COUNCIL CONTROLS ACTION See Page 2 (Z 4P Ailr igau :4Ia it1 Latest Deadline in the State PARTLY CLOUDY AND WARM VOL. LXI, No. 21-S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, JULY 26, 1951 FOUR PAGES Jury Indicts Racketeers On Contempt Costello, Adonis, Erickson Tagged NEW YORK-WI)-Frank Cos- tello and two other racket big shots were indicted on Federal .contempt charges yesterday. Costello, h o t a n d nervous, hopped a subway and turned him- self in with a plea of innocent. * * * A GRAND JURY tagged Cos- tello, racketeer Joe Adonis and ace bookie Frank Erickson for their refusal to answer questions before the Senate Crime Committee last March. Adonis and Erickson are be- hind bars on gambling charges. They couldn't answer the con- tempt charges at once. Costello was arraigned and then re- leased on $5,000 bond. ' The Government said it would press for an early trial of the case. The 60-year-old racketeer-re- garded by Senate crime probers as top man in the American under- world-had nothing to say to newsmen. * * * IN EACH COUNT of the Grand Jury's multi-count indictment the top penalty on conviction is a year in prison, plus a $1,000 fine- nine years for Costello, 16 for Adonis and 74 for the pudgy Erick- son. Millions watched on television last winter as Costello squirmed and squeaked but stubbornly re- fused to answer the Senate com- mittee's questions. Adonis and Erickson were even less talkative during their turns on the witness stand. They ad- mitted hardly anything. Adonis, 49 years old, has been accused of just about every crime in the book at one time or an- other-gambling, kidnapping, ex- tortion, and assault. He supposed- ly was a figure in Brooklyn's mur- der, Inc., the old murder-for-hire gang. But few of the charges agaist him ever stuck for long. HE FINALLY was tripped up in New Jersey and is now serving two to three years there on gamb- ling charges. Erickson, 54 years old, was the bookie's bookmaker-the gambler to whom they turned with bets too big for most operators to handle. He headed a $12,500,000 a year gambling empire. House Re ects Compromise HousingBill WASHINGTON-(A)--By a two- vote margin, the House yesterday refused to retreat in its demands for a big slash in the Administra- tion's public housing program and for a cut in the number of Fed- eral employes. The chamber voted 188 to 166 to stand pat on the two economy moves and to reject a compromise worked out by a Senate-House conference committee. * * * HOUSE CONFEREES were in- structed to insist on the original House decisions as spelled out in the $6,160,000,000 independent of- fices appropriations bill. The mea- sure provides funds for more than a score of Federal agencies, in- cluding the Atomic Energy Com- mission. Originally, the House had voted to allow the Public Housing Ad- ministration to build only 5,000 public housing units this year. Under the compromise proposed by the Senate-House conference com- mittee, the number would have been increased ten-fold to 50,000 units. President Truman h a d asked for 75,000. The conferees had also agreed on a Senate proposal for cutting Federal personnel by 10 percent, instead of the t-ouse provision to refill only one out of every five job vacancies. President Truman had originally asked Congress to authorize 135,000 housing units in the year starting July 1, but later cut the number to 75,000 because of shortages arising from the Korean War emergency. Acheson Issue DividesGOP Minority of House GOP Approves Ouster Move at Strategy Session WASHINGTON-(P)-House Republicans split wide apart yester- day in voting 71 to 33 to back legislation designed to oust Secretary of State Acheson from the Federal payroll. The vote was taken behind closed doors at a grand strategy session heralded in advance as a meeting of the entire GOP House roster. HOWEVER, MORE than 90 Republicans either failed to attend or refrained from voting. The outcome made it doubtful that the Agreement Seen Imminent In Korean Cease-Fire Talks 4 Lattimore Ties Probed By Senate WASHINGTON-(P)-A Senate committee produced evidence yes- terday that Owen Lattimore, one time State Department consultant, urged a Far East research organi- zation in 1938 to support Soviet Russia's international policy "with- out using their slogans." The disclosure was made at the start of an investigation into the Institute of Pacific Relations (IPR). Senator McCarran (D- Nev.), presiding at the inquiry conducted by an Internal Secur- ity subcommittee, said he aimed to find out whether "subversive influences" have affected American Far Eastern policy. * * * THE FIRST witness was Edward C. Carter, a slender, gray-haired man who is a trustee of the IPR. He described himself as a former edu'cator and vigorously denied he ever was a Communist. The examination dealt princi- pally with Lattimore, now a Johns Hopkins University professor, and Frederick Vanderbilt