PAGE IWO 17 Guerrillas Captured During Hunt for Soldier TAN lIIF,P, South Viet Nam (JP)—U.S. military advisers and their army cooks plunged into South Viet Nam's jungle war yes terday and in a few hours cap tured 17 Red guerrillas without firing a shot. Shrugging off the usual non combatant role, Col. John Paul Vann of El Paso, 'l'cx., scraped a 60-man patrol together and sent it off in search of an American major assigned to advise South Vietnamese troops. THE VIETNAMESE forces had failed to return nn schedule at dawn from a hunt for Communists slipping away from nearby Ap Bac after a victorious guerrilla ambush Wednesday. "I'm not trying to fight these people's war for them," Vann said. "Our sole reason was to pro tect that major." The major and the government patrol returned in late morning, after Vann had sent out his own patrol. The American patrol had auto- Telstar Ills Healed NEW YORK (IP)—Telstar, the television satellite, is back on the Job, cured of a kind of brain fever brought on by radiation. Collegian Photo Staff and Candidates MEETING MONDAY 7:30 P.M. Office: Basement of Sackett ~' % `+a,• „ z z.Y y e s';..a9t;`•%`e..'• ... :'a ;, r , . , . 6 .'fi' 3; ?a s i . Yr:":W,' % Y , N'',i•....r%~;S:i,;:r".;Evi;,';3 :,'...a;,i~a~.:+:.ii:..4`x5:~t.,,k::N.: ;.~ rB:•n::.nekr.%.'.,s ; :s~. £..a..: ta~;:.r;:i ~"%'4'..:~.=:~..:5;Y.:1}:>.. .:•;:~)a' • /r:Y.:r F~~c:..— LIAsKM M M,1 t.t !4.1 - matic weapons but had orders from Vann not to fire unless fired upon. Vann said there was no need to use the weapons. The patrol left at 10 a.m. and returned with the prisoners 3 1 / 2 hours later. Vann called on every Ameri can assigned to the Vietnamese 7th Division, except himself and a radio operator, to take part in the operation. He also ordered other American advisers passing through the area in the Mekong River delta to stand by as possi ble reinforcements. Soon after their return, the Americans' quickly reassumed their advisory roles and the cooks went back to their field stoves. Tshombe-- (Continued from nage one) then we fight in the bush." Tshombe set up his headquar ters in a house in the center of Kolwezi, another mining center where his air force is based. Tshombe insisted his forces, routed from Elizabethville and Jadotville in less than a week, were still in fighting shape. But Porter reported that those he had seen on a journey from Eliza bethville to Kolwezi via Jadotville were undisciplined, without hope and without orders. ;~~~`_ „-o'J~F „ r , a , ~; ;~~ THE DAILY COLLEGIAN, UNIVERSITY PARK. PENNSYLVANIA ''' OVER 30 YEARS CONTINUOUS -SERVICE Dean Announces Resignation WASHINGTON (!P) Ambas sador Arthur H. Dean announced yesterday that he is resigning as chief U.S. disarmament negotia tor to return to private life. The New York lawyer, 64, said in an interview, "I'm sorry to leave," but "I've got a lot of per sonal things to take care of" aft er nearly two years in the ardu ous Geneva job. He indicated he will continue to he interested in disarmament matters and said Secretary of State Dean Rusk and U.S. Dis armament Administrator William C. Foster have asked him to con 354.:47. ................................... tinue to make his advice availa ble. If President Kennedy accepts Dean's resignation—as expected —Charles C. Stelle is in line to carry on as acting head of the U.S. delegation at the 17-nation Geneva Disarmament Conference until a regular successor is named. Stelle has been No. 2 man under Dean. Official sources suggested that the lengthy Geneva talks have be come so involved now that Dean's successor will have to be well versed in disarmament matters. Speculation on a successor thus NEW A i iirjr : A ky, NOW SHOWING . ..-.'l''':; . %".- -.*;' i s i'.!- . - ; , ;; , :=],!::%•:'? . i: :'-?...:Z4.1.: P y "'tt..F:' . ~~~i~. ... - . MEE -er PANAVISION • METRO COLOR k TODAY at 1:55-4.30-7:00-9:25 - - SUNDAY at 2:05-4:35-7:00-9:25 -- Some men love War the way others love women . • . HERE IS A STORY OF BOTH KINDS! TODAY 1:30-3:25-5:20-7:15-9:10 SUNDAY 2:00-3:48-5:35-7:24-9:10 ~tGfi;"fl;.',:{~i!%i n~yY^~p.4H-.~.iT.fi+?:v 'F~2'i~3s: "~~V`S:Fr: ~.'<.~.4:~~~ . ,a..: : ~ 2-.., , • - •: ,,, ..-% , ::;."M'ffi' , '7 .................................................................. .... ........., ... - -_ • ' • ,aa . - .., . ..., , ~. .. . . . SATURDAY, JANUARY 5, 1963 centered on high-ranking au thorities already experienced in the field. The stocky, flat-voiced Dean was an old hand at negotiating with the Reds when Kennedy picked him for the Geneva post shortly after the new administra tion took office. He was a U.S. representative in the truce talks which brought the Korean War armistice in 1953. Dean said a heavy backlog of personal business caused by his long absences while in Geneva had brought about his decision to resign. . - with the wontl?rful niti , vie of RODGERS & HART OR NOVEL OF WORLD WAR 11! ........,-..,...,___ _..., 'MADIEF I L EY FTEU) LOVE . .. HE MAKES LOVE!
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers