Happy birthday UGLi; still ugly after 30 years The Michigan Daily-Thursday, February 18, 1988- Page 3 By DAYNA LYNN When the Undergraduate Library, affectionately known as the "UGLi," opened its doors in 1958, it did not have computers or carpeting. But it did have those famous orange and turquoise "decorator" chairs. Back then the UGLi also had an Audio Room with two tape playback machines, ten turntables, and AM/FM radio receivers. And before the advent of com- puters, students could rent coin-operated typewriters at -the UGLi to type their papers. The UGLi, which cost the state $3,105,000, was the first library in the country ever devoted solely to undergraduates at a public university. Since the begin- ning, the Undergraduate Library has been a social gath- ering place for students as well as a place to study and research, Barbara MacAdam, head of the UGLi, said. HARLAN HATCHER, University president at the time, officially opened the library for the first time at 7:55 a.m. on January 16, 1958. Roberta Keniston, library head in 1958, said stu- dents did not hesitate to study at the new library, largely due to overcrowding at what is now the Harlan Hatcher Graduate Library. Students just came in, found a seat and got to work, Keniston said. But students have always criticized the UGLi's ar- chitecture. Students were "appalled" by the UGLi's un- °traditional appearance, said University alumnus Peter Eckstein, who was a senior the year the UGLi opened. His first impression of the UGLi was that it was "very stark and had no character." The UGLi's exterior had "a kindergarten approach with all its pastel, bright-colored panels," he said. From the very beginning students referred to the library as UGLi, Eckstein said. MACADAM SAID "there's no question (the acronym) has to do with the building's appearance." Compared to the traditional Gothic and Tudor architec- ture of most University buildings, she said, the UGLi is 'not pretty." But the UGLi's architecture has its own merits, MacAdam said. The building is open and approachable - characteristics vital to welcoming and accommodat- ing undergraduates. Keniston said the UGLi appeared "very austere - but it was very functional," she said. The library's interior was functional chiefly because its partitions were not fixed and were easily moved to accommodate new needs and changes in the library, Keniston said. Keniston said the UGLi's big sturdy tables and comfortable chairs were chosen with the students' comfort in mind. BUT THE building's interior design seemed strange to Eckstein. There was "no privacy to study - it was all open and you just sat at tables," he said. Eckstein preferred the traditional study carrels in what is now the Grad because it provided separation from other students and less distraction. Despite his dislike of the UGLi's appearance, Eck- stein said he did use the library for research. As an economist with the Michigan AFL-CIO, he still re- searches periodically at the UGLi. Before the UGLi was built, Eckstein said most stu- dents studied at the "General Library," now the Grad, built in 1873. TODAY many students prefer the UGLi's more relaxed and open study environment over the "intensity" of the Grad. First-year LSA student Angela Prelesnik likes the UGLi because it's "not so quiet that you go crazy." Pat Devine, LSA sophomore, agrees - "the Grad is too depressing, I study there only for finals," he said. Physical changes to the UGLi have been "relatively modest," MacAdam said. There was an art print gallery on the fourth floor where Art History stu- dents could study prints for their courses. This gallery is now housed in the basement of the Modern Lan- guages Building. A previous library head told MacAdam that during the 1950s and '60s - when most students did not have their own stereos and walkmans - couples went to the Audio room to "listen to music and hold hands." The Audio room, which was renamed the Sight and Sound center, was recently closed due to lack of usage. WHAT IS NOW the Reserve Desk on the third floor used to be the "Multipurpose Room," she said. Eckstein remembers on a tour, he asked Mrs. Keniston to "name a purpose" for the room. Keniston told him it was designed for lectures and student meetings. Students used the Multipurpose .Room for films, Doily Photo by ELLEN LEVY. When the UGLi opened its doors 30 years ago, it was the first library devoted specifically to undergraduates. Today, it holds a reputation of being one of the least attractive