Re: [FairfieldLife] Re: What has Replaced It

2013-03-18 Thread Share Long
Plus many of the MSV buildings are very eco friendly.  I've visited one out in 
the country that's totally off the grid, everything run by solar power.
There's a little grouping of home just north of campus called Eco Village.  
I've also heard that some of homes have hot water radiator heat IN THE FLOORS!  
Now that'll keep the feet toasty during the long Iowa winters.


About the Carnegie building on campus:  I think it made Fairfield the first 
town west of the Mississippi to have 2 Carnegie libraries.  As for eye sores, 
IMHO, the pods definitely fell into that category and I'm glad they're gone.  
But of course, remembered with fondness (-:



 From: Alex Stanley j_alexander_stan...@yahoo.com
To: FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com 
Sent: Sunday, March 17, 2013 10:01 PM
Subject: [FairfieldLife] Re: What has Replaced It
 

  


--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Ann awoelflebater@... wrote:

 Here is a building disguised as a space ship or perhaps it is a large,
 perfectly formed breast. Maybe in hard times it will house soybeans or
 corn. I am not sure if the surrounding fence is to keep people in or
 people out.
 
 
 This building is not sure if it wants to represent some sort of Colonial
 facade or a pagoda. What the hell, it can be both!
 
 
 A tree-lined drive leading to the Fairfield Correctional Facility  - no
 wait! This is the Ayurvedic Center.
 
 
 Are we in Greece? Are we in India? Did three architects combine plans
 for this one? And the white picket fence just takes me back to small
 town America. No wait! I think we're in Vegas, where you can look out
 from on top of the Eiffel Tower across the street to Bellagio Italy and
 see the Chrysler Building kitty corner to that!
 
 
 
 Now if this doesn't get your aesthetic sensibilities salivating I don't
 know what will. I mean, these could double as Hampton Inns.  The only
 thing missing is the No Vacancy sign and the semis in the parking lot.
 
 
 I had a good time, I hope you all did too!


When they built the domes, they didn't waterproof the foundations, and when the 
heavy rains hit in the summer of 1993, the basement of the mens dome filled 
with mold to the extent that my breathing would halt as soon as I stepped in 
the door. So, I'd take a big breath, walk in, take off my shoes, and get 
upstairs as quickly as possible. The air upstairs in the dome wasn't as bad as 
the basement, but I'd get a headache from being in there. The only reason I was 
even in the dome is because Petra wanted me to go, and that summer was my 
breaking point. Thus ended my toil with the TMSP.

As for the chapel, when I went to MIU, that was where meditators had to 
meditate. It was cold, drafty, and moldy, and the wooden pews were very 
uncomfortable. I have no fond memories of that place, and I was perfectly 
content with it being torn down.

I'm not fond of the masculine, angular architecture of most MSV buildings in 
FF, but if they're solidly built, well insulated, with good HVAC and no mold, 
I'd take that, regardless of aesthetics, over some nasty, poorly built or old 
and dilapidated, mold-filled piece of crap.


 

[FairfieldLife] Re: What has Replaced It

2013-03-18 Thread Richard J. Williams

Ann:
 Here is a building disguised as a space ship or perhaps
 it is a large, perfectly formed breast...

It sort of looks like a Buddhist stupa. LoL!




Buddhist Stupa at Sanchi circa 200 BC.



[FairfieldLife] Re: What has Replaced It

2013-03-18 Thread Richard J. Williams
  Here is a building disguised as a space ship or perhaps
  it is a large, perfectly formed breast...
 
 It sort of looks like a Buddhist stupa. LoL!

If it looks like a Buddhist Stupa it probably is a Buddhist
Stupa. LoL!

 


[FairfieldLife] Re: What has Replaced It

2013-03-17 Thread seventhray27

One of your best Ann.  You hit the mark on this.  At least with the
commentary!


