FRUDAY, MAY 14, 1965 muW. Mir.uTr_ & v 'na TT v I_ i in : il1AxiriwT l Y A' TA 'U UT PAGE FIVE ; I OIUMIN IAN UK11: U.S. Supports Elites For Direct Classified Ad Service, Phone 764-0557 from 1:00 to 2:30 P.M. Monday through Friday, and Saturday 10:00 'til 11:30 A.M. By STEPHEN BERKOWITZ and JEFFREY GOODMAN Third of three articles "POLITICS makes strange bed- fellows," but it seems to do this consistently. Thus, to no one's great surprise, two old "friends" of the United States in Latin America-General Alfredo Stroessner, the military ictator of Paraguay and General Iumberto Castelo Branco, the nilitary dictator of Brazil-turned .p last week between the sheets of ' "resident Johnson's crusade for lemocracy in the Dominican Re- )ublic- They, of course, 'were offering troops to defend democracy against the Dominicans. Other Latin Americans were not quite so pleased. The governments )f Venezuela, Chile and even Viexico registered serious doubts .bout our actions. THE JOHNSON crusade is, of curse, being waged against that .efarious enemy of us all-the 'Evil Communist Conspiracy"- which, by dint of its superior capacity for deviousness, had been able in the spice of a few days o take over "control" of a popu- ar democratic revolution which, In all probability, was planned and launched from American soil (Puerto Rico). Further, this "Communist- -lirected" revolution was, appar- ently, being led by Dominican military officers trained in the United States. How insidious can you get! This sort of thing comes as no irprise to people accustomed to iding Communists under their ed,, but for the rest of us, it has bout itself the unpleasant smell f the CIA. Those familiar with the recent listory of Latin America are 'amiliar with the CIA's last foray nto the real world-the Bay of Pigs invasion. This didn't turn out very well, surely, but the CIA was certain it knew the source of its troubles: the Communists. THE COMMUNISTS, it "rea- soned," were involved in both Cuba and the Dominican Republic; ergo, they ought to be treated in the same way. "Only this time we're going to win by using enough force," they said to themselves. ,Thus the world was treated to the spectacle of seeing 30,000 orth American troops-a number equivalent to one and a half per eent of the population of the country - charge ashore in the Dominican Republic. The rationale given by the Johnson administration for this seemingly absurd action-a ra- tionale provided by the CIA no doubt-was that "58 known Com- munists" became involved in the Dominican revolution just as it seemed likely to win. ALL THIS PROVED, however, was that the CIA was doing its homework: everyone knew there was a Communist Party in the Dominican Republic (everyone also should know that it support- ed Trujillo) and that it threw its support (?) behind the revolution when it seemed likely that Tru- jillo's successors were about to get, booted out. How, precisely, the CIA dis- "overed this secret information tas not been disclosed. They might ave obtained it from the rebels temselves-who openly admitted at the CP had changed horses mid-stream. t )f course, Johnson did not that he "held in (his) hand a Sof the names of, 58 members the Communist Party etc."- it the antecedents of his mode policy making were clear none- aeless. ALEXANDER ORLOV, one of te chiefs of the Soviet intelli- ince apparatus before World War , wrote in his "Handbook of atelligence and .Guerrilla War- are" about two opposing "con- eptions" of intelligence work (the U.S. and Soviet): one which )perated primarily on the basis Af "educated" guesses and pre- ictions, the other which seeks in- ormation directly from secret sources. The failure of the first method of and by itself (Orlov outlines some of the reasons it fails in his book), is clearly demonstrated by the Dominican incident. In the absence of any direct understand- tnbg of the functional role of these E men in the movement-a place which does not seem to have been great-the "fact" of Communist participation alone is inconclusive and misleading. In this instance, >ur guess was somewhat less than ducated. With this kind of "intelligence" aetwork serving the purpose of gathering the "information" which -lets us Justify the, directions ofV our foreign policy (rather than the direction being taken from ;he information), the U.S. is in-v