The Ann Arbor Chronicle » book http://annarborchronicle.com it's like being there Wed, 26 Nov 2014 18:59:03 +0000 en-US hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=3.5.2 Ode to an Office Park http://annarborchronicle.com/2009/01/29/ode-to-an-office-park/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=ode-to-an-office-park http://annarborchronicle.com/2009/01/29/ode-to-an-office-park/#comments Fri, 30 Jan 2009 04:28:46 +0000 Mary Morgan http://annarborchronicle.com/?p=12840 Tom Monaghan signs a copy of Domino's Farms: A Landmark Office Park in the Country

Tom Monaghan signs a copy of "Domino's Farms" by Bertie Bonnell at a reception Thursday evening at – where else? – Domino's Farms.

If you didn’t know that Thursday evening’s reception and book signing for “Domino’s Farms” by Bertie Bonnell was a special event, here’s a clue: Tom Monaghan’s dog, Sasha, got a bath for the occasion.

More than 100 people attended the reception at Domino’s Farms to mark the publication of the book, which is being distributed by the University of Michigan Press. It tells the story of how Monaghan conceived of and built the landmark office park, inspired by the architecture of Frank Lloyd Wright’s Prairie Style. 

In his remarks to the group, the founder of Domino’s Pizza said he met Bonnell when she interviewed him for an article in the Ann Arbor Observer. The article was far shorter than the material she gathered, so he suggested she write a book – a suggestion she took to heart.

Tom Monaghan and Bertie Bonnell

Tom Monaghan and Bertie Bonnell.

Bonnell said when she first got to know Monaghan, he was a surprise to her – softspoken, “rather courtly and altogether pleasant.” She discovered his lifelong love of architecture, but said that his greatest talent was in “imagining something and making it happen.”

She interviewed dozens of people for the book, uncovering some unusual stories in the process. When steelworkers finished their part of the job during the winter of 1984, they called the Domino’s store on Plymouth Road to order a pizza – and were surprised when told “we don’t deliver there.” Rival Little Caesar’s was happy to – much to the chagrin of the general contractor at the work site.

The complex is a half-mile long, with the world’s largest copper roof, a herd of bison and a petting zoo. The office park also includes a café, fitness center, hair salon, art gallery, chapel and religious bookstore – Monaghan is known for his Catholic activism and philanthropy. He is founder of the Ave Maria Foundation, Ave Maria University and Thomas More Law Center, among other organizations.

The Chronicle didn’t keep a tally of how many people bought copies of the book, which were for sale at the reception, though we did spot John Hilton of the Ann Arbor Observer and local developer Ed Shaffran each making a purchase. Nor did we keep a tally of how many people made a point of petting Sasha – there were too many to count.

Sasha

Sasha, who is often seen in the hallways of Domino's Farms, took a rest during Thursday's reception.

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Ayers and Dohrn at Hatcher Library http://annarborchronicle.com/2009/01/27/ayers-and-dohrn-at-hatcher-library/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=ayers-and-dohrn-at-hatcher-library http://annarborchronicle.com/2009/01/27/ayers-and-dohrn-at-hatcher-library/#comments Tue, 27 Jan 2009 12:28:05 +0000 Dave Askins http://annarborchronicle.com/?p=12628 Bill Ayers Ann Arbor

Right to left (counterclockwise) Bernardine Dohrn, Bill Ayers, Julie Herrada, Scott Westerman.

On Monday evening at the University of Michigan’s Hatcher Graduate Library, Bill Ayers and Bernardine Dohrn addressed the 300-400 people who had packed into the space, answered written questions and signed copies of their new book, “Race Course: Against White Supremacy.”

Ayers had gained renewed notoriety during the presidential campaign, through the speculation about a connection between Ayers and then presidential hopeful Barack Obama. When Republican candidate for vice-president Sarah Palin spoke of Obama “palling around with terrorists,” Ayers was the guy she meant – Ayers was a member of the radical 1960s group the Weather Underground. (Ayers rejected the label “terrorist” on Monday.)

Although it was Ayers and Dohrn who headlined the event, the story that The Chronicle found was in the people who attended, many of whom were linked in somewhat unpredictable ways.

Take Jim Manganello, whose real interest is in directing theater, but who’s completing a teaching certificate at UM, having already earned his undergrad degree. Part of the reason he went to hear Ayers and Dohrn speak is that he’s taking a course in the history of American radicalism, and his professor mentioned the event in class.

Manganello rents the place he lives from another attendee, Roger Manela, who now is a social worker and also the guy who recruited Carl Oglesby to Students for a Democratic Society. That recruitment is described in detail in Chapters 2  and 3 of  Oglesby’s “Ravens in the Storm.” Oglesby served as the president of SDS from 1965-66.

