The Michigan Daily Edited and managed by Students at the University of Michigan Friday, July 25, 1975 News Phone: 764-0552 The master of pretense FTER AN EXTENDED dry spell, reports are once again popping up in the nation's newspapers con- cerning two situations which owe their notoriously lofty statures in large part to the meticulous efforts of our illustrious Secretary of State Kissinger: U.S. arm sales to the Middle East and covert U.S. activities in Latin America. Prominently mentioned in yesterday's account of Richard Nixon's frenzied attempts to thwart Salvador Allende Gossens rise to power in Chile was Mr. Kissinger's firsthand knowledge of a plot to supply anti-Marxist Chilean subversives with weapons and tear gas grenades. Though the report suggests Kissinger felt the plot should be halted at the time, it also discloses that he was privy to a secret discussion headed by Nixon of plans to eliminate Allende, a discussion which completely and illegally bypassed the proscribed procedure for initiating CIA activities-that is, through the so-called "Forty Committee." What is significant here isn't that the Nixon huddle might have put the agency to a more important use than the forty committee-Kissinger controlled that particular body-but that the Secretary had direct evi- dence of an immoral and illegal attempt of the President an the life of another national leader, and chose to do nothing about it at the time. T IS FROM this historical perspective that one begins to understand the paradoxical approach of the U.S. toward Middle East politics. Why, so many ask, does the Secretary shuttle so furiously across the Mideast sands in the name of peace, if all the while he approves massive U.S. armaments shipments to virtually every antagonist party in the con- flict, thus upping the chance of a devastating outbreak of violence in that war-torn global powder keg? Why indeed. Perhaps this question wouldn't seem so puzzling if we could fathom how it was that a Nobel Peace Prize winner could stomach an accessory role in a depraved scenario, which dictated the ultimate downfall of a popular national leader in a country that was certain to. suffer at the hands of a fascist regime after his demise. For your next trick, Henry, save it. PART TWO New light on the CIA By WILLIAM W. TURNER (Second of two parts) DR. RICHARD H. POPKIN, is also conviced fl'at the Ma- nila "Manchtrian Candid te" cr se was connerted to the .'.F assassination. On Mardi 2, 1967 a man namer 5t in Angel Cas- tillo was detained by the PH;Ilip- pine National Bnreau of Investi- gation after he had contacted left-wing Huk guerrillas. Ques- tioned under truth serum and hypnosis, Castillo blurted out a tale of having been taken to a building in Dallas, Texas, the day Kennedy was shot, handed a rifle assembled from compon- ents hidden in a bowling hag, and instructed to fire ata man in an open car sitting next to a lady. The signal to fire would be given by mirror flashes. The story caused a brief sen- sation at the time. The Manila Times bannered: " 'JFK Plot- ter' in Manila!" Wire service dispatches to the United States said Castillo was a "Cuban- trained Communistagent' who hadn't shot because he heard that a man named Joe "had al- ready shot the man in the open car. The story was so implaus- ible that it quickly died. NOT LONG AGO the hynotist who conducted the interrogation of Castillo for the Philippine au- thorities, arrived in this country under the name Vincente R. Sanchez. When Popkin took a lookat his reports, his eyes popped. The reports termed Castillo a "zombie" - a hypnoprogram- TENANT'S CORN EF Activist By STEVE DOWNS and LARRY COOPERMAN THE ABILITY OF landlords and management companies to regulate and restrict the lives of their tenants has long been one of the most institutionalized asnects of the landlord-tenant re- lationship. In recent years, the trend has been in the opposite direction, with tenants gaining more legal protection, and, con- currently, demanding greater rights to control certain aspects of their tenancy, such as the right to redecorate their own apartments or houses, to live with whom they please, and to keep pets. However, landlords are still able to exercise a great deal of control over their tenants. As a group, they are able to determine where a tenant will live, for example. The major management companies now re- quire a prospective tenant to fill out an application for hous- ing that includes such infor- mation as former landlords, banks used, credit references, and names and addresses of med robot. Sanchez extracted Castillo's rambling story over a period of weeks. Castillo, then 29, was in- ducted around 1960 into a "Spe- cial Operations Group" which afforded him paramilitary train- ing. In 1961 he participated in the Bay of Pigs invasion, as a pilot for the CIA. Thereafter he infiltrated a double-agent net- work, posing as a communist in Venezuela and liquidating a communist agent in Mexico. "In talking about the JFK assassination, Ca- stillo was able to de- scribe in some detail the room from which he was to shoot." In talking about the