CHICKEN MAN PIED PIPER FOR FESTIVAL pijMNFR (Continued fcs>fnpage\l) Jaycces will be prepahn& the host chicken dinneinn tneaT Serving time will be 11 a m to 5 p.m., Sunday. July 18. With less than a month remaining, the McHenry Area Jaycees are, making a coiv cen^rated effort to insure a turnout for this annual "rafting event. Improvement^- in preparation and serving will allow the Jaycees to more than double the amount of dinners served. Funds raised from the Chicken Bar R Q will be used fof the various community, activities planned for 1971-1972. \ $39,000 OWED BY COUNTY (Continued from pa^e 1> selected to serve As a member the Board of Health A request of the Civil Defense committee to the Fees *and Salaries committee that Civijr Defense Director John Shay of McHenry be placed on a full time basis was discussed generally by the board For the second time the matter was filed for further discussion*^ Two zoning petitions were"- granted. One was for Charles Kopp. Wonder Center. \Vonder Uike. for a variation from a 51-j-foot set-back to a 24-foot set-back. The other involved a request by tieorge Kleinhans of McHenry for a variation to permit him to remodel his business building without the necessity of installing a foundation The building is now on cement piers. For the second time, the board tabled a motion of Supervisor Buckley to employ a public relations person to cover committee and board meetings for area newspapers. Chairman G Watson Lowe resigned from the McHenry County Housing Authority and ask consideration of Supervisor Dean to replace him. The board approved the action. Leo Bennecke, Howard Ruth and Charles Weingart were named ro represent the supervisors on the County Extension board MUSIN' N" MEANDERIN" (Continued from page 1) young lady spoke about the subject at hand -milk -after only thirty-six hours as title- holder Her runner-up. Kathy Luth, of Harvard, a pretty Woodstock candidate, Terry Raupp, and lovely Bev Dimon of McHenry, the 1970 princess, attended the luncheon and were a credit to this annual contest. All of them helped to restore our con fidence in an age group to which most of uss; wth some reservations woiildlike to return K A F Deaths KATHLEEN KING Funeral Mass was offered at 10 o'clock Thursday morning at St Patrick's church for Mrs. Kathleen F King, 77, of 113 N. Emerald Drive, McHenry. Mrs King passed away in McHenry hospital Tuesday, June 29 She was born Jan. 23. 1894 in Chicago and had been a summer resident in McHenry for many years before making her permanent home 20 years ago. The deceased was preceded in death by her husband. John i Jack i in 1956 and a daughter, Mrs Peter M (Virginia) Kelly. Survivors are a grand daughter. Mrs. Frank A. ( K a t h l e e n ) L o d e w y c k , Woodndge. and a grandson, Mark Lodewyck Ater visitation at George R Justen & Son funeral home and last rites the body was taken to the Kavanagh funeral home, 238 W. Chicago avenue, Oak Park, where a prayer service will be held at 10 o'clock Friday Burial will be in All Saints cemetery, DesPlaines PEARL PIETSCH Mrs Pearl Pietsch, 76, of 608 Country club drive, died Tuesday June 29, in her home. She was born\N'ov. 18, 1894 in Olympia, Ky ' She was a past president of the American Legion Auxiliary .No 491, and past chapeau of 8 & 40 McHenry county Salon. Survivors include a daughter, Mrs G W. (Emma) McCary, Fredrickstown, Mo.;4" two sisters. Mrs. Harold P. (Reba) Owen, McHenry, ; and Mrs. Lawrence <Minnie) Meddings of VanLear, Ky She was preceded in death by her husband, Winfield, March 17, 1969 The body, rested at the George R Justen and Son funeral home where services will be held Friday at 12 o'clock noon with Rev Raymond White officiating Entombment will be in Woodland cemetery. SPACE-»d* AERONAUTICS^ ENVIRONMENT WASHINGTON -- A few weeks^jgo we reported on ^ne aerospace firm that was mar keting a device that sepa rates oil from water in our natural-waterways. The com pany claimed its separator was developed from work it had done in the nation's space program. - v i We followed this announce ment with one about another aerospace firm ihat claims to manufacture a device to con trol industrial pollution. Their device,..too, is a direct out growth pf work don^" for NASA in high thrust engines. Both claims are accurate. Recently we mentioned a new underwater camera sys tem that snaps still pictures of the algae in Lake Erie for 10 unattended days; and we reported the, acquisition of two new high performance aircraft to do special Earth resources photography over four specially elected ecolog ical areas in the U.S. Now we learn that NASA 'scientists at its Ames Re search Center, CA, have de veloped a means for detect ing and determining the size of oil slicks via sensing de vices carried on aircraft now and on satellites later. They made measurements off the West Coast from a twin engine Cessna