THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, DECEMBER 9= 1962 EIGIff PAGES rlaii.R V acIL. AL i (1ll Ll L7 V ARCADE THEATER-The Arcade Theater burned out one Sunday afternoon in'December while the students cheered and the Parrot restaurant met the same fate within hours, Parrot, Arcade Theater Burned Amid Cheering N, Oldest Man Still Believes In Students The oldest merchant of State Street has lived in the shadow of campus all his life and has never lost his faith in students. "Students are the best of our young people coming to get an education," he said. "Everything has been cordial" in contacts with them over his 79 years. However, the average student is worthy of great trust if he is religious. "You can't trust some- one if he doesn't believe in some- thing higher," he said. Remembers Fence This man who grew up on Fifth Ave. and attended school on the site of the present Newberry Hall can remember when there was a fence around the 40 acres of cam- pus. He has seen many changes in the University and the students. For one thing the students are much less aware of tradition and the past than they were in the early part of the century. Now some students do not even know about their grandparents. The students dress is very dif- ferent now also. In the old days one could tell if the students were rich or poor. As most clothes were made to order, dress styles were much more individualistic than they are today. Before, there were 14 tailor shops, now there is one, maybe two, left in town. In gen- eral, the girls still dress better than the boys. More Healthy The girls are more healthy than they used to be as they are out- side more, he said. However, the boys are less athletic. The real change in the Univer- sity is the raised academic stand- ards, he noted. This makes the students much more serious than they used to be. A nostalgic memory held is the change of the colors from light blue and pale yellow to the more contrasting dark blue and gold. Although this man's memories of State Street and the University could unravel for hours, they be- come more and more difficult to relate. For with each memory is the personal touch of this man who doesn't wish to be known as the oldest merchant. Why? Be- cause he doesn't want to advertise himself, just his merchandise. Establishments Closed with 'U' When State Street was first a student center, the whole area would close up with the school and reopen in the fall. Now the year- round character of the University and its faculty sustain the stores through the dry season. Tree Longest Resident Sunday, December 26, 1928-all the students that were not in bed from the flu epidemic were out walking around the campus when the fire engines broke the Sunday stillness. The Arcade Theater, dominating the corner of N. University and Thayer Streets had broken out in flames. By the time the students reached the site the flames were Merchants Encourage Prosperity The State Street Merchants As- sociation is organized to promote the economic growth and stability of the State Street and N. Uni- versity stores. Composed of business men who work in these stores, they work for greater cooperation between the members and work closely with the city of Ann Arbor, the Cham- ber of Commerce and the Univer- sity. They also believe in the spirit of State Street, a spirit which is known almost around the world. Orders come in from Europe and the Orient from former University students for books, sweatshirts and clothing. State Street area with the serv- ices and merchandise it offers ranks far above most other uni- versity and college shopping areas. Arid it's not that people remem- ber State Street but that they come back to it for a morning of shopping before the game. And the students, of course, continue to take advantage of the shopping opportunities on State Street. Jacobson's Began in 1924 The Jacobson store was estab- lishe on its present site in 1924 and later earned the title of the "largest campus shop in the coun- ty," although the ratio of student to adult trade has evened out in recent years. The :store was built on the site of some sort of place that received deliveries because the signs lead- ing to it were found on the brick walls in the last renovation. Originally smaller than at pres- ent, the store has branched out in areas formerly ocupied by Collins, Robert's Millinery and the old Uni- versity Press. GIVE this rsta -- ma SLATED'S YOUR COLLEGE BOOKSTORE 1 ter. it: How to start the new ear brit You could probably use more money now .. . and the older you S84,c get, the more you're going to need money. Spending all you getOFFYU t will get you nowhere. You have to save ahead to get ahead. StartA S the new year right by opening a savings account at our associa- tion where savings earn excellent returns. You couldn't make a U,,To41 brighter New Year's resolution. I.