Th URSDAY, JULY 1, 1965 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE ThURSDAY, JULY 1,1965 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE CHANGE RENT LIMITS: Atered Housing Bill Passed The Hidden ar of the iet Cong WASHINGTON (P)-The House passed by a vote of 245-169 yes- terday a four-year; $5.3 billion housing bill containing a dras- tically modified version of Presi- dent Lyndon B. Johnson's pro- posal to subsidize rents of some lower-income families. Democratic handlers of the bill, apparently unsure of a safe mar- gin after two days of debate and intensive work among party mem- bers, ,gave ground by writing in tighter income limitations on eli- gibility for the supplements and by cutting the funds proposed for them. These concessions did not win much Republican support, but held enough Democrats to avert outright removal of the rent sup- plement plan. The House defeated a move to cut the supplement plan, 208 to 202. Changes As it was finally approved, the rent supplement plan was shifted substantially from the original ad- ministration concept, which was an effort to meet housing needs of families not poor enough to qualify for low-rent, publicly owned housing, yet unable to pay for adequate housing on the open market. The program was rewritten so it would only be available to the same group of families that could qualify for public housing. The income level for such eligi- bility will be locally determined in each community and much of the debate on the bill raged over the limits that would apply. How Much? One representative told the * House the maximum family in-, comes for admission to public housing ranged from $2,720 an- nually in Houston to $5,760 in New York. But another said that under some interpretations, families with an income as high as $11,300 might qualify in New York. The bill as passed contains a number of innovations in addition to the rent supplement scheme which, as modified, would be an alternate to public housing for some families. No Down Payment Other new features are no- down-payment FHA home loans for peace-time veterans, mortgage insurance for land development and grants for neighborhood fa- cilities, parks and playgrounds, as well as for rehabilitation of de- pressed-area homes. The bill also would continue the established programs such as FHA, Urban Redevelopment'and financ- ing of college dormitories. It now goes to the Senate where its chances of approval are good. A Senate committee has approved generally similar legislation but it has not been set for debate. 'Subterfuge' Republican leader Gerald Ford of Michigan called the retooled rent supplement plan a camou- flage and subterfuge adopted be- cause the original proposition would have been defeated. Rep. William B. Widnall (D- NJ) said he would have voted for the original, but rejected the sub- stitute. Bringing it out with no earlier committee consideration, he said, was "the craziest way to legislate I can think of." But Speaker John W. McCor- mack (L-Mass) termed the pro- posal "a subsidy for human beings who have been forgotten," and urged approval. Show Intentions The Democratic leader, Rep. Carl Albert of Oklahoma, said the intention was to help really needy families "and this amendment will kill any lingering doubts that this is what we do." Chairman Wright Patman (D- Tex), of the House Banking Com- mittee, said the "great strength of this plan is that it enables the private enterprise system to meet some of the need." FIDEL CASTRO HOARI BOUMEDIENNE Algerian Chief Answers Criticism- from Castro ALGIERS 0P)-Col. Houari Boumedienne bluntly told his foreign Communist critics yesterday that Algeria has "no need for advice from abroad" on how to build a socialist society. In one of his rare speeches since he took, power in a predawn coup June 19, the strongman defended his regime against a recent scathing attack by Prime Minister Fidel Castro of Cuba and growing criticism in the Communist newspapers of Western Europe. Castro called the new regime a fascist, reactionary military dictatorship. Departure Castro's speech departed from the attitude the Soviet Union, Chas taken-one of fence-strad-' EDITOR'S NOTE: How is the Viet Cong able to do it? How can a guerrilla force survive the onslaught of modern weapons and go on to fight another day? Here is a study of guerrilla methods in Viet Nam, reported by a correspondent whose four years in the war area have given him many chances to observe Viet Cong methods. By MALCOLM W. BROWNE Associated Press Staff Writer SAIGON-You can pretty well reconstruct the way the Viet Cong operates: A small brown man squats un- derground in an improvised echo chamber, straining his ears for the slightest sound. Naked except for black shorts, a long rice pouch over one shoulder and a belt slung with hand gre- nades, he has been squatting pa- tiently for hours. It is nearly dark in the cham- ber, except for daylight streaming through the sound slots around the top. Through these slots, the first sounds come, reflecting from the curved sides of the chamber and amplifying at the man's ears. Then the distant thudding of heli- copter rotor blades. Alarm The man, wriggling through a short tunnel to the