buildings on campus. lectures, poetry readings and group meetings, said Keniston. MacAdam said this room helped establish the UGLi's social reputation. The rules on smoking at the library - the only campus library that permits it - have changed drasti- cally during it's thirty years. In 1958 smoking was al- lowed in the entire building, Keniston said. A study room on each floor was reserved for non-smokers. Later, and until a year ago, smoking was allowed in the entire basement, MacAdam said. TODAY - due to guidelines restricting smoking in public places - smoking is prohibited everywhere in the building except one basement group study room. "Smokers are people who need a quiet place to study, too," MacAdam said. Carpet was first laid in the library in 1983. MacAdam said she found old student suggestions from before the UGLi was carpeted complaining about the noise caused by shuffling feet. MacAdam is in the process of collecting old clip- pings, reports, student and alumni anecdotes and "hall of fame" student suggestions, which will be displayed in the library's lobby beginning this spring to give students "a feeling of what the UGLi was like in the past." But one of the most interesting stories may be MacAdam's own experience. As an undergraduate, she went into the early stages of labor on the UGLi's sec- ond floor, while waiting for her husband. The display in honor of the library's 30th anniver- sary will be changed periodically through next fall. GET IT ! The Personal Column WIIaIGAN OAIY n AnIFIEAo ADS THE ILIST What's happening in Ann Arbor today Prof. tries to link obesity to food tastes By DAVID SCHWARTZ Many people are slaves to their food passions - like chocolate- lovers who make special trips to the drug store for candy bars. And Psy- chiatry Prof. Andrew Drewnowski thinks this inability to control one's food preferences may lead to obesity. Drewnowski is currently studying the correlation between food prefer- ences and the kinds of foods people eat, and hopes to "modify diets so obese people won't gain back weight they had previously lost." Drewnowski called obesity a psycho-social problem because not all people with a sweet tooth will have trouble avoiding high calorie food such as sugars and fats. "If people love chocolate, it doesn't necessarily mean they will eat it," he said. Drewnowski said people of nor- mal weight may still prefer to eat fats and sugars, but may choose not to eat a lot of these foods because they know it will affect their appearance and fitness. Drewnowski expects his study to show that fat people don't have as much will power as thin people. Drewnowski plans to track of the eating habits of his subjects - Arn Arbor residents - for a full year. In the past, he said, studies by other researchers have only observed the eating habits of overweight people See PROF., Page 5 Meetings A panel of four professional women will speak on "What to dog with a science degree: academic alternatives," at East Conference Room, Rackham fourth floor, 4- 5:30 p.m. U M Women's Lacrosse Club At the Coliseum on the corner of Hill and Fifth St., 4-6:00 p.m. Women's Action for Nuclear Disarmament - 1209 Union, 6-7:30 p.m. The Bicycle Coordinating Committee will speak on bicycle issues, City Hall fifth floor conference room, 7:30 p.m. The United Coalition Against Racism - Weekly meeting, Michigan Union, 6 p.m. Lesbians of Color Collective - 7 p.m., call 763- 4186 for meeting place. The Department of Romance Languages F r e n c h Conversation Club ("L a Parlotte") - Fourth floor commons, MLB, 3-5:00 p.m. Okinawan Women's Karate Club -t IM .Sports Building, beginners' class 7:45-8:30 p.m., advanced class 6:30-7:45 p.m. Speakers Andrew Geller - "Effects o f Field Size, Contrast, and Retinal Eccentricity on Visual Acuity in the Viewing of Interference Fringes." Part of the Vision Lunch Seminar, 12:15 p.m. at the 2055 Mental Health Research Institute. Mark Hayes, Brian Schints, and Paul Levine, of Apollo t Computers, will lecture on "Direction of Personal Workstations," "COS - Corporation of Open Systems," and "NCS - Network Computing Systems," respectively at 143 Chrysler Center, from 1-2:30 p.m. Ernest Fontheim of the Space Research Laboratory, will speak on "The Solar Wind Interaciton with the Venus Exosphere," at 2231 Space Research Building, 3:30 p.m. Computer Vision Research Laboratory Seminar- A 4 n.m. at 1200 EECS Bilding. Mason Hall, 4 p.m. U-M Dearborn Prof. Neil Flax-"Fabricating the Avant- Garde: Art Critics in France in the 19th Century," Rackham West Conference Room, 8 p.m. Dr. Kit Wesler, of Wickliff Mounds Research Center in Kentucky - "Cross-Cultural Archaeology: West African Perspectives on North American Research," Room 2009, Museums Building. 