been one of repression and re- action. IN SOME PLACES and at cer- tain times in the past, the precise composition of these "elites" has changed somewhat. But the relationship these elites enjoy to the rest of the popula- tion of the country has remained the same. In an atmosphere of social rev- olution, with non-Westerners promising to assume an increas- ing role in the conduct of world affairs, the U.S. risks calling down upon itself the deserved approba- tion of the majority of the earth's people. The intervention by the U.S. in the Dominican rebellion--against a movement attempting to re- establish constitutional democracy and give expression to needs and desire for real social-economic re- form-this intervention cannot but place the U.S. on the side of reaction and colonialism in the+ eyes of the peoples of all of the underdeveloped world.; Those governments which are established, strong, conciliatory toward our vast enconomic hold- ings in Latin America and our peculiar conceptions of democratic1 self-determination, those govern- ments which, in a word, are part; of the aristocratic, oligarchic powers which depend strongly on our economic interests in main-j taining a general economic andf political stranglehold and which1 therefore protect those interests- these oppressive and economically and politically reactionary govern- ments we perceive "pragmatically"- as our best stake. Whatever threatens them there-1 fore threatens us, for we are con-f cerned not with real democracy orc real progress but with stability- as long as it can keep up thec guise of progress, making gran-- diose motions full of sound andf fury whose insignificance is little real consequence to us. of IN THIS LIGHT, it is an ad- mirable restraint that North Viet Nam, China and Russia have shown regarding our bombing of Hanoi's military and industrial in- stallations. For we have not only intervened unilaterally and im- perialistically in sending- thou- sands of troops and millions of dollars to defeat a primarily southern-based popular liberation movement. IF THE HYPOCRITICAL juxta- position of our proclamations and our deeds is galling, it is ironic, that the latter inevitably subvert the former. The constant reminder that U.S. power will be and has been used to subvert liberating and nation- alistic movements, that the U.S. is incapable and afraid of aiding, in a true spirit of cooperation any of the multifarious progressive revolutions which we stereotype and dismiss as Communist--these unambiguous signs cannot help but inflame, crystallize and strengthen the legitimate move- ments we are illegitimately at- tempting to stifle. So it is a vicious circle of more and more "holy" colonial inter- ventions to shore up a declining prestige in a world which, turning revolutionary, is simultaneously and unnecessarily turning against us because we cannot accept it and cooperate with it. THE COMING YEARS, with only the details of future VietI Nam's, future Dominican Repub- lics left to be filled in, is clear: armed clashes which the peoples of the world will increasingly see as an unsuccessfully-veiled neo- colonialism, nuclear confrontations -and, unless we are lucky, the final blows. FOR RENT URGENT-Wanted 2 girls to share apt. for 4 for fall. Call either Barb at 517-224-4103 or Susan at 313-338-1391 co llect.C C0 FOR GRAD MEN -- Efficiency rooms, low rate. Inquire at 917 Mary. C19 ROOMS FOR GIRLS for summer in new professional sorority house. Call 662- 1017. C21 AVAILABLE AUG. 15 & FOR SUMMER SUBLET-Large 3 or 4 person apts. Also large furn. rooms. NO 2-2197 or. NO 8-8601. C17 SINGLE ROOM - Mature graduate woman, kitchen privileges, cool quiet apt. Call 764-7465. C5 LARGE STUDIO & ROOMS FOR RENT. $22 and $12 per week. Avail. now. Also basement apt, avail. June 24. Close to campus, 701 S. Forest. NO 3-2108. C18 ROOM IN large, quiet, private home with refrig., linens furn. $11 per week. NO 2-9806 after 5:30 p.m. 07 FOR ALL OR PART OF THE SUMMER -Mod., air-cond., furn. apts. for groups of 2 or 3. Also 3-man apts. for fall. Call between 10 and 1 or 4 and 6., 663-8866. C15 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING LINES 2 3 4 ONE-DAY . 70 .85 1.00 SPECIAL FIVE-DAY RATE 3.00 3.75 4.35 Figure 5 average words to a line Call Classified between 1 :00 and 2:30 Mon. thru Fri. Phone 764-0557 NO LEASE REQUIRED Large studio, unfurn., $70/mo., cludes all utilities. 