PAGE EIGHT THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1952 OVER-ACTIVE GRID ROOTERS: First Aiders Have Hectic Saturday S* * * * * * * * * By MIKE WOLFF The staff of the University Hos- pital and an E. Huron St. funeral home will have a slightly less hec- tic life now that the 1952 home football season is over. Their Saturday afternoons will be free from the task of manning the Michigan Stadium first aid station and administering to the needs of over-exuberant grid root- ers. * * , LOCATED AT the north end of the stadium, the station is staffed With a doctor and nurse' from the hospital and an ambulance from the funeral home complete with two attendants, a portable bed- stretcher arrangement and an ox- ygen mask. On football Saturdays one ambulance remains at the home to handle highway accidents while the other arrives at the stadium about 1 p.m. to avoid the heavy pre-game traffic. The station is equipped to han- dle emergency cases until they can be transported to the hospital. It usually has to take care of every- thing from heart attacks to cut fingers, according to ambiumnce driver Robert Klug. Yesterday's game had the first aiders admin- istering to a few fainting spells and mending the strap of one woman's shoe with adhesive tape. THEY SAVED the day for an attractive Purdue drum major- ette by providing her with the thread necessary to mend a tear in her uniform. A soft drink vendor who cut his hand on a bottle also re- ceived first aid. One boy could not be helped, however. He wanted change for 50c and no- body had it. The second ambulance driver, Jim Bargar, worked the football shift as part of his one-year ap- prenticeship at the funeral home. Noted Pianist Will Play Here A diversified program of classic, romantic and modern music will be offered music lovers by Vladi- mir Horowitz, renowned Russian- born pianist, who will give a con- cert at 8:30 p.m. Wednesday in Hill Auditorium. Program for the concert, fourth in the Choral Union Series, will include works by Bach-Busoni, Scarlatti, Schumann, Chop in, Scriabin, Debussy and Liszt. This season marks the 25th year that the pianist has performed in the United States. He first played for an Ann Arbor audience in No- vember, 1928, the year of his American debut. Horowitz left his native land and family in 1925. Since then he has spent most of his time in America. He became a citizen in 1944. Four Nation Team Plan Hill Debate Four distinguished speakers, each representing one part of the world will participate in a four way debate on the great issues of the day in Hill Auditorium at 8:30 p.m. Tuesday. A unique lecture program, "The World Affairs Council," simulating a miniatuire UN Rpniity C i il II. -Daily-Alan Reid FIRST AID STATION OFFERS EMERGENCY TREATMENT AT GAME Nobel Prize Developments Used Here * * .. * * * ARCHER J. P. MARTIN ... English chemist Four 'U' Faculty To AttendMeeting Four University staff members will be among the 13 Michigan ed- ucators and civic leaders on the program at the National Confer- ence on Government, to be held tomorrow through Wednesday at San Antonio, Texas. The program will be conducted by the National Municipal League. Those from the University who will attend are Prof. Arthur W. Bromage, Prof. Daniel S. McHar- gue and Prof. Harold M. Dorr, all of the political science depart- ment, and Glenn R. Winters, sec- retary-treasurer of the American Judicature Society. By VIRGINIA VOSS Four American and British scientists who helped unravel the complexities of modern science and this month received 1952 No- bel Prizes for their progress are firmly established names among University chemists and physicists. The fast moving world of science sees to it that the same day an award is being made for a new development, universitysresearch students are making use of the methods in campus laboratories. SUCH WAS the case with an in- genious method of separating and identifying chemical substances known as "partition chromato- graphy," developed by Nobel prize holders Archer J. P. Martin of Lon- don and Richard Synge, a Scotch chemist. Although the simplified an- alysis method is "not something you would give to freshmen," it will make the process of sep- arating minute quantities of things much easier, according to Prof. H. B. Lewis of the chem- istry department. Prof. Lewis said that the devel- opment will open up an entirely new field of protein chemistry. "Partition chromatography" is a method whereby different sub- stances in solution diffusing along a filter paper are absorbed in dif- ferent spots and can thus be sep- arated. * * . THE NOBEL Prize-winning de- velopment in physics involves a more complex apparatus than fil- ter paper. Edward M. Purcell of Harvard EDWARD M. PURCELL . .. prize-winning physicist * * . and Felix Bloch of Stanford Uni- versity were honored for the in- vention of a new method to measure magnetic fields in atomic nuclei by determining the influence these fields have on the current in electrical coils. As far as finally answering the significant question of what force holds nucleus particles together, the physicists discovery was just a foot in the door, according to Prof. E. F. Barker of the physics department. But he added that when scientists discover some- thing they're curious about, it us- ually turns out to be important. Co-winner of the physics prize, Bloch lectured here in a Physics Summer Symposium several years ago. a mlilt uc uN ecurn y ;ounc , will include a closing period when the four experts will answer ques- tions from the audience. * * ** THE FOUR featured speakers are: Hon. Camille Chautemps, for- mer vice-president and four times premier of France, as the delegate from Europe. Cuneyd Dosdogru, Turkey's fore- most journalist, as the delegate from the near east and middle east. Melchior Aquino, Philippine journalist and diplomat with a distinguished record in the United Nations, as delegate from the far - east. John C. Metcalfe, former Wash- ington diplomatic correspondent for the New York Herald Tribune and Time Magazine, as delegate from the United States and Latin America. Metcalfe also serves as chairman of the council. - The four speakers from Paris, Ankara, Manila and Washington, have behind them a record of sev- eral thousand professional lecture appearances in the United States and abroad. * * * THE FOUR will present back- ground on big issues and person- alities in the news. Tickets at $1.25 and $1 will be on sale Wednesday and Thursday at the Hill Auditorium box office. Biology Society To Sponsor Talks Two University professors will share the speaking platform at 8 p.m. tomorrow in Rackham Am- phitheatre to present a lecture sponsored by Phi Sigma, biology honor society. Prof. Merle Lawrence of the Institute of Industrial Health will speak on the "Physiology of Hear- ing." "Biology and Industry" will be the topic of a talk by Prof. Lloyd L. Kempe of the engineering college and medical school. The lecture is open to the public. 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