Taylor - Swomley Counters (Continued from page 1) opinions of the war (such as those presented in New Republic), was presented to Taylor in one question. "The men are so busy fighting that they do not have time to read the "New Republic," he replied. They have enough to do without worrying about opinions back home, he said. When they do hear about protests toward the war, they reply with "a few impolite terms," Taylor said. WHEN ASKED why all the borders could not be maintained, he said there were thousands of miles of shoreline, dense jungles and an extensive waterway. He suggested that college students volunteer to "sit it out on the frontiers." The men have all the weapons they need, he said, and to the objection that they are fighting with obsolete weapons, Taylor answered, that in a war of this type, the military has found earlier-made weapons are more efficient. The Hanoi proposal for peace talks which were to have been made to Adlai Stevenson as ambassador to the United Nations, were reported by men who were "not informed." Taylor said. EVEN THE offices in Hanoi said they were not aware of the proposal, he said. "If we had considered the negotiations at that time, we would never have gotten the satisfactory objectives we seek now." When the Communists see how they are losing, they will give up and come to the conference table, he said. dors that we cannot be intimidated. (Continued from page 1) "Now we are trying to demonstrate in Viet Nam that the guerilla tactics won't work either," he said. But he questioned the methods. The United States is demonstrating this by indiscriminate bombing of civilians," Swomley said. This course of action is morally indefensible, Swomley said. "We are bombing indiscriminately in the North. "The MILITARY tells of bridges and roads being bombed, but they censor the fact that American planes bombed a leper colony and hospitals." Swomley condemned the military public information service for censorship, "We have been led by propaganda to believe we are fighting a clean war and bombing military targets. Swomley gave three alternatives The United States could negotiate with the Viet Cong. THE SECOND WAS referral to the United Nations. He said the United States was obligated under article 33 of the Charter. The third would be a reconvening of the Geneva Conference. "This would be impossible unless the bombing stops. "I conclude that this war is morally and politically wrong. We are guilty of setting up a puppet government. We have ravaged the land. We are the aggressors!" Critic Slams U.S. Policy, Foreign Aid The objective of the present U.S. foreign policy is to destroy her enemies by making them friends. The provision of foreign aid helps further this objective. A U.S. critic said this on a replay of the tape recording of the Toronto Teach-in on the foreign policies of the U.S. and the Soviet Union which the KU Student Peace Union (SPU) had arranged last night in their meeting. THE U.S. CRITIC said, "History has been dominated by futile wars among the developed nations of the world." The recording was a discussion between the representatives of the U.S. and the U.S.S.R. on the topic "Revolution and Ideological Conflict." He expressed hope that the U.N. would become an arena where major crises could be arbitrated. "The whole cause of world revolutions hinges on the struggle of the Asian, African, and European nations," he said. The spokesman for the Soviet Union gave his idea of the future of the world as "either a world of peaceful coexistence or a world totally destroyed by a nuclear holocaust." He said, "Under no circumstance would the Soviet Union attempt to impose its ideas on another country." "IN GREAT BRITAIN and the United States, a peaceful change into socialism is not theoretically possible," the Russian spokesman said. He added the Soviet Union had proposed that the UN adopt a resolution saying that a member nation cannot interfere in the internal affairs of another country. He said the U.S. in South Viet Nam had made use of armed interference. "The main thing to consider in any country are the people. Only in this way can we establish peaceful coexistence," he said. IN KEBUTTTAL, the American critic stressed that while he subscribed to the policy pursued by the U.S. in Viet Nam, he was not in accord with its practices in the Dominican Republic. The Russian spokesman replied, "Hungary was sad for the world." RAY STONEBACK'S COUPON OFFER Offer He then asked how the Soviet Union justified its stand in the Hungarian Revolution. 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