f V Ratings in Music Contest Told High ratings predominated ir the Central Oregon solo and en ' scmble ihumc content, which wound up lust Friday afternoon mi tlie Thompson school auditorium More than 150 high school students from Prineville, Madias, Ked mond, Mines and Bend look part Ratings not announced earlier are . lis follows: French horn solos Rnrbara Kos burg, Burns, 2-; I'hil Hector, Ked mund, 1-; Alan Sikes, Prineville, 2 plus; Kay Thompson, Prineville, 1; Shirley Vilhauer. kedmond, 2-. Baritone Solos Ralph Towner, Bend, ; Bruce Scott, i'rineville, 2-. Tiximbone Karen Dodson, Redmond, 2; Darrell Smith, Prine ville, 2: Larry Peden. Redmond, 1; Bob Warren, Prineville, 2-. Drum Duane Schmidt. Hinrs, 2 Horn solo Helen Harrison. Burns, 2-; Davis Buhman, Burns, 1. Bass horn Bill Fosburg, Hines, 2; Den nis Douglas. Bend. 1; Armond Schrocdcr, Burns, 1-: Dwight Vance, Redmond, 1; .lim Meek, Burns. 2. Brass ensembles Prineville Charles Ilughbanks, Prineville, 2.1 trio. 2. brass sextet. 1-: Redmond brass: Girl's medium voice Barbara Flute solos Ruth Poetsehat sextet. Hend brass uuartet. 2 Keil. P.end. 1. Boys' ensemble ! Bend, 2: Kay Jordan, Prineville plus: Prineville French horn quar-! Prineville boys' double quartet, plus; Susan Laltu, Redmond, 2-; ter. 1; Redmond brass qiurtel, 2 Bend boys' quartet, 1; Prmevillci Sally Summers. Bend, 1; Deane plus; Rend cornet trio, 1; Prine- boys quartet, 1. Ville trombone duet, 2; Burns cor- Ciirls' high voice Barbara Dnke, in -f duet, 1; limes cornet duet, 2. Prineville, 2; Murilyn Rainey, Piano solos Sandra Lynch, j Bend, 1; .lane Johnson, Prineville, Prineville, 1; Joanne Pellys, h; Vivian Tendollcn, Bend, 2: Hums, 2 plus; Duane Schmidt, I Sharon Luughlin, Prineville, 2: Hines, 2-; Vclda llein. Burns, 2-; j Kinina .lean Bartletl. Bend. 2; Sharol McLne. Hums, 2; Sally j Judy fiumpert, Prineville, 3; Carol Stearns, Henil, -; I arol Rube, Smyth, Bums, 2; Kutn De.viin, Burns. 2 ; Clenda Hughet, Burns.! Prineville, :',; DKlay Satterlee; I: Pauline Aiisinus. Burns, 2: (iail Prineville. 2; Sally Houston. Prine Wilson, Bend, 1; Byron .Meadows, Prineville, 1. Tenor solos Eill Wellman Bend, 2; Jim Farmer, Bend, 2; Dale Black-well. Bend. 1 ; Don Moss, Bend, 1. Baritone solos Charles Lincoln. Bend, 1; Wayne: Peggy Conner, Bend, Fox, Bend, 1; Fred Brummer. Prineville, 1; Howard Bever, Bend. Tom Hawser, Burns, 1; Clilf Nelson, Bend, 1. Bass solos Johnie Hendrix. Prineville, 2; Tom Rose, Bend, 1; villn, 3; Jane Palin. Madras, J: Pat lljlliland, Bend. 1. Girls' low voice Karen Austin. Bend. 1. Bonnie Venters. Prine ville. 1; Darlene Harshman. Eend. 1; Marilyn Smith. Prineville, 2; 2; Janice Thompson, Prineville, 1; F.vadne Kelsoe, Bend, 1; Pauline Kiesow, Bend, 2. Girls' ensemble Bend junior triple trio, 1; Bend senior triple trio, 1; Prineville senior triple one t. Gabriel, Prineville, 2 plus; Mary Ann Ihalholer, Prineville, 1. Clurinet solos Sharleen Felt, Bums, 1; Jane Elliott, Redmond, 2-. Oboe Karen I.antz, Redmond 2. Tenor saxophone George Thompson, Prineville, 3; Loletta Rand, Redmond, 2-; Albert Car der, Prineville, 1. Alto saxophone solos Jerry I .ear, Redmond, 1-; Curtis Felt Burns, 2; Diane Bevans, Bend, 5 plus; Jane McAllister, Bond, 2; Denise Conway, Bend, 3; Doug Fehernbacher, Prineville, 2 plus Don Powell, Bend, 1 minus. Of 23 woodwind ensembles en tered, 21 received ratings. They were distributed as follows: Bend- one 1, one 1-, four 2 s, one 2- Redmond three l's, one 2, one 2-, Burns two 3 pluses. Prineville two l's, three 2's, 1 2-. Hines 'Unfair nWi I GOD HELP MM - J : fi: 1 wr f EMBATTLED Mrs- Floyd Gallo of Sacramento, Calif., is determined to prevent the state from taking her property for a freeway without paying her a "fair price." So she stands guard with her shotgun, ready' to run state highway olllcers off the lot. Professor's Life Not Really Soft NEWARK, Del. (UP - Many persons outside the profession be lieve thai college professors, will) short classroom hours and sum mer vacation, lead a soft life. But "it's just not so," according to Dr. John A. Perkins wrote in a recent biennial report to univer sity trustees. Perkins admitted it's true that faculty members often teach only 15 hours a week, but that's only the beginning of llieir labors. For every lecture hour, the professor is expected to devote one or two additional hours each day to pre paring a stimulating