THE MICHIGAN IAILY FRIDAY, MAY 30, 1952 MO-am'' 4 UTOMATIC GARAGES: Mayor Outlines New Parking Areas 'Next Week Airks Anniversary Describing the parking system in nn Arbor as one of the most suc- essful in the country, Mayor Wil- am E. Brown in an interview ith the Daily yesterday outlined uture plans for the erection of wio new parking structures. With the parking structures still 1 the planning stage, Brown said hat he hopes to make a definite nnouncement of the details of he proposal late this summer. 5* *c "THE NEED for 250 more car capacity in the State Street area and additional parking space in the downtown South Main Street area could be solved by building two multi-deck, automatic type garages," Brown said. "Attractively designed the structures would be nine stories high with accomodation for 250 cars per unit," Brown indicated. "Estimated cost of the buildings would be between $350,000 and $400,000 each or about $1400 per car space." Cost of the buildings could be met from revenue bonds sold on look Store Collections for the fall SL book the jrorlts aerived rrom city-own- :change will begin next Thursday ed parking meters and the six city id extend through June 12, Parking lots. Special agents will collect texts IMMEDIATE action on his pro- .dormitories, and collection de-____ED_ ATE__cion__nh___pr_-_ ts will be set up at the Union, e Business Administration Bldg., Opera Records igell Hall and on the Diagonal. ooks may be turned in at these Union Opera records will be dis- ands between 11:30 a.m. and tributed from 7 to 10 p.m. tonight 30 p.m. Next fall the exchange will op. in Rm. 3G of the Michigan Union. ate from Rm. 18 Angell Hall. Records are $4.75. posal is being held up temporarily by discussion of a compromise University plan, Brown said. Going on to point out the ben- efits of the parking system in Ann Arbor since its inception in 1945, Brown declared that com- merce and retail business has been greatly aided by more ade- quate parking facilities. "Shoppers no longer need to go into Detroit to buy since the park- ing problem has been solved here," Brown continued. "During the past year 300,000 cars or the equivalent of 12,000 miles of automobiles parked bumper-to-bumper were accomodated by the parking sys- tem." With a $100,000 profit per year going into an improvement fund, the system has the cheapest meter rate in the country, 10 cents for two hours and five for each addi- tional hour. Justifying city ownership of the parking system the Republican mayor declared, "cities should not go into business unless the public needs and demands service pri- vate enterprise cannot accomplish. Wolverine Club Selects Officers Larry Bloch, '53, president of the Wolverine Club announced next year's appointments yester- day. New officers are, Ken Cutler, '54 and Robin Renfrew, '55, Special Trips; Dorothy Fink, '55 and Jack Gray, '53, Flash Cards; Bob Ber- man, '53 and Joel Kaplan, '55, Pep Rallies; Janet Reinstein, '55, Exe- cutive Secretary. Of Capu Hen FOLLETT'S will buy, Hal Fire By ERIC VETTER. HAVEN HALL, once a campus landmark, became a charred ruin two years ago next Friday. A roaring four-hour long blaze reduced the three story stone structure to a gutted pile of destruction in the worst fire Ann Arbor has ever known. *,* * * MORE THAN $3,000,000 damage resulted from the holocaust which also laid waste countless man hours of work on manuscripts and research papers. Fire fighters manning the twisted bulky hoses pumped 700,- 000 gallons of water into the raging building. Often those man- ping the hoses were forced to race from falling debris and re treat from clouds of smoke emerging from the building. Only a few books and typewriters were salvaged from the blazing inferno which raged unabated until 9 p.m. when it was gradually brought under control. Final examinations, research papers and many rare books were reduced to ashes. AS STUDENTS busily finished final examinations in the building Alvin Kaplan, '51, spotted smoke pouring out of a second story room. Unusually calm, Kaplan quickly spread the alarm to other students and then smashed the fire alarm box. Police cars and fire trucks raced to the scene with their piercing sirens attracting hundreds' of on- lookers. As they arrived most of the building was cleared of students who switched from bluebooks to posts on fire hoses. Faculty mem- bers and students vainly tried to check the blaze with hand ex- tinguishers, attempting to rescue their research work. Spreading flames and heavy smoke finally caused a complete. abandonment of the building. Meanwhile, hoses were dragged up fire escapes and their operators deluged the upper floors with water while-other hoses were played on lower levels from the ground. PEOPLE FROM ALL parts of town, lured by the billowing smoke as it rose skyward, swelled the crowd watching to 20,000 at one time. Students skipped their evening meals to aid the fire department, or to just take in the spectacle. Health Service received emergency cases of students who were overcome by the smoke. One fireman fell from the east wall and suffered slight injuries. Powerful search lights were rushed to the scene as night fell, Under their steady glare mopping-up operations continued late into the evening. When it was over, Fire Chief Ben Zahn shrugged, "If it hadn't been for the students there's no telling how far the fire might have gone." Stacy ArsonC CooRnec In Haven Fire Recalled. HAVEN HALL STANDS The three story stone structure-a campus landmark before the disaster. 