iHE MICHfIGAN DAILY PAC 3E THREE Nehru Claims Chinese 'Thinned Out' Troops, Doesn't See Pull Back NEED FUNDS: Thant, U.S. Give UN Warning UNITED NATIONS (AP)-The United States and United Nations Secretary-General U Thant sounded similar warnings yesterday that the UN is headed for financial disaster unless its members put aside political considerations and find a formula for raising needed funds. Bolstered by a World Court advisory opinion that peace-keeping operations constitute valid expenses of the organization, the Assem- bly's budgetary committee opened hearings on the problem. It was complicated by the refusal of the Soviet bloc, France and some others to pay for the Congo and Middle East forces. Make Appeal Thant and Philip M. Klutznick, United States delegate, appealed for the committee and the Assembly to avoid partisan political speeches and deal with the central ques- . Himalayan Scene Called 'Confusing" Report Indian Troop Staying at Positions NEW DELHI ()-Indian Prim Minister Jawaharlal Nehru sai yesterday Communist C h i n e s front line troops in the Himalaya may have thinned out, but the; have not pulled back. He told Parliament the situa tion is rather confused. "There are signs of withdrawa in the rear-in the front position they might have thinned out, bu they have not withdrawn," Nehr said. Heading North Chinese and Indian source have reported Chinese troops we returning north in the Himalaya on the eastern sector. An authori. tative source in Tezpur said Sun. day they had moved back 20 mile at some points in partial fulfill ment of Peking's one-sided cease- fire and withdrawal proclamatio of Nov. 21. Nehru did not go into that Standard tactics might call foI some combat units to cover the abandonment of occupied terri- tory and form a rear guard for the march back. Await Clarification India awaited further clarifica- tion from Peking of provisions in its proclamation calling for with- drawal of both armies to position 12/2 miles behind the line of ac- tual control of Nov. 7, 1959. In- dian government ministers pro- pose the lines of last Sept. 8 and say India will fight for every inch of her soil. A foreign ministry spokesman said Indian troops are standing pat. Among other things they are reported holding on to the Ladakh airfield of Chushul in the north- west, which is among 2,000 square miles of Ladakh that the Indians say China allegally claims as be- hind its 195 "line of control." Chinese Masquerade A military source said there is apprehension here that the Chi- nese, who dressed some combat teams as peaceful Mompa tribes- men to surprise Indian troops, may leave some soldiers behind to carry on as propagandists if not as war- riors. In the diplomatic maneuvering, an Indian mission flew to Colom- bo, Ceylon, where a conference of neutrals concerned about the In- dia-China dispute is tentatively scheduled for Dec. 10. The mission's work will be di- rected by Mrs. Lekshmi Menon, Nehru's Minister of State for for- eign affairs. She has just com- pleted a swing across southeast Asia to explain India's stand. Mrs. Menon told newsmen in Madras that, among all the countries she visited, only Indonesia seemed to understand the Indian position clearly. Kozlov Finds Chinese 'Joke' Very Unfunny ROME (')-Soviet Premier Niki- ta S. Khrushchev's chief Commu- nist party lieutenant brought Mos- cow's ideological war with Peking to the Italian party congress yes- terday, raking the Red Chinese for a "poisonous and dangerous" posi- tion in world affairs. While Chinese delegates listened stolidly, Frol R. Kozlov, ranking member of the Soviet Communist Secretariat, by implication blasted Red China's leaders for attempting to "joke with thermonuclear fire" in the Cuban situation. Red Chinese leaders were ob- viously angry last month when+ Khrushchev backed down on the issue of missile bases in Cuba. JAWAHARLAL NEHRU . . : "thining out" LOCKHEED:. Ask Court injunction LOS ANGELES QP)-The De- partment of Justice asked federal court yesterday for an injunction against Lockheed Aircraft Corp. and the International Association of Machinists to prevent further strike action for 80 days. The action followed " a request made earlier yesterday by Presi- dent John F. Kennedy to Atty. Gen. Robert Kennedy to seek the injunction under the Taft-Hartley Law. The machinists union halted a two-day strike against Lockheed last Thursday as a result of Ken- nedy's invoking of Taft-Hartley procedure the day before. Sandy Sees Settlement On Kashmir Nehru Sets No Limit On Negotiators, Talks LONDON (')--Duncan Sandys, British Commonwealth relations secretary, voiced high hope yester- day of a Kashmir settlement in projected talks between India and Pakistan. "I genuinely believe the prospect of success is greater on this occa- sion than on any previous occa- sion," Sandys told the House of Commons. Sandys headed a British mission