,mow.;..:.. ;: t _ .. ;. .. .. ., ... , . .. The Michigan Daily-Friday, January 29, 1982-Page 9 U- M Department of Theatre and Drama Presents Frederick Knott's Eononni health improves; SOfficials, From AP and UPI WASHINGTON - The most sensitive economic indicators climbed last mon- th for the first time since July, the government reported yesterday, but cautious administration spokesmen infused to say the recession is coming f"an end. The Commerce Department said its ,.index of leading economic indicators - 'esigned to foreshadow changes in economic trends - went up 0.6 percent in December. COMMERCE Secretary Malcolm y redict Baldrige said his department's report was "welcome news...and suggests that the recession may soon touch bottom." Baldrige said parts of the report "signal possible further declines in out- put in early 1982 and some further sof- tening in labor markets." The Labor Department came up with a mixed report on productivity, a key to economic progress and declining in- flation.. THE DEPARTMENT said produc- tivity tumbled a record 7.2 percent during the last three months of 1981. Daily Classifieds Get Results- Call 764-0557 I[DILc&Th M 70a 5-55) IMVMM)K recovery President Reagan, the first to declare the economy was in recession, told the nation Tuesday night that recovery would come in the latter half of the year. But Michael Evans, president of Evans Economics in Wshington, said continued high interest rates threaten to keep the recovegy from amounting to much. "The slide has stopped, but I don't see that big boom that the Reagan people are talking about," he said. Feb., 3-6, 8:00 pm Mendelssohn Theatre Tickets at PTP Mich. league, 764-0450 Poland claims rise in T : T fl 0 From AP and UPI WARSAW, Poland - Polish officials charged yesterday that CIA agents working under cover in the US Em- bassy had aided Solidarity trade unionists and helped push Poland to the "'brink of anarchy." Col. Zhigniew Wislocki of the Interior ,Ministry's counter-intelligence service told foreign journalists that U.S. ,'special services" helped extremist members of the independent union Solidarity, suspended since martial law Swasimposed Dec. 13. THE CHARGES by Wislocki, who named seven Americans in other coun- tides who allegedly sought to ,recruit, Poles for intelligence activity here, ap- peared to be in response to U.S. aid sanctions and a U.S. government program attacking martial law which is planned for worldwide telecast Sun- day. Wislocki spoke for more than an hour after reporters were shown five special TV programs on spying in Poland. He was flanked by a museum-like exhibit of gadgets and publications, including special radios, cameras, ink and tape recorders taken from alleged spies. The programs contended two former employees of the U.S. Embassy here were involved in intelligence activities, and a thuied American diplomat for- merly stationed here had been "trained by the CIA" and was forced to leave af- ter receiving a dissident document. J. spying THEY ALSO named Alicja Weslolwska, a Pole sentenced to prison in 1980 here for allegedly spying for the CIA while working for the United. Nations. Asked if he blamed intelligence work for the rise of Solidarity, the first union free of Communist Party control in the Soviet bloc, Wislocki said that some "negative" successes of extremists 'aiping to destroy the state could be blamed to "a large extent on the actions iof special services." 'THE POLISH charges came-as unof- ficial sources said some top leaders of Solidar-ity are being treated more har- shly than other Poles interned since martial law was declared Dec. 13 and may be put on trial. SummerSu NAME r ADDRESS PHONE_ Mail ad and payment or bring in person to: 420 Maynard Street Make checks payable to: The Michigan Daily 'Only$12 before 5 p.m February 22, 1982 ($14 from February 23 to March 19) Absolutely I nfooads accepted r Plea SMarc/i 19 the' Supplement will - 9 iblet An -i Supplement' I .the summer, Smodern house thruAUG i oomas 0vailable 3edroom house. m campus & Arb pS om Central Rec. Op Y FURNISHED Basher 1 Dryer & tt )ishwasher - BACKYARD -getbe garden plot sf FRONT PORCH egotiable eryl or Bruce ze of ad) NO REFUNDSII pe legibly in the is you would like r. ir March26, 1982 Old Haven fire memories rekindled by Econ blaze (Continued from Page 