JFK as- sassination, Castilloth despite some disjointed phrases - was nevertheless able tordescribe in some detail the room from. which he was to shoot, and how his control agent ordered, "They got him already. Let's get out of here." After the rifle was dis- assembled andtstuffed in the bowling bag, he was hustled in- to the car which had brought him to the building. It stopped twice within blocks to pick up sther men. IN 1967, according to Sanchez, Castillo was programmed to as- sassinate Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos after openly associating with the leftist Huks -which would implicate them in the assassination. Popkin points out that this is a similar ploy to the one Nagell attributed to the anti-Castro Cubans' use of Oswald. Until recently the Castillo epi- sode might have seemed a logi- cal impossibility. But the re- lease of the Rockefeller Report, with its revelations about secret CIA projects to induce behavior modification in unsuspecting subjects, make the possibility of a "Manchurian Candidate" more than mere fantasy. (In the Robert Kennedy assassina- lion, Dr. Bernard Diamond, who examined Sirhan Sirhan for the defense, testified that he believ- ed Sirhan was hypnotized at the time of the shooting). Although the current where- abouts of Castillo is unknown, the Sanchez reports contain the names of six persons who sup- posedly ran his network, includ- ing the "control officer' and a woman who hypnotized him. Popkin's own investigations have shown that these people do exist. THROUGH Popkin their stor- ies have now been passed on to the Attorney General and the Church Committee. William T u r n e r is the author of a book on the CIA'srs e c r e t war against Castro, and a writer for the Pacific News Service. Copy- right, PNS, 1975. tenants blacklisted parents, who are sometimes ex- pected to co-sign the lease. These applications permit the management company to dis- cover, before agreeing to rent an apartment, if the tenant has any history of activism, such as de- manding repairs or withholding rent. The cooperation among land- lords in furnishing each other with information is tantamount to keeping an informal black- list. During periods of tenant activism, such as the 1969 Ann Arbor Rent Strike, the black- list is more than informal; it is widely employed both in an at- tempt to discriminate against the activists and to keep other tenants docile. THE TENANT'S CHOICE of housing is further restricted by discrimination on the basis of marital status, sex, sexual pref- erence, race, educational sta- tus, income, and number of children or pets. Numerous tenants have felt fortunate be- cause they have been able to "get away" with keeping a dog in their apartment. Even in their own homes, tenants are forced to feel as if they live in a hotel, albeit one with very poor service. Tenants are told where and how to live by people who are interested in them only as a source of revenue. This condi- tion exists primarily because tenants have not organized to defend their rights. Instead, ev- ery election day they put their faith in one politician or anoth- er who promises to do some- thing to correct the situation, and every election day they are disappointed. Tenants can no longer afford to wait for their "representatives" to take ac- tion. They must learn to repre- sent themselves, to take con- trol of their own living rooms as a first step towards control- ling their own lives. Steve Downs and L a r r y Cooperman are members of the Ann Arbor Tenants Union. Twe 6pi~iC OF '6-. Letters to The Daily Joan Little To the Daily: I WAS SHOCKED by your irresponsible editorial on the Joan Little trial which appeared in the July 16 Daily. Whether Little is guilty or innocent of murder in the death of her alleged rapist is for the jury, not some editorial writer to de- cide. The, issue is whether her actions were lawful self-defense, not that she is black and female and he was white and male. Sometimes equally irrespon- sible editorial writers demand the conviction of criminal de- fendants. Then it is called pre- judicial p r e - t r i a 1 publicity. Whether you call for the con- viction of an unpopular defend- ant or the acquittal of a fash- ionable one, itsis lynchmob psy- chology, and has no place in any newspaper. -Richard S. Kanter July 21 ghost writer To the Daily: OVER THE YEARS I have found numerous letters to the Editor published in the Daily so preposterous as to make me be- lieve that they were surely fic- titious. In the July 23 letters, I see one signed by the infamous and w h o I1 y fictitious "Inez Pilk." Ms. Pilk, in whose name events such as receptions in the League garden and conference speeches were foisted on the University community by a tongue-in-cheek D a iI y staff about fifteen years ago, seems to be as indestructible as Till Eulenspiegel-and her pranks as merry. My point is, however, that it is now clear that the Daily's letters column carries no war- ranty of authenticity. What a relief! We can now read these pieces as the fiction they un- doubtedly are. -John W. Reed Distobiued cy ,soA goes-e SYNDLCATE