TWO THE MICHIGAN DAILY witi i _ _ _ - Rally Recalls Tales Of Old I 4 Classified Directory ii i -i _ . ri r I' - l / I i Pan MAAtl:" nC F _ .. _ .._ LAUNDRYI A, I i A ,, 1/ ItAr a WANTED: Student and family laun- V dry. -Reasonable rates. Will call (Continued from Page 1) for and deliver. Phone 2-3669. the University his Auditorium, they 11 transferred the pep meetings to that EXPERIENCED laundress, doing stu- place, but still the boys clamored to dents' laundry. Will call for and get in. A larger hall just meant deliver. Telephone 4863. 7x more enthusiasm. An empty seat in C Hill Auditorium at a pep meeting was STUDENT HAND LAUNDRY: Pric nothing short of a miracle, reasonable. Free delivery. Phone In 1910, a huge mass meeting was 3006. 6x .planned before theNotre Dame game. LAUNDRY 2-1044. Sox darned. Because of a misunderstanding re- garding eligibility, the game was can- Careful work at low price. 3x celled Friday noon. But did that stop LAUNDRY Wanted. Student and Michigan's enthusiasm? No, sir! Co-ed. Men's shirts 10c. Silks, N They went right ahead and held the wools our specialty. All bundles pep meeting anyway and had even done separately - no markings. more yelling and singing than before. Personal satisfaction guaranteed. And you have it on the word of the Call for and deliver. Phone 5594 F old timers, the students had just as anytime until 7:00. Silver Laundry much fun and got just as much out of 607 E. Hoover. 4x it. It was in 1910 that "Sully," a stu- FOR RENT dent whose fame is remembered but ROOM for rent: Front suite for twoM whose name is forgotten, was, the students or business girls. 920 Oak- cheer leader. One of the first at land Ave. 28 Michigan, he had a way, the old tim-___ndAve._ 2__ ers tell, of really getting it out of 'em. NICELY furnished single or suite, For a long time they had no cheer- .545 Thompson. 30 P leader. As the darkies "get religion" and stand up in °ehurch and begin a THREE ROOMS in private home for chant, so did students lead cheers .girls with home privileges. Garage. whenever the spirit got 'em. 5 Marshall Ct. off S. Division, after Those-pep meetings were short, but 3 o'clock. 5287. 22 - they had what it takes to make a pep SUITE with private bath and shower, meeting. And when it was over, the accommodating three. Extra room boys took it up outside, and would if desired. Steam heat, garage. march up and down Ann Arbor Dial8544. 422 E. Washington. 23 streets, causing no end of annoyance ________________________________ for the good burghers with song, GRADUATE women for sunny front cheers, and more songs and cheers. corner room. Two graduate women Back in the '80's and even into the in the house. 928 Oakland. 32 gay '90's, when they hadn't yet in- vented the pep meeting, the students LADY with apartnient will rent room gave vent to their enthusiasm by or share with graduate student. meeting the team at the train and Near campus, reasonable. Call 4370. giving them a send-off. "They used 34 to get pretty ;excited then," Regent Beal, '82, .declared. He smiled when thusiasm. But you have the old he recalled that often the tired heroes timers' word for it, that little gen-t " of -the gridiron would- slip off and. erating was needed. The money was evade the triumphal march. "But promptly raised, and the boys liked that didn't make any difference. The the pep meeting idea so well they have boys went right on cheering." been holding 'em ever since. As with all things, necessity being "To me, they're something certain- the mother of invention, they started ly worth while," said the Old Man pep meetings because there was a yesterday about pep meetings. And need for them. At the turn of the Professor Whitney feels they grew out century the football team had just of the famous Yost leadership, in the about exhausted its finances. It days of Yost and his great side-kick, needed money for equipment and the beloved Keene Fitzpatrick.' footballs. To raise this money in 1901 (Year one 'of the -Yost regime) they massed the students together and ALL MUSICAL SUPPL attempted to generate them with en- Pianos to Rent Repairing c TTE JTEET New Location: 203 East Lib WELER 40 Years in WATCH & JEWELRY REPAIRING PROFESSIONAL SERVICES OICE BUILDING and singing. Pri- vate and class lessons for juniors and advance students. Grace Johnson Konold, 1908 Austin. Phone 4855. Formerly voice in- structor in School of Music. 