Page 8-The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, November 11, 1987 E 4 4 The once-bustling admissions lobby of Old Main Hospital is virtually abandoned now. Its reign as one of the country's premier teaching hospitals ended with the opening of the new University Hospital in February of 1986. Now Old Main is resting quietly, collecting dust, and waiting to be demolished. AWalkThrough Old ain The sign simply says, "We've moved." "We've moved?" It's a sign you expect to see hanging outside a restaurant, or a drug store, maybe. But you don't expect to round the corner of Observatory on your bike and see the words "we've moved" above the bolted, dusty doors of Old Main Hospital. It's strange. And it's eerie. And it's not quite right. On February 14, 1986, the massive new University Hospital opened its glossy, white, com- iuterized doors for business. The doctors alid administrators and nurses moved their Otatients and files down the street, like a family moving from its summer cottage to a high tech condominium. Yes, they moved. But something about Old Main didn't. IBack in 1925 when it opened, Old Main was the symbol of state-of-the-art medical care and instruction in this country. Peni- cillin wasn't discovered yet. Maggots were used to treat infections. And the now- obsolete open wards were to become the sites of 60 years of medical triumphs and breakthroughs at the University. When the staff of the new hospital says, "We've moved," they're talking about the beds, the brain scanners, and the bottles of medicine. But they're not talking about shadowy emergency rooms and empty wards, or dark hallways that once echoed the footsteps of great doctors and brave pa- tients. The memories of Old Main have not moved. But they cannot remain where they are, either. Old Main has become its own last pa- tient, and its prognosis is grim. Suffering from a terminal case of uselessness, Old Main will officially become an abandoned piece of University property on January 1, 1988. It will be destroyed - most likely by implosion - before next August. On- ly the front administrative wing will re- main standing, a nostalgic facade of old ../ . Like this forgotten bouquet, Old Main sits lifeless. memories. In the months ahead, the discussion about Old Main will be reduced to finances and logistics - how to destroy it, how much it will cost, what will grow from its graveyard. But 60 years cannot be erased in a single moment. The memories will have to move. And so they will become pho- tographs and stories and, for many, nostal- gia. Kathy Mammel is a member of the Hemodialysis department, which still re- sides on a deserted hallway of Old Main. Her office will move to the new hospital on Nov. 19. I watched the new hospital go up from the windows. Now it blocks our view of Ann Arbor. There's not a lot of care at Old Main anymore. I think most people are going to miss Old Main when it's gone. Not the building itself - just how com- fortable it was. Lisa Stephens is a secretary in the Car- diac Studies Department, scheduled to be the last unit to evacuate Old Main this De- cember. I kind of like it here over at Old Main. I worked in the new hospital for a while, and I can tell you it sure is a lot of hustle and bustle. Over here, though, it's like we all have our own little community. I like ev- erything about Old Main better - the building, the design, the way we can have our own space. The new hospital means being cramped in cubicles, stuffed into the, spaces. Yesterday I was outside Old Main and I had to show an old woman where to go. She was lost; she thought Old Main's doors still opened. "What's nin on here?" A University Hospitals secretary found an-old woman waiting outside the barricaded doors to Old Main this. week. "You can't go in there anymore," the secretary told her. "What happened to the hospital?" the woman asked. "Where do it go?" But the truth is, no one is that glad to move over. I've asked them. At New Hos- pital you find you've lost a lot of the warm feeling at Old Main. It's like a maze over there. No broad hallways. No steady flow of people. They miss all the little win- dows. Dr. William Robinson, a professor emeritus in the department of medicine, came to Old Main in 1934, as a medical student. Old Main has outlived it's usefulness to us. I'm not one for nostalgia, and there's nothing left in that building. It was obso- lete years ago. Yes, we have memories. But we also have the future. When I saw the New hospital I wondered what it was going to look like in 60 years. But I can't tell. The ability to predict how medicine will change is still an awkward science. Chief of General Surgery Dr. Robert Bartlett considers Old Main's place in his- tory. It's a place where a lot of important medical breakthroughs have occurred. It has taken and given so much to all of us. It has served patients and doctors and medicine nl mn tive, all of Old Main might be saved. We look at things from different perspectives, I guess. Audrey Lucas, a hospital employment representative, remembers Old Main with a sense of loss. When I started here 35 years ago the hospital was a community: elevator opera- tors would talk to doctors, and doctors would talk to administrators as they walked down those hallways together. We sat at the round tables in the cafeteria and ate lunch together, family style. We all had genuine care and concern about each other. Now everything is decentralized, com- puterized, and fancy. There isn't the time to care that we used to have. Thinking about the destruction gives me a very, very sad feeling. When you work at a place for 35 years it becomes very much a part of your life. I've stayed, but many of the older people retired when they found out the Old Main was coming down. Some of the peo- ple actually miss the wards, miss the openness that comes from seeing all your patients at once. Sure it's wonderful to see the new technology. But you can't look at Old Main without thinking an era has ended. NI - - - m