ?1 HE WILL, VWfT I . I TOO AWfUl PARKl HAPPENED Pa BRINS 'IM EACH 1 JUST HEAPS L AT ALL A E'-NA l-OSDICK.'.'-YOUVK ' hOLVF-.D THE CACL7.,-eUT; , falNCE IT WAS ALL j-1 IMf. DKHAPIVII-NI CANNOI OFFICIALLY RFXOGNIZE YOUR ACHIE.VF-MENT F.XCFPT IN r . . i ONEWAV--JfVK? ' VL'LL DfcLXJ.T . bOPERChNT h ui-YLXl PAV tVFPY "WEEK.'. If uijs7 hi r t- TOKHIMfcVJRSF: TMIS INNOCFMT ClTIZEM FOP.T1IE DESTRUCTION OFHIG SIU BABUPGER I AM PROUDl TO GIVL;. HALF OF W MISERABLE I FAY, TO SAvFTHrS- I lAMPROUDl 1, TO GIVK. I HALF OF W 1 MISERABLE I f FAY, TO I SAVF.TH- ! brAND.v , r'THE RICHEST ' I CITY IN THE Lva BUMSTIAO-vOU PliT THE CAPBOU IN BACKWARD 5 vO't ivpro WTHlS R6POPTy- 7 y i F I A 1 AS, a ; 3EP1 T Excuse ME . OR A MINUTE--f I A TO BORROW lV SOMFTHlNCi rPOM l-T THE SvmT(TmHOAD V ... now see.'-vou can pfad j THE PtPOPT IF VOU MOwO ) A MlPPW BtHINO IT ' ' LIKE THI IT MEANS StVfcN VEAP5 OF BAD LUCK . J BUT ITS V.OOTH ) ir I ' I . mi ' I