Page Four THE MAl(-H1(-AK1 r')Al V C-----j- n I m-r7 I_____--1_____I~ Sunday, ecember , 197/3 3 GRADUATE STUDENTS WELCOME! BOOKS GANGSTERS & THE CIA Heroin: How the U.S. created an epidemic i i i i 3 i GRAD COFFEE HOUR WEDNESDAY 8-10 p.m. West Conference Room, 4th Floor RACKHAM TIRED OF THE FLOOR? EVER THINK ABOUT RENTING FURNITURE? COME OUT SPECIAL- AND SEE STUDENT RATES Globe Interior Rentals 3426 WASHTENAW 971-9220 THE POLITICS OF HEROIN IN SOUTHEAST ASIA. By Alfred W. McCoy. New York: Harper & Row. 472 pages. $2.95 (paper). By ALAN LENHOFF THERE IS a new phase emerg- ing in American Cold War poli- cy. Today, we are engaged in a war of contrition. As a nation, we have spent 25 years quixotic- ally attacking leftists (both at home and abroad), throwing our economic might behind some of the more ruthless dictators of the post-war era, and standing with our hands in our pockets while an alliance between indus- try and the military has steered foreign policy. Now we are apologetic about the Cold War. We are sorry about Vietnam and the Bay of Pigs. We are sorry about snubbing Mao-tse-tung, and for listening to Joe McCarthy. Perhaps we are even sorry we provoked Khruschev into banging his shoe on the table at the U.N. But we have more to be re- pentant about. As Alfred McCoy has very ably documented, it was largely our Cold War policies which have led to the epidemic of heroin that has ripped at the core of American cities. His message is clear: The heroin problem was not perpetrated up- on the U. S. by organized crime and unscrupulous foreign gov- ernments. Rather, it is a prob- lem of our own making. McCOY, A 27-year-old Yale grad- uate, spent 18 months inter- viewing customs agents, intel- ligence officers, ARVN generals, Laotian farmers, American GIs, and others,who had knowledge of drug trafficking. His findings implicate American diplomats of entanglement in the international drug trade on two levels. First, there are those who be- came involved in narcotics by forming political alliances with drug traders. This often result- ed in U. S. officials providing aid to traffickers, or covering up for their actions. Of a potential- ly more scandalous nature, how- ever, are McCoy's allegations that some American agents and diplomats have been engaged in the actual transport of narcotic drugs. McCoy's portrayal of American HAMILL'S TALE A Christmas 'gift': No bargain involvement in the heroin trade begins shortly after World War II. At that time, heroin no longer seemed a serious problem. War- time shipping restrictions had forced an estimated 180,000 ad- dicts to undergo involuntary withdrawal, leaving less than 20,000 addicts in America. BUT SOON, the United States began exercising what Sen. J. William Fulbright has called "the arrogance of power". Still flexing its muscles after the re- cent liberation of Europe, the U. S. launched a global crusade against "international Commu- nism". Buoyed by bi-partisan support, it became unofficial U. S. policy to embrace any poli- tician who espoused an anti-Com- munist line. In Asia, we fought nationalism by bolstering sagging right wing dictatorships in Taiwan ("Free China" we called it) and in South Vietnam ("Free Vietnam"). In Europe, our government attempt- ed to thwart socialist labor move- ments by joining forces with the Sicilian and Corsican mobs. The OSS literally breathed new life into the mobs, which had been powerless since the end of the war, McCoy says. In ex- change for American weapons, money and guidance, these gang- sters beat workers at political rallies, bombed labor headquar- ters, and suppplied intelligence information - while carefully re- building their power base. The pay-off came soon. In Mar- seilles, a U. S. group helped Cor- sican gangsters wrest control of the harbor from leftist workers - ostensibly for the purpose of facilitating Marshall Plan ship- ments to central Europe. Almost immediately, however, the mob was using its new asset to run heroin to the United States. OSS officials ignored the set-up, while the mobsters laid the groundwork for dominating the ,f NOAM CHOMSKY LOVE HIM? HATE HIM? BUT READ HIM! 4toI American Power and the New Mandarine. PI A questioning and analysis of the modes of , operation of American Society.' Chomsky I examines the post-war rise to power of a r new elite: the liberal intellectual, or "new mandarins." At War With Asia. Noam Chomsky draws on his visit to