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Fort Lauderdale News du lieu suivant : Fort Lauderdale, Florida • 1

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Fort Lauderdale, Florida
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1 ILI It ERDALEl EWS Mt Laud Clear to partly cloudy. High today 70-75, low tonight 54-60. Weather data on Page 16A. HOME EDITION Full SEA Service Member Of The Associated Press, UPI Chicago Tribune Press Service Six Sections 78 Pases FORT LAUDERDALE, FLORIDA, WEDNESDAY, DEC. 27, 1967 1967 Gore Newspapers Company Vol.

58, No. 78 ft TT at ties In Bloodier 'Off; if igger. attrition espoused by Gen. William C. Westmoreland.

At the DMS S. Marine officers estimated casualties suffered by both sides were on a one-to-one basis all year long. Optimism about an early end to the war is based partly on the huge total of enemy dead more than 80,000 this year by allied reckoning. But the Communists continued to commit men in seemingly pointless battles right up to the year's end. Killing of more than 10 enemy troops at a time were (Continued on Page 16A, Col.

2) As this year ends, military tacticians cannot determine that even one decisive battle has been fought. At the demilitarized zone, both sides are bogged down in the mud and slush of the monsoon season. Hill 875 and the other headlined heights of Dak To are being taken over again by the jungle and avoided by both sides since the bloody battles of November. Many persons see 1967 as a curtain-raiser to a military showdown in 1968. This year's developments tend to support this thinking.

The Communists put to a severe test the allied tactics of By PETER ARNETT SAIGON. CB The Vietnam war spiraled to new heights in" 1967. A year of action from one end of the country to the other has left knowledgeable Americans concerned at the possibility of bigger and bloodier battles ahead. Both sides claimed numerous victories this year. In the terms of reference both used, both were right.

American commanders tend to analyze Vietnam in terms of World War II. The Communists see the war in terms of the fight to oust the colonial French in the 1950s. ANALYSIS Red. Mass rooiD Alo I- -1 L'" V'" 7 I Attacks Repelled By Laos Prince Pledges To Fight PHNOM PENH. (UPI) -Prince Norodom Sihanouk of Cambodia said today he has asked the Soviet Union to urge the United States not to undertake any military action against his country.

The Chief of State told the National Congress that Cambodia would "offer desperate resistance" if any U. S. troops entered its territory "allegedly pursuing Communist Vietnamese forces." This echoed a statement broadcast yesterday BANGKOK, Thailand's army commander said today three Communist battalions that include North Vietnamese are poised on Thailand's northern border and one is trying to cross. In neighboring Laos, the government declared it faced a general North Vietnamese offensive. The battalion trying to cross into Thailand totals some 600 men and includes Thai insurgents drilled in North Vietnam, men of the Communist Pathet Lao movement in Laos and Meo tribesmen, said Gen.

Praphas Charusathien, who- is deputy premier as well as commander in chief of the army. To check the threat, Praphas said, helicopters whirred into Nan province carrying government troops from Chiengrai, in northern Thailand and units 'from the 3rd Army Headquarters. The area where Thai by his government. Sihanouk said he would call fnr hpln frnm Phina auu uic uuvib. viiiuu gnu iui i volunteers from North Korea, Communist China and Cuba to resist any U.

S. aggression. "But I am not pessimistic, as President Johnson has not yet given the green light," Sihanouk said. In Washington, Robert MctHosky, the State Department News Secretary, said yesterday the United States had (AP Wirepholo) BANDAGED SOLDIER HELPED OFF MEDICAL EVACUATION HELICOPTER Yank wounded in Quang Tin Province Copters, Viet Troops Kill 203 VC Near DMZ troops and the Communists were reported facing each other is 350 miles northeast of Bangkok. ATTACKS REPORTED i "no hostile intention toward 'Cambodia" and would continue I n' The Laotian Defense Ministry American! Reports from the sandy southern panhandle in said in a communique late Tues- SAIGON.

(UPI) to seek a peaceful settlement of the problem posed by the "use of Cambodian territory by Viet Cong and North Vietnamese army units." But at the same time, South Vietnamese Foreign Minister and South'tlefipid. ahotit 10 i 1 es massive raids aimed at knock-'day Mat reports arriving trom helicopter gunships (AP Wirephoto) Vietnamese troons Dinned down various tronis confirm a general jTran Van Do told newsmen in a battalion of Communists near 5 N'orth Vietnamese offensive." the South China Sea just south Soutn Vietnam's northernmost caches built during the 24-hour reported attacks over the of the demilitarized zone yester-Prov'nce. sa'd 15 Vietnamese allied Christmas truce. Military weekend on government army day and killed 203 in a fierce, 'soldiers were killed and 59 spokesmen said the pilots flew Psts at an? ac in "an SHE LIVED: ANOTHER DIED Patrolman Richard Dominquez glances sorrowfully at the single eye peeping from the bandaged face of eight-month-old Rosemary Perez after she was rescued from a fire that killed her two-year-old brother in San Antonio, today. Rosemary suffered second degree burns on her face in the blaze that destroyed her home.

Paris that his country forces would pursue Communists fleeing into Cambodia if it was necessary for "self-defense." daylong battle, it was reported in the first major 150 missions yesterday the u. "luL. outskirts lane and on the of today. clash since the Christmas truce most in a month. Bad weather Bouala both in Savan- pnHpH Mind IV ouu At least one helicopter was.J on Hage ISA.

Col. 8) shot down and several others Che's Violent End 'Detailed? In Paris Miami Launches WarOnHoodlums hit. Three helicopter crewmen were injured and one American adviser and an Australian with the i a troops also were injured. Pope May Send Mission To Hanoi FORCE OF VCS I r-4rv in a schoolhouse the day after The helicopters accounted for casualties among the, his capture, was shot dead by many Communist force estimated VATICAN CITY. (UPI) Pope ground for peace pre- a thin-faced, mustached ser at from 300 tt 500 members ef VI nd Vatican negotiations." geant named Mario Teran and a PARIS.

