4a The Bend Bulletin, Wednesdcy, April 1 3.1955 Television Used In Parking Cars CAMDEN, N. J. - (UP) The ever-exp:indlng uses of television Jvive claimed a new field spot ting parking spaces for car paik inn icrviccs. RCA has announced that the Downtown M'-rchants Parking A: focliition in Oakland, Calif., was the first iroup to use a device that enable parkins; attendants at the. curb to "see" where the va cancies are. Make)'' of the "TV Fye" said camera, mounted atop a standard overlockinR the lot. has been doing yeoman service at speedine up parking operations. The standard is connected to a 21-Inch television receiver in the entrance booth to the parking lot. The camera can automatically npd rontlnrausly scan the parkins; nrca and rhow the receiver what it "sees." The camera can also he oper ated manually by control switches In the booth. Authorities recognize is true va rieties of cheese. The spelling of Wisconsin was established by Congress from ihe Indian names Ouiscousin and Mis-consing. Farmland Area Seen Shrinking CHICAGO IL'P) Sproutins; suburbs have wiped out more than 2..0fi0 acres of county farmland in the last five years, according to Carl F. M-. s, Cook County farm adviser. lie said builders are willing to pay sy!i hik'h prices for the land that farmers can't compete with Ihem. Since 197), he said. COO farms have Riven way to the growing suburban home movement. Tliere are only about 2,600 farms still re maining In Cook County, he added. Higher taxes might have made farming les profitable and there by reduce, the number of farms, according to Mees. But mostly, he said, the reduction was due to th farmers' inability to pay the high prices that builders pay ior land Mees also said some of the farnr 'and was better suited for farm inn than house building. It's too low for houses, he said. Red China to Seek Condemnation Of U.S. At Session in Bandung NO-NO fiAMK .IFAVFl.L. Ore. (UP) Daw Morgan faced only 21 batters yes terday ns he pitched Jewell high school to no - hit, no - run seven inning 14 0 victory over Nehalem !ARLYHGfl Is every ounce your best bourbon buy... because: SA 55 fifth j Zbefoowtte is bottled at the peak of perfection! s' '- I S Li- ttS'''""" it's Sv&ti ounce a man's whisky! KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKY 88 PROOF EARIY TIMES DISTILLERY COMPANY LOUISVILLE I, KENTUCKY By FRANK JORDAN .I'nlted Press Staff CorrciKindeiit BANDUNG. Indonesia (UP) In this freshly painted city on the west end of Java, ringed by sol diers to keep the hill bandits out. a meeting unique in Ihe world's his toid begins next week. It will bring together represen tatives of more than half the peo ple of the globe. Almost all of them are Orientals, Negroes or from the Arab races with a common detestation of white colonialism. It is called the Afro-Asian Con ference. It begins Monday, April 18. Delegates from 29 nations on those two continents will attend. Included were: Turks, Burmese, Egyptians, Fil ipinos, Arabs, Japanese, r.tluopi- ans. Delegates from the Negro Re public of Liberia, from remote Af ganistan. from the former British rules Sudan. Moslems, Buddhists, Christians, Communists, Neutral ists, anti-Communists. America On Trial It could be a shapeless, awk ward talkfest of little significance and lesn results except for one tiling. Red China is coming to Ihe meeting, led by her cunning For eign Minister, Chou Fn-lai. And Chou is going to try to put the United States and its foreign policy on trial before these African and Asian nations, lie will seek to convince them that America wants to oppress the dark skinned races. He will charge the United States with aggression. He will seek to set a tide of nnti- Ame ii nnisin running. Blocking him and defending the United Slates will be nations like the Philippines. Silling In the mid dle will be the so-called "neutral ist" bloc led by India. India's Juwaharlal Nehru will be the best known of the world's statesmen here. One llute in Common It was India and the host na tion, Indonesia, who were primar ily responsible for the conference. The attending nations have one tiling in common: A hatred of col onialism. The Initial idea was to discuss coloniulism, economic de velopment of the Afro-Asian area. how it could contribute to varld peace. Some American diplomats are concerned ulxmt Ihe racial aspects of the conference. They think it pertinent that Australia and New Zealand, while geographically a part of the area, were not invited. Ken China may bring up ii 're her demands for Formosa. She may also seek support for her ad mission lo the United Nations. Both subjects are certain to produce bit-lu- fights from nations friendly to the I'niled States. Refurbished City Bandung, a city of MO.OOO, perched on a volcanic plateau, has had a complete facelifting. Every downtown building has been paint ed. New street lights and traffic signs have gone up. Special Indonesian dance troupes are rehearsing. European or Indo nesian food will be available. De spite the Moslem influence, liquor will be served. So will American soft drinks. Thousands of soldiers will cor don the city off from fanatical Moslem terrorists who control the mountains south of Bandung. In side the city, hundreds of stale po lice will guard the delegates. Ex-Athletes Told to Watch That Waistline I.OS ANGELES (UP) Former college athletes should wutch their calories. Dr. Wayne W. Massey, associate .irofessor of physical educalion on the Los Angeles campus of the University of California, said that old grads who earned varsity let ters are more likely to pick up ex cess poundage after graduation than their non-athletic classmates. Dr. Massey based his opinion on an extensive survey of graduates who now overage 44 years of age. In the calorie battle, the letter win ners who weighed an average of 1li7 pounds on graduation, gained an averags of 22 pounds ns com pared with ony 15 pounds for non athletes. Dr. Massey emphasized these gains do not necessarily have any medical significance nor do they imply that college sports activity is bad for latter day