663-7268. in- 'CALLOWAYS': Family Entertainment Wholesome, Tiring 3 RM. FURN. APT. Close to campus and downtown. Mod., clean, garage, laundry facilities, TV antenna, large sun porch, utilities except electricity. $145 mo. NO 3-5532 after 6 p.m. 08 ATTRACTIVE, 2 bdrm., large furn. apt. Piano, garage. Near campus. Heat, water included. Grad women students, married couplesrpreferred. $150 mo. Call NO 5-4740 or see 1523 S. Univ. C5 HOUSE FOR RENT--3 bdrm., minutes from campus. Rent $200 or best bid. Call 662-7384. 09 CLOSE TO CAMPUS and downtown, avail. after May 15. 2 bdrm. furn. apt., mod. and clean, off-street park- ing, laundry faclties, TV antenna, utilities except electricity. $135 ma. NO 3-5532 after 6 p.m. C10 REDUCED CAMPUS-HOSPITAL 1 bdrm. apt, with study. Very attrac- tive, modern furn. Avail. now and fall. $80 mo. Cali NO 5-0925 or NO 2-7992. C3 4-MAN APARTMENT Modern, furnished 4-man apartment available now for either part of sum- mer, whole summer, or full year. Good location, off-street parking, garbage disposal, full basement in addition to kitchen. $31.25 per man during summer. $37.50 during school year. Call Ed, 662-1860, 5:30-7 p.m. C12 ROOMS FOR MEN $20 per month TV Lounge, Air conditioned Complete Snack Kitchen Call 8-9593 Cl FURN. 3 bdrm house, ceramic bath, fireplace, newly decorated. Hill-, Division area. Summer $180 mo. Fall' $220 mo. Call NO 3-6528. C3I USED CARS TR 3, 1960, SHINY black, 38,000 miles. $1095. CALL NO 2-8895. N9 TRIUMPH TR-4, 1964 roadster. Clean. 14,500 miles. Never raced. Four on the floor, wire wheels, radio, heater, windshield washer. Green, black top. Racing stripes, seatrbelts. One owner. $2500. Can be seen at 523 Neff Road, Grosse Point. Call TU 2-8535 for appointment. N3 ALPHA-1963 Sprint Speciale. One own- er. Mint condition. Best offer. 3150 Morgan Road. N1 MGB 1964 AM-FM radio. NO 5-4620. N7 MGB '63. Blue Roadster, wire wheels, luggage rack, radio. 665-5620. N8 '59 OLDS, 4 door station wagon. Call NO 3-3547. N2 BARGAIN CORNER SAM'S STORE Has Genuine LEVI'S Galore! LEVI'S -SLIM-FITS-$4.25 "White," and 5 Colors For "Guys and Gals" Cord. SLIM-FITS-$5.98 LEVI'S STA-PREST PANTS Never Needs Ironing Asst'd. Colors-$6.98 S-T-R-E-T-C-H LEVI'S For Gals and Guys "White" and Colors-$5.98 SUMMER SUBLET FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted NOW - Cheap, air-cond., mod. apt., 815 S. State, Apt. 8. Call 663-7406. U18 4 RM. FURN. APT., main floor, avail, now 'til Aug. 20, washing facilities. Also 3 rm. furn. apt. avail. Aug. 15. NO 3-4325. U16 SWIMMING POOL, lounge, mod., air- condi., 1 or more girls to share. Bar- gain! 2 blks. from campus. 663-1062. FURN. APT., convenient, 1 man, June 1-Aug. 24. Sacrifice. Call Dick, 764- 4285 days; 665-7637, 5-7 p.m. U17 MALE ROOMMATE for air cond. apt. Call 2-1477 eves., 6-7. U2 STUDENTS-Choose your own hours! Scholarship offered! Call 761-2779 8-11 a.m. H7 GIRL WANTED to share apartment. Call 2-9785 after 5:00. U12 SUMMER SUBLET-2 blks. from cam- pus. Furn. for 2, until Aug. 19. Call 665-5582 after 5:00. U8 ON CAMPUS-Mod. 3-rm. fully furn. air-cond., garbage disposal, sun ter- race, avail, now or June 1. Call 665- 4289 after 5:00. U13 5 RM. DOWNSTAIRS furn. apt. 1207 Willard. Avail. now. 665-3446. U14 MOD. FURN. apt. for 4-Air-cond. Heat- ed swimming pool. Call 761-2283. U9 SUMMER ONLY-Near campus, 5 room, furn. for 3 or 4. 453-6006. U15 REDUCED FOR THE SUMMER Furnished and unfurnished for 1-4 people. Call 663-7268. U7 2ND SESSION, for 2, 3 or 4, new air cond. apt. Bargain summer rates. Call 668-8723, 665-8330 or 665-2689. U3 4 PEOPLE to sublease apt. May 5 to Sept. 1. Furn and air cond. Call HU 3-6100, ext. 3960. US MUSICAL MDSE., RADIOS, REPAIRS A-1 New and Used Instruments BANJOS, GUITARS, AND BONGOS Rental Purchase Plan PAUL'S MUSICAL REPAIR 119 W. Washington MISCELLANEOUS WORRIED about Viet Nam? The Do- minican Republic got you down? Your bridge game gone sour? Forget your problems with goodies from RALPH'S MARKET 709 Packard open every night 'til 12 HELP WANTED TWO STUDENTS-Room in exchane or 7 hours work per week. Call NO 3-4740 and ask for Peggy. H12 ANIMAL CARETAKER need. MINIMUM $1.50 hr. 20-25 hrs./week. 764-0438. H9 TEACHER-Beth Israel Nursery, Half days, starting Sept., experience de-! sirable, mail resume to Mrs. Linde- nauer, 1414 Argyle. H10 PART TIME-Young woman to work at Univ. Hospital about 1 hr. daily. Ideal for someone living in Univ. Terrace or vicinity. Do not phone Hasp. Please write time of day avail. and describe any previous work ex- perience to Box No. 7, 420 Maynard, Ann Arbor. H5 GRAD. RN Wanted to work in mod., air-cond. office beginning in July, located on Greenfield Rd. betwn. 