Field, leftist New York millionaire. Carter told the Senators that Field tried without success to obtain an Army intelligence as- signment after the United States entered World War II. He testi- fied he wrote someone in the War Department in behalf of the appointment. Senator Eastland (D-Miss.) said a February, 1942, letter from Field to Carter showed that Lattimore and Lauchlin Currie, an Admin- istrative assistant to President Roosevelt, also recommended Field for the job. The letter said "Owen" was tak- ing the matter up with Currie, but Carter under questioning said he didn't know whether Lattimore and Currie recommended Field for a commission. The letter Lattimore wrote on July 10, 1948 concerning Soviet policy was produced in photostat by subcommittee counsel Robert Morris. It advised the IPR, a pri- vate organization, how to conduct its then current Sino-Japanese survey. It was written to Carter, then Secretary-General of the IPR. Fight Rages Over Controls WASHINGTON-(I)-The Ad- ministration tore into one of the hottest issues of the economic controls fight at the opening of Senate-House Conferences yester- day. It sought to keep the right to fix livestock slaughtering quotas. Both Houses, in their varying bills which the conferees are try- ing to weld into one, denied the Office of Price Stabilization that authority. In view of that action Senator Maybank (D- S.C.), chair- man of the conference, said there is some doubt there is any legal way to restore the power in the present bill. @"get-Acheson" drive would succeed unless it gained strong and unex- pected Democratic support. S o m e Southern Democrats have rallied behind the GOP-led attack, but Administration lead- ers said they were confident they could beat it off when the Re- publicans make their move, probably today. Under GOP strategy-as ap- proved by a majority of those who voted at the meeting yesterday- the showdown will come on -an amendment offered by Rep. Phil- lips (R-Calif.) to a $1,051,715,115 money bill. The omnibus bill is to provide funds for the Departments of State, Justice and Commerce, and the Federal Judiciary. * * * REVISED AND carefully tailored to meet the specifications, Phillips' amendment would strike directly at Acheson and would spare sev- eral dozen other top-flight offi- cials who might have been hit by an earlier version. The amendment says that no money provided under the omni- bus bill could go to the head of any Executive department who, within five years before his ap- pointment, was connected with a professional firm that repre- sented a foreign government. Acheson's law firm once repre- sented the Polish government in obtaining an American loan. TM * THE AMENDMENT would cut any such person off the Federal payroll unless his appointment was "submitted or re-submitted by the President to the Senate for confirmation." The vote was 126 to 102. Rep. Stefan (R-Neb.) sponsored the reduction. Local Blaze Drives Mei From House Several men students fled into the street yesterday afternoon when a fire of undetermined ori- gin destroyed the rear of their rooming house at 725 Haven. The owner of the rooming house, R. J. O'Leary, called the fire de- partment after being notified by a neighbor who first saw the fire. Responding firemen found the rear of the house completely enveloped in flames, and O'Leary held little hope that the rest of the structure could be saved. ** * QUICK ACTION by firemen us- ing high pressure fog guns kept the blaze confined to the back of the house and the fire was reported ex- tinguished an hour after the alarm was turned in. The fire destroyed most of the furnishings and personal belong- ings of students occupying the three rear rooms, while the kit- chen and a shed were completely burned out. Smoke and water dam- age to the front of the house was considerable. One student was caught in the third floor shower when the fire started and paused only long enough to grab a pair of pants and his shoes. Fire Department officials gave an on-the-spot estimate that dam- age from the blaze, which appar- ently started in the kitchen, would exceed $15,000. -Daily-Bob Keith NEW ROOMERS-The University's versatile Victor Vaughn House will open its doors to coeds next fall. for the third time in its 12 years of existence. Its conversion for feminine occupancy will come at the same time hundreds of rooms for men are made available with the completion of the University's $5,600,000 South Quad. odT nVu* * H * * s Coeds To Live In Vaughn House By BOB KEITH Coeds will be living in Victor Vaughn House next fall for the third time since the structure was built, Services Enterprises Man- ager Francis C. Shiel announced yesterday. The 187 bed red-brick dormitory overlooking the Huron River will be opened for women "because we're not getting enough housing applications from men," Shiel said. ** * "THIS IS the first time we have been caught