conciliation Commission o Speak with Kasavubu Police Hold Stanleyville At Gunpoint. STANLEYVILLE, The Congo () -, Mutinous military policemen hold this capital city of the Congo's Oriental Province at gun- point yesterday in the name of ex-Premier Patrice Lumumba. The military regime of Col. Joseph Mobutu in Leopoldville, 800 miles to the southwest, does not exist for this city within a jungle. , Jittery officials of the p'rovin- cial government are arrested daily. Officers of the disorganized gar- rison are beaten and thrown into jail. The slightest suspicion of pro-Mobutu sympathies can cause this. No one knows from day to day who commands the troops or who is in charge of the 11 local govern- ment ministeries. Alphonse Songolo, once Lumum- ba's communications. minister but later his detractor, is in the city hospital going blind. He was beaten for two hours by military police, then left unattended for four days. "They are cruel and dangerous children," says Slavomir Brzak of Czechoslovakia, United Nations civilian affairs officer he r e, spreading his arms in dismay as he talks of the Congolese. "We cannot do anything without being accused of interfering in their internal affairs. "We have no instructions to deal with this situation," says Col. / Wolde Yohannes Shita, comman- der of the Ethiopian Tekil Brigade. Those troops, in theory, police this city of 130,000 and all of vast Oriental Province. PLOTTING PERSISTS: Anti-De Gaulle Riots Dissolve in Algiers ALGIERS (M--The violent anti- de. Gaulle temper of right-wing European settlers dissolved yes- terday behind a facade of normal- cy, but talk persisted of plotting against the Paris regime. Street sweepers and repairmen removed most of the traces of the Clearance ,To Pentagon, WASHINGTON (JP) - Liaison representatives of the incoming Kennedy administration will be cleared by the Pentagon for access to the top secret information they will need in preparing for transi- tion of defense department con- trol. . Preparations for consultations with and brieflings of the Kennedy representatives by Secretary of Defense Thomas S. Gates and his aides were finished yesterday. Still lacking was the name of the man or men who would be sent by Clark Clifford, chief liaison repre- sentative for President-electJohn F. Kennedy. The sessions could be merely broad administrative and budget discussions with Gates and his civilian aides or military opera- tional officers such as the Joint Chiefs of Staff could be called in. Armistice Day rioting and the city went back to work as usual. The only traces of Friday's vi- cious rock fights-which left an estimated 100 injured - were a score of boarded-up shop windows and yellow stains oh the pave- ments where tear gas grenades had been thrown. Streets were filled with shoppers and market places had a new supply of to- matoes, after losing most of them to the rioters. Speculation in some quarters that the riots were the forerunner of a serious test of strength against President de Gaulle's gov- ernment proved to be wrong-at least for the moment.-, General belief was that the riots -mainly by teen-age students- were an effort to sample the atti- tude of law enforcement authori- ties, perhaps as a prelude to a more serious effort to reverse de Gaulle's controversial Algerian policy. Many Europeans here profess to feel de Gaulle is preparing a sell- out to the nationalist rebels, who have been fighting the French for six years. s Riot police, gendarmes and sol- diers Friday made more of an effort at containing the rioting students than in putting them out of action through charges and mass arrests. Study Road Budget PVlais WASHINGTON W-Democrats at the Capital already are doing spade work on one of the first domestic problems the Kennedy Administration will face-financ- ing the national superhighway sys- tem. The problem comes to a head with submission.to Congress early in January, before the new Presi- dent takes office, or two major commerce department reports on the 41,000-mile interstate roads system. Another key factor is the sched- uled expiration next June 30 of a one-cent a gallon gasoline tax in- crease voted last year to keep construction of the superhighway; network from falling too far be-, hind schedule.- Staff members of the congres- sional committees which handle, road construction and financing legislation will be prepared to help the committee members go into the problem early in the 1961 ses- sion. Democrats who put through the1 1956 act setting up 90 per centi federal financing for the inter-1 state system are hopeful that the1 1961 review will come up with permanent solutions for the trou- bles plaguing the big road pro- gram. They would like to revive pros-, pects for completion of the entire 41,000 miles by 1972 or as soon thereafter as possible. This was the goal of the 1956 law but it is not now in sight.1 UN 18-Nation Committee Gives Report Officials Make Plans To Leave for Congo UNITED NATIONS (A') -Dipol- mats said yesterday some mem- bers of the United Nations con- ciliation commission for the Con- go probably will talk with Con- golese President Joseph Kasavubu before going to -his turbulent country. They reported this after a pri- vate meeting of Secretary General Dag Hammarskjold's 18 - nation Congo Advisory Committee. The committee will meet again, probably Monday night, to decide when the commission will leave. The diplomats said they expected the commissioners will depart to- ward the end of next week, per- haps Friday. One delegate said that before- hand, three to five members of the commission were likely to meet on their own with Kasavubu, now in New York seeking a U.N. seat. Another stressed that this would be outside the scope of the commission's work. In any case, the contact would put commission members in touch with one of the two leaders the commission seeks to get together. Another is Patrice Lumumba, the man Kasavubu fired from the premiership Sept. 5. Lumumba is now a virtual prisoner in Leopold- ville. Some on the commission favor Kasavubu, others Lumumba. But all voted in the General Assembly Wednesday to postpone debate on seating a Congolese delegation until the commission has visited the Congo and reported back. Ghana, a sponsor or a resolu- tion to seat a delegation sent here by Lumumba, won the postpone- ment on a 48-30 vote. A U.S. delegate said after the committee voted that the United States wanted the assembly to take up the recommendation quickly, perhaps early next week. AF Launches New Satellite VANDENBERG AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. (I')-Discoverer XVII-first of a series of new military spy satellites capable of changing course if threatened-- rocketed into orbit yesterday. After hours of confusion blamed on insufficient radio data, the Air Force announced the satellite was whizzing around the earth once every 96 minutes. A spokesman said the eggshaped orbit was nearly perfect, taking the 2,100-pound satellite as far as 615 miles from the earth and bringing it back to 118 miles at the closest point. Late this afternoon it is to drop a 300-pound capsule for re- covery by air and-sea forces near Hawaii. Contents of the satellite and its capsule were not disclosed. It is known, however, that future satellites of this type called Agena B have been designed to carry TV cameras and send surveillance films back to American territory. Thanksgiving CARDS and GIFTS o Brundlage Gifts. 307 S. State NO 5-7921 j *~ o o ~ t o c r c. 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