11 YOUR COLLEGE TEXTBOOKS. for CASH at 322 South State Street READ and USE DAILY CLASSIFIEDS III 11 I * Fountain Pens " Personalized Stationery " Typewriters . " Webster Tape Recorders HAVEN HALL BURNS Thousands of spectators view the four-hour long blaze Haven Hall Fire Losses Still Felt Thousands of man-hours in book manuscripts, research pap- ers and theses went up in smoke in the Haven Hall blaze-perhaps the most tragic losses of the holo- caust. Frantic efforts to salvage the work of professors and graduate students went for nought as flames and smoke drove back volunteers who tried to kill the fire with hand extinguishers. Faculty members and students stood helplessly while their work was reduced to ashes. AFTER TWO YEARS the effects of the Haven Hall losses are still being felt. Most of the 20,000 volumes stored in the Bureau of Government Library were dam- aged beyond recovery by flames and water. The Library suffered an 80 percent loss, according to Director Warner Rice. Rice said recently that the Library would never be the same because most of the lost ma- 'terial had been gathered over the years and is irreplaceable. Although the Library is being rebuilt, it contains only a third of the number of books it had before the Haven fire. A man who was dealt one of the severest blows in the fire, soci- ology Prof. Amos. Hawley, has made great strides toward replac- ing his lost work, but he can never regain the lost time, he says. "I've tried to estimate the man-hours I lost by the fire but find it im- possible." Driven by previous publishing commitments, the sociologist has already rewritten three of his manuscripts, with his just- published Principles of Sociol- ogy heading the list. A mono- graph on internal migration awaits publication and the third work, on the relationship be- tween population size and costs of government, is in the finished manuscript stage. Prof. Hawley is slowly rebuild- ing a personal Itbrary valued at $3600 lost in the fire. * * * By CHUCK ELLIOTT Daily Managing Editor On October 11, 1950, fully four months after the fire which gut- ted Haven Hall, a University teaching fellow named Robert Stacy was arrested on a charge of setting it. After all night questioning, Stacy confessed to police that he had committed arson. He had walked into a second floor room of Haven Hall on the afternoon of June 6, touched off a pile of maps in a corner, and promptly left the building, according to his state- ment, PREVIOUS TO the arrest of the thirty-year-old graduate student and teaching fellowin the De partment of Classical Studies, there had been no definite suspi- ALSO... ENGRAVED GRADUATION ANNOUNCEMENTS MORRILL'S...314 South State ... Phone 7177 I i SELL 'i Stacy had been under psychia- tric treatment at the Veteran's Readjustment Center, according to University officials. He unsuc- cessfully tried to commit suicide twice before he was finally brought up for trial before Circuit Judge James Breakey, on Dec. 13,1950. Several days after his arrest, Stacy had completely repudiated his confession. The court appointed local at- torney Leonard Young to be his lawyer, and before a crowded courtroom, the arson trial be- gan, with Prosecutor Douglas Reading handling the case for the state. The nine-woman, three-man jury was quickly chosen, and Miss Dorothy Strauss, a former Univer- sity research assistant, took the stand. She testified that she had seen a man resembling Stacy walk away from her down the hall in Haven Hall just before the fire. THE NEXT DAY, the defend- ant's former girl-friend, Zelda Clarkson, told the court how Stacy had described setting the fire to her during an "uninvited" visit to Provincetown, Mass., where she was staying for the summer. She said that he had been "bothering her" with telephone calls and let- ters before and after the confes- sion, and that she had come to Ann Arbor in October to petition to have him committed as insane. Defense Attorney Young ham- mered away at discrepancies be- tween Stacy's confession and testimony, but to no avail. Though Stacy had been expected to take the stand in his own be- half, at the last minute he told Young that "he just didn't feel up to it." Final arguments pre- sented, the case was handed to the jury. Following a three and a half hour period of deliberation, the jury found Stacy guilty, and on Jan. 4 Judge Breakey sentenced him to a five to ten year term at Jackson. This didn't end the debate about whether or not Stacy ac- tually set Haven Hall on fire, however. He began serving his term at Jackson, while attorney Young filed a plea with the State Supreme Court for an ap- peal. The appeal was denied, and the next thing heard was at the beginning of March this spring. Tn. a Iptt, t. o' " T )lAil. tar. YOUR USED MEN WITH A HOSE Students aid fire department in vain effort to save building. TEXTBOOKS for CASH OR TADE ROBERT STACY . .. Convicted * * * t cion of arson. Rumors to that ef- 4 C I I I ~ ~y ~ - s~zw~~s~ uin~