North Viet Nam and Laos for I a discussion of the historical, political, and' economc reasons behind our first involve- ment in an Asian land war. For Reasons of State. Analyzes the theore- tical and practical development of the Am- erican state while discussing some ways in which individuals can respond to its grow- ing power: civil disobedience, the role of the university, the philosophy of anarchism. J Ij; i THE GIFT by Pete Hamill. New York: Random House, 83 pages, $4.95. By DON KUBIT PETE HAMILL reminds me of Reno Bertoria. Who? Reno Bertoria was an infielder for the Detroit Tigers back when it was important to know who played third basetfor a fourth place team. Bertoria never became a great player, but he was a mem- ber of the team and he played every day. He batted after the Kuehns and the Kalines. When manager Tom Wolfe pro- claimed the New Journalists the best team on the block, he gave Pete Hamill recognition for in- venting the nickname and an honorary place in the starting line-up. Hamill bats after the Breslins and the Taleses. The Gift is an autobiographical novel of the days when Hamill was a 17 year old sailor on leave for the Christmas holiday. On the verge of manhood, Pete returns to Brooklyn and a reunion with the girl he has left behind and w i t h his noncommittal father. The girl, whose face he con- jures in the lonely nights "stand- ing guard over garbage cans," h a s terminated their corres- pondence with a "Dear John" letter. Pete meets her coming out of school and =tries to convince Need Something Professionally Typed? Time Running Out! " Thesis " Dissertations " Business Letters " Personal Correspondence Word Processing Service 611 Church St., Suite 2005 663-8521 her that his return means a re- incarnation of old emotions. HE IS INFECTED with the Holden Caulfied dream of run- ning away with a girl he has already lost, h e a d i n g West, changing his name, getting mar- ried and eventually finding bliss. Of course, she rejects him. lIe turns his attention instead to solving the mystery of the min with the magic leg, long ag amputated after a soccer game; the man who hides out in Rat- tigan's with its steamed windows protecting his past. The boys of the neighborhood solicit other bars, but Rattigan's is "the club of the older men, my father's people ... the hard drinkers, the brawlers."' T dis- cover his father it becomes man- datory that he enter this secret society. "I wanted to see him in t.t place where he truly lived, in the place where his personal historynbeat aroundehim, where everyone had a record of iis small wins and his unmentioned losses, the place where he bast- ed and lied and laughed and was forgiven everything. I knew now what saloons were for and why men went there late at night." FATHER AND SON sing the songs of the old country and the ceremony is intensified as they brawl with two outsiders try- ing to discourage their ritual. Father and son meet; the gift is received. This neatly balanced plot of boy - loses - girl - and - finds - father may be too sentimental, but a writing style accurate in barroom dialogue and sharp .le- tails of physical surroundings al- most makes it succeed. Most of the problems with The Gift are caused by its brevity (83 pages). It is not tight enough to be a good short story and not developed enough to work as a novel. There is barely enough room to fit in the simple plot, leaving a minimum space for explanation of the characters. All the bodies are there; Ham'll just failed to paint in their scars. At best, it is a piece of quick fiction, giving the impressioa that it was finished in a flurry-- in time for the approaching and appropriate season. After all, how many books with a Christ- mas setting can you hope to sell in July? /E'RE DESTINED to see a plethora of novels from the gymnastic typewriters of New Journalists. Pete Hamill wears the same uniform, but on the basis of The Gift, he still bats toward the bottom of the .rder. American heroin market for nearly 20 years. MEANWHILE, in Southeast Asia, the U. S. was ensuring that the mob would have new supplies of opium poppies when things were to get "hot" in Eur- ope and the Middle East in the late '60s. We began in 1951 by supporting Nationalist Chinese Army incur- sions into Burma. Largely due to its American benefactors, that army today controls about one- third of the world's supply of opium poppies. McCoy's research has not gone