12-1:00 p.m. Prof. of Industrial and Operational Engineering Stephen Pollock - o n "critical issues," North Campus Commons Valley Room, 12 noon. Furthermore School of Music sophomore Ray Wade - Featured performer at a song recital in the Michigan Union's Kuenzel Room at 12:15 p.m. Free admission. Gaza and the West Bank: Implications for the Future - Presented by the Center for Near Eastern and North African Studies, Rackham Amphitheatre, 3- 5:00 p.m. Tittabawassee Jane - a m u s i c a l b y playwright/songwriter/folksinger Jay Stielstra. $7. At the Performance Network, 408 W. Washington, 8 p.m. A Celebration of Life with the Bichinis Bia Congo Dance Company - At the Ark. Call 763-TKTS for more info. "Contemporary Inuit Drawings," The University Museum of Art will showcase 83 drawings all week. Museum hours are 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Tuesday through Friday, and 1-5 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. Computing Center Courses - Microsoft Word Part 2 (Macintosh), 3001 SEB, 8:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m.; Microsoft Word, Part 1 (IBM PC-Compatibles), 3001 SEB, 1-5 p.m.; Introduction to TEXTEDIT, Part 6, 2065A Frieze Building, 1:30-3 p.m.; Formatting a Rackham Dissertatrion with TeX. MSA to list profs. who held class MLK day SG p°CC I I By RYAN TUTAK Tuesday night the Michigan Student Assembly (MSA) narrowly passed a resolution urging students to inform the assembly of professors who did not offer alternative lectures on Martin Luther King day. The assembly will list the names of professors who assigned tests or papers on Feb. 18 without offering "make-up" lectures and test dates in a Daily advertisement. MSA will also help students file grievances against the professors. THE RESOLUTION, which passed 16-11 with one abstention, calls a reluctance to cancel classes "an affront to Martin Luther King day and a disrespect for the students who boycotted classes." The resolution initially stated that only the professors' departments would be publicized but was amended to name the professors, making them accountable to the University community, MSA Vice President Wendy Sharp, an LSA senior, said. "If department chairs see the name of their professors in the paper, maybe the chair will ask them why they didn't offer an alternative day for an exam or paper," she said. BUT HARRIS McClamroch, chair of the faculty's Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs, said publishing t h e professors' names "might alienate professors rather than involve them in the issue." Law school representative Joe Girardot said'he voted against the resolution because it called for "undue and unnecessary incitement" I I I 1 I I I I of the professors. "(MSA) could open themselves up to a legal suit," he said. Sharp said MSA would only condemn the professors for not offering alternative classes, adding that the advertisement would include a disclaimer that the professors' names were obtained by student reports. IN ADDITION, the assembly shot down a resolution to disapprove of UCAR's partial blockade of some Angell, Mason, and Haven Hall doorways during Martin Luther King day. The resolution, voted down 22-4 with two abstentions, said the blockade infringed upon students' freedom to attend class. Sharp said the blockade, by making students walk to a side-door, "forced students to deal with internal racism and recognize that it's MLK day... I don't think students would have thought twice if they weren't confronted with the picket." Engineering representativeand junior Dan Tobocman, who introduced the resolution, disagreed. STREET mO3TORS Quality Care ForYour FineImported Automobile W OFFER NN. FEPhane SAI GS.. MON.-FRI. 9AM-6PM. 1 o.a MAIN STREET MOTORS - 906 North Main Street Ann Arbor, MI 48104 I r Rent a Car from Econo Car . OPEN 7 DA YS A WEEK '.4= _ ; I BUY-SELL ANYTHING SWAP PHOTOGRAPHIC CAMERAS & LENSES UGTING &RDARKROOM EQUIPMENT NEW & USED BARGAINS Ann Arbor 13th Camera Show and Sale Holiday Inn West 2900 Jackson Rd., at 1-94, Exit172 Ann Arbor, MI SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1988 10A.M. - 5 P.M. ADMISSION $3.00 FOR INFO CALL 1313.884.2242 WE RENT TO 19 YR. 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