light air craft during 60 hours of tests over controlled oil spills. The aircraft's sensors detected sticks from both heavy and light crude oils and light die- sel oil. It is almost impossible to see oil slicks from aircraft so it is important to have air borne sensors that can spot them. Now having determined that these sensors can do the job, the next logical step is to adapt them to a satellite- Srne system. With such a , BERTRAND F. DYSLIN F^rtrand F. Dyslin, 59, of 3102 S. Riverdale, McHenry, was pronounced dead on arrival at McHenry hospital Wednesday morning, June 30. Mr . Dyslin was born April 18, 1912, in^Ghicago. He had served as superintendent of the City of Crystal Lake water treatment plant for the past ten years. The deceased was a retired major, a veteran of service with the Air Force during World War II In addition to his wife, Ellaine (Geyer) Dyslin, to whom he was married Oct. 4, 1943, he leaves one daughter, Mrs. Joseph (Diane) Mayersak of Utica, Mich.; one son, Michael, serving with the Navyr^fK^granddaughter and two brothersSFrank and Cliff, both of Chifcag^ The body ijests at the Querhammer fiineral home, Crystal Lake, where arrangements are incomplete, pending arrival of Mr. Dyslin's son. KENNETH G.ZELLER Memorial services were held Monday for Kenneth G. Zeller, 65. 410 S. Barrington road, Wauconda, who died Friday, June 25. in his home. Born Oct. 8, 1905 in Chicago, he resided in the Island Lake- Wauconda area for 21 years. He was formerly employed by the Railway Express. Among his survivors are his widow. Irene, nee Popowski, whom he marrried Ayg. 19, 1929; three sons, Kenneth G. Jr., McHenry, Gregory A. Waucofhda, and Raymond L. with pihe U.S. Air Force in Vietnam; a daughter, Mrs. J.J. ( J a c q u e l i n e ) R o g e r s , McHenry, and seventeen grandchildren Arrangements were made by the Wauconda funeral home. Memorials may be made to the American Heart Association. system in operation from polar-orbiting satellites, oil slicks could be spotted and tracked on a global basis every few days except in-- , those areas where persistent cloud * cover would prevent immediate detection^y satel- litesv - Add all this up and . it^ sounds like NASA is in the anti-pollution business. Well, not directly; it helps where it can. After all/NASA is not! |: in the communication business but it gave us "'a commercial satellite commu nications system; not in the weather forecasting but gave birth to forecasting weather by satellites; not in machine tool business but'has given - £ur factories a host of novel new machines including new welding techniques. And so it goes, as all explorers and researchers throughout his tory have learned. One never knows where his search will lead him and who may profit therefrom. It took a, long time to re pay ^he debt that the aero space industry owes the - mining industry, but now, perhaps, the hour is at hand. The first airborne electric power system, in ca.se you didn't know, was a miner's lamp carried aboard ~ a manned balloon during the siege of Paris during the Franco-Prussian War. Having borrowed from the miners, we're ready to }>ay them back. At the National Aeronautics and Space Ad ministration's Ames Research Center, NASA scientists re cently met with representa tives of the U.S. Bure&u of Mines to discuss the use of aerospace-developed resusci tation methods and apparatus for miners. That's the way it goes: ideas for siege balloons are found under the Earthy and ideas for mine safety and some of the following show up in spacecraft. Scientists have learned by now, or should have, that ideas are where you find them. This is certainly true at the space agency. A de vice that measures pressure distribution over the surface of small models in the wind tunnels has been licensed for commercial development as a cardiac catheter for medical * research. Two instruments of the type that measure the land ing impact of the Apollo command module were incor porated in a prototype device fofr precise fitting of artificial limbs. /The company that de veloped the "glass sandwich" to prevent windshield fog ging on NASA's X-15 and other high altitude experi mental aircraft has now ap plied the technology in a cradle warmer system that monitors the condition of pre maturely J>prn infants and maintains the proper tem perature within the laminat ed bassinet. The heat pij>e was de veloped to maintain con stant temperature for elec tronics on spacecraft It uses condensible vapor to trans fer heat. As a consumer ap plication it j>ermits superef- ficient cooking of meats by distributing the heat uni formly throughout. What next? That seems limited only by our imagina tion and ingenuity. How about using fabrics developed for space suits to make warm, lightweight sleeping bags for campers? Sorry, you're too late--it's being done. 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