1) 'scene. "We emptied the barn," Brown said. He said he was at the fire con- tinuously for 17 hours. ", Prof. Dean Baker of the com- munication department was a jour- nalism instructor at the University in 1950. He recalled the fire clearly. "I WAS AT home and a neighbor :came over and said'Haven Hall is bur- n;0g" Baker said. By the time he airived on campus, he said the blaze was "pretty far along." Baker confirmed there was a large -rowd of spectators, but said "20,000 sounds on the high side." He said students helped professors bring out typewriters, exams, and an Associated Press teletlfpe. One student was overcome by smoke, and had to be treated at University Health Service. Several firefighters were also injured. It was final exam time at the Univer- sity when the fire started; and several tests had to be rescheduled to Hill Auditorium. Students who lost papers or tests in the fire were not required to make them up. "According to Zahn, automatic sprinklers would have extinguished the fite before it got a chance to spread, had they been installed. Ironically, the Fire Marshall that year listed the Economics Building as a fire hazard. Unlike the situation this year, the state legislature then took immediate action. Within two weeks, an initial ap- propriation of $1.5 million was granted to get construction of a new building un- oderway. The old building, which occupied a site between N. University and Angell Hall, was neverrebuilt. It wasn't until autumn of that year that police apprehended a suspect in the case. Robert Stacy, 30-year-old Latin teaching assistant who was studying for his doctorate, was arrested at his rooming house Oct. 10,1950. Teachers described Stacy as an ex- cellent, though moody, student. He made academic honors every year at the University. Police broke the case on a tip from a nurse, Zelda Mae Clarkson, Stacy's former girlfriend. Clarkson had filed a petition asking that Stacy be committed to a mental institution. She said he had ' TAKE TI Help New Stu the Diversity BEA ORIEN1 LEA admited setting the Haven Hall fire and had threatehed her life. Stacy confessed shortly after being arrested. He twice tried to take his own life, but was prevented from doing so by police officers. - Despite the fact that he later repudiated his confession, Stacy was found guilty of arson after a four-day trial in December 1950. He was given a minimum sentence, five to ten yearsnin prison. Haven Hall housed several depar- tments of the Literary College at the time of the fire. The journalism depar- tment was the hardest hit, losing vir- tually all of its records, 'including the complete files of The Michigan Jour- nalist. "The Departmherits of History 'and Sociology, also housed in the old Haven Hall, lost most of their records as 'well. Doctoral dissertations and research materials, many without duplicates, were destroyed. History Professor Palmer Throop lost the entire manuscript of a book he had written on the Italian Renaissance, plus the books on which the research was based. Professor Dwight Dumond, also of the history department, lost more than 15 years of research on the southern anti-slavery movement. The blaze also destroyed the exten- sive Bureau of Government Library. Only 1,500 of nearly 50,000 classified items dealing with city,. county, and state government were salvaged. Most items had been painstakingly collected over many years. Zahn said the fire apparently started in the northeast section of the building's attic. It spread rapidly and engulfed the library in the south wing shortly thereafter. The Haven Hall fire was not the only blaze to strike the campus before the Economics Building burned. On Aug. 12, 1911, the west wing of an old medical building burned all night, causing $50,000 damage. The south wing of old University Hall caught fire on May 28, 1913, resulting in $54,000 in damages. The most spectacular fire prior to the Haven Hall outbreak occurred on Feb. 1, 1927. A blaze destroyed the con- valescent section of the University Hospital, causing $66,000 damage, but 278 patients were safely evacuated. EVERY THURSDAY NIGHT AT WINSTON'S PUB h &IiderS ANN ARBOR " 769-9400 3600 Plymouth Rad. In the Marriott Inn (Actual si ase print or typ ce provided, a copy to appeo i W a p pe HE LEAD dents Discover of Michigan FALL iATION DER