--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Ann awoelflebater@... wrote:

 Here is a building disguised as a space ship or perhaps it is a large,
 perfectly formed breast. Maybe in hard times it will house soybeans or
 corn. I am not sure if the surrounding fence is to keep people in or
 people out.


 This building is not sure if it wants to represent some sort of
Colonial
 facade or a pagoda. What the hell, it can be both!


 A tree-lined drive leading to the Fairfield Correctional Facility - no
 wait! This is the Ayurvedic Center.


 Are we in Greece? Are we in India? Did three architects combine plans
 for this one? And the white picket fence just takes me back to small
 town America. No wait! I think we're in Vegas, where you can look out
 from on top of the Eiffel Tower across the street to Bellagio Italy
and
 see the Chrysler Building kitty corner to that!



 Now if this doesn't get your aesthetic sensibilities salivating I
don't
 know what will. I mean, these could double as Hampton Inns. The only
 thing missing is the No Vacancy sign and the semis in the parking
lot.


 I had a good time, I hope you all did too!





[FairfieldLife] Re: What has Replaced It

2013-03-17 Thread Ann


--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, seventhray27 steve.sundur@... wrote:

 
 One of your best Ann.  You hit the mark on this.  At least with the
 commentary!

See Steve, you are a nice guy and you can laugh easily. I am sure I have pissed 
off a number of people here but it was all in good fun (for me, at least). I 
have a feeling Feste may be having apoplexy right now. 
 
 
 --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Ann awoelflebater@ wrote:
 
  Here is a building disguised as a space ship or perhaps it is a large,
  perfectly formed breast. Maybe in hard times it will house soybeans or
  corn. I am not sure if the surrounding fence is to keep people in or
  people out.
 
 
  This building is not sure if it wants to represent some sort of
 Colonial
  facade or a pagoda. What the hell, it can be both!
 
 
  A tree-lined drive leading to the Fairfield Correctional Facility - no
  wait! This is the Ayurvedic Center.
 
 
  Are we in Greece? Are we in India? Did three architects combine plans
  for this one? And the white picket fence just takes me back to small
  town America. No wait! I think we're in Vegas, where you can look out
  from on top of the Eiffel Tower across the street to Bellagio Italy
 and
  see the Chrysler Building kitty corner to that!
 
 
 
  Now if this doesn't get your aesthetic sensibilities salivating I
 don't
  know what will. I mean, these could double as Hampton Inns. The only
  thing missing is the No Vacancy sign and the semis in the parking
 lot.
 
 
  I had a good time, I hope you all did too!
 





[FairfieldLife] Re: What has Replaced It

2013-03-17 Thread seventhray27


--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Ann awoelflebater@... wrote:
 See Steve, you are a nice guy and you can laugh easily. I am sure I
have pissed off a number of people here but it was all in good fun (for
me, at least). I have a feeling Feste may be having apoplexy right now.


I'll bet you coaxed a giggle out of him (-:



[FairfieldLife] Re: What has Replaced It

2013-03-17 Thread Alex Stanley


--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Ann awoelflebater@... wrote:

 Here is a building disguised as a space ship or perhaps it is a large,
 perfectly formed breast. Maybe in hard times it will house soybeans or
 corn. I am not sure if the surrounding fence is to keep people in or
 people out.
 
 
 This building is not sure if it wants to represent some sort of Colonial
 facade or a pagoda. What the hell, it can be both!
 
 
 A tree-lined drive leading to the Fairfield Correctional Facility  - no
 wait! This is the Ayurvedic Center.
 
 
 Are we in Greece? Are we in India? Did three architects combine plans
 for this one? And the white picket fence just takes me back to small
 town America. No wait! I think we're in Vegas, where you can look out
 from on top of the Eiffel Tower across the street to Bellagio Italy and
 see the Chrysler Building kitty corner to that!
 
