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Professor Emeritus of Architecture
The Michigan Alumnus 14
Emeritus status has meant for me the freedom to do a lot of things I had long been wanting to do. No longer any frustrating academic deadlines to worry about or faculty committee meetings to attend — just the sheer luxury of time to read and think and to do only whatever strikes me as significant and really worth while, always at my own sweet pace.
Actually, I am busier than usual as a professional consultant on the planning and design of the built environment. I feel re invigorated and fully productive. This is indeed a happy period of my life.
Credit for such personal euphoria must go to a very charming and talented wife. Myra Gulick and I were married in June 1970. I had been a widower for seven lonely years.
Myra is now an associate profes sor in the new U-M School of Art. Next fall she begins her first sab batical study. It will be focused on the emerging role of the artist in American business and industry. Four typical corporations will be visited and analyzed in depth. I ex pect to share in this learning experience, for our campus romance has blossomed into a true intellectual partnership.
Global planning of the built envi ronment for an evolving world community implies, I believe, the parallel development of a global network of university-based in formation centers. Multi-discipli nary and multi-professional in character, these centers should be able to perceive and define the emerging goals of social develop ment and to provide an integrated flow of specialized data to planners and designers at every magnitude of environmental concern — local, regional, national, global.
Michigan, I've been telling my friends and colleagues, could well take the lead in lining up a consor tium of universities to provide such an interlocking information service within the United States.
I must say a word about Dukie and the Duchess, our two English Royal Mute Swans. They merit a brief bit of attention as tokens of the natural environment.
The rear yard of our home abuts city-owned South Geddes Pond which the Parks Department is trying to restore as a wild bird sanctuary. Myra and I have been allowed to acquire the two swans and to turn them loose on the pond, provided we continue to be respon sible for their maintenance and good deportment.
When winter comes, they have to be confined inside a pen high enough and strong enough to pro tect them from hunting dogs. Open water is essential for their ingestion of food, so an air compressor and bubbler system has been installed to keep the pen ice-free. This ar rangement works well so long as the temperature stays above 15. Below this point we can count on waking up to find the two swans sur rounded by a sheet of ice that may be as much as an inch thick, where upon Myra and I bundle up, don our waders, and begin chopping away.
During this winter of historic chill we have had to ask a husky art student to come in to assist. A com pensating reward has been the joy of watching dozens of mallards and black ducks drop in on Dukie and the Duchess for some free loading of grain and a daily bath. From the prevailing signs we also expect there will be some little cygnets this spring.