surface, can yell an alarm. Instantly, shadowy men lounging or cooking at the bases of the tall trees are on their feet and moving fast. The heavy equipment from last night's battle has been stowed for future use in deep, camouflaged holes. The bodies have been buried. The men move rapidly, scatter- ing in many directions in twos and threes. This is their base area, and they knew every feature of the dense jungle in the area-the hidden trails, the camouflaged bunkers and tunnels, the gun em- placements, the mines and booby traps. Viet Cong positions were first prepared here years ago and with each month the positions have been improved. The Viet Cong guerrilla spends much of his day digging, even when there is no im- mediate need for it. Hidden Entrance The entrance to a tunnel might be under a heavy rock, it might be under the hearth of a peasant's hut, it might be under water in the bank of a mountain stream. Only by sheer luck would a gov- ernment soldier find one, and if he did, he probably would kill only a few Viet Cong. The rest would be elsewhere. In an air raid, some of the tun- nels and bunkers would be crush- ed. A jellied furnace of napalm would ooze down into some of the air holes. But many of the bunk- ers would be deep enough to sur- vive even direct hits by heavy bombs, and their galleries of men and weapons would survive. At nightfall, it would be safe to move around again. The government soldier might find just empty space here, or his battalions might walk into a jungle trap, a devastating mortar barrage from prepared positions, followed by a regimental guerrilla onslaught. He would have to thread his way carefully through the jungle, and take a series of casualties from man-traps and snipers. Short Lived Most of all he would have to move in large groups because uni- formed stragglers do not live long in the jungle. Big groups on the other hand always betray their presence. The guerrillas could choose to slip away or fight, on their own terms. Nearly always, the Viet Cong will know what to expect, long in advance. The warning may come from1 the echo chamber. It may come in a radio message from a comradex miles away. It may come from peasants in the area, who eitherc fear the Viet Cong or are more or less on the Viet Cong side. It may come from a bar girl who was drinking with government or American troops the night before.c Tipoff The tip may come from thef strike force itself. If it is to be1 an air strike, there always will be1 a light reconnaissance plane cruising over the area hours or perhaps days in advance. The pro- longed presence of a light plane anywhere in Viet Nam is a sure sign of an impending government air strike or assault. The South Vietnamese haul men and cannon and gear in trucks as far as they can, or use helicopters that may be limited in their landing zones to a few clear patches in the jungle. The guer- rilla almost always will move overland, toting everything he needs on his back, and skirting the roads, unless he wants to am- bush them. When the government forces are finished for the day, they probab- ly will move to some safer area before nightfall. Night belongs to the guerrilla. If government forces decide to stay overnight, they often bivouac in a small area, setting up a perimiter defense. Un- disciplined soldiers may chatter and cook, perhaps even using lan- terns. They can become sitting ducks for a mortar barrage. Best Friend In the jungle, the wilderness it- self is the guerrilla's best friend. In the cities and towns, the guer- rillas' best camouflage is people. A guerrilla terrorist in a crowded city looks no different from hun- dreds of thousands of other youths. He is likely to be wearing dark trousers and a sport shirt, and he across Campus THURSDAY, JUNE 1 7:30 p.m.-Prof. H. A. Gleason will speak on "Writing Systems: Their Form and Place" in Aud. A. 8 p.m.-The University Players will present "The Threepenny Op- era" by Bertolt Brecht and Kurt Weil. probably has a bicycle, motor scooter or even automobile. Only by luck will an unusually con- scientious policeman stop him to check the bundle on his scooter. He may even be dressed in Viet- namese army uniform. Two bogus Vietnamese army officers drove into the courtyard of the U S. officers' brink hotel last Christ- mas eve, parked a jeep and walk- ed away. Within an hour half the hotel was a blazing, bomb-blasted pile of rubble. Infiltration The terrorist may be working in a cell infiltrated by a government informer. He may be caught, and end up before a firing squad in Saigon's central market. He prob- ably is a fanatically anti-Ameri- can youth who will yell anti- American and Communist slogans before the bullets cut him down. The half dozen other terrorists who share his cell also may be arrested and shot. But smashing one cell does not stop the terror. The cells are built into a tight system of con- spiratorial secrecy. Members rare- ly know anyone in the terror net- work outside their own immediate cells. "We have yet to develop a ma- chine that could tell at a glance whether or not a man is a Viet Cong. If we could do that, this battle would be won," a U.S. counter-intelligence operative said recently. So far, the powerful weapons