class presen tation. In addition, Perkins said, the professor spends an hour or two daily in counselling individual students. He also maintains regu lar office hours or faculty or student academic conferences. MEN! It's Easy to (jet pep Fifl yoarl youngar t 411. So. GO or over. Oitti'i Touio TulilcM put Add travel lime for out-of-town extension rourse lectures and time consumed in outside research or writing and the result is anything but a short work week, Perkins said. The university president also contends (he vacation period rare ly is longer than the average work man's, mainly because most pro fessors must leach during summer sessions to augment their relative ly low income. younger pep, em'iuy in body wcuk, muilown In! bivauio low in iron; comlihimi you niny mil "old , For tiolli t-iri. Try Oilrt-i lotln-iint M'ur, K-py, "vr.in yoiuu;,-r" fn'linu. Iixtay, .' ' Ccl-tqiiaintiHl nr Siltf. At ill druuniiti. j"h. NKW I'KKXY CINCINNATI (UP) Dr. Walter ('. Lnngsain has been elect ed president of the University of Cincinnati as of Sept. 1, when Dr. Raymond Wallers retires alter 23 years as head of the institution. Dr. Langsam. Ill, has lieen presi dent of Gettysburg (Pa.) College since lll.VJ. For seven preceding years he was pivsident of Wag ner College, Staleti Island, N. Y. When using a paint roller, line the roller paint tray with alumi num foil when using an oil base This t.-icilil.-ilcs the ele.-inim All His Money Not Worth Hoot HOMKVILI.K, Va. (UP) It all started 17 years ago when Howard Spain lent a neighlior $15 dollars and collected $3,000 in re turn. Now the Sussex County, Va.. farmer keeps about half a million dollars in currency and bonds around the house. But none of it is worth a hoot at the grocery. It's all Confederate issue. Spain became interested in col lecting the non-negotiable stulf when that loan was paid off. Now he has one of the most enviaole collections of Confederate money and ImhhIs in the South. It rivals collections of museums and uni versities. His choice piece is a $1,000 Com monwealth of Virginia bond with all its uuelipiH'd coii)ons intact, lie said Duke University owns the only other such c o m p I e t e specimen. Tne collector also has a $1,000 Slate of Florida Iwmil secured bv N O0O acres of land. '; I , ijr : . i N N x Sb.MM.tfMMi JAJLiSiswix Problem Noted In Zoning Plans CHICAGO (UP) Most mod ern zoning ordinances require all new buildings to be supplied with off-street parking, according to the American Society of Planning Officials. Bui the association said there usually is no guarantee that the space originally designed for off street parking will continue to be used for that purpose. If the park ing space is not on the same par cel of land, or if it is under sepa rate ownership, there is a chance of future violation. As u result, the society added, "more and more communities are finding it u good idea to specify in their zoning ordinances that the obligation to provide off-street parking space is one tluit con tinues as long as the building is in use. Among cities which have taken such action are South Euclid, O.; Bismarck, N. D.; West Palm Beach, Fla.; Colorado Springs, Colo., and Chicago. Fabulous Clock Aids Atom Study By PATftK IA WIGfilNS United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON (UP) It's never later than you think to Dr. Koltan Bay, a nuclear physicist who is lifting clock-watching to new heights. Bay and a small corps of scien tists at George Washington Uni versity have a "clock" originated by him that is ticking off tomor row as it solves the secrets of an atom nucleus. Their piece of scientific wizard ry doesn't measure minutes und hours. It tells time at the rate of one one-hundred-billionth of a second. That's as fast as the speed of light, fastest traveler known to man. ( It takes light only about one second to get from earth to the moon.) The measurement also is "10 times less time" than can be clocked by any other gadget as small a part of a second as one second is to 10.000 yeurs. The one - of - a - kind "clock. under Navy contract, enables scientists to chart the mysterious energy changes of a nucleus from an "excited" or higher - than - nor mal state, to the "ground" state and to note the time spent in that step. In 10 Years? Gamma rays emitted during the change give off electric shocks which the clock us triggered to count. If that sounds