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Show Students show technique the digestive complexities com-plexities of the suborder Ruminantia. Ruminants, Dr. Burgoyne said, are cattle, sheep, goats, deer and giraffes that have stomachs divided into four compartments and chew their cud. After flushing the organs out with a garden hose, rinsing them with formaldehyde and tying off one end, the stomachs are inflated and left to dry. They are finished with a coat of clear lacquer. "Biology 490 students will student teach this year," Burgoyne said. CEDAR CITY - A process by which sheep stomachs can be treated and preserved a.s visual aids will be demonstrated by Southern U.ah State . College biology students at the National Association of Biology Teachers Convention Oct. 22-24 in Las Vegas. As directed by Paul C. Burgoyne, associate professor of biology at SUSC, studen ts in Biology 490, teaching life sciences, will demonstrate demon-strate how a stomach can be inflated amd preserved as a visual aid to teach science students about |