. S *~ #V~*~S **~.J~ *S~ -, ~ I I I II ~ I 1 1 G I V% 11.r I I I %.Jf- I V ir//'1 1 L 1 rage i ruca Top military officers resign in Israel JERUSALEM (RP) - Israel fac- ed a new political crisis yester- day as top military officers re- signed+ or were suspended from duty for failing to be prepared for the October Mideast war. The opposition also called for the ouster of Premier Golda Meir and her defense minister, Moshe Dayan. Lt. Gen. David Elazar, 49, a hero of the 1967 Middle East war, quit as Chief of Staff, and a few hours later Maj. Gen. Eliahu Zeira resigned as chief of intelli- gence. SOUTH AFRICAN SA Daily Photo by KEN FINK Nutrition on a stick Jerry Poquette, campus Good Humor man, began his 12th year of service to the University community yesterday. He believes he should get an honorary degree from the University for "keeping the kids healthy all these years." Prices are up a nickel over last year's prices. "I don't think it's Good Hu- mor's fault. You better take that up with Mr. Nixon." Court acquits federal agents of instaken drug related raids Bane DURBAN, South Africa W) - The minister completed the mar- riage ceremony which made Miss Jeanette Cunningham-Brown, 20, the wife of Michael Murphy. The new Ms. Murphy missed some of the wedding reception, however. She stood well apart from others outside St. Alphege's Church last month while guests shouted chamipaigne toasts. Four days before her wedding on February 4 she and three men were served with five y e a r banning orders under the Sup- pression of Communism Act. HER ORDER affected her wed- ding by limiting the number of people she could directly social- ize with. It controls where she may work and where she may live. Immediately after the cere- mony the newlyweds launched a successful legal fight to live to- gether. Part of the banning order stipulated that she had to reside at the home of her parents at Pietermaritzburg. The Murphys wanted to set up housekeeping at Durban, 40 miles away, w h e r e her husband is a high s c h o o l teacher. The justice ministry bridev granted their appeal. Ms. Murphy shares her ban with an estimated 200 other white, brown and black South Af- ricans. THERE IS seldom an official explanation for the crackdown, not even to those restricted. The only hint comes from their activi- ties before the Suppression of Communism Act is invoked. In the month before she mar- ried, Ms. Murphy and the three men banned with her were ac- tive as white trade unionists in helping black laborers organize and strike for better wages in. the Durban area. Black and white clergymen who hve condemned the official race policy of apartheid have been banned. Politically active mulatto journalists and Asian civil rights leaders have been banned.. THE.COMMON denominator seems to be that those most like- ly to be banned are outspoken critics of government policy, par- ticularly in the area of race re- lations. Justice Minister Petrus Pelser told parliament recently that 67 ISRAEL'S ONCE proud high command was rocked by the re- port of an inquiry committee, published Tuesday, which accus- ed Elazar and Zeira of making light of Arab war preparations. Another high general, Shmuel Gonen, lost his job as command- GA v'ins suiti persons were banned last year Unofficial statistics indicate that since the mid-1950s about 2,000 South Africans of all races have been banned, some under the Riotous Assemblies Act, but most under the Suppression of Communism Act. Banning orders can be lifted or extended, again with no official explanation. THE MICHIGAN DAILY volume LXXXIV, Number 147 Thursday, April 4, 1974' is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News pnne 764-0562. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48106. Published ldaily Tuesday through Sunday morning during the University year at 420 May- nard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier (cam. pus area); $11 local mail (Michigan and Ohio); $12 non-local mail (other states, and foreign). Summer session publishea Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscrip. tion rates: $5.50 by carrier (campus area). $6.50 local mail (Mitigan and Ohio); $7.00 non-local mail other states and foreign). er of the southern Sinai, a post to which he had been transferred after he was sacked as Egyptian front commander during the war. The right - wing opposition Likud -promised "a relentless struggle" to oust Dayan because he was Elazar's superior. Likud's Shmuel Tamair con- tended Meir also should quit, along with her Cabinet, which he said was closest to developments