To any fellow uofm grads that never heard this one,
the story goes...
Some time around 1959 Dominick DeVarti owned a few Dominick's pizzarias in Ypsilanti. He sold one of them to Tom Monaghan for 600 bucks. Dominick purchased (before, after, concurrently?) the site next to the law school in Ann Arbor and christened it as usual. He meanwhile forbade Monaghan from maintaining the name for his spot over the highway in Ypsi. It wasn't a franchise. I wonder how many times he'd later wished it was? One of Monaghan's delivery guys suggested Dominos instead. Close enough to connect with Dominick's already loyal customers. It stuck. And the rest is....
I've always wanted to believe that Dominick held no regrets. That he owned and operated a beloved, genuine, no bullshit, business that provided a slice of family away from home for many generations of students and faculty over the years. That could not ever have been said of Dominos, never mind it's billions.
Dominick's was a significant part of the props and scenery of my early 90's Ann Arbor days.
Svejkovat t1_jdqryhg wrote
Reply to TIL the Domino's logo has 3 dots to represent the original 3 locations in Michigan. by eelikay
To any fellow uofm grads that never heard this one,
the story goes...
Some time around 1959 Dominick DeVarti owned a few Dominick's pizzarias in Ypsilanti. He sold one of them to Tom Monaghan for 600 bucks. Dominick purchased (before, after, concurrently?) the site next to the law school in Ann Arbor and christened it as usual. He meanwhile forbade Monaghan from maintaining the name for his spot over the highway in Ypsi. It wasn't a franchise. I wonder how many times he'd later wished it was? One of Monaghan's delivery guys suggested Dominos instead. Close enough to connect with Dominick's already loyal customers. It stuck. And the rest is....
I've always wanted to believe that Dominick held no regrets. That he owned and operated a beloved, genuine, no bullshit, business that provided a slice of family away from home for many generations of students and faculty over the years. That could not ever have been said of Dominos, never mind it's billions.
Dominick's was a significant part of the props and scenery of my early 90's Ann Arbor days.
"Claudia! Let's get some Peronis!"