Academy Affairs 77 



Sectional Meetings 



BACTERIOLOGY AND MEDICAL TECHNOLOGY 



Margaret Hotchkiss, Chairman 

 Emil Kotcher, Secretary 



1. The effect of products of heterologous microorganisms on the in vitro migra- 

 tion of leukocytes of tuberculous guinea pigs as determined by a slide culture 

 technique. 



E. H. Gerlach and M. Scherago*, Department of Microbiology, University 

 of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky. 



2. The effect of products of heterologous microorganisms on the in vitro migra- t 

 tion of leukocytes of tuberculous guinea pigs as measured by a capillary tube 

 technique. 



C. Thomsberry* and M. Scherago, Department of Microbiology, University 

 of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky. 



3. Fluorescent antibody detection of the gonococcus. 



James A. Ellis, Louisville-Jefferson County Health Department, Louisville, 

 Kentucky. 



4. Properties of staphylococcal coagulase in relationship to the hydrolysis of 

 peptides. 



Marvin Murray, Gail Bosley, and Carl Rutledge, Department of Pathology, 

 University of Louisville, Louisville, Kentucky 



5. The effect of tuberculin on the in vitro migration of leukocytes from guinea 

 pigs sensitized with heat killed Mycobacterium tuberculosis. 



R. W. Johnson* and M. Scherago, Department of Microbiology, University 

 of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky. 



6. The correction of astigmatism in the electron microscope. 



O. F. Edwards, Department of Microbiology, University of Kentucky, Lex- 

 ington, Kentucky. 



7. Pseudomonas as a hospital pathogen. 



William H. Kelly, Jewish Hospital, Louisville, Kentucky. 



8. Detection and isolation of the inclusion conjunctivitis virus. 



Emil Kotcher*, Kenneth Keller, Carolyn A. Frick and Doris W. Bottorff, 

 Department of Microbiology, University of Louisville, Louisville, Kentucky. 



9. The effect of uric acid upon the weight gains and the intestinal flora of chicks. 

 Larry N. Bare*, and Ralph F. Wiseman, Department of Microbiology, Uni- 

 versity of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky. 



10. The effect of uric acid upon the excretion of riboflavin in the rat. 



Paul J. Armstrong, Jr.* and Ralph F. Wiseman, Department of Microbiology, 

 University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky. 



11. Physiological tests to differentiate cultures of Streptomyces and Nocardia. 

 James D. Moore* and M. Hotchkiss, Department of Microbiology, University 

 of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky. 



12. A simple method for the conversion of diphasic fungi to the yeast phase. 



E. H. Gerlach, Department of Microbiology, University of Kentucky, Lex- 

 ington, Kentucky. 



