THE MICHIGAN DAILY Fridoy, April 12, 196E N, THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, April 12, 196E I RVEY OF RIOT-TORN CITIES: t dyasoroCzech R egim e C alls tdyCalls Lo oter 'solid Citizen Cri"ici9 ''e-id 5 By Tile Associated Press Who were the looters? Who tossed the fire bombs . In the aftermath of the assas- sination of the Rev. Dr. Martin' Luther King Jr., racial violence struck more than 100 cities, whole blocks went up in flames and hundreds of stores were stripped of everything that could be car- ried out. "The hoodlums did it," said a Baltimore pharmacist whose drug store in a. Negro neighborhood was struck three times. Poland P"a G ain-olhs, N ew) WARSAW P-Poland's Com- munist party chief, Wladyslaw Gomulka, anchored his power base yesterday against the challenge of, a group headed by. the nation's secret police chief. Parliament ap- proved two Gomulka supporters, as the new ceremonial president and minister of defense. In a unanimous vote, the 460- member Sejm, or Parliament, elected Marshal Marian Spychal- ski to the vacant pdst of presi- dent. It also unanimously backed the nomination of Lt. Gen. Woj- ciech Jaruselski, 44, as defense minister, the job Spychalski left. Four other changes, three at cabinet level, also were announced in the continuing shake-up that has followed the Gomulka regime's bitter reaction to last month's antigovernment student riots. Premier J o s e f Cyrankiewicz promised more "systematic purges of bureaucrats, troublemakers, in- competents and those who were alien to us." The "alien" refer- ence was taken by Westerners here to mean Jws, a main target for the government's attacks. Gomulka's opponents are an ul- tranationalist group of Communist World War II resistance fighters known as the Partisans. Under the That seems to be a general as- sumption-but arrest records in a sampling of cities often run counter to this belief.- In Washington, interviews by the District of Columbia Bail Agency disclosed that a number of the arrested could be called solid citizens of the community. The city-run agency interviewed 1,200 persons 18 and over by Tuesday afternoon. "A larger percentage of them are working," said an interviewer. "A lot of them have jobs-good rty Chief Sp port'. leadership of Maj. Gen. Mierczy- slaw Moczar, interior minister and secret police chief, they have been maneuvering for.-power, and had pushed one of their members, Lt. Gen. Grzegorz Korcynski for the defense minister's job. The group mixes attacks on "Zionists" with opposition to party officials who came into power during the Stalin era. Spychalski, whose wife is Jew- ish, was jailed during the early 1950s when he fell into disgrace with the Polish Stalinists. Most observers gauged the ap- pointments of Spychalski and Jaruselski as good indicators of how Gomulka has fared against .the Partisans. jobs, some of them appropriate for their education level." What did this indicate to him? "I guess it means a lot of people who normally don't commit crimes were out there in those stores grabbing stuff along with the rest." Sam Devine, owner of a shoe store in Chicago, was surprised Monday when a 16-year-old Negro walked into his store, returned a pair of shoes and apologized for taking them. "His folks must have told him to return them," Devine said. "It was really something nice." But in Memphis, where it all started a week ago, police said the typical rioter was 24, most likely unemployed and with a one-in four chance of having a police record. Ofd103 persons arrested in Memphis for looting, 3P were over 17 years and 30 were women, Three were 6-year-olds, who were released. The average rioter in Youngs- town, Ohio, was said by police to be between 19 and 21, unem- ployed, and often had a police or juvenile record. Most are school dropouts from low-income fami- lies. In Cincinnati, the city prosecu- tor's office described most of those arrested as "youngsters out to raise a little hell." The Washington Post analyzed data on 119 persons processed by the District of Columbia Bail Agency-which does not handle juveniles-and found that 49 had not gone beyond the 10th grade. Only 13 were unemployed. Of those employed, 14 were construc- tion workers, 10 were janitors, 11 worked for the federal govern- ment and 5 for-the Post Office Department. Baltimore Mayor Thomas J. D'Alesandro III, estimated /that only about 3,000 persons of the city's 910,000 population was ac- tively involved in the disturbance there. Among five persons arrested on Chicago's West Side Tuesday and charged with arson were Edward "Fats" Crawford, 46, president of the National 'Negro Rifle Associa- tion, a group with the announced purpose of teaching self defense to Negroes, and Frederick Andrews, 29, an organizer of the Garfield Organization, a Negro self-help group. But everywhere, young people, teen-agers, even children, partici- pated in the disturbances in large numbers. t 1 PRAGUE (P) -- Czechoslovakia's Czechoslovakia's new freedom of Communist regime, apparently the press was getting out of hand slowing its liberalization drive, and might endanger his economic told news media yesterday that and political reform program. free-wheeling criticism of party In an another development, In- apparatchiks, or bureaucrats, was terior Minister Josef Pavel said getting one-sided and demagogic. he had begun moving toward Party chief Alexander Dubeck separating the secret police fron charged newsmen with "one-sided- the normal public safety services ness in the press campaign." He -a recommendation in Dubcek's said it had become "necessary to action program. Pavel said he was defend functionaries of the party." trying to remove "people who vio- these functionaries, he said in lated the law." the party newspaper Rude Pravo, Ministry Violators are now being demagogically ac- cused by some individuals." He told the news agency CTK h nnld nt P--imn tho im I.t l' i Mut ctWiel .Fie coua noc es ima~e te num- Must Act 'Wisely ' .J~UA1~ ~~~.~1I~.~~ Dubcek, considered a middle- ber of law violators who still held of-the-road leader reluctant to ministry posts. He oversees the further antagonize hard liners secret police. still holding posts on the party Dubcek said decisions should be Central Committee, emphasized based on agreement among all that it is now necessary to act parties including non-Commun- "wisely with due consideration ists, but once such decisions were and without hysteria." reached "they must be obligatory To some, Dubcek's warning may and the minority must give way have reflected his opinion that to the majority." $ $ CAS"9 for BOOKS $ $ Bring Vs Your Books $ $ $ SLATER'S BOOKS,$ 336 S. State St. . "':~::::.-- . <...... .:: .;: i.. n .....1 :.}.:".:.: ...:..n ..t .h.. n ....,. 4: ":} ..,v .. .. .. . . .....vL ...:.. . 4..--. i}'{.4. ? . r..... :::: : . ... .\..... ..... ........:.... ::y}nv: ::. ::::.:::?:::r-.:.k}.. .:i . . . . . . . ..w. i::" MICHIGANENSIA N DISTRIBUTION..,. , ALL W'EEK } } PICK UP 'YEARBOOKS 9 A.M.-4 P.M. 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