Wednesday, June 27, 97z, THE SUMMER DAILY Page Three Narc errors strike terror in Middle America's homes The Royal Glance A member of the 48th Highlanders honor guard gives England's Queen Elizabeth a sly glance as she reviewed the guard at the start of her visit to Toronto yesterday. The Queen, by the by, is a married woman. J rGay pride week Ic le reEE NlMoaAlMl T enants' riahts By The Associated Press One night, two months ago, a group of armed men burst into homes in Middle America and brought terror to two fam- ilies. The men were narcotics agents, and they had made a mistake. Their error put Collinsville, Ill., in the nation's headlines and touched off a storm of indignation. A SURVEY has produced a small, but chilling, harvest of similar tales. SIn January, William Pine was awak- ened by his daughters' screams as armed men broke through the front and b a c k door of his Winthrop, Mass., home. He was pushed against a window with guns pointed at his head before state police realized they had the wrong house. * Heyward Dyer, 22, was shot and killed Oct. 2, 1969, in his Whittier, Calif., apart- ment when a narcotics agent who had broken into the wrong apartment on the floor above fired a shot through the floor. . On May 18, an off-duty Texas De- partment of Public Safety officer was shot to death in a raid on a Houston apartment after an informer mistakenly identified him to narcotics agents as having sold amphetamine pills. THE NIXON administration has declared "all-out global war on the drug menace." State and local enforcement has been stepped up, partly through the efforts of the Office of Drug Abuse Law Enforce- ment which was set up in the Justice De- partment in January 1971 to carry the federal attack on drugs, particularly hero- in, down to the street level. This campaign has resulted in record numbers of search or arrest warrants and put record numbers of drug traffickers and record amounts of illegal drugs out of circulation. But civil liberties groups and persons in the enforcement field charge the legal re- strictions or operating safeguards have in some cases been ignored under pressure to produce results. HERBERT GIGLOTTO, 29, and his wife, Louise, 28, were asleep in their Collins- ville home on April 23 when a crash and some screaming awakened them. "I take about three steps out of bed, and I see these hippies with guns. I told my wife, 'We're dead,' " Giglotto said, Giglotto says he and his wife were knocked down across their bed and hand- cuffed. He was threatened with death at gunpoint as the men shouted obscenities at them. One agent flashed a gold badge, which Mrs. Giglotto only glimpsed. When the men realized their mistake, they lefttwithout apology or explanation, Giglotto said. DONALD ASKEW, 40, and his wife, Vir- ginia, 37, had just sat down to dinner that night in Collinsville when armed men began to kick their door in. Askew told his son to run for his life. See INNOCENTS, Page 12 Wonder whether you'll get your damage deposit back from spring term rentals? According to Campus Legal Aid attorney Jonathan Rose, the best way to make sure is to withhold the rent due July 1. He says tenants are on safe legal ground if they do this, and advises anyone who encoun- ters difficulty to contact Legal Aid. Badillo defeated NEW YORK - Comptroller Abraham Beame won the runoff election for the Democratic nomination in New York City's mayoral race last night, piling up a margin of nearly two to one over Congressman Herman Badillo. Beame could become the city's first Jewish mayor. With 73 per cent of the votes counted in the first mayoral runoff in New York history, Beame had 415,347 to Badillo's 240,673. For better or worse SANTA MONICA-Light-hearted actress Eva Gabor, 46, has dissolved her fourth marriage in Superior Court. Gabor, whose roles include the never-to-be-forgotten Lisa of television's "Green Acres," took thirty seconds Monday to end thirteen years of holy matrimony to Richard Brown, a screenwriter. As they say, love is better the fifth time around. 0 A2's weather Mostly cloudy with a chance of rain. An area of scattered showers trailing the cold front passing us by early this morning will give us overcast to broken sky coverage with the chance of rain. High temperatures between 85 and 90 with lows tonight 65 to 70. despite Council By REBECCA WARNER a picnic on the Diag. Despite City Council's refusal June 4 FRIDAY'S LESBIAN PRIDE activ ro repeat last year's endorsement of Gay will be led off by a protest picket at Pride Week, members of the city's gay Ann Arbor Public Library at noon. GA ::ommunity have set aside this week for "celebration of our capacity for love of is asking all women to protest the librat one another." recent refusal to display an art coll A Lesbian Pride Day will also be held developed by the Lesbian Art Group. Friday, as a separate action. Spokes- The art group, a loose organization women for the Gay Awareness Women's loaaritperdth clag w Kollective (GAWK) say remnants of sex- local artists, prepared the collage a ism within the gay male movement make iooperative effort. Library director Hot it impossible for GAWK to participate in :hance told representatives of the gr local Gay Pride Week actions, last week that the collage was tooc ities the WK ry's age n of s a imer roup con.- A SPOKESMAN for the male Gay Liberation Front (GLF) calls Gay Pride Week "an open, safe way for people to admit to themselves and the people living around them that they're gay and feel ,,ood about it" The mass activities, culminating in a starch and dance in Detroit, will also serve as "a show of force to straight people or to the rest of the community," sLF members comment. The chief Gay Pride activity in the pity will be a march Friday at 5 p.m. from the Union to City Hall, followed by' GOODBYE.,. . Today is the last day of classes for the spring half-term. It is also the last day of spring publication for The Daily. But we'll be back start- ing July 10 with more tales of tuition increases, Tiger triumphs and trage- dies, dope notes and Senate votes, and perhaps even impeachment pro- ceedings. Happy Fourth of July. Troversial for display. The collage, titled "As We See It as See GAY, Page 12 Plai ondo n files motion for dismissal of case By GORDON ATCHESON A pre-trial motion has been filed seeking dismissal of all charges against Rainbow People's Party members Pun Plamondon and Craig Blazier which alleges the state's case against the two is part of a conspiracy to defame the party, RPP spokespersons announced yesterday. Plamondon and Blazier have been ar- raigned on several felonies, including armed robbery and extortion, in con- nection with an apparent marijuana deal last January. the duo has been bound over for a July 16 trial. The court will also hear motions asking a separate trial for Blazier and a second motion which, if granted, would allow Plamondon to act as co-defense counsel along with Detroit attorney Hugh "Buck" Davis. "The prosecution is being brought in order to chill and deter the political ac- tivity of defendants and the political organization to which they belong," the motion states. ORAL, ARGUMENTS on the dismissal THE MOTION further alleges the case and other related motions begin today mi has been brought against Plamondon and the Benzie County Circuit Court, where See RPP, Page 12