without enough male applicants to occupy our regular men's facilities," he added. Shiel laid the shortage of male Field Denied Bail by U.S. Court Jude NEW YORK - ()- Millionaire leftist Frederick Vanderbilt Field was denied freedom on bail yes- terday by U. S. Supreme Court Justice Stanley F. Reed. The action in Washington also applied to Field's two fellow-trus- tees of the Civil Rights Congress bail fund, mystery writer Dashiel Hammett and W. Alphaeus Hun- ton. ALL THREE were jailed for con- tempt after they refused to say where the Congress got the bail money it posted for four fugi- tive American Communist leaders. The decision climaxed a rec- tic, day for Field, who was whisked from one hearing to an- other as the Government tried to pry the bail data from him. In a separate case, Field went before a Federal grand jury with orders to talk-or else. There was no indication whether he did. LATER, HE was taken before a state banking investigation into the Civil Rights Congress bond ac- tivities. There he said little or nothing. applicants to a drop in enroll- ment. The unexpected lack of men and the conversion of Vaughn House into a women's dorm come at a time when the University's mam- moth new $5,600,000 South Quad- rangle is about to first open its doors for male occupancy. Designed to ultimately hold 1,179 men, the South Quad will be equipped to house approximately 500 by the time the fall semester begins, Shiel estimated. * * * WHEN THE South Quadrangle is fully completed, probably by the start of the spring semester, the "dispossessed" men who lived in Vaughn House last semester will be transferred as a unit to one of the houses in the new dorm, Shiel added. "It is our desire to maintain the spirit-and continuity of the group despite the break of one semester," he pointed out. Vaughn House, meanwhile, will serve to ease the still acute short- age of women's housing, Shiel said. LOCATED at the corner of Catherine and Glen, Vaughn Boyle .Denies Connection With RFC Loan ST. LOUIS-(P)-The name of William M. Boyle, Jr., Democratic National Committee Chairman, was linked yesterday with *print- ing firm here which after three unsuccessful tries secureda $565,- 000 loan from the Reconstruction Finance Corporation. In Washington, Boyle denied any connection with the RFC loan. *o * THE POST-DISPATCH reported that Boyle, a close friend of Presi- dent Truman, was paid $8,000 by the American Lithofold Corp., in monthly installments which began soon after an RFC loan for it had been approved in 1949. House was built in 1939 for use by medical students. Although coeds have remained in the house for only one semes- ter both times they previously moved in, Shiel said they will now be allowed to stay until such time as the house is turned back over to the medical stu- dents. He said this could be any*here from one to three years hence. IN ANOTHER move to counter- act the shortage of male housing, applicants, the number of male residents in Fletcher Hall will be sliced in half, from 110 to 58, so that more men can be directed into the larger University housing units, Shiel said. Meals are not served at Fletcher Hall and its revenues are not directly applicable to the University's current dormi- tory construction program. The various changes in housing will have no effect on the total number of men living in the East and West Quads next fall, Shiel said. Previous plans had called for 1200 residents in both dorms. This number representing a re- duction of approximately 150 men at each since last spring, will still hold, he said. Another previously announced action expected to remain unaf- fected is a contemplated $60,000 food improvement program in the dorms. Financed by a $40 hike in room and board rates, the food improvement is already in effect Shiel said. THE LATEST housing moves will serve to keep the larger dorms as full as possible and enable the University to meet construction bond obligations. It was not known whether fur- ther acts will be necessary to guarantee full dorm occupancy once the complete capacity of South Quad becomes available.' This question is expected to hinge chiefly on the size of Uni- versity enrollment at the time. Ungrateful TAUTON, Mass. -An auto- mobile hit a dog here but it was the motorist who went to a hos- pital, according to a United Press dispatch. Worried because he h a d struck the dog, Ernest Spencer Jr. got out of his car to give aid, only to be bitten on the leg for his trouble. Living Cost Index Drop Announced WASHINGTON-(A')-The Gov- ernment's cost of living index dropped from May to June-the first decline since February, 1950, the Bureau of Labor Statistics re- ported yesterday. The index on June 15 was 185.2 percent of the average prices pre- vailing between 1935 and 1939. That was 8.8 percent higher than the index of June, 1950, just be- fore outbreak of the Korean con- flict, and 0.8 per