news briefs by The Associated Press ISRAELI FORCES withdrew from southeastern Lebanon yes- terday as the Lebanese army began moving into Arab guerilla havens after four days of Israeli attacks in the area. Israel put guerrilla losses at 50 dead and 100 wounded, but the guerrillas claimed losses of 20 dead and 36 wounded. Leaflets distributed to villagers in the area warned of further Israeli assaults unless Lebanon clamps down on Palestinian guerrilla activity. The attacks were made in retaliation for guerrilla raids last week that killed five Israelis. Israeli officials had declared earlier yesterday that they would not heed a U.N. Security Council resolution demanding that Israel halt the fighting and pull out of Lebanon. BOMB BLASTS, sniper fire at British police, and rioting erupt- ed in Belfast, Northern Ireland yesterday while British troops raided a hideout and arrested two. In Aldershot, England, two Irish construction workers were charg- ed with last week's Irish Republican Army revenge bombing of an army base that killed seven. Meanwhile, in Washington Sen. Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.) urged the Nixon administration yesterday to "end its policy of silence" and offer U.S. mediation to Northern Ireland. British parliamentarians. responded by proposing a British investigation of race relations in Massachusetts. ** * . P *rr't an ttttu Tuesday, February 29, 1972 Page Three s. Viets dri~ve into Cambodia NEARLY 100 INMATES and guards were treated for injuries socatd Press after New York correction officers stormed a Rikers Island -Aerocfateis rasai cellblock to put down a three-hour uprising. Five hostage guards were freed unharmed when the assault force Paratroopers carry the Union Jack-draped coffin of Father Gerard of club-swinging officers entered the cellblock under clouds of tear- Weston, the Roman Catholic Paratrooper Chaplain who died in gas late Sunday afternoon and restored order after 15 minutes of last week's terrorist attack at Aldershot, at the funeral in Crosby, hand-to-hand fighting. Langs, England yesterday. Cause of the disturbance was unclear. Damage was described as "very extensive," with every window broken, pipes ripped out, toilets CONTROVERSIAL ADS: broken and furniture smashed. LAST TIME TONIGHT "ON E OF THE YEAR'S 10 BEST!" -Wm. Wolf, Cue -Joseph Gelmis, Newsday "The Confession" is: "A FASCINATING FILM!I Yves Montand-a bravura performance! BEAUTIFUL!" -Judith Crist 4"The Confession"Aamoctute MCoor ALSO "ONE OF THE YEAR'S 10 BEST!" -Vincent Canby N.Y. Times An extraordinary filn" -Gail Rock Women's Wear Daily THE SUPREME COURT yesterday unanimously rejected a challenge to regulations requiring Detroit policemen to live within city limits. The Detroit Police Officers' Association and three individual of- ficers had contended the rule, adopted by the city council in 1968, was discriminatory and violated "a constitutional right to live where one pleases." However, the court upheld the decision of the Michigan Supreme Court which ruled last August that the law was reasonable because of the "special relationship between the community policed and the policeman." THE U.N. SECURITY COUNCIL, in a vote inspired partly by U.S. legislation which permits importation of Rhodesian chrome ore, resolved yesterday to adhere to a 1968 U.N. embargo on Rhodesin goods. Supreme Court to test broadcast. right WASHINGTON (A) - The Su- asked the FCC for an order requir- preme Court agreed yesterday to ing broadcasters to sell time to decide whether radio and televis- responsible groups for the solici- ion stations are required to broad- tation of funds and for comment cast paid advertisements on mat- on public issues.. ters in public dispute. tersin pblicdispte.The FCC turned the Democrats In granting a hearing to the down, but last August the U.S. Federal Communications Commis- Circuit Court ruled that a total sion (FCC) and two networks the ban on editorial advertising vio- court kept the FCC from setting lates the First Amendment. SAIGON (A') - The South Viet- namese army launched another operation inside Cambodia S u n- day and reported nine battles with the Communists in that country and in South Vietnam. Units of the U.S. 1st Air Cavalry Division re- ported two clashes with Commun- ist soldiers yesterday only 30 miles northeast of Saigon. The Saigon command said the fighting between its forces and Communist command troops dur- ing the nine battles has killed or wounded nearly 200 soldiers on both sides. In the engagements, the com- mand claimed 136 North Vietnam- ese and Viet Cong troops were kill- ed while Saigon forces suffered 20 killed End 37 wounded. The South Vietnamese forces had air and ar- tillery strike support. The new drive into Cambodia, the