EXTRA 1Mw ujrn 4at14 EXTRA Latest Deadline intthe State L. LX, No. 169 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN WEDNESDAY, JUNE 7, 1950 FOUR PAGES i tudents Help Fight Blaze: I II I I I pectators Help, * * * * *N 0 nder Firemen Thousands Crowd Scene of Fire, Scores of Students Volunteer Aid By LEON JAROFF (Daily Managing Editor) A huge crowd, estimated at 20,- 000, watched, helped, and hin- dered Ann Arbor firemen as they. fought yesterday's disasterous Ha- ven Hall fire. Minutes after the billowing white smoke began to pour from the roof of Haven Hall, thousands of students and townspeople had completely ringed the burning building, hindering firemen and volunteers as they struggled to bring hoses within effective range. SOON AFTER city and state po- lice had roped off the danger areas, a burning sections of .ledges and roofing began to fall where, only a few minutes before, crowds of onlookers had stood. Scores of students Immediate- ly volunteered their services to Exams To Be Given in Hill SAuditorium Examinations scheduled for Ha- ven Hall will be given at the regu- lar times today and for the re- maining exam period in Hill Audi- torium, according to Dean Hay- ward Keniston of the literary col- lege. Signs will designate the place I-r specific courses in the audi- torium and lapboards will be pro- vided for students. Dean Keniston estimated that about 450 students were scheduled for exams today in Haven Hall. The exams were changed to Hill Auditorium after a hasty confer- ence held last night between Dean Earl V. Moore, t.f the Music School and University Vice President Rob- ert P. Briggs. Dean Keniston urged all stu- dents and faculty members to come to the auditorium 15 min- utes early to facilitate exam ad- ministering. EXAMINATIONS listed for 9 a.m. to 12 noon today in Hill Au- ditorium are history 42, history 171, journalism 142, sociology 166 and 180. Exam writing students will not be disturbed by workmen remodeling the Auditorium or- gan, according to Dean Moore. Work will be partially discon- tinued and parts of the organ will be moved out of the audi- torium, but the work will be finished this week, he said. Vice President Briggs said he will ask radio stations WHRV, WPAG and WUOM to make spot Ann Arbor's undermanned fire department. One of the first hoses to reach the second floor of the building was dragged up a front fire es- cape by 15 students, some in suits and ties. Later, this same group narrowly escaped injury when a mass of blazing wreckage slid from the roof, missing them by only a few feet. ** * SMALL GROUPS of students and an occasional faculty member plunged into the building repeat- edly to rescue records, typewriters, and stacks of newly-written blue- books. Prof. Arthur Bromage, a city councilman, vainly urged them to stay out of danger as the flames closed in. But some, faculty and stu- dents alike, faced with the loss of unfinished doctoral theses and documents representing years of grueling work, remained in the building until flames made fur- ther search impossible. An occasional bit of comic relief brought cheers and laughter from the crowd. Three students on the second floor of the blazing build- ing threw stacks of uncorrected final bluebooks to "safety" below. Fire hose couplings came loose occasionally in the midst of the crowd, drenching hundreds of stu- dents to the skin. Very few left to dry off, however. Many journalism students, who had been in the midst of final ex- aminations when the fire routed them from Havenl Hall, stood among the crowd, their unfinished bluebooks clutched in their hands. One student finished his final on the steps of Angell Hall and searched through the crowd until he found his professor. The blue- book was accepted by the surprised professor who commented that it was "a little late but permissible in the light of present circum- stances." An art student, completely ab- sorbed in his work, sat with his back to the scene of destruction, calmly sketching a mother and child who were watching the fire. As darkness closed in, search- lights were played on the still- smouldering ruins, directing water streams toward the remaining danger spots. And the feelings of the dwind- ling crowd were expressed simply but effectively by an Ann Arbor housewife as she turned to leave. "It's a tragedy," she sighed. "It's a tragedy." Sociology Offices Moved to Mason . Temporary departmental of- fices for the sociology depart- Ancient Building Called Total Loss Cause of Fire As Yet Undetermined; Rumors of Arson To Be Checked By DAVE THOMAS The University's 87-year-old Haven Hall was completely gutted by a fire of undetermined origin yesterday despite the efforts of firemen, police, and swarms of students and faculty members who battled the blaze for more than four hours before finally bringing it under control at 9 p.m. Officials tentatively placed the loss at $3,000,000. The building and. its., contents. were ..ompletely cQvered by_. Oe insurance, they said. Cause of the fire which apparently started in the attic of the center section of the brick and sandstone building, has not yet been determined but police and fire officials have promised a full investigation. Rumors of possible. arson will be fully checked, according to Fire Chief Ben Zahn. Six Ann Arbor fire trucks poured an estimated 700,000 gallons of water into the flaming building which housed the departments of history, sociology, and journalism and the University's extensive Bureau of Government Library. FIRE CHIEF ZAHN described the blaze as the worst Ann Arbor fire which he has seen since joining the force 34 years ago. The building was completely gutted, down to the ground floor. Walls, floors and stairways were completely destroyed. The fire was first noticed shortly after 4:30 p.m. simultaneously by students and faculty members in various parts of the second and third floors. * * * * INVESTIGATION disclosed smoke and flame pouring from the attic which runs the entire length of the building. By that