By Mary Williams

Daily Bruin Senior Staff Over 20 years ago, a student crawled through a smoke vent on the roof of Royce Hall, trying to sneak into a Cannonball Adderly tribute. He accidentally snapped off a sprinkler head on a fire line, letting loose 165 pounds of water pressure and flooding the building. The fire department arrived to find no fire, but four inches of water in the dressing rooms and organ blower room. Furthermore, a cable carrying 2,600 pairs of telephone lines was filled with water and short circuited, which caused a small fire in the General Telephone service building in Westwood. Phones in the UCLA Medical Center were out of order for over six hours as a result. A lot of incredible events, though most less absurd than this one, have occurred at Royce Hall in the past 72 years. And through its long history here at UCLA, Royce has come to represent the university as a whole and reflect its changing character. The building, completed in 1929, was the first to be constructed when the university planned a move from its Vermont Avenue location to the Westwood Hills. Architect David Allison, who also designed several buildings on the original campus, built Royce to function as the main classroom building, in addition to housing an auditorium. Ernest Carroll Moore, the first provost of UCLA, chose Josiah Royce as the namesake of the hall. Charles H. Reiber originally suggested Royce as a name for what is now Powell Library according to the book “Royce Hall” by James Klain and Arnold J. Band. “His name will not be used if we attach it to the library,” Moore is reported to have responded. “Let us ask the Regents instead to call our chief classroom building for him; then he will always be named whenever that building is referred to.” Josiah Royce was a philosopher who taught at UC Berkeley and Harvard. Moore had been a colleague of his, and Reiber had been his student during his graduate studies, both at the latter university. Royce spent a great deal of time in Germany and helped bring to America, the German ideal of higher education institutions functioning to search for truth rather than to just impart knowledge. At the suggestion of Moore, the building is a monument to education as well as a place for it to occur. The loggias, the vaulted ceilings above the six large arches in the building’s facade, are painted to represent medieval professions and the education of the world. On the first floor, the painted loggias depict the study and practice of the graphic arts, education, language, biology, history, mathematics, literature-drama, philosophy, chemistry, music, physics and astronomy. For the loggias on third floor, Moore named 12 revolutionary thinkers who he thought represented the great leaps in knowledge, from ancient times to modern. Socrates, Christ, Aristotle and Plato represent the ancient world, Abelad, Petrarch, Loyola and Melanchthon the medieval, and Immanuel Kant, Charles Darwin, Charles W. Eliot and Albert Einstein the modern. At the time, Einstein was the only living person to be included. “Lest the young people who come here may think these are just names of men who never lived at all, take one living man, the greatest of living scientists, Albert Einstein,” said Moore according to “Royce Hall.” Over the years, Royce has come to represent not just the educational ideals that Moore was interested in, but also popular and classical entertainment. The auditorium’s original design allowed for a boxing ring to be set up, fitting in with the vision that Royce was a building for the students. Even the performances that took place in Royce Hall were incredibly student-oriented. The first shows were performed and attended by students. “(Moore) wanted the students and the faculty to do the performing,” said James Klain, the author of “Royce Hall,” in a phone interview. A few years after the auditorium opened, a stream of notable speakers came to its stage. Appearing at Royce only three years after it was finished, nobel laureate Albert Einstein drew a full crowd for his lecture, delivered in German. Other nobel laureates who spoke in the Royce auditorium include poet T.S. Eliot in 1933, philosopher Bertrand Russell in 1939, chemist Linus Pauling in 1958 and UN undersecretary and UCLA alumnus Ralph Bunche in 1961. Prominent popular music artists including Ella Fitzgerald, Bob Dylan and Simon and Garfunkel, took the stage in the 1960s, followed by Elton John, Frank Zappa and The Ramones, among others, in the ’70s. In the 1980s, Royce played a part in the Los Angeles-hosted Olympics. Some of the cultural events, customary counterparts to the games, were held in Royce. The well-regarded Royal Shakespeare Company performed for two weeks as part of that program. The building also underwent its first major restoration in this decade. Starting in 1984, it was closed for 18 months to improve the acoustics and seating of the auditorium. Also, the equipment in the boiler room, which originally provided hot water to the campus, was removed and an addition was made in the west side of the building. Following the Northridge earthquake in 1994, a major emergency seismic renovation was required. “We were very interested in treating it better than it had been treated in the past,” said Barton Phelps, FAIA, the design architect on the project and an adjunct professor in the department of architecture and urban design. Tens of millions of dollars were spent to re-align the towers, which had shifted six inches out of place, strengthening the structure and further updating the acoustics of the auditorium to accommodate both speakers and musicians. The building almost doubled in weight, from its original 40 million pounds to 70 million after concrete supports were added. “We like to say we inserted a new building in the old building and no one can tell,” said Phelps. When it reopened, the auditorium was host to a gala event where Paul Reiser, Stevie Wonder, Paul Simon, Don Henly, John Lithgow, James Galway, Heather Locklear, Sidney Poitier and Carol Burnett made appearances. With the addition of Elvis Costello as the artist-in-residence, performances are scheduled to include acts like Sonic Youth and All Tomorrow’s Parties. Royce is a building that not only reflects and represents the student body, but also, in cases like the flood-causing Cannonball Adderly fan, has been affected by it. Through its popular speakers, rock concerts and educational prowess, Royce is a building that represents the student body and the spirit of UCLA.

With reports from Antero Garcia, Daily Bruin Senior Staff.





ROYCE HALL'S ASYMMETRY

Some of the building's architectual inconsistencies. Can you find the rest?

KEY

1. Three windows on left, two on right 2. Three windows on left, two on right 3. Two windows on left that are not on the right side. 4. Windows are different. 5. Different width of brick in detailing. 6. Different number of stripes. 7. Stripes offset on right tower. 8. Two blocks on left, three blocks on right. 9. Top bricks longer on top, and don't match on bottom 10. Bricks connect on right, jagged on left 11. Pattern in arches over three doors is different 12. Brick decoration over the nine windows is different. 13. Brick decoration over the three windows is different. 14. Bricks over the three arches are different. 15. White stones are asymmetrical around the three windows 16. Brick medallion 17. Bricks arranged differently around two windows. 18. Only windows with grating. 19. Symbol over each arch is different 20. Bricks sunken on right tower, flat on left. 21. White stone goes higher on left tower. 22. Inner decoration of windows is different. 23. The one column on the right tower interrupts the small arches that cross it. The two columns on the left run between the arches but don't cross them. 24. The columns on the left are round, the column on the right is flat. x 16 brick difference - 41 inconsistent bricks on the two towers