THE MICH16AN DAILY PAGE "TE THE MICHIGAN DAIIN PAGE FIVE AMONG OUR SOUVENIRS: Previous Pep Rallies Were Rowdy But Fun Education Standards Stem from Industry By MARY RUTH LEVY Two roasted oxen, an empty audi- torium, and tear gas riots, have all, distinguished University of Michigan pep rallies. Student spirit apparently swings1 from one extreme to the other; some- times as a 1929 cheerleader put it, "lousy," and sometimes, as in 1899, "howling success in every way." Students in 1901 were tempted by two roasted oxen, "coon singers," and "buck and wing" dancers. By 1909 the response was so great that the meeting place, University Hall, was dangerously overcrowded. Seeking to reduce the fire hazard, the authorities made what proven to be a serious blunder-they banned girls. The re- sult was a storm of protest that rein- stated the girls in just four days. A 1911 The Daily quotes the first speaker of the rally as asking, "Are we feeling tonight as Jonah felt when the whale swallowed him?" Two thousand voices, the article states, "replied in a mighty shout, 'No!'" Nov. 3, 1928, The Daily recorded the first rally in the history of the Uni- versity in which the audience did not outnumber the speakers, there being three each. The entire audience, it continued, was brought to its feet by the stirring speech "I shall not men-1 tion any number of things." Nov. 23 of the same year saw the breaking of the previous record. The band, one cheerleader and several speakers faced a totally vacant Hill Audito- rium. A Boston columnist paid tribute to University spirit in 1934. Our team, he said, hd been outstanding for four triumphant years, and on its return from "away" games it had been met at the station by a few cab drivers. Roundly defeated by Chi- cago, the team returned to find an overflowing station, with the band and the cheerleaders leading a cheer- ing student body. Michigan, he said, had proved itself. Eventually students got out of hand. For several years, apparently, they had demanded free shows after the pep rally from the Michigan Theater-without success. In 1937 about 1,500 students stormed the theater, breaking bulbs, throwing garbage, lighting a bonfireand being similarly destructive until the fire- men arrived. They they removed the tires from the fire truck, took out the MESSIAH: Guest Soloists Will Sing in Presentation Four guest soloists, the Choral Union of 300 singers, and a special "Messiah" orchestra will headline the 65th annual Christmas performance of Handel's famous oratorio, the "Messiah," to be presented at 3 p. m. Sunday, Dec. 16, in Hill Auditorium. Traditional Program A traditional presentation of the University Musical Society, since its organization in 1879, the "Messiah" has been performed either during the year or at May Festival. The annual December performance began over a quarter century ago. The entire en- semble will be under the direction of Prof. Hardin Van Deursen, of the voice department in the School of Music. He is acting conductor of the University Musical Society while Thor Johnson, the conductor, is in service. When the Musical Society organ- ized the Choral Union chorus for the first season, the group was known as the "Messiah Club" since its prin- cipal purpose was to sing choruses from that oratorio. Later, however, it expanded its repertoire to include other great choral works, and mem- bership was extended to include both University singers and townspeople. Text from Bible Written in the latter part of the composer's life, Handel's well-known religious oratorio takes its text from the Bible. Composed for a special Dublin performance, the oratorio was completed in September, 1941, at the time Handel was becoming blind and paralyzed. He devoted the last years of his life entirely to the composition of an uninterrupted series of orator- ios which poured out the fullness of his genius in complete expression. After the initial performance of the "Messiah," the German composer's authority remained uncontested. He had given a fresh, independent char- acter to the oratorio form by adapt- ing it to English words. Oratorio Soloists Featured in the Christmas perfor- mance of this monumental work will be Rose Dirman, soprano, of New York City, who will make her first Ann Arbor performance; Kathryn, Meisle, contralto, former Metropoli- ton Opera Company member; Arthur Kraft, popular tenor, to be heard here for the first time in many years; and Mark Love, basso, of Chicago, also appearing here for the first time. Frieda Vogan of the School of Mu- sic will be the organist, while Hugh Norton of the speech department will be the narrator. Tickets are on sale at Burton Me- key, and put the truck on the side- walk. They dispersed after three sep- erate tear gas bombings. Another riot in 1938 brought about a stern admonition in 1939 that fur- ther destruction would terminate all rallies. It brought results, for a crowd of almost 10,000 confined their ener- gies to cheering. In 1941 the last year of pre-war rallies, found Tom Harmon telling students that if they didn't back the team they would be, "the biggest bunch of rats that ever lived." The police were quite satisfied with the 6,000 crowd, for they had merely to remove a car from the Alumni Me- morial steps. Improved stanaards of technical education In the Floutiwest are a di- rect. result of Industrialization in that section of the country said Dr. H. H. Willard of the Chemistry department. With industrial opportunities open in their own states, students in the Southwest will not longer feel the need to seek employment in the East. Schools, particularly the Uni- versity of Kansas and the University of Wichita, had this in mind, said Dr. Willard, when they began organizing departments similar to he University of Michigan's Engineering Research, so that they might take in industrial projects. Exemplifying this interest shown in new enterprises in a region where, before the war, only the oil industry readily flourished, the Midwest Re- search Institute has been established. Started by popular subscription, the Institute, closely akin to the Mellon Istitate of Pittsbutrgh, is now work- ing on twenty-five full time projects. Lecturing for the American Chemi- cal Society, Dr. Willard, an authority in the field of analytical chemistry, has just returned from a three week, 2,500 mile trip through the South- west. He spoke on "Improvements in Separations by Precipitations" in a number of cities in Louisiana, Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas and Missouri. Automatic Jack DETROIT, Nov. 24 - P) - Three Detroit inventors announced today that they have perfected a built-in automatic jack that will enable a mo- torist to raise one or all of his wheels without leaving the driver's seat. IM f 1 j i 0 from th -0 is good greeting ristmas 0 At peace once more - e world busy mending VI0 its scars of fvar. j4.world where men tried By flame and smote, Can work and love And pray an joke. 0 /07 in a series of Christmas rhymes straight e heart of a store filled with Christmas. here heavens are lit By a kinder liglt * Than the sudden flash Oja bombing flight. J'1'Tere mothers can sleep, A d cildren dream O reindeer a-prance On a wite moonbeam. 1 Its go .it afc Not fet Te pc 0e 0 1I/ aC ad trimming trees . . JO w ent anily ring, ,a ring a m essage 3stman might bring. t? s good seein in love once ag No longer depe , rt On memory and pen. I s good knowing arms Are no longer munitions But means of embracing A'Iore tender ambitions. 'nnil arvn~t~- h"1 m~