 
 
 Now if this doesn't get your aesthetic sensibilities salivating I don't
 know what will. I mean, these could double as Hampton Inns.  The only
 thing missing is the No Vacancy sign and the semis in the parking lot.
 
 
 I had a good time, I hope you all did too!


When they built the domes, they didn't waterproof the foundations, and when the 
heavy rains hit in the summer of 1993, the basement of the mens dome filled 
with mold to the extent that my breathing would halt as soon as I stepped in 
the door. So, I'd take a big breath, walk in, take off my shoes, and get 
upstairs as quickly as possible. The air upstairs in the dome wasn't as bad as 
the basement, but I'd get a headache from being in there. The only reason I was 
even in the dome is because Petra wanted me to go, and that summer was my 
breaking point. Thus ended my toil with the TMSP.

As for the chapel, when I went to MIU, that was where meditators had to 
meditate. It was cold, drafty, and moldy, and the wooden pews were very 
uncomfortable. I have no fond memories of that place, and I was perfectly 
content with it being torn down.

I'm not fond of the masculine, angular architecture of most MSV buildings in 
FF, but if they're solidly built, well insulated, with good HVAC and no mold, 
I'd take that, regardless of aesthetics, over some nasty, poorly built or old 
and dilapidated, mold-filled piece of crap.



[FairfieldLife] Re: What has Replaced It

2013-03-17 Thread seventhray27

I'd like to thank Alex for being the moderator of this Sunday's edition
of Face the Situation


--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Alex Stanley
j_alexander_stanley@... wrote:

 When they built the domes, they didn't waterproof the foundations, and
when the heavy rains hit in the summer of 1993, the basement of the mens
dome filled with mold to the extent that my breathing would halt as soon
as I stepped in the door. So, I'd take a big breath, walk in, take off
my shoes, and get upstairs as quickly as possible. The air upstairs in
the dome wasn't as bad as the basement, but I'd get a headache from
being in there. The only reason I was even in the dome is because Petra
wanted me to go, and that summer was my breaking point. Thus ended my
toil with the TMSP.

 As for the chapel, when I went to MIU, that was where meditators had
to meditate. It was cold, drafty, and moldy, and the wooden pews were
very uncomfortable. I have no fond memories of that place, and I was
perfectly content with it being torn down.

 I'm not fond of the masculine, angular architecture of most MSV
buildings in FF, but if they're solidly built, well insulated, with good
HVAC and no mold, I'd take that, regardless of aesthetics, over some
nasty, poorly built or old and dilapidated, mold-filled piece of crap.





[FairfieldLife] Re: What has Replaced It

2013-03-17 Thread Alex Stanley
http://youtu.be/6sdVx5gQz6w

--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, seventhray27 steve.sundur@... wrote:

 
 I'd like to thank Alex for being the moderator of this Sunday's edition
 of Face the Situation
 
 
 --- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, Alex Stanley
 j_alexander_stanley@ wrote:
 
  When they built the domes, they didn't waterproof the foundations, and
 when the heavy rains hit in the summer of 1993, the basement of the mens
 dome filled with mold to the extent that my breathing would halt as soon
 as I stepped in the door. So, I'd take a big breath, walk in, take off
 my shoes, and get upstairs as quickly as possible. The air upstairs in
 the dome wasn't as bad as the basement, but I'd get a headache from
 being in there. The only reason I was even in the dome is because Petra
 wanted me to go, and that summer was my breaking point. Thus ended my
 toil with the TMSP.
 
  As for the chapel, when I went to MIU, that was where meditators had
 to meditate. It was cold, drafty, and moldy, and the wooden pews were
 very uncomfortable. I have no fond memories of that place, and I was
 perfectly content with it being torn down.
 
  I'm not fond of the masculine, angular architecture of most MSV
 buildings in FF, but if they're solidly built, well insulated, with good
 HVAC and no mold, I'd take that, regardless of aesthetics, over some
 nasty, poorly built or old and dilapidated, mold-filled piece of crap.