~JISA V/NGS AND LOAM .LLL 1WXLI5. L LU ASSOC/ATION MAIN OFFICE, I!BERTYAT DIVISION NEIGHBORHOOD OFFICE, STADIUM AT PAULINEm ORGANIZED 1890 Member: Federal Nome Loan Bank System - Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation I licking at the posters which prom- ised films of Charlie Chaplin. in the "Circus." A few hours later, down the street, the Parrot restaurant, cam- pus landmark, also broke out in flames. Taxed Equipment Although the two fires were ap- parently unconnected, they taxed the equipment of the Ann Arbor Fire Department beyond its capa- city and provided an afternoon of cheering to University students. According to a bystander, the students would "stand in front of one fire and cheer and then, when something seemed more interesting at the other-would run down the street and cheer there." "The Michigan Daily" carried the story in their next issue. They reported that damage was esti- mated at $150,000 according to Fire Chief C. J. Andrews. Two men were hurt, a fireman who fell off a ladder and the movie operator. However, four businesses were dis- turbed by the Arcade fire, which cpmpletely gutted the theatre and finished the history of the Ar- cade. Moe's Burnt Out Moe's sports shop was burnt out and moved to 314 S. State for a year or so, MacDiarmid's Candy Shop had smoke and water dam- age but would continue in busi- ness as would the, similarly dam- aged Craft ,Type shop. The most unique damage was that reported by the Fransicco Boyce Photography Shop-that of "smoke fogged printing paper." The Parrot resumed business following the Christmas recess to LONGEST RESIDENT-The oldest tree on State Street is the majestic oak in front of the Methodist Church on State and Huron. It is the last of the oak grove that was there when the first settlers arrived and is described in the old deeds as the "Oak Grove" running from St. Andrew's Church property to State Street. Ancestors of the present squirrel population were also mentioned in the first accounts. Former Team Head Runs Cloth ing Store Peter Van Boven Sr., '21, opened a men's clothing and furnishings store in the fall of 1921, after finishing a successful season as baseball captain of the Michigan nine. Baseball was a more popular sport, he reminisced. About 10,000 students and townspeople would come to the games at Ferry field. After his baseball career Van' Boven knew almost every student by name. This, the prosperity of the per-j iod, a good business sense and the growing popularity of Van Boven's specialty, the "natural line" fashions, brought good busi- ness to the store. Moved Store In 1924 they moved the store to its present site in the Arcade and by 1926, Van Boven was able to buy out his silent partner, Ann Arbor banker Earl Kress. In 1929,1 he bought a branch in Detroit and has spent three days at each store for every week since then. The crash in 1929 brought hard times to the store but it came through. Durin World War II, when materials were hard to get, they branched out into officers unforms to keep going. With the inflation of the fifties their merchandise tripled and the store became what it is today, a quality clothing store serving Ann Arbor, Detroit and the surround- ing states. Recalls Van Boven can recall supply- ing the students of the twenties with spats, derbys and Chester- field coats by the hundreds. "It was a more dressy era then," he said. However, the store has never really changed its styles in its history. "Our customers wouldn't let us," he stated. continue serving 1960, when it was Charcoal House. students until replaced by the EXOTIC GIFTS! FROM THE ORIENT Waiting for you - at the INDIA ART SHOP 330 Maynard Ann Arbor GIFTt '.0 FROM \ . i - SF j~p'" ': { ft,*:" .. . t),ifi y SAFFELL r ".. i' ~~ HAS A DOUBLE n MEANING QUAIYand STYLE 4 The Following Members of the 3 STATE STREET MERCHANTS ASSOCIATION present this 3 SPECIAL STATE STREET AREA SUPPLEMENT I Ann Arbor Bank Checkmate Ann Arbor Federal Liberty Music Savings and Loan Morrill's 3 Wagner's The Quarry Van Boven Shoes Slater's Van Boven Inc. Collins Shop Inc., Randall's John Leidy Bay's Arcade Jewelry Saffell and Bush Kresge's Campus Smoke Shop Haller's Jewelry Forsythe Gallery Jacobson's Hi Fi & TV Center Moe's Sport Shop The Virginian