Friday, July 2, 1 77 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven I New troop pullout begins SAIGON () - The U.S. Com- mand announced yesterday -the biggest single cutback of Ameri- can troops in Vietnam to date. Included was the last U.S. unit defending South Vietnam's bor- ders. The command said 48 Army units with authorized strength of 6,095 men were being pulled out of combat to prepare for reas- signment. Included in the withdrawals are units of the 1st Brigade, 5th Me- chanized Infantry Division, which is the last outfit guarding a South Vietnamese border. The brigaderhas been holding profthe front along the de- militarized zone dividing North -Associated Press snd South Vietnam. Units of the brigade still man two bases there but they will be olds a shotgun pulled out in one or two weeks. site site on a When they are gone, the South the Indians, Vietnamese will be left alone to News Briefs, guard this critical front. Also being withdrawn are parts - of the 173rd Airborne Brigade, the first Army combat unit to arrive in Vietnam. The cutback of 6,000 troops was the largest number announced at one time, nearly double the pre- vious high of 3,300 announced March 1. As the imminent withdrawals were announced, U.S. B52 bomb- ers flew their heaviest concen- -tated Press trated raids in 10 months. Seven waves of the eight-en- gine bombers pounded North from which the North Vietnamese heavy action in the past few days. have been bombarding allied W h i 1 e American casualties bases guarding the DMZ. Other dropped to the second lowest targets were bunker complexes weekly rate in 512 years, South and suspected troops concentra- Vietnamese losses showed an tions. increase this week, reflecting the Ground fighting along the DMZ increased fighting role of the subsided for the moment after South Vietnamese. House urged to ctle CBS for contempt No Trespassing * An Indian woman identified as Carol Warrington he yesterday at the gate of an abandoned Nike mis North Side Chicago park. Police arrived to oust who have occupied the property since June 14 (See p. 7). news rieA b~ By The Assoc WASHINGTON (1) - A divided Commerce Committee urged the House yesterday to cite the Co- lumbia Broadcasting System and the network's president for con- tempt of Congress for refusing to hand over untelevised material from its documentary "The Sell- ing of The Pentagon." Announcing the 25 to 13 com- mittee vote recommending con- tempt action against CBS and its president Frank Stanton, Chair- man Harley Staggers (D-W. Va.) expressed regret that the con- frontation had occurred but said, "It might be good to clear the air and to show the American people that their elected representatives are trying to get at the truth and not trying to censor any- body." Staggers argued that material deleted from the documentary must be studied in light of char- ges that electronic manipulation rearranged some questions and answers, distorting positions of persons interviewed or shown on the documentary that criticized military public relations spend- ing. When asked what the House would do, he said, "That would be hard to predict." A floor vote is expected next week. Stanton maintains the 1st Amendment's freedom - of - the- press guarantee protects broad- cast journalists from government scrutiny over news and editing judgments. Staggers says, however, that 1st Amendment press freedom is not at issue in this case and said that the five-man subcommittee, which unanimously recommend- ed the contempt citation origin- ally, is trying to protect the pub- lic from deception on televised programs. Stanton issued a statement yes- terday saying, "If broadcasters must submit to government sur- veillance of news judgments, broadcast journalism can never perform the independent and ro- bust role which the Constitution intended for the American press in preserving freedoms." Conviction could carry a maxi- mum penalty of one year in pri- son and a $1,000 fine. SELECTIVE SERVICE DIRECTOR Curtis Tarr ordered states yesterday to continue pre-induction physicals, classification appeals and other procedures except actual draft callups until Congress renews the draft law that expired midnight Wednesday. Tarr had earlier advised states to halt nearly all draft procedures after midnight Wednesday. Senate Armed Services Chairman John Stennis (D-Miss.) said "the outlook for the draft law is highly uncertain" unless the House, Senate and President Nixon can break "a triple-headed deadlock" on mandating a Vietnam war halt. ABOUT 100 INDIANS were ousted yesterday by rifle and tear gas-equipped police from the abandoned Nike missile site they have occupied since June 14 in protest against the kind of housing they said is available to them in Chicago. About 12 Indians were arrested by police after several workers, employed by the Chicago Park District where the site is located, were injured when they tried to dismantle a steel mesh fence girdling the site. Authorities denied the incident was an eviction attempt and said they arrested only those who attacked police. "We're simply returning the site to the use of all the people," a park spokesman said. TIMOTHY LEARY, one-time high priest of the nation's LSD cult, was arrested recently in Switzerland and is being held by Swiss police pending extradition arrangements with California. Leary had been reported in exile in Algeria with members of the Black Panther Party, including party leader Eldridge Cleaver. Leary, who was sentenced to a six months to 10 years term in prison for marijuana possession in December, 1969, is wanted in San Luis Obispo County for escaping from the California Men's Colony on Sept. 12, 1970. Vietnamese positions just below the Demilitarized zone, saturat- ing the area around Fire Base Fuller with 630 tons of high ex- plosives, Major targets of the B52s were rocket and mortar launching sites I '' ~ L Judge Us by the * Company We Keep! For the Finest in Listening, Stop and Look at Quality Equipnent TEAC McINTOSH KENWOOD TANDBERG KLH ADVENT BOSE PE JBL . GARRARD and More At HI-Ft BUYS ANN ARBOR-EAST LANSING 618 S. Main 769-4700 Comprehensive Repair Service Avoilable WG OO o 0 falchtalm at we forgo to order our subscipto to1 Don't Make the Same Mistake Keep up with all the important news, whether it's from Pnom Penh, Lansing, Washington, or Angell Hall; Dis- cover the reasons behind the events; Be informed! 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