losed - Circuit Will Show Air Television Bubbles Watching an amoeba through a ijlicroscope can be a frustrating I fcperience for new biology stu- jljlents—especially if it turns out I) be an air bubble. 11 And, a microscopic cross-section av 6isK a plant stem can be completely f|l«ffling to budding scientists, but ■ Bsed-circuit television here may cent! Irrect these stumbling blocks to idem Ireater knowledge. &iSilhl“Our problem is getting across s”oal)the student what they are see- ing or supposed to see in the micro- hip ii lope,” says Dr. Lawrence S. Dil- s ail In, professor of biology here, andi I Because the microscope is a ba- lilesBc scientific tool in industry as ell as biology, he and his col- tagues believe students should S6nl®aster the use of microscopes jiawMhile they are in basic biology :p, iJourses. sefil TO DO THIS, they are utilizing i ■ $2,500 grant from the School of Biw-ts and Sciences teaching im- iBrovement fund to test using a fflBlevision camera mounted atop a ;o((Mght microscope. This will permit Irojecting accurate microscope ; it Views of specimen slides through a closed-circuit TV system to lab oratories. Closed-circuit TV also may save instructors from aching backs and cricks in their necks from bending over a multitude of students’ mi croscopes. This semester, as in a majority of semesters, there are more than 1,000 students enrolled in biology and vertebrate zoology courses. All are required to spend three hours a week in the laboratory using some 120 microscopes. THROUGH USE of closed-cir cuit television, Dillon expects to project microscopic specimen view to as many as three laboratories at one time. With the assistance of Dr. A. B. Medlen, associate professor of bi ology, and biology instructors W. V. Robertson and John Murad, Dillon hopes to have the TV equip ment installed and operating by the opening of the spring semester in February. “Through use of this closed-cir cuit television microscope, the in- jnW iridi iseW .obb} er. throil crcati illecis :r Hi J im ; sc?s rati* ill® adnf! itufe dtos “Hi a ^ c!V Heai “Ttr* GOING PLACES . . . Joyce’s smashing new collec tion of wool separates in holiday-into-Spring pas tels. Gather a batch to mix ’n match in sea blue and sky blue; leaf green and shadow green; sand stone and brownstone; sizes 6 to 16. Choose from four styles of sweaters, 9.98 to 10.98; slim skirts, 7.98; fully-lined slacks, 9.98. Joyce's 55-• 608 S. College structor will be able to project on the TV screens an image of pre pared slides, live protozoa or other material which the students are studying,” Dillon said. The slide can be moved about to show different areas and en larged to suit the instructional needs, he added. Students will be expected to make more efficient use of their microscopes. “IT IS NOT unusual for a new biology student to spend time watching an' air bubble, which be cause of light refraction and grav ity movement, appears to be an amoeba,” Dillon said. “Some have even made drawings of such speci mens.” The entire closed-circuit plan is part of preliminary planning for the new Biology Building wing that will be built soon. THE BATTALION Thursday, November 15, 1962 College Station, Texas Page 5 Wendy Parriott, 12, a 4-H Club member from La Puente, Calif., shares a cool drink with her 804-pound Hereford “Hadacal,” as Wendy gets ready to enter the animal in competition for grand champion honors at the 37th GWE Livestock Show. FOR SOUTHWESTERN TITLE Checker Players Set Meet Serious-minded checker players — many of them champions — will arrive here over the Thanksgiving holidays to take part in the South western Open Checker Tourney Nov. 24-25 in the Memorial Student Center. The tourney is open to players anywhere in the world. and the winner will be recognized as the “checker champion of the South western U. S.” According to J. Wayne Stark, chairman of the tourney steering committee, play will begin in earnest at 9 a.m. Saturday, Nov. 24. The tourney will be conducted on a modified “Swiss System” and Hi ^‘Sports Car Center” Dealers for Renault-Peugeot & British Motor Cars Sales—Parts—Service ■ “We Service All Foreign Cars”; 11416 Texas Ave. TA 2-4517; there will be one class of players only. There will be seven rounds of tourney play, with two games con stituting a round. PRIZES FOR the tourney in clude $100 and a trophy for first prize and $50 for second place. In addition, there will be many book prizes. Official referee and scorekeeper for the tourney is R. E. Hawkins of Dallas. H. L. Cravens Jr. of Brownwood is chairman of the tourney prize