6 and 7 MIle Road in Detroit. Practice limited to allergy. Must live in Detroit area. Dr. Leonard Schreier, NO 2-8232. H11 BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED $6 for Rh positive; $7 and $10 for Rh negative. Hours: Mon., 9-4; Tues., 9-4; Fri., 1-7, 18-21 yrs. old need parent's permission. Detroit Blood Service, new location, 404 W. Mich- igan, Ypsilanti, Mich. H29 POLICE PATROLMEN Starting Salary-$505 per month Top pay for patrolmen-$644 per mo. If you are a U.S. citizen, 21-35 years old, at least 5'9" and 150 pounds, have good vision (at least 20-30 in each eye without glasses), have no police rec- ord, and are willing to submit to a polygraph examination, you may be interested in joining our top notch police department. Merit system, com- petitive examinations for promotion, excellent training available. Applications may be obtained by writing to the Skokie Police Department 8333 Lincoln Avenue Skokie, Illinois H8 ROOM AND BOARD CO-OPS are a good place to eat this summer. Board $11 per wk. Room & board $17 per week. Join for 1 or both terms. Contact Intter-Cooper- ative Council, 2546 SAB. Call 668-- 6872. El TRANSPORTATION RIDE WANTED to BOSTON, May 14-16. Chris Cohen, 764-9087 or 665-4537. G FOR SALE SELLING OUT All unfinished furniture. Dastic reduc- tions. Save money while stock lasts. A few of our specials: Desk and chair, $14.95; 3-drawer chests, $9.95, 4-draw- er chest, $11.95, Record cabinets, bookcases, corner, china cabinets, bookcase headboards. Come in and be convinced. Michigan Woodcraft, 113 S. 4th Ave. B4 21-INCH Console TV. Admiral. Good condition. Call 665-7056. B3 BUY AND SELL THROUGH The Clearing House A listing service for privately owned articles. Autos, motorcycles, bikes, T.V., Hi-Fi's, furniture, cameras, etc. PHONE 662-6574, 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. BUSINESS SERVICES TYPING DONE in my home. Mrs. Carol Fox, 476-5184. J18 Meet the Right Person The purpose of our organization, using established techniques of personality appraisal and an IBM system, is to introduce unmarried persons to others with compatible backgrounds, inter- ests and ideals. Interviews by ap. pointment. Phone 662-4867. MICHIGAN SCIENTIFIC INTRODUCTION SERVICE BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY RELIABLE PARTY FOR ADDED INCOME FOR PART OR FULL TIME WORK WE SECURE LOCATIONS FOR TESTERS Male or female, wanted for this area to service route for Sylvania & R.C.A. television and radio tubes sold through our latest modem method free self-service tube testing and merchandising units. Will not inter- fere with your present employment. To qualify you must have $1,476.60 to $2,953.20 cash available immed- iately for inventory and equipment, investment secured. Car, 5 spare hours weekly, could net up to $6,000.00 per year in your spare time, should be able to start at once. This company will extend financial assistance to full time if desired. Do not answer unless fully qualified for time and investment. Income should start im- mediately. Business is set up for you. Selling, soliciting, or experience is not necessary. For personal inter- view in your city - please include your Phone Number and WRITE U. S. ELECTRONICS CORP. 6267 Natural Bridge, Pine Lawn 20, Mo. PERSONAL 2 GUYS need cook for dinner-not lunch. Call Fred, 665-2341 between 3 and 5 p.m. Fl LOVABLE LABRADOR free to the right home. Have moved to the city, dog prefers room to run. Has shots. Call 662-4177. F10 RENT YOUR TV from NEJAO GE and Zenith portables for only $10 per month. FREE service and de- livery. Phone 662-5671 NOW. F JUDY'S LONELY! She needs lots and lots of people to help her on the Michigan Daily Business Staff. Come in and see her any day. F14 WAKE UP SERVICE -- Have your phone ringEat any designated time- day or night-LOW RATES, DON'T BE LATE FOR CLASS OR WORK- AGAIN. TELEPHONE ANSWERING SERVICE, 665-8871 (24 hours). F42 AUSTIN DIAMOND-"The best buy on an Engagement ring in Ain.Arbor." 