TNE MICHIGAN DAILY )rnithologists To Meet Here onventipn This Weekend Will Feature Exhibits Bird students and enthusiasts from 2 states, Washington, D.C., and anada will convene here Friday and aturdey, Nov. 25 and 26, for the )th anniversary meeting of the Wil- n Ornithological Club. Registration will be held in the niversity Museums building at 9 ;m. Friday and the opening session ill be addressed by Mr. Fred M. *iage, director of the Museum of oology. Symposium Held Friday Friday afternoon will be devoted > a symposium on the Ninth Inter- ational Ornithological Congress held a Rouen, France last May. There will be an informal' recep- on Friday night in the Rackham iildiag in the room adjoining the t exhibits which are a feature of ie convention. One of these is a fllection of Benson bird etchings, aned by Mrs. William A. Comstock, hd some original drawings by Louis gassii Fuertoes. A joint exibition bird paintings by contemborary mtists will also be shown. A luncheon will be held Saturday the League ,and the annual ban- het will be held Saturday night at ie Union. Field Trip Piaed For the visitors who. wish to do >ine actal field work while here, trip to the Edwin S. George Re- rve, a 1,200 acre wildlife reserve, a miles northwest of Ann Arbor, has en arranged for Sunday. The local committee in charge of e arrangements and program for ze convention is headed by Dr. Jos- lyn Van 'Tyne, Curator of Birds in e Museum of Zoology. Also on the mmittee are Pierce Brodkorb, arry W. Hlann, Thomas D. Hin- iaw, and 'Almerin D. Tinker. niuersity Museum las Rare Collection f TibetanPaintings Inclu ded in the many collections 'longing. to;the University Museums a rare group of Tibetan temple- aintings collected for the Un ver- ty by Dr. Walter Koelz. Be ause its number and interest the ex- ibit ranks high among the few col- ctions of this type of painting in merica. Tibetan "baners" or temple-pic- ures are usually found in the temples1 hich form part of the "lamaseries" monasteries. The paintings rep-. sent the numerous deities of La- Laism and are regarded as very sac- d objects. The banners are painted on native )tton weaves, imported Indian fab- cs, and, more rarely, on Chinese lk. The material is first sized with le and chalk and then rubbed with nch shells to secure the desired ,inting surface. Mr.13.A.Bailey of the .Museum of nthropology says that fine examples e rare because monastery authori- es seldom dispose of any banners ad native owners are usually reluc- ant to have them acquired by for- gners Polonia Hears Osapafin Polonia Literary Circle celebrated s 30th anniversary at a meeting uesday in Lane Hall at which Peter sapafin of the sociology department loke on "Reflection of the Aristo- 'atic Point of View in the Polish- mericai." Prof. Felix Pawlovyski of te aeronautical engineering depart- ent led an open-forum discussion ' the address. Location Of Mountain Slide That Buried Hundreds !1 t , MANOWN I,"% _... ,_ « Ta?.Lac .. ........ Haiti Dominican 4% Puerto Rico .: p tfGI 'a....Y. SEanta ('s * Lucia art ini~ q e ba Washtenaw Opens Drive Couty Campaign Against Tuberculosis Starts Today I Washtenaw County's 1939 drive for funds to fight tuberculosis will get under way today with the issuing by the county tuberculosis association of 1,500,000 stamp-size Christmas seals, it was announced yesterday by Miss Kathryn Tuomy, chairman of the drive. Miss Tuomy stressed the fact that proceeds from the sale of seals help to provide care for Washtenaw tu- berculosis patients in hospitals, and at the same time, make possible an extensive campaign of health education emphpsizing early diag- nosis and precautions against the disease. The seal design this year pictures a mid-Victorian mother and her two children lighting a candle. hi Pd K... -1 /V %S 41 1- 0 100 20 - ILES5 - --- 'u w,.. A series of rainloosened avalanches spread death and destruction in the iiterior of St. Lucia island, British West Indies. A mountain