unnoticed. In August 1972, the CIA learned of the book's im- minent publication, and asked Harper & Row to provide them an advance copy so they might correct any of McCoy's "errors". Harper and Row agreed (despite McCoy's protests of censorship) but publication began one month later after an H&R executive de- scribed theCIA case for scrap- ping the book as being "under- whelming." , CCORDING TO the New York Times, several CIA sources have said that McCoy's account is an extremely accurate one. And if that is not convincing, McCoy's 100 pages of appendices and footnotes are a challenge to anyone who disputes his find- ings. AMERICAN REVIEW A look o contemporary writing AMERICAN REVIEW 18 edited by T h e o d o r e Solotaroff. New York: Bantam Books. 244 pages, $1.95. By GEORGE MOREL AMERICAN REVIEW is a unique sort of beast: a mag- azine masquerading under the format of a paperbound book. It has been around for a while (this is No. 18), and has had not only, a slightly different title (New American R e v i e w), but has switched publishers (this is the third issue put out under the Bantam cover). AR 18 is a mixed-bag of fiction, poetry and essays by "knowns," "half-knowns," and "unknowns." Yet, a reading of this issue gives the impression that it is a care- fully mixed bag. Although AR bills itself as "the magazine of new writing," it is by no means avant-garde. A new young writer such as Ian McEwan, who has had only two pieces published previously (one of them in an earlier NAR), lead off the issue with a short story, "Disguises." But it is a big-name author, Phi- lip Roth, who ends this one. It is a return to the womb of the "Name." Noam Chomsky, Ferrari Ward Professor of Linguis- tics at MIT, came to national attention with two ar- ticles, "The Responsibility of Intellectuals" and "On Resistance," both originally published in The New York R e v i e w of Books, and is acknowledged throughout the world as one of Americo's leading social critics. Centicore Bookshops 1229 S. University 336 Maynard ' ONE SEASON A high school football odyssey A BOOK OF UNSURPASSED SPLENDOR4 N The ROHAN MASTER "One of the most surprising masterpieces of French art' this beautiful Book of Hours was designed in the fifteenth century by one of the greatest masters in France at that time, and executed by him for a royal patron. But not until 1 904 did this relatively unknown master- piece, now in the collection of the Bibliotheque Nationale in Paris, emerge from its artistic obscurity to widespread acclaim and critical appreciation. With introductions by Milard Meiss and Marcel Thomas, who has written the commentaries on the plates. Printed by Draegerr Freres of Paris in four colors plus gold, and handsomely slipcased, 248 pages, 127 plates in four colors plus gold Before Christmas $40.00 u Thereafter $45.00 . S Other titles in our library of illuminated manuscripts: THE GRANDES HEURES OF JEAN, DUKE OF BERRY . ...".. $45.00 THE TREE RICHES HEURES OF JEAN, DUKE OF BERRY ..... $45.00 .THE MASTER OF MARY OF BURGUNDY ................ $25.00 THE HOURS OF ETIENNE CHEVALIER ..................... $20.00; THE VISCONTI HOURS .$40.00 T E A M by Richard Woodley. New York: Holt, Rinehart, and Winston, 323 pages, $7.95. By CHUCK BLOOM T REMEMBER the good old days of high school football- the off-key marching bands, the Saturday afternoon clashes, and the adolescent enthusiasm for the games. Those were the days when, naively, one believed that foot- ball was merely a sport to be enjoyed and nothing more. Big games were not to decide any post-season money-making excur- sion but were more a matter of civic pride in your school. Now I've graduated into the corporate monster of the colleg- iate and professional ranks-for- getting just how innocent those schoolboy days actually were. I forgot, that is, until I read Rich- ard Woodley's Team. Woodley spent the entire fall of 1971 with a high school team in one of the suburbs of West- chester County, New York, re- cording and documenting their every move, emotion, and draw pl y. When the fall campaign of the L a k e t o w n Harvesters (a mythical name for the team) end- ed, Woodley sat down, and wrote his memoirs in diary form-the result of which is this interesting though often superficial book. WOODLEY GOES into great detail in Team to describe things like workouts and plays. All this elaboration gets to be boring after a while-but that is what high school