committee. A professor of politi cal science at Howard Payne Col lege, Cravens is the state checker playing champion for 1962 and looks upon checkers as a pastime that requires patience, knowledge of the game itself and concentra tion. “No one has ever been able to figure out the number of variations possible in a game of checkers,” says Cravens. “There are 137 dif ferent plays possible at the open ing of a game.” Many A&M Education Majors Concentrate On Math, Science With greater emphasis on sci ence and math subjects in public schools, more than 28 per cent of the men in education courses here are preparing to teach in these fields. A&M has 518 students studying to become school teachers, Dr. C. H. Groneman, co-ordinator of oVlMAlVIieS I i=0rex WORTH the A&M Council on Teacher Edu cation, announced Wednesday. Noting Nov. 12-17 is National Education Week, Groneman said 6.2 per cent of the A&M students are enrolled in teacher education programs. A total of 149 students have de clared teaching majors or minors in chemistry, math, science, phy sics and biology. The students are enrolled in teacher education programs offer ed by the departments of education and psychology, health and physi cal education, agriculture education and industrial education, he said. In addition to more than, 500 men in undergraduate teacher edu cation programs, 244 students are enrolled in graduate classes with, 25 in the industrial education doc toral program, Groneman said. Cravens can play 30 oi checker opponents at a time. MSC Radio Group Plans Steak Fry To Raise Funds The Memorial Student Center Radio Committee will sponsor a steak fry in Hensel Park Dec. 1 as part of a fund raising campaign to buy a new receiver for the club station, W5AC. The new receiver, a Drake Model 2-B, will provide more selective reception of messages. Members won’t have as much trouble with unwanted signals once the new set is in operation. Faster and more efficient student service for hand ling messages and phone patches will also be possible. Two people can actually carry on a telephone conservation over the air because of the phone patch service. Through special features of the set actual voices of one party may be picked up by the transmitter and conveyed to the receiver where they are heard by the second party. Friday during Convocation, W5 AC will have communication sta tions at five locations on campus. At the stations visitors may send messages, obtain information con cerning the day’s activities and ga ther information about the cam pus. These stations will be in oper ation from 7 a.m. - 5 p.m. White House Confirms JFK Charity Gifts WASHINGTON hP) — Presi dent Kennedy has contributed all of his government salaries to charity since 1947 when he entered Congress, White House sources said Wednesday. In line with this, informants said, Kennedy will contribute his $100,000 presidential pay to char ities this year, as he did last year. However, the 1961 salary didn’t quite hit that total since he was not inaugurated until Jan. 20. Kennedy is doing the same as another wealthy president before him, Herbert Hoover, did three decades ago. Kennedy is able to pay his own personal expenses because of iden tical trust funds set up by his multimillionaire father, Joseph P, Kennedy, for all of his children in 1926, 1936 and 1949. AT THE TIME of Kennedy’s in auguration, his press secretary, Pierre Salinger, told newsmen that the President had a gross net income of about $500,000 a year — about $100,000 after taxes — from the trust fund investments. Newsman calculated that figur ing an average return of about 5 per cent on the investments, a $500,000 anual income would rep resent principal of around $10 million. Kennedy and his brothers and sisters get control of the principal in their trust funds on a step-by- step basis. When he was 40, Kennedy re ceived title to one-fourth of the principal invested for him. When he reached 45 last May he re ceived another 25 per cent. AGGIES! Start buying your Christmas Gifts Sales on ladies Lingerie and Blouses at 25% discount. Ladies silk hose Reg $1.00 Only 390 THE DISCOUNT HOUSE 2 Doors From Campus Theatre HUNTER’S PRAYER Let me shoot clean, Kill clean; and if I Can’t kill clean; please Lord, let me miss clean. FREE DEER SACKS To protect your kill against insects & dust. We fully process your deer—blast freeze and wrap—ready for your home freezer or locker. LET US PREPARE YOUR DEER SAUSAGE HICKORY SMOKED READY TO EAT ‘ PICK UP YOUR CAMP MEAT HICKORY SMOKED HAMS, BACON & SAUSAGE HANSON'S MEAT CO. 2701 Texas Ave. Bryan, Texas