THE MICHIGAN DAILY _ How Hurricanes Wreck Property In San Juan IU. S. Government Finds Decameron Not Immoral Book, MINNEAPOLIS, Sept. 29-- (A) - The United S t a t e s government, which first had contended otherwise, unbent in its surveillance of national1 morals to admit that "The Decam- eron," repository of fourteenth cen- tury Neopolitan philosophy, wit and gaiety, is not obscene and immoral. The admission, made by Oswald A. Blanchard, assistant United Statess district attorney for M i n n e s o t a, eliminated the necessity for a jurya trial, as had first been planned to determine the book's moral qualifi- cation. Two sets of two volumes of the literary work, together with a more modern time, "Married Love," by Marie Stopes, were included in a shipment seized by federal customs officials here last spring for viola- tion of federal tariff regulation for- bidding importation of "bbscene mat- ter." Dr. Mabel U 1 r i c h, Minneapolis bookstore proprietor, to whom the volumes were consigned, hired coun- sel to prevent destruction of the books as demanded by the govern- ment. Her attorneys found citations that "The Decameron" is a recog- nized literary classic and has been sold publicly in the United States fo many years. Di I iscoverer Of Planet To Continue Schooling LAWRENCE, Kan., S e p t. 29 - Scarcely remembered now, Clyde Tombaugh, the young man who dis- covered Pluto, has enrolled in the University of Kansas to continue his training in astronomy. Beginning the science of star-gazing as a hob- by, he continued his studies in the field after leaving high school. Fi- nancial circumstances and his work at Lowell Observatory kept him from college. But his unexpected discov- ery on Feb. 18, 1930, of the planet Pluto and his achievements in th- field of astronomy earned him the Edwin Emery Slosson scholarship in science and he is now pursuing his studies in that field. War Memoirs Published By Michigan Alumnus Announcement has been made of the recent publication of a book of war memoirs by the late William M Graves Sharp, '81L. After graduating from the Univer- sity Mr. Sharp practiced law in El- yria, Ohio. His career was marked with distinction. In 1892, he served as a presidential elector and served two terms in Congress as a repre- sentative from Ohio. In 1914, Presi- dent Wilson appointed him ambassa- dor to France, which post he held until the close of the World War. On his return to this country, the University conferred upon him an honorary Doctor of Laws degree. (Associated Press Photo) Scenes like the one pictured here prevailed again in San Juan, major city of Puerto Rico, following a hurricane which took at least 30 lives and wrecked scores of buildings. Note how tropical trees were snap- ped in two when this picture was taken after a similar storm in San Juan in 1928. Clerk Calls Repairing of 40,000 University Locks 'An Easy Job' Luncheons Sponsored By Detroit Alumni Club Alumni of the University will have an opportunity to attend a series of luncheons sponsored by the Univer- sity Club in Detroit during the foot- ball season of 1932. The luncheons are popularly priced and are presented with the intention of arousing interest among the alum- ni, according to T. Hawley Tapping, general secretary of the Alumni As- sociation. A number of years ago, similar Monday noon luncheons were sponsored by the University of Mich- igan Club of Detroit. These were discontinued in 1924, Tapping said. When Oscar A. Ahlgren was nominated for congress in Indiana he was given a Magyar serenade with the fiddlers striking up "Rak- oczy," the revolutionary march of 1848. iUas. Anyway, the Key Clerk guesses in the University Hospital alone- here are about twice as many cylin- all equipped with that type of lock-- er locks-Corbins and Sargents- to illustrate the assertion. n use by the University than in "No, I'm not really a locksmith; Lie rest of the entire city of Ann I just know how to work with cylin- rbor, and points to the fact that der locks," says the Key Clerk. "It here are about 1,200 private rooms isn't much of a job." WATCH TN 16 :W'S +46, HA t A Free Manicure with All Barber Work. i .1 s r o i B.OMXL TAB COLLAR ATTACHED SHIRT NECK w.WE'AR At the present moment, it seems that all Universities are talking about Neckwear in the Glen Plaid light- weight wool. This is a vogue that started last year and is going over bigger than ever this Fall. The SCOTCH GLEN PLAID dominates ten-to-one over any other pattern. Buy One Today $1.00 Custom Tailors 311 State Street The Newest Mode in Shirts for College Men is the ROYAL TAB COLLAR-ATTACHED SHIRT A style you 'will likre r$1*65 -.. CONCE RTS CHORAL UNION SERIES Our Ladies' and Children's Department separate from men's department, patterned after J. L. Hudson's, Detroit. Hobby Horses and Automobile, Chairs for the children. Including a Souvenir for the children. -615 E. Libetry St. deparu euai - , -----&u- --- - persons to whom they are issued in to their various departments. Contrary to 'general belief, a mas- ter key is not made by concentrating all the characteristics of the locks to be opened into one key, but by vary- The s ing the lengths of the pins in the BRIGHT SPOT oMiignLa 802 Packard St. Today 11:30 to 1:30 every cut in price consistent with the standard of quality Breaded Fillets it will always strive to maintain Creamed Shrimp on Toast Salmon Salad with Potato Chips Breaded Pork Chops Tempting ' Roas BeePLATE DINNER Potatoes - Green Beans PLATE LUNCHEON 30c Lemon Custard, Cake, Jello, Ice Cream 25c Coffee - Cider - Milk 30c Oyster Stew Rice Croquettes 5:30 to 7:30 Combination Vegetable with Cheese Sauce _ Baked Stuffed Fillet of Haddock Salad Pineapple Waldorf Salad Fried Oysters BSalad ac vegetable Plate with Beef Bread and Butter Buttered Spinach or Hard-Cooked Egg Baked Ham - Orange Sauce Roast Pork___________________________ ____ Meat Loaf - Tomato Sauce Mashed or French Fried Potatoes BREAKFASTS.15c,20c, 252 Scalloped Corn - Lima BeansCLUB b 1 5 Green Bean SaladBenin September 29 Cocoanut Cream Pie - Cake Beginning Ice Cream Coffee - Milk - Tea - Cider 40c - -- EVERYTHING'S under control when you eat Nature's own energy food, 100 % whole wheat (Shredded Wheat for short!) Launch two big biscuits into a bowl of milk or cream and hop to it. And get this! ALL the energy-building elements that Nature put into wheat are right here in these golden-brown biscuits. So call the waiter! Tell him you've decided to double up on energy! Tell him you want to put spring in your step and fire in your eye. Tell him you want Shredded Wheat! When you see Niagara Falls on the package, you KNOW you have Shredded Wheat. I uI Frfr 11h Oct. 25, BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA SERGE KOUSSEVITZKY, Conductor. Only Mich- igan concert of America's premier orchestra Nov. 2, LAWRENCE TIBBETT PRINCE OF BARITONES. Nov. 30, DETROIT SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA OSSIP GABRILOWITSCH, Conductor. Only Ann Arbor appearance this season Dec. 12, EFREM ZIMBALIST DISTINGUISHED RUSSIAN VIOLINIST. Jan. 16, NATHAN MILSTEIN SPECTACULAR RUSSIAN-SOVIET VIOLINIST. In Ann Arbor debut. Jan. 27, MYRA HESS Acclaimed "World's foremost woman pianist." Feb. 8, BUDAPEST STRING QUARTET Jose Roisman, first violin; Alexander Schneider, second violin; Stephan Ipolyi, viola; Mischa Schneider, 'cello. Ann Arbor debut of "Europe's finest quartet." Feb. 15, SEGRID ONEGIN Ann Arbor debut of outstanding contralto, both in opera and concert. Mar. 6, VLADIMIR HOROWITZ Eminent Russian pianist in third Ann Arbor appearance. Mar. 15, PADEREWSKI "King of Pianists" in eighth Ann Arbor concert TEXTBO NEW and SECOND-HAND for ALL DEPARTMENTS. f II 1 11 I