I PAGE EIGHT THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1934 THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY. SEPTEMBER 30. 1934 Stable Economy To Be Discussed By NRA Adviser Wyer Will Outline Four- Point Program As Means Of Ending Depression To Talk Wednesday "Technic," Engineering Magazine. Will Sponsor Abductor Seized IHuher Announces Graduate Reception P A convocation and informal recep- tion for students in the graduate school and their wives was announced for Oct. 11 by Dr. G. Carl Huber, dean, yesterday. The graduate school convocation, which i now held a" an annual evnt will take place in the Lydia Mendel- ssohn Theatre at 8:15 p. m. Addresses will be made by Presi- dent Alexander Ruthven and Dean Huber, following which there will be a reception in the ballroom. More detailed plans for the con- vocation, now being worked out in the graduate school offices, are to be announced next week. Thieves Loot Sorority; Police Search For Clues Breaking into the Delta Gamma sorority house on Hill street during a rushing dinner Friday night, thieves ransacked pocketbooks and stole $40 in cash. It was not known that a robbery' had been committed until the guests began to leave later in the evening. Police are working on finger print clues, but have thus far pot identified the thieves. As other robberies have recently been committed in the same vicinity, police issued a warning to all resi- dents of the neighborhood. FATALLY INJURED DETROIT, Sept. 30-- (P) - Ray Werths. of Detroit. was fatally in- jured yesterday when, according to police, he walked into the side of a car, was knocked down, and ' then struck by a second vehicle. Richard Laird and Harold Dolan, drivers of Kite flying, for centuries a Chinese the cars, were detained for question, national pastime, has been outlawed. ing. __ GRE ENE'S Speech By Expert Outlining a four-point program of planned economy im discussing "Con- tributions to a Way Out of Today's Depression," Samuel S. Wyer, prom- inent technical advisor to the Fed- eral Government, and head of the Social Engineering Fund, will speak to interested students and members of the faculty at 8 p. m. Wednesday The kidnapping carzer of John in Natural Science Auditorium. Baldwin, who escaped from a St. Speaking under the auspices of the Joseph, Mo., jail a month ago, was "Technic" student engineering maga- a short one. He was captured by zine, Wyer will answer the question, police in the midst of his second "Which economic system will lead abduction in four days at Oakland, the way out of today's economic mud- Calif., when he returned to a hotel dle?" Discussing the six possible for his possessions. (Associated Press economic systems, he will attempt to Photo.) show wherein an orderly society, of balanced production and consump- CLEANERS AND DYE) UNDEROTHEOPE Phone 2.3231 RS iN tion, is the logical solution to pres ent day difficulties. Wyer, a graduate of Ohio Stat University, has maintained an in dependent consulting engineering of fice in Columbus, O., where he has specialized in the economic aspects of the inter-related fuel, power, an transportation problems. As head ofthe Fuel-Power-Trans- portation Educational Foundation, an institution subsidized by the Ohi Chamber of Commerce, he published several books and pamphlets to dis- seminate information with regard to specialized engineering problems as- sociated with these felds. He is now head of the Social Engineering Fund an organization that studies prob- lems of modern society and believes that "the sole justification of any social order is human welfare." Wyer first attained prominence as the proponent of NRA codes. In 1920, as Consulting Engineer for Sec- retary of the Interior, Lane, he pre- pared the first pooling program for field operations for oil and natural gas. This was the first code avail- able in this country, and was almost unanimously rejected by the industry The industry's failure to adopt this code later resulted in the over-pro- duction in oil and natural gas opera- tions in the history of the country and led to an entirely unnecessary waste of over six million dollars worth of gas daily. Copies of Mr. Wyer's pamphlets on the subject of his talk will be avail- able at the lecture. Pack Shows Cause Of Postal Violation If you ever have to pay ten dollars postage on a laundry bag, it may be because you inadvertently inclosed written material, which, says the gov- ernment, subjects the whole parcel to the first class charge of three cents per ounce or fraction thereof. VELVETS FOR FROCKS Velvets and printed velveteens, be- sides their use in evening wraps and gowns, are expected to be used con- siderably for winter frocks and two- piece outfits by London's fashionables this season. - Offer Michigan s Alumnus For sSale This Week d _ 7,000 Copies Are Printed; Account Of Research In Egypt Is Feature Making its first appearance of the - current year, the Quarterly. Review of the Michigan Alumnus will be of- , fered for campus sale this week. Over 7,000 copies have been printed for s distribution among the regular sub- scribers to the Quarterly. Featured in the October issue is "An Architect in the Classical Lands" written by Irving K. Pond, '79E, Mr. Pond is well known to Michigan alumni as the architect of the Mich- igan Union and League. Egyptian Expedition Described An account of the work of the Uni- versity expedition in historical and archeological research in Egypt is portrayed in an article by Enoch E. Peterson and John G. Winter. The former is entering upon his tenth year at the excavation at Karanis. This ' article is illustrated by Peter Ruth- * ven, son of the University President. Several Hopwood winners, includ- ing Barbara Patton Smith, '34, Frank C. Aldrich, '37, John H. O'Brien, '35, Theodore C. Wilson, Grad., and Ar- thur Clifford, are among the con- tributors to this issue of the Quar- terly. ly Other Features Among the other features is "A yDiplomat Glimpses Parnassus, ex- cerpts from the correspondence of Christopher Hughes, with an intro- duction by Jesse S. Reeves, William W. Cook, professor of American in- stitutions and chairman of the de- partment of political science. A study of the drug addiction problem is pre- sented by Dr. Charles W. Edmunds, professor of materia medica and the- rapeutics in the Medical School, and Dr. Nathan "B. Eddy, research profes- sor of pharmacology. Prof. Arthur Evans Woods of the sociology depart- ment contributes "Universities and the Problem of Crime." 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