FRIDAY, DECEMBER 4,1964 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PACE THRFIa THE MICHIGAN DAILY - .....aae a...4A. R"tiVJul. 1 nnr, Y w Taylor Back in Viet Nam; War, Hopeful of Pope Paul Begins Tour of India U7N' FUinds B B A(P)-Pope Paul VI ity-but to the millions of peo- He called India "the cradle of Regi To Involve No New U.S. Personnel Washington Decisions Not Revealed, Plan Talks with Huong By The Associated Press WASHINGTON - Ambassador Maxwell D. Taylor headed back to South Viet Nam last night to shape new steps for strengthen- ing the war effort against Com- munist guerrillas-but without in- volving more U.S. personnel. Taylor is due back in Saigon Sunday to begin urgent confer- ences with South Vietnamese of- ficials to implement decisions reached here in a week of discus- sions with President. Lyndon B. Johnson and top diplomatic and military advisers. Not Disclosed Just what these decisions are has not been disclosed but after his final conference with John- son yesterday, Taylor told news- men: --He sees no requirement for sending added personnel to build up U.S. forces in South Viet Nam. These forces currently number nearly 22,000; --He welcomes international. support to help South Viet Nam with technical, engineering, medi- cal and logistical support. Taylor said his talks here over the past week have been focused on two important points. The first was the continuing difficulty in establishing a stable government in South Viet Nam. Insurgency The second involved Ndrth Viet Nam's continuing efforts to strengthen and support the Com- munist insurgency in South Viet Nam. ToBe 'Strengthened' d Brezhnev Charges Provocation' Says Soviet Union May Assist North By The Associated Press MOSCOW-Leonid I. Brezhnev accused the United States yester- day of committing provocations against North Viet Nam and said the Soviet Union "is prepared to render necessary assistance." Brezhnev's remarks followed a charge by Hanoi Radio yesterday that 12 U.S. planes bombed, and strafed three villages in half of the demilitarized zone between North and South Viet Nam Tues- day. The broadcast asserted it was the fourth such attack since Oct. 16. Settlement UNITED NATIONS (R) - UN diplomats yesterday began deli- cate statge-by-stage negotiations aimed at resolving the crisis over peacekeeping debts. The immedi- ate question was how much the Russians would agree to pay and under what conditions. While the General Assembly be- gan its policy debate under a no- vote truce achieved through big power agreement, the negotiators tackled the thorny financial and constitutional problems involved in the crisis. Secretary-General U Thant, the key figure at present, was on the sidelines temporarily because of illness. But U.S. Ambassador Adlai E. Stevenson and other top U.S. of- ficials conferred with Thant's chief assistant, C. V. Narasimhan, and presented the U.S. view. The chief cause for U.S. opti- mi'sm was belief that the Soviet Union would make some kind of a payment into a UN fund that would be set up to relieve the fi- nancial crisis caused by refusal of the Soviet Union ,France and oth- ers to pay for UN peacekeeping joined yesterday in a friendly and unprecedented meeting with non-Christian leaders. He kuoted Hindu scripture, cited a Hindu prayer and commended its use. "We must come closer together," he told a small gathering of about a dozen Moslem Imams, Hindu Swamis and guilding teachers of other oriental faiths - Buddhists, love him as an inspiration of ' love and self-sacrifice," he said. Then the Pope recited this Hindu prayer: "From the unreal lead me to the real. From dark- ness lead me to the light. From death lead me to immortality." The Vatican last spring set up a new secretariat for relation- ships with non-Christian religions. Its aim, to further practical col- laboration and understanding with other religions, differs from the movement of the Catholic church and other Christians for actual unity. 'Friends in Christ' One period of the Pope's day was spent with leaders of non- Roman Catholics in India-Prot- estants, Orthodox and Anglican churchmen-whom the Pope ad- dressed as "my dear friends in Christ." Expressing joy at the growing understanding and increasing work for Christian unity, he said: "It is our hope that our efforts can accompany yours, can mingle with yours so that together we can seek out the ways by which Christ's will can one day be 'fully realized." The pontiff then rode through the city again, his route lined' with cheering crowds, for a 30- minute call on President Sarvepal- li Radharkrishnan of India. "You too," he later sadi, "are engaged in the struggle against the ills that darken the lives of innumerable people.,We must find the concrete and practical ways of organization and cooperation." people for their relentless search for God "in deep mediation and silence, and in hymns of fervent prayer." A moment of confusion kept the P~ope from meeting representa- tives of India's Jewish community. He promptly invited them to a special audience. Four Indian Jews were present in the morning when the pontiff spoke to non-christian Indian re- ligious leaders. A spokesman for the Pope's party. said the four Jewish lead- ers were to have been introduced to the Pope but they were unable to make their way forward in the confused rush at the end of the meeting. ple who have come to know and great religions" and lauded its U.S. AMBASSADOR Maxwell D. Taylor (left) returned to Saigon yesterday after talks with President Lyndon B. Johnson and high government advisors. Leonid I. Brezhnev has accused the U.S. of aggressive air raids into North Viet Nam. Taylor, who is under instruc- tions from Johnson to consult ur- gently with .the South Viet Nam government, said his talks with Premier Tran Van Huong's gov- ernment will be completely frank and open. The big question remaining un, answered as Taylor left is wheth- er strikes will be made against supply lines of the Viet Cong guerrillas outside South Viet Nam. On this subject, Taylor would say only that "we talked about every- thing you can think of." Growing Signs Dispatches from Saigon said there are growing signs that the South Vietnamese air force, U.S.