The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 12, 1981, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Local
THE BATTALION Page 3
THURSDAY, MARCH 12, 1981
TV to tie A&M medical units
1 legislatii
help the
the spirit
rdofEd
i'inatetli(
^ System
duplicity
a sir"
'exas
nmongi
liles
leeful wi
e stroll tlj
■1 campus
that the;
its hereii
ly 164 ol
’hite.
cere
have at
hin the
t Texas
thelj|
ase f
our
ore imp
ntegratelj
hte stud;
uospherj
esandc
i are dor
lature i
The factiS 1
11 others i
By KITTY FRALEY
Battalion Reporter
A microwave link between the
Texas A&M University College of
Medicine and its Temple campus
will begin operating this month
and is predicted to be a substantial
time-saver.
The microwave link will pro
vide a closed-circuit television
system to be used for everything
from committee meeetings to
taped lectures.
The microwave system, includ
ing a relay tower, cost $251,000.
“This system will decrease
travel expenses and time spent on
the road between College Station
and Temple,” Dr. Elvin Smith,
associate dean of the College of
Medicine, said.
“The microwave system in
volves equipment that will con
vert television signals from Tem
ple to microwave,” he said. “The
relay tower will transmit them
here and at this end we will con
vert them back into television sig
nals.
“Microwave wavelengths can’t
travel from Temple to College Sta
tion, so a relay station was built in
Cause.” Cause is located halfway
between the two cities.
“The 199-foot tower will receive
the signal, amplify it and retrans
mit it,” he said.
John Culpepper of Bryan don
ated two acres of land for the sta
tion, which has been named Hen
derson Station in memory of his
mother.
Part of the $17 million Veterans
Administration grant for the
medical program was earmarked
for the link between College Sta
tion and Temple, Smith said.
But the upcoming system will
also provide a new component to
the existing linkage between the
Scott and White Clinic and Hos
pital in Temple and the Temple,
Marlin and Waco VA hospitals,
Smith said.
As part of this system, television
facilities are located at each of
these places, Smith said.
“The system will increase the
interaction between us and the
Temple campus, and certainly the
frequency of the interactions,”
Smith said.
The Temple campus is part of
the College of Medicine at Texas
A&M.
“I want to dispense with the
idea that the Temple campus is a
separate component,” Smith said.
“The College of Medicine consists
of the Texas A&M campus and the
Temple campus.”
It’s not unusual for the teaching
hospital to be separated from the
basic sciences portion of a medical
school. Smith said, and in this case
the students are at Texas A&M for
two years and Temple two years.
The College of Medicine has
people on the staff who are qual
ified to run the system, Smith
said. This includes running the
cameras and repairing them when
necessary.
)r. Kerry Hope, senior staff counseling
psychologist for Personal Counseling Service,
Its with a student in her office in the base-
Photo by Linda Warriner
ment of the YMCA Building. She works with
eating behavior control groups offered
through the Health Center Satellite Office.
All are welcome to attend a free lecture entitled:
"Healing Through
Spiritual Perception"
given by
William C. Breen, a member of the Christian Science Board of
Lectureship.
March 12 8:00 p.m. in
Room 601 Rudder
Make This Weekend
SOMETHING SPECIAL!
^ 707 SHOPPING VILLAGE
696-6713
ot the midterm blues?
CS may be able to help
mtinga
By KATHLEEN WLATREK
Battalion Reporter
If midterms or approaching fin
als have got you nervous or de-
ressed, the Personal Counseling
ervice may be able to help.
The PCS deals with problems
ultwalti 0 f personal concern that all stu-
I dents may encounter, says Dr.
Larry Roe, assistant director of the
PCS. They include self image, so
cial relationships, male and female
relationships, pre-marital and
larital relationships.
| Roe said that the most common
Complaints are depression and
anxiety. Anxiety may be caused by-
competition at college, fear of fai-
®ire, approaching tests and the
thought of what will happen upon
[^graduating from school.
, , 1 “The high pressure environ-
the bai hient of Texas A&M can cause
light?fif' much anxiety,” Roe said,
jd andf'" f ' The PCS sees a rise in the num-
[00 pertt-her °f students with emotional
sr as advi’Problems before tests and one or
' to weeks prior to finals, he said.
The staff is made up of seven
ill-time senior staff counselors
jho are licensed psychologists,
|>ur full-time psychology interns
tnd two part-time consulting
psychiatrists.
Sullivail The PCS runs on an appoint
ment basis. These can be made at
107 YMCA or by calling 845-4227
Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to
5 p.m.
“If an appointment is not avail
able within two weeks, the stu
dent will be put on a waiting list, ”
Roe said.
There is always a counselor on
duty in case of emergency.
Last semester, the PCS saw 600
patients, made 2,500 counseling
contacts and by the end of the
semester had a 60-person waiting
list.
Because of the great number of
students using the PCS, Roe said,
the staff will counsel a student only
as long as a semester. But the PCS
will not refuse anyone in an
emergency.
