\LION t BATTALION Wednesday, October 6, 1971 College Station, Texas Page 5 y TV. Vietnamese forces withdraw from Cambodian border IaIGON •■‘ zp) —North Vietnam- ■ forces have withdrawn from could a|.B(; a mbodian border battle area '' ith broajK r suffering heavy losses in °f bac|M r 10-day offensive, the South ict amese commander of the takeiti |rapaig n said Tuesda y- !e p0 ' ver iR\r e plan to pursue them,” ‘ l Pc WorliB re( j n Gen. Nguyen Van SUs PecM^ are K oing after them 11 heavy air attacks and other n es ; Chot Ef|nsive operations.” henf . iiiih said the North Vietnam- ^■lost 450 men killed in their campaign on the Cambodian- Vietnam frontier. He told Associated Press cor respondent George Esper at his headquarters in Tay Ninh that South Vietnamese casualties in the border fighting were 41 killed and 289 wounded. Minh said allied radar and other electronic detecting devices confirmed reports that the North Vietnamese had withdrawn east ward and northeastward from the main battle arena around the highway junction town of Krek, seven miles inside Cambodia. Minh reported the North Viet namese pullout less than 24 hou^s after the heaviest fighting of the border campaign, a series of savage clashes near Fire Base Alpha, Si/o miles east of Krek, over a seven-hour period Monday. As the fighting raged, a tank- led- South Vietnamese relief force pierced the North Vietnamese blockade of Alpha and relieved the garrison that had been cut off 10 days. Two earlier attempts to crash through had failed. Saigon headquarters claimed 134 North Vietnamese were killed in the ground fighting near Alpha and that 230 men were killed by the relentless allied air strikes and artillery bombard ment. South Vietnamese losses were 10 killed and 39 wounded, the command said. During the siege, the Alpha garrison of South Vietnamese and Cambodian troops had been resupplied by Vietnamese C123 transport planes which made low- altitude parachute deliveries. The cargo planes had been fitted wtih machine guns and they raked enemy positions on both sides to suppress ground fire as they came in. Minh estimated that the North Vietnamese force totaled about 3,000 men in the border cam paign. He said they consisted of three regiments, all far under strength at about 750 men each. A regi ment at full strength would have 2,900 men. The general said the objective of the North Vietnamese border offensive, which started Sept. 25, had been to disturb Sunday’s presidential election in South Vietnam, to embarrass President Nguyen Van Thieu and to cause his prestige to drop. Minh said that captured docu ments of the Communist com mand showed that the North Vietnamese had hoped to draw South Vietnamese troops out of the Tay Ninh area and destroy them in eight days. The plan, he said, was to lure South Vietnamese reinforcements up a main highway to go to the aid of a surrounded fire base and to ambush the column on the road. Once the task force was destroyed, Minh said, the North Vietnamese hoped to send two sapper battalions into Tay Ninh to wreck headquarters. ALBERTSONS) QUALITY SKAGGS ALBERTSONS DRUGS & FOODS SPECIALS GOOD WED., THUR., FR LIMIT SAT., OCT. 6, 7, 8, 9, 1971 RIGHTS RESERVED PRESIDENT'S FREEZE ORDER! Skaggs-Albertson's is cooperating with the presidents excutive order. Our prices will be maintained at or below the present level. Our quality will always remain the finest. CUT FROM USDA GRADE A FRYERS FRYER PARTS FRYER BREASTS. u.54< FRYER THIGHS i. 44‘ FRYER DRUMSTICKS u 48 c FRYER LIVERS lb 59< FRYER GIZZARDS lb 49' PICK-O-CHKKiHr . lb49 BONELESS SHQULDERI ROAST USDA CHOICE BEEF LB. 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CASCADE il 69 c Labor leaders renew attack on policies WASHINGTON (A 5 ) — Pres ident Nixon worked on the next stage of his campaign against inflation Tuesday while the House took up his tax-cutting program and labor leaders re newed their attack on the Pres ident’s economic policies. “Robinhood in reverse” and “association for the rich” was the description applied to Nixon's program by Patrick E. Gorman, chief executive officer of the AFL-CIO Amalgamated Meat Cutters union. Testifying before the House Banking Committee, Gorman urged Congress to reject the tax bill as a “bonanza for industry.” The House began debate on the measure and scheduled a vote on it Wednesday. Chairman Wilbur D. Mills, D.-Ark., of the House Ways and Means Commit tee, predicted it will pass. He called the bill an improvement over the President’s proposals. Nixon, back from a weekend at Key Biscayne, Fla., conferred at the White House with Secre tary of the Treasury John B. Connally and Director George Shultz of the Office of Manage ment and Budget. These men, along wtih mem bers of the President’s Council of Economic Advisers and other top aides, are helping the chief executive round out the program that will replace the 90-day wage- price-rent ^freeze' that expires Nov. 13i»ii!> oinnoJ nrfol. n ^ White liouse V 'press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler indicated the President will be ready to an nounce the Phase 2 program soon, perhaps sometime over the coming weekend. One of the final problems i'e- maining to be settled is what type of enforcement is to be used in keeping wages and prices in check when the present freeze ends. Sen. Gale McGee, D.-Wyo., proposed legislation delaying pay raises for the armed forces as well as for civilian government workers. McGee, chairman of the Senate . Post Office and Civil Service Committee, said in a statement that Senate approval Monday o£ an additional $381 million in crease for the military on top of a $2.4-billion raise included in the already-enacted draft bill is unfair at a time when civilian pay raises are frozen. McGee’s action followed House approval Monday of Nixon’s order barring until next July 1 a pay raise that civilian federal workers had been scheduled to get on Jan. 1. The Senate is due to vote on this question Wednes day or Thursday. The tax bill before the House contains some $5.71 billion relief in 1971-73 for individuals, mainly those in the lower income tax brackets. Organized labor’s criticism of the bill was directed at its bene fits for business and industry. AFL-CIO President George Meany said the “tax bonanza to business” would amount to $70 billion in a decade. Sensing Center awarded contract A&M’s Remote Sensing Center has received a $48,500 contract from the Naval Ordnance Labo ratory, announced RSC director Dr. John W. Rouse Jr. The center will develop and test a laboratory model of a new system developed at the center during the past two years. Dr. Rouse said the system, when op erated in conjunction with air borne radar, would provide near real time identification of Arctic ice types. Results from radar data analy sis at the RSC led to laboratory tests of the system using a mock- up built around a small analog computer. fto