preceding the war. Leftists with- in Meir's Labor party also cla- mored for Cabinet resignations. THE INQUIRY committee of two supreme court:judges, two former chiefs of staff and the state ombudsman wrote in its report that it could pin no "di- rect responsibility" on Dayan and Meir, and praised some as- pects of their conduct. But it added it was not quali- fied to rule on whether they should quit because of their ov- erall responsibility. In streets and cafes, Elazar's dismissal replaced mounting ten- sion on the Israeli - Syrian front as the key topic of conversation. Many Israelis sympathized with the general. It L S & A STUDENT GOVERNMENT ELECTIONS POSITIONS OPEN: * President. & Vice-President # Executive Council Seats Filing forms for candidacy may be obtained at the LS&A Student Government Office, Room 3M, Michigan Union. FILING DEADLINE IS APRIL 4, 5 P.M. "I HAVE BEEN done an in- justice," Elazar charged in his letter of resignation. Labor party official Yitzhak Ben - Aharon, a Dayan oppon- ent, branded Elazar's resignation as "a miscarriage of justice.' Ben - Aharon told reporters it was intolerable that only army officers, and not Cabinet minis- ters, were being penalized . Likud demanded an unusually long 10-hour parliamentary de- bate on the affair. The debate is set for next week. ISRAELI newspapers also sid- ed with Elazar. Maariv jeered at the Cabinet, and said in an edi- torial, "When everything goes well in the army, it is to the credit of the government. But when failures are discovered, then the army becomes an inde- pendent body, and it alone bears responsibility." The report deals only with Israel's state of alertness before the war. The committee is to convene again to probe Israel's conduct of the fighting up to the point that it stopped the Egyp- tian and Syrian advances, and eventually reversed them. WASHINGTON M) - Since adopting rigid rules, the federal drug agency has avoided mis- taken raids like the 1973 sweep into a Collinsville, Ill., home. The new rules, which went in- to effect nine months ago, 'came after the furor over a series of mistaken raids. Seven federal drug agents were acquitted Tuesday of vio- lating the civil rights of 11 per- sons in the raids which were con- ducted without warrants in the Collinsville area. DURING THE TRIAL, the agents admitted they made a mistake'in raiding the home ,of Herbert Giglotto and his wife in Collinsville. The victims of the raids testified that the agents mistreated and terrorized them. Only one of the agents, Dennis Moriarity, was acquitted of all charges against him. Three ag- ents still face charges of ob- structing justice and the other three of perjury. Some of the agents claimed they were maliciously prosecut- ed by the Justice Department un- der pressure from Sen. Charles Percy, (R-Ill.) THE STRINGENT rules for raids.were instituted by John Bartels, administrator of the' Drug Enforcement Administra- tion, after he was confirmed as, head of the agency. His changes included restric- tions on the use of no-knock au- thority, forced entry and limited the use of firearms. In commenting on the jury's finding, Percy said the verdict "must not give impetus to any future actions which would vio- late the constitutional rights, cw- pecially the right to privacy, of our citizens. "THE COLLINSVILLE raids are not a proud event in law en- forcement history. For that fea- son, I am pleased that the DEA has now established strict pro- cedures which will provide max- imum assurance that homes will not be broken into and innocent citizens harassed." Rackham Student Government is now taking applications to fill positions on: * LSA Search Committee for Dean Rhodes' Replacement * Dean Sussman's Grad Grievance Committee * Long Range Planning Committee Task Forces on: -Decision Making Processes -Size of the Student Body To apply come to Room 2006 Rackham Building or call 763-0109 weekday afternoons DEADLINES FOR APPLICATIONS 2:00, FRIDAY, APRIL 5, 1974 Ladies' and Children's Hairstyling a Specialty .. Appointments Available Dascola Barber Shops Arborland-971-9975 Maple Village-761 -2733 E. Liberty-668-9329 E. University-662-0354 WANTED: Pre-1949 copies of the Michiganension Box No. 4 I 11 I r; r r r * ,.:... . ,.. ,r{ "s .'%',~r af %;" * .: m o r n M ' 1 r' Unvrsity Tower E g t m n t'ea e * Free weekly housekeeping * 5#i.Ad, rnnmw -- -~ :.±.-~--- ____________________ .-......-* ,..... .. Wr i. ' t f r V. r - 1461 I of .y E i 1"' H 668-9604 Other locations: New York City "' Los Angeles " Washington, D.C. 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