a ~emen tI atIo ter Long Years of Service to the University e Romance Languages Building Was Razed By Thomas Hayden ONCE upon a very long time ago, a young, ambitious university n the Midwest found itself with a erious problem-of space. The professors, being cluttered by nature, saved all the stones and bones they especially liked and un- eremoniously stacked them in heir classroom cabinets. Having ery few students, the university lad very few classrooms, and the lassrooms had very few cabinets. So the cabinets got filled with tones and bones. Sensing a need for more cabi- lets, a virile, young science teach- r one day proposed a solution to ,e problem of the filled cabinets. What we need," he said, "is a ,eat big building where we can iut our stoies and bones." Everyone agreed. "Huzzah," they bouted. And so construction started. A Thomas Hayden, a member of The Daily editorial staff, came under old RLB's spell the first day he went inside for a freshman language course. short, round little Army major who happened to be the only professor of architecture the university could afford, was selected to design the new building. After many, many nights of work, he set his blue- prints before the Board of Peers, who promptly approved. THE MUSEUUS was to be con- structed in French Renaissance style, four stories high, of red bricks trimmed with .stone. Its most remarkable feature was to be the distinguished tower. Its ediface was decorated with the grotesque images of battling mon- sters, symbolic of the bones with- in: When the building was finished at' last, all the professors happily scurried around its-'insides, look-. ing at all the empty space where they could stack their stones and bones. "Huzzah," they shouted. again. However, as years passed, the university expanded. The museum, aging rapidly, was" no longer .con- sidered such a massive, wonderful structure. The original roof was found too heavy and.was replaced by a cumbersome, makeshift affair. The United States'. Pavilion "Ugl y, Ugly Everyrwhere,-and Not a6Blade of: Grass" The. Russian- PaviL Lacking a basement, the museum ground floor began to sink and had to be strengthened. And the stacks- of stones and bones kept piling up. Soon the university was lacking space again. The Board of Peers ordered con-, struction of 4 big, new museum. , ESTONES and bones were moved out of the tired, old museum and replaced by an in- coming 'group of language teach- ers. Its fifty-year-old silence was shattered by the babbling herd. With each year, the old museum withered a bit more. A coat of grey paint was hastily slapped on its weary walls. People began to com- plain about the danger of a fire, about the gnarled stairways, about the. inescapable drafts.; A few notalgics remained. They looked at the scarred edifice, at the monsters intheir never-ending battle, at the gate of heaven placed at the pinnacle of the tower, and they shouted "Huzzah" for the old building. But not quite as 'loudly._ Moreand more people began to think the museum an eyesore. "Y-e-e-e-ch, what an eyesore,;" they hooted. Even some of the professors-be- gan to dislike :the museum. They called it a firetrap and afreezing, Try FOLLETT'S First USED BOOKS at BARGAIN PRICES New Books If You Prefor FOLLUTTS STATE STREET at NORTH UNIVERSITY WANTED: STUDENTS Worth Cheering bOout! &tudents and facultymembers who need extra cash for any good reason, have found they can borrow~ with confdence from HFC. At Household, loans are made promptly, in privacy, with repayment terms you select. So if a CoikrMONTHLY PAYMENT PLANS o a is the answ er r 24 ITour PAYe LA. s 9 2 to your money * faem*s J** JP*t#*i so J#Vi problems, phone or $50j 5.03 9.241 ,iit HFC. 10 5.83 6.65 9.98 18.39 IiA 1 q .11 V..77 36.59 old barn and a hole and a pile of erect rubble. "What a pile," sail one, pro- fessor. Then, while the old museum celebrated its 78th birthday, the Board of Peers made a startling announcement-all the babbling language teachers were to move out of the structure for it was to be razed, 'HUZZAH" yelled some, and very loudly indeed. "Huzzah, huz- zah, huzzah." Others questioned the decision. gWhy tear it .down?" they asked, "It's too distinguished to tear down." "Bah," the Board of Peers re- torted. "The whole mess is coming down." -And soit did. Rattling red"dump- trucks came and steam shovels came and men came and fences went up all around. Aid the rat- tling red dumptrucks carried-the old museum away. The people who felt bad began to console themselves. "Well, at least we'll have a place to plant some decent grass on campus," they said. The uni- versity had certainly grown. There were buildings with huge pillars, and buildings with red bricks and even one building which had blue- and. yellow windows. A green, fresh open space with no buildings at all was needed. THE VACANT PLOT where the old museum had been was silent, expectant. Then one day the rattling red dumptrucks came back and with them came men and shovels and trowels and.., cement. The men knelt down -and began to lay out cement Walks. "We have decided to build a patio," the Board of Peers an- nounced. "We are moving for- ward." And so today at the big univer- sity one can see a flat, white slab of cement. Most of the students will soon think it has always been there,. No one will tell them about the old museum, or the plans for a fresh, grassy expanse. Except perhaps for an t5-iner who will look and ask, puzzled, "What happened .to the old pile of, erect rubble?" Or the aesthete who will cry, " lgly, ugly everywhere and not a 'blade of grass!" By John Weleher F IT COULD be considered to be existing in a vacuum, the Brus- sels Fair would be strictly for fun. A complete ignorance of world af- fairs is perhaps best for a per-; son. attending It. For, despitel the best efforts of the. planners and of some o f the participants, the Fair is basically a good place to gawk. The won- ders of the world are there, in every category if one can enjoy them without looking at the na- tional labels they bear. 