which checked last week on In- dia's long-term need for weapons to meet Red China's threat to the subcontinent and sought to still fears in neighboring Pakistan about the flow of Western arms to India. Comparable and coordinated work was carried out for the Unit- ed States by a similar mission un- der Assistant Secretary of State W. Averell Harriman. Both consulted at length with Indian Prime Minister Nehru and Pakistani President Mohammed Ayub Kahn-antagonists in a 15- year quarrel that splits the border state of' Kashmir on a United States-supervised cease-fire line. India and Pakistan share mem- bership in the Commonwealth. Nehru told his Parliament in New Delhi yesterday there will be no restrictions or preconditions on the talks and representatives of both sides will have complete free- dom to express their opinions. tion of keeping the UN financially sound. Soviet delegate Pavel M. Tcher- nyshev quickly threw cold \vater on the proposals. Rejects Responsibility He said the Soviet Union still rejects the responsibility for mem- bers to Pay Congo and Middle East costs because they were ap- proved not by the Security Coun- cil-where the Soviet Union has a veto-but by the General Assem- bly. "This has been and continues to be the position of the Soviet Un- ion," Tchernyshev said. "The financial situation tran- s c e n d s political controversy," Thant told the committee. "We are not approaching this question of who was right or wrong in past debates," Klutznick said. "What we now do must be guided by only one consideration -nurturing this institution. We don't believe it is the intent of any member to bankrupt the United Nations. k h Unfurls Basis For Allotment of Patronage By The Associated Press LANSING - Gov.-elect George Romney, in his first news confer- ence since the state elections, an- nounced yesterday that party af- filiation would be a consideration but not the only factor in his dis- tribution of patronage. One of the most important posts -at least as far as the University is concerned-is the state control- ler, who heads budget-planning and budget-request-cutting opera- tions. Romney said there are four men under consideration for this post, which was vacated Saturday by Ira S. Polley, who took over from Prof. Merritt M. Chambers of the education school as executive di- rector of the State Council of Col- lege Presidents. The governor-elect also reported he would apply any surplus-ex- pected to be about $30 million- from the operating budget towards reducing the state's fiscal deficit. 'To Resume 'Congo Lift LEOPOLDVILLE (MP-The Unit- ed States Air Force will resume its airlift to the Congo, including the ferrying of Indian army vehicles to secessionist Katanga, a United Nations spokesman said yesterday. The spokesman would not elab- orate. But it was recalled USAF transport planes played a key role in supplying the UN during the fighting between UN and Katan- gan forces last December. Robert Gardiner of Ghana, head of the UN Congo operations, is re- ported to feel that further fight- ing with Katangan forces can be avoided if he can over-awe Ka- tanga President Moise Tshombe with the world organization's mili- tary strength in the Congo. Gardiner returned from consul- tations with UN Secretary-General U Thant in New York along with Brig. Inderjit Rikhye of India, Thant's military adviser. Thant proposes to apply eco- nomic sanctions, if necessary, to end Katanga's secession. But he also is keeping an eye on the mili- tary situation. Rikhye will survey the UN's mil- itary position and discuss "meas- ures to bring an end to attacks by Katangan aircraft piloted by mercenaries in North Katanga," a UN statement said. The UN last week charged pilots from Katanga were carrying out "murderous'' air strikes in North' Katanga. The resumption of the United' States airlift is at the request of the United Nations.' USSR To Wait On Germany BERLIN (P)-The Soviet Union is prepared to wait for "the most favorable moment" to sign a Ger- man peace treaty, Communist of-] ficials were reported yesterday to have told a public meeting in East Berlin.I U THANT . . . financial crisis AT liJN: Denounce Sky Spies UNITED NATIONS (A) - The United States yesterday defended as consistent with international law the use of satellites in outer space for collection of military information. It met with an immediate chal- lenge from the Soviet Union. The declaration on so-called spy satellites was made in the United Nations main political committee by United States Sen. Albert Gore (D-Tenn). He said also that "even although it is now feasible," the United States has no intention of placing weapons of mass destruction into orbit, unless compelled to do so by the Soviet Union. Gore clashed in the committee with Soviet Ambassador Platon D. Morozov as debate opened on measures for promoting peaceful cooperation in exploration of outer