of the 20th century have had little more effect on the Viet Cong guerrillas.. than did the British Redcoats, with their superior musketry, on the American guer- rillas of two centuries ago. It is a hard tactic to beat. CAPTURED VIET CONG troops (left) are usually smoked and bombed out by helicopters supplied to the South Vietnamese by the U.S. However, many more get away than are caught, and their guerrilla tactics present a major roadblock to U.S. aims in Viet Nam, Though there are less Viet Cong than government troops, they often win vital victories or escape serious defeat by hidden retreats. P I I World News Roundup By The Associated Press NEW YORK-The stock market bounded higher yesterday; for the second straight day the gain was the biggest in 19 months. But, in contrast to Tuesday's wild see- sawing, it was all on the upgrade.' * * * WASHINGTON - Living costs hit a new high last month, W. Wil- lard Wirtz, head of the Labor De- partment, reported yesterday. Figures released by' the gotern- ment were up 1.7 per cent over the mark of a year ago; the index of consumer prices rose to 109.6, which meant that consumer goods able to be bought for $10 in the 1957-59 period now cost $10.96. BONN-The West German par- liament yesterday enacted a law requiring air raid shelters in all new residential a n d business buildings. The law also requires people to buy and store rations and emer- gency gear for survival'in war. Under the new law all buildings started after July 1, 1966, must contain cellars that can be used as air raid shelters. The govern- ment will pay one-fourth the cost. * * * WASHINGTON - At midnight last night the United States en- tered its 53rd straight month of rising prosperity and its sixth straight year of deficit financing. It closed the books on fiscal 1965, the crucial testing year of what President Lyndon B. John- son calls "expansionary fiscal policy," with a smaller-than-ex- pected budget deficit-$3.8 billion or, quite possibly, less. The deficit is at least $2.5 bil- lion smaller than the $6.3 billion which Johnson predicted in his budget message last January. dling. The Kremlin has neither' repudiated or recognized the new Algerian regime so far. The only sign from Russia has been a state- ment yesterday by President Anastas I Mikoyan that he is sure the Algerian people will con- tinue with a socialist government. Boumedienne referred contemp- tuously to French, Chinese and other Communist advisers sur- rounding Ben Bella who abruptly left the country or went under- ground the morning after the coup. "For three years our country was infested with adventurers who called themselves advisers, who had made a mess of revolutions elsewhere and who tried to use Algeria as a test site for their experiments," he said. No Advisors He made it clear that Algeria, while continuing its own brand of socialism, would no longer tol- ergte such advisers. Foreign Minister Abdelaziz Bou- teflika received all the foreign ambassadors one by one on the day after the coup. He told those from Communist nations that Al- SUMMER PLAYBILL presents the UNIVERSITY PLAYERS, THE"THREEPENNY OPERA by Bertolt Brecht & Kurt Well . .TO.DAY tkru Saturdayj :..............:,:: Y+.":.;:::.5:::555:;{055}; ;:...." .y:A....: . ~~~~~~~. :..55:":::555'5::=:..555:+:::,.::: .... July 14-17 THE CONFIDENTIAL CLERK,. by T. S. Eliot ...r.. .5...... .t4.. .Y... ...r... :. : vrr r...". : S~. l:S".".> r.".. . .. A x.:. . r.:^ v:.+"..ov.":~r r..Vr.v:w." ::S ;.:;.};.... .. y . % ..: ::x ."" r" .:.".:nr ::" :r.x'rri:;4:::<':. .3 v ............... :A r.. ,";"a:.x"::..::5. . ....1:..... .:. ...,........ .. ,... .. :"?: .vs..W"r:: vr""."?" 9"?r:S::l..". :;ti{". : ::..:."........r.e:". ......:....,x.x ...... . :::..v r,v ;"S'C'', .:i">" :rr:3^ geria would tolerate ence in its internal intended to pursue socialism in its own Algerian" way. no interfer- af fairs and its path to "specifically mmowd W. WILLARD WIRTZ CO-ED FOLK DANCE Fridays, 8-11 Instruction - Refreshments WOMEN'S.ATHLETIC BLDG. everyone welcome 50c ENDING TONIGHT Shows at 1:00-3:30-6:15-8:50 Feature 20 Minutes Later g U - This Weekend , I I U, CINEMA GUILD! presents I, I, I I CHARLIE CHAPLIN , i ; THE GOLD RUSH DIAL 8-6416 "A THRILLER, more than tingling ... as fascinating as it is dazzlingly beautiful - as sharply, smoothly cut as a diamond" -Crowther, N. Y. Times Rene with ALAIN DELON IF YOU NEVER SEE ANOTHER FILM YOU MUST SEE "MONDO CANE," THE MOST EXCITING, SHOCKING THRILLER EVER MADE! July 2T-24 THE PRIVATE EAR and THE PUBLIC EYE by Peter Schaffer .... ;.. : ............ :..... ...;^: ": rvs r.".^."sr::."r v..: v. .r..........o:n oo::::r:omnr:.:"". .o..w:..var~":::::: ".::v::: ":v .. F.:: .. r... . ....; ::..:: r:::::."::... ;...... .......; .... J....:...... :... ................. . ........................::.... .....::4;.;:::,,...... fi . ...::;: ...:..,.......... ": :. r.av:xr:. :.: . ."r: f.{v::.a............:.:"': ;4L.,,,: rr}Y~,ro: iYi:v:"iifivi}:.... '$ ......«.......:.M::.u ......................u.rdruJ.ititi:r.J..AY.:...A...:.4'JJ....l:!f..........Yru.P.ti'.:..J..4"X:JA a.Yr'... Y! August 4-7 I I MEASURE FOR MEASURE by William Shakespeare August 11-14 An Opera to be announced I I I I II I II