time, a quick-thinking student, Alvin Kaplan, '51, had set off the alarm system and calls were put in to the fire department. The first trucks and police cars arrived five minutes after the call was put in. As they drew up, students, many of whom had been writing final examinations only minutes before, were filing out of the building in an orderly fashion. OTHERS WHO HAD snatched fire extinguishers and pushed to the upper floors, were being forced down the stairways by smoke and heat. Several faculty members and graduate students attempted to re-enter the building to save research work and documents. Students from a gathering crowd which grew to immense pro- portions - almost 20,000 at :one time according to police estimate - rushed to help on the undermanned fire trucks. MORE TRUCKS AND POLICE began arriving as the police and fire departments called into action both their day and night crews. Meanwhile the fire was racing the entire length of the attic and breaking through the roof of the three-story structure at both ends. Students from the journalism department lugged a score of typewriters and the Associated Press Teletype machine out onto the lawn in front of Haven Hall. A few books and files were dumped from the windows. -Daily-Ed Kozma HAVEN HALL GUTTED-Flames of undetermined origin completely destroyed the interior of Haven Hall late yesterday as hundreds of students, faculty and firemen from an airplane piloted by Bob was described by Ann Arbor Fire battled desperately to save the 87-year-old structure. This picture, taken by a Daily photographer Gach, shows smoke from the three million dollar, blaze billowing high above the campus. The fire Chief Ben Zahn as the worst fire in the city since he joined the force thirty-four years ago. Legislature May Review U' Budget The State Legislature may want to reconsider University appro- priations, when it returns June 20, in the light of the destruction of Haven Hall. President Alexander G. Ruth- ven said last night that he had "told the legislature committee for years what we could expect. Some of these buildings have been condemned for years." The possibility that the Legisla- ture may want to take action was suggested by Gov. G. Mennen Wil- liams who added that he will "im- mediately look into the question of rebuilding." The University suggested to the State Legislature in 1946 that Haven Hall, Romance Language, University Hall, South Wingand Mason Hall be torn down and re- placed by additions to Angell Hall. The other buildings are of the same brick and wood construction as Haven. The plans for replace- ment of some of them are already made, according to Vice-President Marvin Niehuss, but the money has not been made available. State Fire Marshall Arnold t3 -.r.- - * san i1Y n n BOOKS, THESES BURNED: Fire Destroys ears of Faculty Work Several faculty members saw years of their work disappear for- ever among the flames that gutted Haven Hall yesterday. It was impossible last night to ascertain how many manuscripts of books, theses and research pro- jects were destroyed, but many ir- replaceable losses had already been reported. PROF. DWIGHT DUMOND, of the history department, lost notes representing 15 years of research on the southern anti-slavery move- ment, in addition to letters and pamphlets on the subject. Ironi- cally, he had completed the trans- fer of the material to Haven Hall yesterday morning, intending to CALM AND COOL: Student Gives Fire Alarm AfterEncountering Smoke write a two-volume work on anti- slavery in the fall. Prof. Dumond entered his see- ond-floor office via a fireescape at 7 p.m. yesterday, and rescued a few anti-slavery pamphlets be- fore firemen forced him to leave the building. Five minutes later, the roof collapsed on the office where he had been struggling to recover the pamphlets. "There were so many personal tragedies, it's difficult to enumer- ate them," Prof. Theodore New- comb, of the psychology and socio- logy departments, said last night. "Nearly everyone in our depart- ment lost his entire professional library." MANY LOST VALUABLE re- search material, he added, "espec- ially Prof. Amos Hawley and Ron- ald Freedman, who lost irreplace- able research data that required years to accumulate. Several doc- toral candidates lost their entire dissertations." Prof. Palmer Throop, of the history department, lost the manuscript of a book he had completed on the Italian ren- aissance, plus the books on which he had basedhis research, and also his personal library. "I will write the book again," Prof. Throop said last night. By AL BLUMROSEN (tDaily City Editor) "I think your building is burn- ing cown." That was the first word of the fire that journalism students on the secornd floor of Haven flail had yesterday afternoon. They came from Alvin Kaplan, '51, 22 years old, of Grosse Pointe. He was the first person to realize there was a fire. "I was going up to the third floor of Haven Hall to see a pro- fessor when I noticed smoke com- ing out of the second floor room," Kaplan said. T40S, im-.irfi n rni nA c P pouring from the walls and ceil- ings- "I ran down to the journalism offices where students were study- ing and told them about it." Kap- lan had read somewhere that you are not supposed to get panicky, so he talked quietly. "Everyone believed me," he said. After that he smashed a fire alarm box. This was at 4:45 p.m. "Then I went up to the third floor to warn anyone up there," he continued. "Smoke was coming from the ceilings." Kaplan thinks the fire broke out in the roof. . * AS THE CROWD GREW and police stretched guard ropes, the fire raged furiously out of control. One fireman was slightly injured in a fall from the east wall and several students were overcome by smoke and treated in the Health Service. Angell Hall was emptied and locked so that no one would be caught should the fire spread. Heavy streams of water were concentrated on southwest corner of Haven Hall where the 50,- 000 documents and books of the government library were going