simple, remember that billions of nuclei would find plenty of elbow room in a dot the size of this period. Also remem ber there is a lot more to it. Dr. Bay said the theory of the atom shell is 'completely solved" but that the world of the atom nucleus is still largely unknown. Willi the help of the "clock" called a coincidence circuit he believes the mystery of the nu cleus will be solved "within the next 10 years or so." Bay. Hungarian - bom natural ized American, first developed his clock in Budapest during World War II. At that time he could measure up to only a slow one one millionth of a second. With the addition of innovations such as the electric multiplier and pholomultiplier, Bay's "clock" reached its present potent state. Tire Bend Bulletin, Tuesday, April 5, 1955 I - A FRIEND TO THE END Apparently heartsick over the death of his little friend, a sad but resolute collie keeps his hours-long roadside vigil. The little terrier wps killed instantly by a hit-skiD driver in Austin. Tex. Department Has To Be( Versatile SALT LAKE CITY (UP) Firemen in some Utah communi ties do many things beside fight fires. At the mining community of Eu reka, the pumper tinck was pressed into service recently to carry water to Mammoth, several miles away, after the 17-mile long pipeline bringing water to Mam moth fiuze. Mammoth is loo small to maintain its own fire department. In Price, the fire wagons roll every time it rains heavily. Their pumps are needed to empty water out of the main U. S. 50 under pass at the north end cf town. During one flash flood, Cliet Mills, Price's only full - time fire man, had to rescue five youngsters who were trapped in a car. Berber women of the Ait Had didu tribe in the High Atlas Moun tains of Morocco enjoy amazing freedom, says the National Geo graphic Society. A wife can legal ly divorce an unwanted husband for 15 cents. Some tribeswomen have had more than 20 husbands. in warm air htatlaa. more families buy Lennox than any other mate I BROWN Furnace Co. 123 E, Greenwood im mi fain la J m. Years-Ahead Styling and 7 Amazing Features! mm Cools Step Into the "biggest room" on the road, with widest scats, widest wrap around windshield. You see to the front, the side, the rear. Yes, a chaise longue in Nash. New use for Airliner Reclining Seats. Nap the children, give driver a "break" convert into Twin Travel Beds. Fish-bowl test proves a new kind of ride! In Nash, new Deep Coil Springs have 3 times the cushioning, new ami-sway safety on curves. New, shorter turning. Heats Filters Turn one knob in Nash and never be bothered again by cold or hea( or dust. All-Season Air Condition ing System costs hundreds of dol lars less than other systems. ' fattnts applltd or New Way s Hit von liiiow vou en ii liilli lii Mr:il t-iiics :il uni'i' liv lontf iliinn-? Here's how it works: Supposi- you want to l.ill; to Imir iclativis in diHerr-nt cities. Well, your long distance ojwrator can set up a singi,. iiivuit connect inn nil live telephones at once. Each of you can talk back and forth to the rest as if you were all in the same room. And the cost is surprisingly low. Why not try a conference call tonight? It's another way we've found to make your telephone still more useful. ..at low cost to you. Pacific Telephone worka to make your telephone a binger value every day. Old Way Kntin-ly new safety. Different from old-type bolted construction, in Nash the ihuble strength of the single welded unit extends girders around passengers. Rut-llc-free. Makes Nash, new or used, your best buy. Enjoy blading getaway with the mighty new 208 H.P. Ambassador Jcttire V-8 engine. Four famous "6s". too, that make Nash the most economical big car. Come wifh Nash into a new motoring age. See and try 7 new motoring wonders that put the new 1955 Nash years ahead of others years ahead in comfort, performance, safety! See a complete "new look" in motor cars, inspired by the famous Nash-Healey sports car. See years-ahead front-end styling with new low hood, forward thrusting "Road Guide" fenders and new Safety-Vu headlights. See and drive the beautiful '55 Nash Ambassador or Statesman today. MSM HOTOn. DIVISION OF AMIMCM MOTORS CORPORatlON. DT0IT 12, MICH. iA'C" sfxJv THY lHeT2aAfjL"7-ffAlUflt" DEMONSTRATION RIDE BEND NASH COMPANY 134 Greenwood Avenue Phone 700 "Hey Folks! Tune in Disneyland on ABC-TV. See TV listings for Time and Channel!"