command said, started with nearly 1,500 South Viet- namese troops in an attempt to halt infiltration of Communist soldiers into South Vietnam. Two other Cambodian drives, one launched Feb. 1 and thedother last Thursday, were under w a y further south. These operations, the command said, were designed to check enemy infiltration toward Saigon and the western Mekong Delta. Only 30 miles northeast of Sai- gon, two units of the 1st Air Cav- alry Division reported killing nine Communist command soldiers in two separate actions near F i r e Base Fiddler's Green. There were no American casualties. U.S. B52 bombers flew 12 mis- sions Sunday night in the north- western quadrant of South Viet- nam bordering Laos between Khe Sanh and the A Shau Valley in an attempt to block a Communist offensive. U.S. military sources said a buildup of North Vietnam- ese troops and supplies was con- tinuing in that area. In another development yester- day, the U.S. Command reported that American troop strength in The Michigan Daily, edited and man- aged by students at the University of Michigan. News phone: 764-0552. Second class postage paid at Ann Arbor, Mich- igan, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor,; Michigan 48104. Published daily Tues- day through Sunday morning Univer- sity year. Subscription rates: $10 by carrier, $11 by mail. Summer Session published Tuesday1 through Saturday morning. Subscrip- tibn rates: $5 by carrier, $6 by mail. Vietnam dropped by 3,000 last week, to 124,100. President Nixon has ordered troop strength in Viet- nam cut to 69,000 by May 1. In a related development, mili- tary sources said two companies from the cavalry division found two more bodies in an area where on Saturday a 15,000-pound bomb was dropped in an attempt to destroy the headquarters of the 33rd North Vietnamese Regiment, killing two. Tarr against a ne t tdaft exiles WASHINGTON UP) - Selective Service Director Curtis, Tarr told senators yesterday that granting amnesty to Vietnam war draft resisters would be unfair and set a dangerous precedent. Tarr told Sen. Edward Kennedy's judiciary subcommittee that the ed by granting total amnesty now. Kennedy (D-Mass.), however, said "most of the political leaders of this country are asking for a;m- nesty from their past positions on war and they're going to the American public to .try to get it." Tarr said some Americans who fled the country and were not un- der indictment might have since become eligible for conscientious objector status because of' Su- preme Court decisions Tarr said he would instruct draft boards to give these men a chane to reopen their draft status, but Selective Service officials said the number is not likely to be large. While estimates of those who have left the country rather than face the draft have ranged up to 70,000 and the number of those jailed has been said to be about 500, Tarr said 6,000 draft reg& trants face possible prosecution. He said that if they were not pen- alized, it would be difficult to jus- tify the continuation of the draft at all. Tarr said the induction process might not be harmed by the pro- posal of Sen. Robert Taft, (R-OhioP to grant amnesty if the draft re- sister accepts either induction or alternative service. up guidelines until a decision is In that decision, Judge J. Skel- Both the U.S. and Britain abstained from voting. reached. This could take a year ly Wright ruled that a broad- The U.N. sanctions were imposed after Prime Minister Ian or more., caster who accepts some kinds of Smith's regime broke away from Britain to preserve white rule. A This means stations will n o t paid advertising, must also accept recent agreement reached by the two countries gives blacks political have to carry paid announcements advertisements on public issues. reent agreement reached byon such issues as the Vietnam war Appeals by the FCC, American power over a long period. and other politically sensitive top- Broadcasting Company (ABC), Co- Many U.N. delegates attacked the U.S. lifting of the ban on im- ics during this year's election cam-: lumbia Broadcasting System ports, but the U.S. delegate said "most of the permanent members" paign. (CBS) and operators of WTOP ar- of council have also been accused of violations. The dispute arose in 1969 when gued that this would give unfair ad- -- - --WTOP, a Washington radio station, vantage to affluent partisans, cut declined to accept one-minute paid down the time available for news announcements by a group of busi- and public affairs programs, in- nessmen opposed to the Vietnam volve the courts in broadcast regt- Swar.lation, restrict the FCC's supervis- SThen.in a separate test, the ion, and hamper the journalistic Democratic National Committee_ freedom of broadcasters. tf- - I s