space. There were United States-Soviet differences also on the role of pri- vate enterprise in a global system of communications satellites. In an apparent reference to United States high altitude nuclear tests, Morozov said the Soviet Un- ion opposed "all operations of that kind" which might hinder peace- ful exploration of outer space. Gore said it was United States policy to take all "reasonable and practicable" steps including con- sultation with the world scientific community to avoid space experi- ments with harmful effects. Peace Corp's Emphasis Turns to Latin America By MALINDA BERRY The schedule for next year's Peace Corps training program calls a shift in the Peace Corps' primary emphasis from Africa to Latin America. This increased emphasis on Latin America is now becoming the policy of the organization. It is expected to be written into the Peace Corps budget that the Kennedy Administration will submit to Congress next month. "The President has encouraged us to emphasize Latin America," R. Sarget Shriver, the Peace Corps director, said, the New York Times reported. More Volunteers He said the agency intended to put significantly more volunteers in Latin America than in any other single geographic area, provided its program was approved by the Budget Bureau, the President and Congress. "A part of the reason for the shift may be a growing realization that conditions in Latin America aren't good and that progress is necessary," Prof. Robert C. Leestma, director of the University's Peace Corps activities said yesterday. Already Apparent The shift has already become apparent. The Peace Corps dis- closed that on Nov. 30 for the first time more corps volunteers were at work in Latin America than in any other region of the world. Previously the Far East and Africa were most heavily staffed. This does not iLdicate a decrease in interest in the Asian coun- tries, Prof. Leestma continued. Rather it corresponds to the increasr; enthusiasm with which the Latin American countries received the volunteers. Shriver emphasized that "Africa and other areas are not being shortchanged." Rather that "if everything proceeds according to plan, we'll have twice as many people in each of these areas by this time next year as we have now." Close to Home "Aside from the factor that Latin America is close to home, the tremendous ferment down there probably accounts for the activity," Prof. Leestma said. "It appears as though if there is no progress within the next five to ten years, the negative influences may take over," he said. The administration must feel that the Peace Corps has a real role to play in "tapping the unrest" in Latin America, and in helping the, countries develop in an "orderly and democratic" fashion, Prof. Leestma continued. Outgrowth of Cuba Shriver said he felt the trend to emphasize Latin America was an outgrowth of the nation's concern over the threat of Cuba in this hemisphere. As of last March the Peace Corps was operating in only three Latin American countries. Now it is in 13-Bolivia, Brazil, British Honduras, Chile, Colombia, the Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Honduras, Jamaica, Peru, St. Lucia and Venezuela, U U World News Roundup By The Associated Press UNITED NATIONS-Arab diplomats lined up behind Saudi Arabia yesterday in criticizing President John F. Kennedy for hailing Israel as a country "dedicated to human rights." TEZPUR-United States Ambassador to India John Kenneth Galbraith toured forward positions held by the Indian army in northeast India yesterday and said he was very encouraged. OUTSTANDING FALL RELEASES on RCA VICTOR RED SEAL LANZA! PRICE! FIEDLERI RUBINSTEINI GENEVA-Saudi Arabia's King Ibn Saud flew to Geneva yesterday for medical treatment, leaving the reins of his oil-rich country in the hands of his brother and premier, Crown Prince Faisal. * * * WASHINGTON-A board of in- quiry told President John F. Ken- nedy yesterday there appears to be virtually no chance of avoiding a strike of longshoremen from Maine to the Gulf of Mexico on Dec. 23. * * *' WASHINGTON-A secret, high- ly confidential meeting of lead- ing Republicans who want Sen. Barry Goldwater of Arizona for president was held in Chicago Sunday. LONG BEACH - The aircraft' carrier Kearsarge collided in a fog yesterday with the big British pas- senger liner Oriane, with first re- ports saying that no one was hurt but that both ships suffered dam- age NEW DELHI - Indian Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru told Parliament yesterday a man who assaulted India's top expert on the border dispute with Communist China appeared to be mentally un- balanced. WASHINGTON - Dr. Edward Teller, internationally-known nu- clear scientist, received from Presi- dent John F. Kennedy yesterday the Atomic Energy Commission's Enrico Fermi award for 1962. 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