- trained and using American-sup- plied aircraft, soon will be strik- ing at Red infiltration routes out- side South Viet Nam. These re- ports said that such raids prob- ably would not be against com- munities in Communist North Viet Nam or in Laos but more likely would be against supply depots in jungle mountains and valleys. World News Roundup By The Associated Press COLOMBO, Ceylon-Prime Minister Sirimavo Bandaranaike lost a confidence motion by one vote in the House of Representatives yesterday but instead of resigning she decided to dissolve Parliament. * * * * UNITED NATIONS-United States Secretary of State Dean Rusk and Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko have agreed to a third meeting which will be held Saturday afternoon, U.S. officials said last night. With backstage negotiations over the UN's financial crisis now in a more hopeful stage, the two big power foreign affairs chiefs are expected to go on to other issues such as disarmament and East-West trade. MADRID, Spain-Juan D. Peron's return in defeat from a transatlantic mission stirred talk here last night that the ex- dictator now will abandon the idea of ever going back to Argentina. * * * * ROME-A Christian Democrat, speaking for his entire party group in Italy's Chamber of Deputies, asked tonight for recognition of Red China-provided the Atlantic Alliance remains undisturbed by such a step. Mario Pedini said recognition would be "merely accepting inter- national reality with intelligence." A PARTY AT THE INTERNATIONAL CENTER Tonight, Dec. 4, at 7:30 p.m. CELEBRATING THE END OF PHILIPPINE WEEK The anticipation in Saigon is that the raids would be made by, Vietnamese air force planes, pos- sibly with U.S. pilots aboard toI accompany Vietnamese crews, rather than U.S. Air Force planes themselves. Statements from Washington have not clearly indicated that raids are definitely planned. But the implication of plans for "ur- gent consultations" between Tay- lor and Huong is that America is! ready to back such raids.. It seemed in Saigon as if it. were only a matter of time be- fore air raids are carried out against Viet Cong infiltration routes outside South Viet Nam. Indications are that the basic de- cision to go ahead with limited raids has already been made. Taylors series of conferences' w i t h "interested government agencies," as well as with the' president, had reportedly focused on this issue as well as on the two other points of stable Vietnamese government and increased attacks by the Viet Cong. Second Meeting After a second meeting of one hour with Johnson, which follow- ed up a two and one-half hour conference with the President and his top advisers Tuesday, Taylor told newsmen that U.S. policy in South Viet Nam remains the same, but that "we change our tactics and methods of ultimately reach- ing that policy's objective." Taylor said he (feels encour- aged by the firmness Huong has shown in suppressing deserters in' Saigon. "But, despite this con- trol, the deserters have an un- fortunate effect on the reputa- tion of the South Viet Nam gov- ernment," Taylor said. South Viet Nam's new ambassa- dor to the United States, Lt. Gen. Tran Thien Khiem, said in an in- terview that North Viet Nam has sent 30,000 to 40,000 infiltrators into South Viet Nam over the past three years, and that it is continuing the movement at an accelerated rate this year. Khiem, former defense minis- ter and chief of staff, called the Ho Chi Minh trail through Laos the main road of infiltration. "The Soviet Union resolutely upholds the cause of the Congo'sE freedom and independence." He called the paratroop land- ing "a surprising example of im- perialist piracy." He said the Western explanation of a need to release threatened hostages was 'a hypocritical pretext.' Brezhnev's 31-minute speech to a Czech-Soviet friendship rally in the Kremlin was more not- able for what it did not contain. His previous expressions of will- ingness to settle differences with the West were missing this time. So were similar statements of Soviet foreign policy that have angered Red China, except fow mentioning "peaceful coexistence," which Moscow advocates and Pe- king does not. In his first public speech since a sharp Chinese attack on his continuation of Nikita Khrush- chev's policies, the new leader turned the other cheek. In his only direct mention of China, he said the Soviet Union sought a complete ban on and de- struction of nuclear weapons. China recently made a similar proposal. V1 0kitLe j l1"ges E LANSING (APu-Special elections will be held around the state April 5 to fill seven vacant judge- ships, Gov. George Romney said yesterday. Five of the vacancies are the result of election of incumbent judges to the new State Court of Appeals. An election already has been called in Detroit to fill the vacan- cy left by the death of Wayne County Circuit Judge Miles Cule- han. Former Democratic Gov. John Swainson has announced for the post. Romney took the opportunity to say, in effect, "I told you so," as he announced the special elec- tion. "As one Constitutional Con- vention delegate out of 144, I tried to get judges on the basis of ap- pointment. i "It was only when I found that I was opposed by a combination of both Republicans and Democrats that I decided to do the best I could," he said, adding, "the best I could do was to give judges the. ability to renominate themselves so they did not have to go back to party conventions for nomi- nation." The statement had appeared as costs. reports from Washington indi- cated strikes at supply lines from North Viet Nam to the south R Pl were being considered. RoImneyPlan ks He also denounced last week's A r l El t' Belgian-American paratroop ac- pr e tion tion in the Congo, saying: POPE PAUL VI Jains, Sikhs, and Zorastrian Par- sees. It was a personal overture by the head of the Roman Catholic Church to advance its efforts for fuller concourse with all mankind. Gazing at the assembled East- ern spiritual leaders, the Pope asked: "Are we not all one in this struggle for a better world, in this effort to make available to all people those goods which are needed to fulfill their human destiny and to live lives worthy of the children of God?" The pontiff said that all men must begin "to build the common future of the human race." It was the second day in In- dia for the Pope, Welcomed here in an apparent outpouring of peo- ple and warmth, and he spent the day in a series of meetings with various groups. Although voicing appreciation for the East- ern religions, the Pope also spoke of Christ and his teachings. 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