1209 S. University, 663-7151. At the State Theatre BIKES AND SCOOTERS WITH THE typical Disney menagerie of wild animals and the typical wholesome-but-troubled teenager, "Those Calaways" rep- resents all that it good and bad about the typical Disney film. Situated in the scenic Vermont countryside, the story revolves round the familiar themes of a boy and his dog, a boy and his "Paw," a boy and his girl, in that order. If that were the extent of it, the picture could be considered appealing, if not enthralling. However, the plot thickens; while the viewer moves smoothly through the young hero's first encounters with the dangers of nature and romance, he oozes rather uncomfortably along for another hour while "greedy, heartless capitalists" attempt to disrupt the lives of the villagers, content in the rusticity of their New England town. All this is complicated by foreclosed mortgages and "Paw's" consuming interest in liquor and wild geese. PERHAPS in an humanitarian effort to make the two corny hours a little more bearable for parents, Disney felt compelled to include a touch of painful realism--"Paw" wincingly sets his own broken leg, ermines get eaten by wolverines, "Maw" and "Paw" even have fights. But they make up, of course, and no one dies in the end--except the ermine. If the human element of realism is squelched by the mediocre acting of most of the cast, the wild-life scenes are at least partial compensation. Hopefully, though, none of the children in the audience were alarmed by -the connection between "maw's" ermine cape and the furry little friend they had seen scampering about in the snow a few moments before, DOTTED WITH minor miracles which set one's teeth on edge but which seem not only accepted, but even required by the younger set, "Those Calaways" is good viewing for the youngster sharp enough to comprehend the somewhat gluey plot; the story is moving and at times even mildly humorous. -CAROL MEAD 'DUNES': Many Implications Brought to Mind At the Campus Theatre "WOMAN IN THE DUNES" is a tautly constructed, brilliantly edited morality piece. The plot is simple and offbeat. A man is offered shelter for the night with a woman, who lives at the bottom of a sand pit, only to discover the next morning that he is a prisoner. The trapped guest then attempts numerous escapes only to fail each time and be returned to the woman of the dunes. Most of the structure of the film revolves around the struggles between the man and the sand, and between the two individuals themselves. The number of possible analogies to contemporary civilization and its ills are numerous. And as with any serious work of art, the interpretations of the analogies and their implications will differ in respect to the individual regarding it. THE GREATEST VALUE the film offers is not a thematic allu- sion to Modern Man or to Man's eternal battle with nature. The real worth concerns the absorbing ways in which the film develops and grows as an artistic unity. The direction is compact and frugal; each shot of the constantly drifting sands, each frenzied moment of time spent by the two people within the sand pit are carefully interwoven with each other to pro- vide a delicate pattern of emotional and psychological tension, both within the film and in respect to the audience. LEVI JACKETS Blue Denim-$5.49 "White"-$5.98 LEVI'S Superslim's-$4.98 LEVI'S Dungarees-$4.49 TURTLENECKS-$1.69 (15 Colors) Open Mon. & Fri. Nites SAM'S STORE 122 E. Washington '61 LAMBRETTA LI 150, $175 or b offer. Call 665-5671. 1964 YAMAHA, 250 cc, 5 speed. $4 663-2840 or 663-3683. HONDA NOW! Buy, reserve, or L away before the spring rush. 24, delivery onrall 12 popular 1965 m els. 30 or more to choose from. E them at HONDA OF ANN ARBC 1906 Packard Rd., 665-9281. SEE IT NOW-The '65 Yamaha w the revolutionary new oil injectl system. No more fuss or muss. NICHOLSON MOTOR SALES 223 S. First CAR SERVICE, ACCESSORII RENT A TRUCK Pickups, panels, stakes, and vans 59 Ecorse Rd., Ypsilanti, Mob. iest Z3 475. Z2 ay- hr. od- See DR, Ith ion ES s. 418 E. WASHINGTON On Campus-Half Block from Frieze WASHINGTON MANOR NOW LEASING FOR FALL, 1965 Apts. for 2 and 3 Men ONE BEDROOM & STUDIO APART- MENTS, LUXURIOUSLY FURNISHED, AIR - CONDITIONED, BALCONIES, SOUND-PROOF CONSTRUCTION, I 59 Ecorse Rd., Ypsilanti, Mich. DINE OUT THIS WEEKEND