health. Mongrel Repays Friendly Family ROXBURY, Mass. (UP) Members of the family of Dennis Freeman owe their lives to a mon grel dog nobody wanted. Freeman, who works for the Animal Rescue League, brought Squirt home in 1M1. Recently, the dog was given the opportunity to repay the Freemans for their kindness. When Ihe oxygen in the Free man apartment wits all but ex hausted front a heater, Squirt managed to awaken the Freemans in lime for them to call for help. They May Be Just Allergic DETROIT (UP) A professor at Indiana University's medical school says that many children be lieved to have adenoids trouble merely are allergic to such things as household dust. Dr. Kenneth L. Craft said that because of these allergies too many unnecessary operations un performed on children for the re moval of adenoids. He voiced his criticism in a talk before the American Ijiryngological, P.hinol ogical and Otological Society. Before adenoids are removed. Craft said, children first should undergo tests to determine if they have allergies. 'It an operation has to be done," he said, "it is better to apply the allergy treatment first so tliat the child will be in better conditiofi for the operation. If the adenoids are not part of the trouble, they can be left in and will atrophy (waste away) eventually. Early Statue Is Refurbished WASHINGTON (UP) A long neglected statue of George Wash ington, depicting him in the toga of a Roman senator, has been spruced up for display here by the Smithsonian Institution. Horatio Greenongh. American- born sculptor, made the 15-foot- high, 22-ton statue in 1813 in Italv. Since then, the statue has moved from the Capitol's rotunda to its east front and finally io u dark corner of the graphic arts room at the Smithsonian. The institution is lighting the statue's alcove and painting Ihe wall behind it blue to make it more attractive. When the world's lnre-pst nnc senger liner, the Queen Klizahcth docks in New York Harbor she lands as many as 2.000 travelers and their baggage. i?els a stem. in. stern cleaning, loads enough food for 100.000 meals ner rouiid-ti-in voyage, and embarks another 2.- 000 passengers - all within a nor mal two-day turnaround. Ancient Indian Diet Skimpy MADISON. Wis. (UP) Sill down to a dandy meal of boiled! acorns, black lichen broth, tubers I of gitjundnuls and yellow lilies. That's what you would have had us me uinner guesi oi an inuiun nullity uaLK ueioic llie Ulllicu States was settled by whites, a University of Wisconsin researcher says. Mrs. Wilma Zieker, a botanist, has gone through translations of Jesuit records of explorations in the Great Lakes region of the na tion and come up with what she believes is a good idea of the In dians' d.et in those days. "The acorn was probably second to wild rice as a vegetable staple," she said. She quoted a Father Ra gueneau as recording in 1650 that the Indians, after a long famine, regarded "acorns and bitter roots" as "delicious." He said in the ab sence of acorns or such tubers as !"oiindnuts, wild beans, water chinquapins or pond nuts, the In dians would "live partly on garlic baked under Ihe ashes or cooked in waler without sauce." Lichen Porridge The acorns, when available, were first boiled in water with ashes to remove the bitter, tannic acid taste, Mrs. Zieker said. Lichens, a mossy delicacy pre ferred'by the moose but few others, was used to ward off starvation by the Indians of the far north. Father Rasles called it "a very black and disagreeable porridge," and said "one must close the eyes on first tasting it, and take care lest his lips stick together." A fel low Jesuit, Father Lalemont, wrote that eating lichen broth was "feed ing the imagination more than the body." Other wintertime delicacies for hungry Indians were ouk and bass wood bark served as a stew along wilh water in which fish has been cooked. Tn the summertime, things were better with the Indians, both Tor meat, fruit and vegetables. Mrs. Zieker said all kinds of berries were ealcn. along with maize, or corn, which was usually the re sponsibility of the women to colli-i rate. Also available to some In- jReport Links , jSchine, Actress HOLLYWOOD (UP) Actress Piper taurie said Tuesday she has no plans light now to marry Pit. G. David Sehine, the center of the stormy McCarthy-Army hearings or anyone else. Miss Laurie issued a statement after it was learned an unsigned marriage 'application for Roselta Jacobs, 21, her real name, and Gerald David Sehine, 20, was on file at Anchorage, Alaska, where the former investigator for Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy now is sta tioned. Sehine, serving as a military policeman at Fort Richardson near Anchorage, was not available for comment on the application, which was dated April 5. The document requires signatures by both parties before it becomes official. Miss Laurie, in a statement is sued through her studio Mon dav, said "David Sehine and I have been friends for several years and we have dated inter mittently during that time. But right now I have no plans to mar ry him or anyone else." In Boca Raton, Fla., J. Meyer Sehine said there was nothing lo the report his son, Q. David, would marry Miss Laurie. He said he talked to his son Sunday by telephone. Young Sehine was drafted after serving on McCarthy's Investi gating Subcommittee staff. He be came one of the central figures in the televised Army-McCarthy hearings when it was charged tint Roy Colin, another subcommittee aide, attempted tn secure prefer ential treatment for Sehine. Land Goes Up On North Border WORCESTER, Muss. (UP)- l.and at the Canadian border in New Hampshire has risen 1,800 fee) during the last 20.000 years. Prof. Richard J. Lougee of Clark University's Graduate School of Geography adds that, farther north, in the Hudson Bay orea, the land has risen nearly 3,000 feet in the same perio. He said the rise in land is due to the flexing of the earth's crust after being relieved of the great weight of the ice sheets that cov- ered it during the ice ages. 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