5x ,OMPLETE BEAUTY service. Spe- cial Mondays only: Shampoo, finger wave, and manicure, 75c. Open Monday, Wednesday and Friday evenings by appointment. Raggedy Ann Beauty Shop. 1115 S. Univer- sity Ave. Dial 7561. 8x VURSERY SCHOOL: Children three to five years; for information call Miss MacNaughton, 5837. 20 FRATERNITIES AND SORORITIES Call the Kempf Music Studios for artistic piano tuning. Terms rea- sonable. Phone 6328. 15 M~AC'S TAXI -4289. Try our effi- cient service. All new cabs. 3x NOTICES LOt P r H -A to was bac she to Ire pro stu Du ing FI LOST AND FOUND ST: Brown leather cigarette case. rized by owner for sentimental easons. Please call Klein, 3936. 33 de ca PREFERS OPERA TO FILMS P [OLLYWOOD, Calif., Oct. 3.-(P) m Music meant more than the movies th Virginia Reid, who was on her p( y to New York today, turning her re ck on three studio offers. She said would devote the next two years es studying opera. Lily Pons and C ne Dunne, both singing actresses, tr claimed her a "find" and the a] dios began bidding, but when Miss S nne arranged for two years school- t , Miss Reid forgot about the films. n p My WATCH Needs Repair The TIME SHOP is FAIR! 1 21 South University Ave. DAILY 1:30 to 11 P.M. WHITEY 15c to 6 P.M. - 25c after 6 Now ;. 4 ; f 4 PUBLIC evening classes in typewrit- ing, shorthand, bookkeeping begin Oct. 7 at the Ann Arbor High School. Registration fee $4 per subject. Enrollment Monday. 27 TEACHER of popular and classical piano music. Helen Louise Barnes. Call 8469. 2x FOR SALE MICROSCOPE: Bausch & Lomb. Perfect. Objectives: 4mm, 16mm. 19mm. oil immersion. Oculars, 5x and 10x. Wood cabinet; daylight filter, etc. Price $70. Call 6179. Today and Saturday JOAN BLONDELL GLENDA FARRELL "We're in the Money" GEO. O'BRIEN 'Hord Rock Harrigan' "Tarzan," No. 4 IES FOR STUDENTS of All Musical Instruments Ausic Hose erty St. Phone 6011 Ann Arbor Witt .urn Forest b. JobOver To posi Frank Murray1 Frank Murray, camp superinten- ent of one of the larger C.C.C.I amps in upper Michigan during the ast three years, has succeeeded Nor- an Munster as forest manager of de University forest preserves and erimental stations, it was announced ecently. Mr. Murray, also a consulting for- ster in the Great Lake states and anada, is in charge of a 320 acre ract of forest near Portage Lake, ,n eightyacre tract known as the aginaw forest, a forty acre tract on he edge of the city, and the forest ursery on Packard St. All of the roperty owned by the University is MICH IGANu Now! 4 Wai.,1 Rt~g f EXTRA als Come Bes arsto oth Yar NEWS ODDITY 'rhoe ~ old'sBrjghte~tst ar 'jight 'The Wayt0@Ga~l~ od~jf~ \Q4. .: in twenty five miles of Ann Ar- ager for the Soil Conservation Ser- vice of the Department of Agricul- [r. Munster resigned to accept a ture, which has its station at Pa- tion as forester and project man- ducah, North Dakota. LAST TIMES TODAY GARBO and MAR H - MAJESTIC Tomorrow Dolores Del Rio Pat O'Brien "1N CALIENTE" and Jean Arthur Victor Jory "PARTY WIRE" Extra Stranger Than Fiction LATEST NEWS Coning Sunday BORIS KARLOFF BELA LUGOSI Edgar Allen Poe's "THE RAVEN" 1 4 ii m s a } : x. t Michigan Union r i p I Saturday TWO3 FINE RCHSTRS x' j.: 4, From U. of M. UNION and M. S. C. FOR UNION THREE BALLROOMS....SPACE Free Ping Pong Taproom Open 750 COUPLES Extra Lounges BARBARA STRAND will sing! Also: "The Four Men of Note" . Soloists: Fred Shaffmaster, Clarawanda Sisson, Warren Foster . .Gustavo and Gustin, Tangoists . . Special Orchestrations -T 1 - * .!"1q 1 u 1 11- I r-I T. T _ T V 1 I ILA, A - - IJ L ..-L2..I(.1-Y - - ~ II