'The Fair isf, rst of all, im- mense. It covers 494 acres north- east of Brussels, and covers them beautifully. No space is wasted, but none is overcrowded. Besides the actual exhibits most coun- tries- have done some landscap- ing on part of their space, with generally refreshing results. The land is naturally rolling, which aids the architects .(al- though it Is .hard oan theĀ° footsore visitors). Plenty of benches are John Weicher, city editor of The Daily, spent considerable. time at the Fair this summer during a tour of Europe. I Hairstyling to please! Try us for: Brussels -More provided for sitting down; these are all free - which cannot be said for any nations' washrooms except those of the United States.. (Everyone else charges four cents. and has a woman attendant at. the door to collect.) The official'languages of BeI- glum and the Fair are Flemish and French. Although most coun- tries (with, perhaps, the -signifi- cant exception of Russia) also give descriptions in English and replace Flemish with its near rel-' ative German, the industrial ex- hibits do not. Fortunately, , these include very little that is either new or interesting to the Ameri- can visitor, who can concentrate on the south half of 'the fair, wherehthe national pavilions are clustered. Here is where the fun is. - U NFORTUNATELY, the plan- ners have apparently failed to regard the Fair as something oth- er than a propaganda contest. They have situated the American. and Russian displays directly op- posite each other with the much smaller Arab States' building in between. The visitor is therefore almost compelled to make a comparison of the two, thus dragging the Fair to the level of international politics. Strictly in the propaganda line, the Russians would appear to have won. Enjoyment, however, Is another matter. The Russians have been extremely thorough and extremely unimaginative; the. Americans have shown plenty of imagination, but have missed much. Foremost among the absentees is industry. A short description of atomic power and a display of the industrial. park. at. Stanford com- prise almost the-entire extent of American efforts in this line. No machinery of any sort rears its head: R- It is possible to argue that ev- eryone knows the value and ex- tent of American machinery and. technical skills; perhaps, on a limited budget, the United States had to sacrifice something. If so, it probably chose well, but the ab- sence of industry, coupled with the heavy accent on consumer goods, makes America look "soft" by comparison with Russia. Consumer goods dominate the pavilion; perhaps excessively. The United States. has played fair; not] new "e* seen pric itou~ Than Propaga DIAMONDS HALLI d9ewefeA TO THE STUDEN UNIVERSITY OF 100 Years: 185 We welcome the Old invite the New.Studer located just North of 717 N. University- nea COLLEGE JEI JEWELRY, Although the Cold War Is There a Tourist Can Avoid It * We are * We are looking for students who are interested in the world outside of the classrooms, the dorms, the fraternity and sorority houses, and the football stadium, looking for students who are concerned about" National and international affairs Economic developments Scientific developments Reports about medical achievements Progress in sociology, psychology Important events in sports Reviews of art, literature, TV, radio movies, Personalities-the names in the headlines And other significant matters in the forth- coming year.. 11 .. i ,I "For BOZAK Speakers it's AUDIO SUPPLY" }, Modern money sere baudkedi 80 yews' eupw qw vv .J11V l.U. ire! / '.* * 330 17.08 f19.55 J29.5 54.78 30 27:24 81.39 48.09 190.02 ffg~v* 's h &&Wsi 51w wweS&tsredu 0f3%.aw Alio dare a bsioem.' xws ,xcwdixg $.0. E3 ._ inK 9pD a}Dof baialata is s of j0'$50. bat, Gr ""#a"W Ow0, and % s an anmp rmaiid. 0 0 " CREW-CUTS PRI NCETONS PERSONALITY CUTS 11 HAIRCUTTERS 0p the Dascola Barbers near Michigon Theatre AUDIO SUPPLY Laboratories 214 South State (across from State Theatre) NOrmandy t-7767I Become an Accred ."the Traveling A Phoane:ANOrmrasidy3-4"l1 ler m.I.rim~ f geby er I1 We are looking for students who wish to be well-in- formed but who must be careful about their finances To such students, we offer the following special campus rates:~~- For all your Cleaning & Laundering Needs andLiterary All Members trave on the Best Whee WELCOME to ANN ARBOR Time JLife J Sports Illustrated ] Newsweek J New Yorker ) The Reporter -'Student Rate $4.00 yr. 5.00 yr. 4.00 yr. 3.50 yr. 3.00 8 mo. 4.50 yr. Regular Rote $ 7.0yr. 10.00 yr. 7.50 yr. 7.00 yr. 7.50 yr. 0.00 yr. 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