The PCS also works in conjunc
tion with the A. P. Beutel Health
Center if a patient needs coun
seling.
TRADE-IN SALE
Dyer the Discounter wants you to have a better
stereo so he’ll take your present one in trade on
anything in stock! Bring individual components
or your whole system to Dyer and trade for the
best names in stereo. Below is just
a sample of the savings.
Everything in all stores is Trade-In
Priced!
ALMOST PAINLESS
PUBLICATION FOR
INSTANT EDITORS
Sat. March 28 9 a.m. - 12:30
Rudder Tower Room 401
Faculty & Staff $10 Students $5
Registration 845-2211
Shortcourse on how to publish brochures, bulletins, newslet
ters and proceedings. Learn how to use the Printing Center,
Educational Information Services, campus mail, and U.S. Mail.
Professional instruction in publication planning, layout and
proofing.
sewoii
esatSfe
i. Andtf
ont pf
am as
of tilt'
Si#
or.
newsfff'
graph! ‘
ditorial-
350
r eM'!
sfc#
*the^
’ fl
t S a#
. .
„l Uni* 1 ’
as A#
I e*<
Lest#
ertisinf'
We believe your
apartment should
be more than a
place to sleep.
G ar*den«a Exceptionally large apartments.
Uniquely designed. Ideally located. Certainly more than
just a place to sleep.
Gardena Apartments have set a new standard
for apartment living in College Station. With
attention paid to detail in every area of con
struction, these unique new apartments are
spacious, bright, and thoughtfully designed
with efficient flow patterns. Gardena
features such extras as solid wood stair
railings, oversized walk-in closets,
quality carpeting and more...features
you’d expect to find only in luxury
condominiums or townhomes.
Gardena is minutes away from the
TAMU campus, several major
shopping centers, and is on thej
shuttle bus route. Within easy
walking distance, you’ll find
recreation, parks and
restaurants.
AH trade, must be In
working condition. AH
trade, are >ub|ect to .tore
manager-, di.cretlon and
right of refu.al but no
rea*onable trade will be
refuaed. Price, below
anticipate Ilka item,
being traded-in (l.e.;
.peaker. for .peaker*,
turntable, tor turntables,
ay.tem. for system., etc.)
sin#
APARTMENTS
1903 Dartmouth Dr., College Station 779-0095
TRADE YOUR PRESENT
STEREO FOR A NEW
COMPLETE SYSTEM!
Good
System includes 45 watt per channel
Onkyo TX-3000 Servo Locked stereo
receiver. Dual 1257 belt drive turntable
complete with Ortofon cartridge, and
pair of two-way Studiocraft Speakers
by Bose. All components perfectly
matched for great sound and trouble-
free performance.
DYER DEAL
WITH TRADE
Better.
*599
Toshiba separate components power
and control this deluxe system. Sixty-
five wpc power amp, separate preamp,
and digital tuner. Direct drive Onkyo
CP-1020 turntable with Ortofon cart.,
and pair of Genesis Two speakers that
are guaranteed for original owner’s
lifetime.
DYER DEAL
WITH TRADE
*849
STUDIOCRAFT by BOSE
DYER DEAL
WITH
TRADE
*129
ea.
Designed and built by Bose, the
Studiocraft Series can improve
the overall sound of most any
stereo system. Acoustic lens over
each tweeter for improved
dispersion of high frequencies,
and six-layer voice coil for
efficiency. Don’t pass up this
trade-in Dyer Deal!
MOVE UP TO METAL!
Deluxe Metal Cassette
Top-of-the-line Nikko ND-990 has all
solenoid controls, LED metering, front
bias control, memory, and capable of
separate remote control unit (not
included). Trade the deck you have for
the one you want!
DYER DEAL $QOQ
WITH TRADE
Nikko
Audio
HITACHI
New Metal Cassette
You can’t beat this bargain anywhere!
Hitachi D-45 fully metal capable
cassette deck with LED input levels
and a lot more! Trade at Dyer today!
DYER DEAL $4 CQ
WITH TRADE |
Best
Nikko Professional components
include 110-wpc power amp, Beta 20
preamp, and Gamma 20 digital tuner.
Electronic direct drive Dual CS-606
turntable complete, and a pair of the
incomparable Infinity 1.5 loud
speakers. Your present stereo will
never be worth more!
DYER DEAL
WITH TRADE
YOUR PRESENT TURNTABLE
CAN HELP BUY YOU AN
ULTRA-LOW MASS DUAL
W/0RT0F0N CARTRIDGE
Dual’s new Ultra-Low Mass
tonearm with Ortofon cartridge
weighs less than half of the
average tonearm assembly on
today's stereo market. This
enables superb tracking and a
sound difference you can actually
hear! Dual model CS-506
complete.
DYER DEAL
WITH
TRADE
*199
*1,899
dyer electronics
r
3601 E. 29 lh St.
846-1768
dyer