Bill Ayers Ann Arbor book reading

Bill Ayers conveys something to Paul Courant, UM's dean of libraries, as Bernardine Dohrn speaks.

The first president of SDS (elected in 1960) was also on hand Monday evening in the form of Alan Haber. Haber remains active in the Ann Arbor community, currently focusing on the Megiddo Peace Project.

Haber’s high school teacher at University High was Scott Westerman. Westerman was superintendent of Ann Arbor schools when Ayers ran for school board. Westerman was also there for Ayers’ talk and stopped by the book-signing table afterwards to chat with Ayers and Dohrn.

And even if Ayers hasn’t been palling around with Barack Obama, it might be fair to say that he’s palled around with Karl Pohrt, owner of the independent bookstore Shaman Drum. On Sept. 11, 2001, Ayers had been scheduled to give a reading for “Fugitive Days” at the store when the events of that day canceled the reading. And Pohrt was at Hatcher on Monday – not really as an attendee, but as part host. Monday’s event was sponsored by Shaman Drum, and it was Pohrt who had pitched the idea to Paul Courant, University Librarian and UM Dean of Libraries, that UM could provide an appropriately-sized venue. Pohrt made introductory remarks on Monday.

That brings us back around to Jim Manganello, whose connection to Karl Pohrt is that he just finished a 3-week temporary stint working the textbook floor at Pohrt’s Shaman Drum.

Not everyone who attended could be linked up in similar fashion.

Oscar Whitehouse was there because he had no choice – he looked to be only a couple months old and was there with his mom, Melissa Stewart. Stewart said she and her husband were there because they wanted to hear Ayers speak first-hand. She didn’t think that the hype surrounding Ayers was fair, and after the talk concluded that their notion of Ayers was correct: “He’s really not crazy.”

Geoffrey Williams, a UM undergrad toting a giant chemistry textbook, said he would not be heeding Bill Ayer’s advice to go to Shaman Drum and buy a book (not necessarily his own) and read it. He was, however, planning to go to Shaman Drum afterward – to by a ticket to Homegrown: Poetry from the Ann Arbor Underground, which will be performed this Wednesday, Jan. 28, at Lydia Mendelssohn Theater in the Michigan League. [confirm date]

Bill Ayers Ann Arbor book reading

Alan Haber.

Julie Herrada, curator of the Labadie Collection at the UM library, was in attendance Monday.  Courant mentioned her in his introductory remarks because her exhibit, “The Whole World Was Watching: Protest and Revolution in 1968, Selections from theLabadie Collection,” was connected in topic and space to Monday’s talk. It had been on display in the same Room 100 at Hatcher Graduate Library  through Dec. 19, 2008.

Ken Magee, new director of UM’s Department of Public Safety, was there partly by virtue of his position. It was his responsibility, he said, to make sure it was a safe environment. But before his long career as a federal agent, he had grown up in Ann Arbor. He remembered riding his bicycle through the Diag. And he had a recollection of the events of the late ’60s in Ann Arbor, even if he had no recollection of Bill Ayers as a person.

Rich Tolman, a professor at UM’s School of Social Work, was hanging around after most of the room had emptied, waiting for the long line at the book signing table to slowly shrink. Tolman is a former colleague of Ayers at the University of Illinois at Chicago – their offices were on the same hallway. Tolman had exchanged some emails with Ayers before his arrival, and depending on the lateness of the hour when the signing was done, the two were perhaps heading out for a drink.

When The Chronicle left Hatcher Library and Tolman, he was sussing the problem of what downtown establishment would still be open past 11 p.m. Otherwise put, where do you take Bill Ayers for a drink in downtown Ann Arbor?

Bill Ayers

Left to Right: Karl Pohrt, Roger Manela, Alan Haber, Odile Hugenot Haber, Scott Westerman

Bill Ayers Ann Arbor book reading

Bill Ayers was entreated by several young people to pose for pictures with their newly-acquired book while flashing the peace sign. One young man (not this one) declared he would be finding Ayers on Facebook and friending him.

Bill Ayers Ann Arbor book reading

A crowd of 300-400 people in Room 100 of the Hatcher Graduate Library gathered to hear Bill Ayers and Bernardine Dohrn speak.

Bill Ayers Ann Arbor book reading

Bill Ayers and Bernardine Dohrn signing books after their talk.

Bill Ayers

Oscar Whitehouse was there because he had no choice. He was there with his mom, Melissa Stewart.

Bill Ayers Ann Arbor book reading

Library staff deployed another 150 chairs for a room initially set for 150.

Bill Ayers Ann Arbor book reading

Fox 2 News was on hand working for you. Channel 7 was also there on your side.

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