slide eight miles long buried two hamlets and a, number of inhabitants estimated to run into the hundreds. The location of the ill-fated island is shown on this Associated Press map. c -- - I I Sure Diagnosis For Ricgworm ns Dsere II Old McGuffey Readers Pass Into The Limbo Ringworm and other fungus infec- tions of the skin may be diagnosedk much more rapidly and accurately than ever before by a new cultural method developed by two Universityt dermatologists.t The "hanging drop" method de- scribed by Dr. Franz L. Blumenthal and Dr. James S. Snow, both of the medical school, has been shown to be the most. useful laboratory aid in the diagnosis of tinea, or fungus, in- fections of the skin, not only oe- cause it is dependable but also be- cause it is simple, inexpensive aid requires a very short time to be con- pleted. .The "hanging drop" method con- sists of the suspension, of a small quantity of a cultural medium which4 contains a sample of the infe°^ ed tissue from a glass slide. This prep- aration is incubated at room tem- perature and examined twice a day for the growth of fungus. In 48 cases studied by Dr. Blumen- thal and Dr. Snow, the "hanging drop" method showed a positive growth in 72 per cent of the cases in an average time of less than two days. Microscopic examination of infected tissue was able to make a correct diagnosis in only 33 per cent: of the same group of cases. CultureI of Sabouraud's agar medium, pre-! viously the most accurate diagnostic method, was correct in only 64 per cent ofthe cases in an average irae of over six days. -- Count Donates Iron Lungs LONDON, Nov. 23-(1P)---Viscount Nuffield, motor maker and philan- thropist,announced today he intend- ed to. provide every hospital in the British Empire with an "iron lung." He said that he would donate about 5,000 respirators costing $2,500,000. H.W. CLARK English Boot and Shoe'Maker Our new repair department, the best in the city. Prices are right. 438 South State and Factory on South Forest Avenue. About 4,000 volumes of old and rare McGuffey Readers have been as-{ sembled and catalogued by the University Elementary School Li- brary. Several editions of the famous readers, dating from 1857, are in the collection, along with the 1848 edi- tion of Webster's Blueback Speller.I Michigan Physicists Plan To Attend Chicago Meet The American Physical Society will hold its annual meeting at the University of Chicago on Friday and Saturday of this week. Lord Russel of England will open the meeting Fri- day. Dr. H. R. Crane, Dr. J. Halpern, of the physics department and James Lawson, Grad. and Arthur Tyler, Grad., will present papers. " -__-- '-'.----- '- - ---i I I "' AILL THE TREMMNN -T OVERCOATS and TOPCOATS COMPLETE 75c DINNER Thursday, November 24 $23.50 to $50.00 Suits $23.50 to $40 Interwoven WOOL HOSIERY 50c-75c-$1.00 pair MENU Choice of Fruit Cocktail - Grapefruit Juice - Tomato Juice Soup Roast Young Tom Turkey - Cranberry Sauce Roast White Pekin Duck - Oyster Dressing Roast Young Chicken - Giblet Gravy Virginia Baked Ham - Raisin Sauce Roast Prime Ribs of Beef - Au Jus Roast Fresh Ham - Apple Sauce Choice 'of Mashed or Candied Sweet Potatoes Baked Hubbard Squash - Fresh Green Peas English Plum Pudding Hot Mince or Pumpkin Pie Coffee - Milk - Tea - Hard Rolls - Bread Prekete's SUGAR BOWL .r9-111 South Main Phone 2-1414 STETSON and LASALLE HATS STADEL Luxurious Full Lining. & WALKER DOWNTOWN FIRST NATIONAL BUILDING eC State Street on -the Cam pits F -WWOMr Read Daily Classified Ads . I I M i FOR A PERFECT EVENING >> > > DANCE AT THE RICHARD STRAIN, '42, will give an exhibition of tap dan- ing on Friday evening. During his professional appearances a Bos- ton newspaper called Strain "one of the finest dancers seen here. BOB STEINLE and His Melody Men will pro- vide the music for dancing both Friday and Satur- day evenings. SODA FOUNTAIN SPECIAL Hot Coconut Fudge Sundae . . ,4 - & -w- 5 1 V... V... k %, r A-% - . A 1 .1 . -. tl ,