football has be- come: bogged down in detail. High school coaches envision themselves as small town Vince Lombardis, their sole purpose in life "to build character, to make men out of boys." Woodley fails, however, to get into the lives of the individual participants. A report on his dinner with the Harvester's 145- pound guard does not suffice as meaningful character analysis. Since the book is fact and not fiction, Woodley can't create the storybook glamour team - an undermanned, undersized group of youngsters who, under the watchful and loving eye of their coach, rise from total ob- scurity to achieve that ultimate goal: NUMBER ONE TEAM IN THE STATE. Instead Woodley must report on Laketown's medio- cre 5-3 season. The book is effective, however, in one way - at least for me. I played high school football for the North Farmington (Mich.) High Raiders. I played, but not very often; I practiced, but not very well. AS I READ this, I reminisced about the same events re- counted in the book. I remem- bered the pit drill - an all-ot' demoralizing exercise in instan- taneous violence between t w o teammates. My mind wandered back to the pre-game psych-ups employed by coaches and captains to life a bunch of 16 and 17- year olds to the point of em.)- tional frenzy. I thought about the "family" concept stressed throughout th book and how my high-school "family" was often racist, anti- Semetic, and never that close- knit. I identified with the players on the Laketown team - t n e happy-go-lucky, f r e e - s p i rited quarterback who would rather sit in the corner and strum a guitar than throw a 10-yard slant- in. I saw myself in the person of a 270-pound second strig tackle who's big and that's about all. As a reporter, Woodley is oniv average, and so too as a novelist. He is best when he uses °3 docu- mentary writing style. 1l, cap- tures the world of the Ii g h school athlete well tow id the Concoction by this method, I guess, is forgivable: it aims to sell books as well as to intro- duce new talent. There is not too much that will put off the oiyer in terms of who and what he doesn't know; the "name" peo- ple bring security. THE CURRENT issue did have an unusual angle, however. I don't know whether this is sup- posed to signal a trend, but most of the issue was non-fictional prose; even the fictional prose read like non-fiction. Gunter Grass wrote an essay, "On Stasis in Progress," which begins with a concept (melan- choly) borrowed from an etching by Albrecht Durer (which, by the way, is on the inside cover of the book), and leads into cul- tural and political observat :unc. Susan Sontag, in "Debriefing," relates the stories of friends o' hers in New York City. (The fIc- tional side of the piece is that just about everybody in the story is named Doris). Typically, Son- tag is abstruse and rambles on about (her) contemporary ex- istence. And then there is Michael Ross- man, who tells us how he leara- to play the flute in "Music Les- sons," while Philip Roth nxplains how he "got it on" with an older woman when he was a young man. The most fictional aspect of Roth's piece is his character's name: Peter Tarnopol. GRASS' ESSAY c o m e s right out as a philosophical-politi- cal tract. The rest of the prose in the book, though, hovers between fiction and plain old "what-hap- pened-to-me" narration. There is very little distance here between the character in the story and the writer. After going through this new issue, I must turn back to the new writer, McEwan, and see his creativity as more appealing than the literary renown of the Grass- Sontag-Roth triumvirate. McEwan's story is arresting. It is about a young boy's strug- gle for manhood against a bi- zarre aunt, who tries to dress him in female clothing and her- self dons male outfits. She asks that he pretend he is a girl and that she is a man. The child, Henry, can only escape by dis- covering that he truly is a male, whic hoccurs after he befriends and visits a girl classmate. lIe experiences his maleness and only then is able to understand why he doesn't want to change roles as his aunt directs. McEwan's story is the bst niece in the honk and. lnna In the CHRISTMAS c° SSTUDIO OF LOGOS BOOKSTORE OPEN 'TIL 11 P.M. CARDS CANDLES Contemporary to Classic Christmas & Holiday Designs Nature Cards, Recycled Cards Specially Designed ; Old Fashioned Cards Holiday Wreaths Many Languages Rings and Holders Imported from Europe