cent above Feb- ruary, 1951, the first month after the price and wage freeze. * * * FOOD PRICES declined 0.2 per cent between May and June. The food index was 226.9 per cent of the 1935-39 average. That was 11.7 per cent above last June. Miscellaneous goods and serv- ices dropped 0.1 per cent. Rents increased 0.2 per cent while other items in the average fam- ily budget remained unchanged in the month ended June 15. At least 3,000,000 workers now are covered by contracts calling for upward or downward adjust- ments in pay rates as the Govern- ment index rises or falls. However very few contracts are adjusted on the basis of the June 15 index, because most of them provide for pay changes only every three months. The pay of auto workers will be determined by the July 15 index, to be announced late in August. World News Roundup By The Associated Press WASHINGTON-The State De- partment refused yesterday to tell Senator McCarthy (R-Wis.) the status of loyalty cases involving its employes. * * * WASHINGTON-A stiff bill aimed at correcting abuses in the future operation of the GI education program is being drafted by a House committee that has reported questionable practices in the past. DETROIT-The U.S. Treasury Department and the Detroit Pro- secutor's Office yesterday stepped into the investigation of defense contractors and the people with whom they deal at the Army's tank arsenal and tank-automotive center here. WASHINGTON - Chairman O'Conor (D-Md.) of the Senate Crime Committee asked Con- gress yesterday to set a penalty of 20 years to life, without pro- bation, for any adult convicted of peddling narcotics to youths under 17. * * * WASHINGTON-Senator Aiken (R-Vt.) declared yesterday that opponents of the St. Lawrence Seaway Project "are fighting against the security of this na- tion." a* * * McKES SPORT, Pa-A petite, 48-year-old grandmother beat down a vigorous Republican an- ti-Truman drive yesterday to give Democrats their third Con- Reds Offer To Postpone TroopIssue U.S. Said Ready To Accept Terms U.N. ADVANCE HEADQUAR- TERS, Korea - (A') - United Na- tions and Communist teams met today in Kaesong amid strong in- dications they would rub out the last barrier to full-scale peace talks. That barrier is the withdrawal of foreign troops from Korea, devastated by 56 weeks of war. Authoritative sources in Wash- ington said the Communists of- fered yesterday at Kaesong to postpone discussion of the knotty issue until after an armistice. * * * THE ALLIED delegation went into the meeting promptly at 2 p.m. (11 p.m., Ann Arbor time) presumably ready to accept the Red compromise. U.N. Leaders had insisted an armistice must come before the withdrawal of foreign troops could be discussed. Such withdrawals are a political, not military, issue, they said. Earlier the Red Korean and Chinese delegates had insisted the issue of troop withdrawals must be placed on the agenda for further peace talks. Helicopters carrying the five- man Allied delegation took off for Kaesong at 1:20 p.m. The usual motor convoy carrying service per- sonnel already had arrived at Kaesong. A wave of optimism swept Allied advance headquarters following Wednesday's ninth session. A communique issued Wednesday night reported "considerable prog- ress toward formulation of an agenda" was made at the meet- ings. * * * DETAILS of the Communist plan were not disclosed Wednes- day, but it pertained to the - ex- plosive issue of withdrawing for- eign troops from Korea-the only issue standing in the way of a completed agenda. In Washington the Commun- ists were reported to have of- fered a compromise in which the withdrawal of foreign troops would not be discussed until af- ter an armistice is arranged. In- dications were this proposal would prove acceptable to the United Nations command. The Washington reports reached the advance headquarters camp before dawn but produced only mild surprise. A.P. correspondent Robert Tuck- man said those receiving the word felt it backed their own feeling that "something big" may happen at today's session. MacArthur Blasts U.S. KoreaPolicy BOSTON - (') - Gen. Douglas MacArthur struck out last night with a sweeping condemnation of American policy, at home and abroad, and declared that the re- sult of the war in Korea has been "indecisive." In one of his most powerful speeches since he was recalled from the Far East, MacArthur laid down four major points: 1. The result of the war in Korea has been indecisive and added that "appeasement became the policy of war on the battle- field." 2. American foreign policy has become a "mass of confused mis- understandings and vacillations. The sorry truth is that we, have no policy. CONSTRUCTION PROGRESS REPORT: Major Part of South Quad To Be Ready by Fall Interior work on five of the work has been completed up toI IN THE UNIVERSITY Hospital has been started, Roth said. The provide a 40-car parking lot close