Page 4--Wednesday, May 5, 1982-The Michigan Daily Polish leaders re-establish marti*al Warsaw, Poland (AP)- .Rioting broke out yesterday in the Baltic port city of Szczecin for the second day. Authorities reimposed a night curfew in Warsaw as well as other martial law measures. It was not immediately clear in which other cities the restrictions went into ef- fect, but the East German news agency ADN said the curfew was imposed in Warsaw, Szczecin and Gdansk. Disorders in Szczecin, a provincial capital about 15 miles from the East German border, were announced in Parliament by Interior Minister Gen. Cieslaw Kiszczak in a review of Mon- day's clashes between police and Solidarity union supporters in Warsaw and at least 13 other cities. KISZCZAK SAID police detained 1,372 people during the rioting, and that at least 72 police officers were injured in street battles. The number of civilian casualties was "still unknown," he said. "The most serious incidents took place in Warsaw where police decided to disperse aggressive groups," the army general said. "The incidents lasted until late night, and similar ex- cesses were repeated today in Sz- czecin." The curfew in Warsaw begins at 9 p.m. for youths under 18 and midnight for adults, the Polish news agency PAP reported. Both end at 5 a.m. Authorities also banned meetings of student clubs, discotheques and all en- tertainment, PAP said. ON SUNDAY, the regime lifted the curbs which were first imposed when the military crackdown began last Dec. 13, but warned it would, not tolerate street rallies and marches that began with a counter-May Day parade here and in other cities last Saturday. Monday's protests, the most violent since December, broke out in the capital and across Poland during Solidarity-sponsored demonstrations law marking the anniversary of the coun- try's liberal 1791 constitution. The scope of the disorders suggested that the anti-government outbursts had been coordinated. NEWSPAPERS and other sources reported disturbances Monday in War- saw, Gdansk, Szczecin, Gliwice, Wroclaw and other cities. Police using tear gas, water cannons, concussion grenades and glares fought rioting unionists, their supporters and youths outside Communist Party headquarters here and the Parliament as well as on a major bridge across the Vistula river. The Soviet Union, in its first comment on the rioting, said the unrest was "a desperate attempt by the opponents of socialism to restore their lost positions." IN WASHINGTON, deputy White House press secretary Larry Speakes said, "We deplore the use-f force" and added that the demonstrations were "a reminder that the demands for free ex- pression have not been met." Telephone communications in War- saw remained cut after lines went dead Monday afternoon, but other channels of communication operated normally. Clean-up crews hastily cleared the mess left here Monday night after more than six hours of street fighting. POLICE KEPT a low profile as War- saw residents went about their business Tuesday as usual. In Parliament, a liberal deputy said his colleagues should consider Mon- day's events and react carefully. "Parliament and government should continue their policy of national accord despite what happened," Deputy Jan Szczepanski said. Szczepanski, regarded as one of the most liberal deputies, said that the government should carefully delineate between Solidarity and a political op- position. In Brief Iranian leader dies in jet crash ALGIERS, Algeria - Foreign Minister Mohamed Benyabia, who mediated the release of the American hostages in Iran, has been killed in a plane crash en route to Tehran to try to end the Iran-Iraq war. Iran blamed Iraqi jets for the crash. Benyahia, eight other officials, an Algerian journalist and the crew of four died when their Grumman G-2 executive jet crashed Monday in northwest Iran near its borders with Turkey and Iraq, an Algerian government statement said. In Washington, former Deputy Secretary of State Warren Christopher recalled Benyahia as a hero for the central role he played in negotiating the January 1981 release of 52 American hostages from Iran. Christopher, who represented the United States in the negotiations, said "I join the Algerian people in mourning his death." The Iranian Foreign Ministry said it would provide Algeria with a tape showing tht the ar traffic control tower in Tabriz, northwest Iran, "instruc- ted the Algerian plane to change direction toward Ankara in order to escape the attack of the Iraqi fighters." Soviets reject summit offer MOSCOW - A senior Soviet official yesterday angrily rejected President Reagan's offer to meet Soviet President Leonid Brezhnev in June at the United Nations, saying tpe Kremlin wanted a "prepared" summit in Europe this fall. "We are waiting for a clear and accurate reply from the American president" on Brezhnev's April 17 proposal for an October summit on neutral ground, said Yuri Zhukov, 74, a member of the policy-making Cen- tral Committee and a political commentator for the Communist Party newspaper Pravda. Zhukov, speaking at a news conference' on Soviet "peace week,' said Kremlin officials believe Reagan is weighing the 75-year-old Soviet leader's suggestion for a summit in Finland or Switzerland, but that there has been no official reply. In Washington, deputy White House spokesman Larry Speakes said he wished Zhukov's response "had been more positive." Salvadoreans claim American killed SAN SALVADOR, El Salvadbr - Military officials and the U.S. Embassy said yesterday they were checking a leftist guerrilla claim that an American was killed while taking part in a guerrilla operation in the Morazan Provin- c. The guerrillas, in a broadcast by their clandestine Radio Venceremos, claimed an American by the name of Joseph David Anderson, age and hometown not given, was killed while taking part in a guerrilla operation near the village of Peza Honda on April27. It said Anderson had been traveling with the guerrillas since January 1981, when the leftists launched their so-called "final offensive" against the government. The guerrillas said the man had been in the country for 12 years. A U.S. Embassy spokesman said there was no one by that name registered with the consular section. Americans are asked to register with the embassy in El Salvador but many do not. Cina to reorganize government PEKING- Vice Chairman Deng Xiaoping clinched an important victory yesterday by winning legislative approval to shape the central government the way he wants in one of the biggest reshuffles ever in China. Eleven vice premiers were ousted from office, and 23 new ministers were appointed. The shakeup announced by the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress packed the Cabinet-called the State Council-with relatively younger and more professional people who back Deng's goal of modernization. Deng supporters already in place were not touched. The mass removal of vice premiers was intended more to streamline the top government hierarchy than to evict political foes. Prosecution begins in Hinkley trial WASHINGTON- Prosecutors told a jury yesterday the shooting of President Reagan was a "planned, premeditated" act, and two law enfor- cement officials "mowed down" in the attack testified in the case against gunman John W. Hinckley Jr. But Hinkley's attorney, setting out the insanity defense, portrayed the sandy-haired product of a wealthy family as a loner who tried suicide in the months before last year's shooting. He said Hinckley was consumed by fan- tasies about movie actress Jodie Foster and the murdered Beatle John Len- non. In all, the prosecution called nine witnesses after the opening statements. Hinckley's lawyers conducted almost no cross-examination. Adelman said the government would rest its case after seven more witnesses tomorrow. 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