Wednesday, June 14, 1972 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine Nationalist sentiment instigated May student riots in Lithuania MOSCOW h-P--Two hundred young workers, students and high school pupils are in jail awaiting trial and another youth burned himself to death following two days of rioting in Soviet Lithuania last month, Lithuanian sources reported yesterday. Two policemen died in the rioting May 18-19 in the city of Kaunas. The disorders were touched off by the funeral of a 20 - year - old Roman Catholic youth who burned himself to death May 14 in a public park in the city, the sources said. Word of the rioting was phoned to Moscow last month, but details were scanty. Yester- day's reports indicated the dis- orders were more serious than they seemed -at first. The youth, Roman Kalanta, killed himself for political rea- sons, the sources said. The sev- eral thousand rioters apparent- ly considered him a martyr to Lithuanian nationalism. The disorders are believed to be the first on such a large scale since the so-called food riots in Novocherasassk, in Southern Russia in 1962, Lithuania, a Baltic state with a predominantly Roman-Catho- lic population, was annexed by the Soviet Union in 1940. Na- tionalist sentiment has been re- portedly rising in the past few months with the Catholic com- munity demanding freedom of worship. The sources said Communist party representatives met 12 days ago and later tried to spread rumors that the youth- ful rioters were shouting anti- Semitic slogans and advocat- ing free love. This was appar- ently an effort to discredit the rioters with Lithuania's Jewish minority and with the older generation. No such slogan were shouted, sources reported. One witness to the rioting said the youth chanted "freedom, freedom, and "freedom for Lithuania." They hurled sticks and stones at policemen and paratroopers, made several attempts to set fires in the city, and smashed the window of a shop that sold political literature. The sources said the streets of Kaunas are still heavily pa- trolled by police and by a di- vision of paratroopers garrison- ed in Kaunas. These paratroop- ers and paratroop units from the so-called "internal forces," under the Internal Affairs Min- istry, were used on the second day of rioting. SAUL ALINSKY, a noted organizer of community action groups, died Monday in Carmel, Calif. See News Briefs, below. I ne .wsbriefs by The Associated Press SAUL ALINSKY, one of the country's most well-known or- ganizer of community action groups, died Monday after collapsing on a sidewalk in Carmel, California. Alinsky had spent the last 25 years traveling around the country working with the poor and minority groups. He formed the Back Yards Council in Chicago in the early 1940s, using rent strikes, boycotts, sit-ins and picketing, in an at- tempt to improve the area around the Chicago stockyards. Alinsky also organized the Industrial Areas Foundation, which has helped in the creation of many community-action groups. ARTHUR BREMER'S TRIAL on charges of shooting Alabama Gov. George Wallace was set yesterday for July 17 by U.S. District Court Judge Edward Northrop. Northrop scheduled the trial at the conclusion of a hearing at which he signed a modified order for psychiatric examinations for Bremer. The examinations are to determine if Bremer is competent to stand trial, to determine if he was legally sane at the time of his alleged offenses and to ascertain if he would be a danger if released from custody. No decision has apparently been reached on whether the 21-year- old Milwaukee man will first stand trial on federal or state charges. AN OFFER FROM THE MILITANT WING of the Irish Re- publican Army for a seven day cease fire in return for peace talks was turned down yesterday by British official William Whitelaw. He said he could not "respond to ultimatums from terrorists." Violence raged across Belfast as the offer was made. A series of bus hijackings and burnings threw the city into chaos. Everyone Welcome! GRAD COFFEE ! HOUR Wed., June 14 8 p.m. E. CONFERENCE ROOM, RACKHAM Lemonade and Cake for all McGovern roams NY for blue-collar support BUFFALO (/') - Sen. George McGovern D-S.D. ) criticized the Nixon administration "credibility gap" yesterday in a campaign tour of upstate New York. McGovern took advantage of Sen. Hubert Humphrey's (D- Minn.) absence from the New York primary to seek the support of blue collar workers in the state. "I take it he attaches a rather low priority to the New York primary," the South Dakota lawmaker said of the Minnesota sena- tor in a news conference in Buffalo. McGovern is expected to win considerably more than 200 of the 278 delegates in New York's June 20 primary. Visiting a stoplight manu- - - facturing plant in Syracuse, McGovern said, "President Nix-23south state on coiues back from Moscow claimingthat we're going to re-S T A T E duce the arms race. Four days later Secretary Laird of the Defense Department goes to the ACADEMY Capitol and says we're going toAW ARD increase the arms budget. Now, who are we to believe? . .I W INNER! don't think the Russians are Best Art Direction going to be fooled by this kind Beat Coslume Design of talk. I don't think we are." Open 145 Meanwhile, Humphrey flew 2 pM to South Carolina to seek the 5 P M support of the state's 32 con- vention delegates. Over a luncheon meeting with the delegates, Humphrey said he believed the nation's econo- my and not the Vietnam war and G will be the prime issue in No- Alexandra vember,__ "MODERN TMES" HAS NEVER BEEN SHOWN ON TELEVISION! 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