Ernesto Che Guevara kicked one Bolivian officer and spat in an admiral's face before he was killed, the French magazine Paris Match said today. The report was written by Mi-chele Ray, a French woman re- the Viet Cong 416th battaUon. The Vatican source said the second lieutenant named Perez. The account said: when the looting starts, the shooting starts," Headley said. The veteran police chief said the new get tough policy was aimed primarily at Negro males between the ages of 15 and 21.

Headley said 90 per cent of the Negro population is "law abiding and wants to (Continued on Page 16.V, Col. 4) The 416th has been operating could also be expected Hip area for several months Its 'explore chances for peace talks, (n nffr flnH nthPr aid Aiier an argument, leran ranks are wjt, Viet- a high Vatican source said to-for North Vietnamese civilians. cVinf Hiiatrara twna tuifh a pnr.i i I i nnrtpr whn wa nnce caotured i i namese re placements. clay. me Latnonc cnantame orga- ltirZ0nC captUreabineastheCuban.revolut.onary About 75 miles northeaEt of SP(Jnization Caritas International IJV L11C V1CL VsUUKi otnAri rnhinnff in rjir flniim in CHIEF HEADLEY orders crackdown kn.

nlhnnlii ctinrtlin.) mink for humane treatment it the mam room oi tne scnooi- whPn enprrilla forces since Msgr. Georg Husserl, relief offer attacked positions of the U.S. v-. secretary general of its German 25th infantry Division near the visited Hanoi last Ja- Cambodian border with tear n.L.h. house at Higuera.

Perez then came in and finished him off with a shot in the neck. In the next room, a Sgt. Huan-ca then shot two other 9 gas, mortars, machineguns and defjnile plans al this slagCi but rifle fire, a mission "annears likelv" fol In the air war, U.S. a'" lnuinff thp Pnnp'c mppfinc las! lim planes swarmed over North with President John- Bride Given Three Dealings The Wedding Bell Rang-And The Fighting Started MIAMI. (UPI) Police Chief Walter Headley declared war on young Negro hoodlums yesterday, promising to equip his men with shotguns and dogs and orders to shoot to kill.

"Felons will learn that they can't be bonded out of the morgue," he said. "We have done everything we could, sending out speakers and meeting with Negro leaders," Headley said. "But. it has amounted to nothing." His crackdown, apparently prompted by the slaying of three persons in Miami's Negro district during the Christmas holidays, was immediately denounced by the Florida NAACP. NAACP Field Secretary Marvin Davis said "this man has no place in a position of public trust.

I'll be before the City Council trying to get him suspended until his attitude changes." Headley said he was taking "complete responsibility" for his get tough policy. "We don't mind being accused of police brutality. They haven't seen anything yet. "We haven't had any serious problems with civil uprisings and looting because I've let the word filter down that son. byWohl "If it is decided to send a PIXies PUT STORY TOGETHER Miss Ray spent six weeks in La Paz and in the Sierra Mountains' putting together the story of Guevara's capture and death, the magazine said.

I The officer Guevara kicked was identified only as Espinosa, DOtitW6w( A who had taken him by the hair and yanked a pipe out of his mission, 1 wouiti expect an announcement sometime in the first half of January," the source said. Reports of a possible Hanoi mission first appeared this morning in the Turin newspaper La Stampa. It said, "The initial purpose would be to obtain a more humane treatment for American prisoners, a subject Mr. Johnson discussed at length with the Pope. AID OFFER SEEN Amusements 7-10C Classified 11-17C Comics 18, 19C Crossword Puzzle ISC Editorials 12, 13A Horoscope 18C Local News 1-4B Movie Time Clock 7C Obituaries 20C Sports 1-5D Television 6B Stocks, Financial 6, 7D Weather Report 16A Women's Pages 1-5C mouth as a souvenir.

"With his only valid foot, (Guevara) sent Espinosa stumbling against the benches with a brusque reflex," the account said. Guevara spat in the face of stocky, mustached Adm. Hugar-teche, who arrived by helicopter with several other officers to (Continued on Page 16A, Col. 1) 1 Silvia, her gown tattered, went to the nearby police station and charged her husband and his family with mayhem. Police fined the groom's family and set them free.

When they returned to the banquet, Rogelio once again called his wife over and beat her again. The free-for-all resumed. Again they all repaired to the police station, where charges were filed against the bridegroom a second time. A second reprimand, and fine, and back to the house. By this time, young Rogelio could hardly stand up, but he gave his bride a third beating.

Police finally arrested Rogelio, Mayo Herrera, Carlos Figueroa, Luis Matias, Jose Gomez and Jesus Rodriguez. Silvia was sent to the hospital, suffering multiple bruises. MEXICO CITY. (UPI) All went well until the first few hours of wedded' life. Then Silvia discovered the real Rogelior Silvia Santillan and Rogelio Pacheco decided they would marry Christmas Eve, combining the traditional holiday dinner with the wedding At the reception, Rogelio called his bride to his side and, before all the guests, administered her first beating of married bliss.

Silvia's relatives armed themselves with bottles and went to her rescue. Rogclio's family flew to his defense. Authorities said that in the ensuing melee chairs and plates were smashed, a guest got his head wedged in a turkey still in the rotisserie and the bridegroom was knocked unconscious by a bottle. "But it is not being concealed that the occasion appears favor- able for an attempt at political) contacts with the Hanoi leaders. I G9Ar hf fefcMj VmIu tyndkot.

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