TUESDAY. JANUARY 8. 1963 .N. Troops Gain Control of Katanga; Central Regime tiles Civil Affairs LEOPOLDVILLE, the Congo (AP) The United Nations' mili tary takeover of Katanga rolled on yesterday and the Congo cen tral government set up civil con trol over the secessionist province. It was the first time Katanga President Noise Tshombe has been superseded politically in the capital of his mineral-rich do main. Swedish U.N. troops seized the railroad town of Kaniama, 360 miles northwest of Elizabethville, and neutralized its airfields with out a fight, the United Nations announced. THE ACTION tightened the U.N. grip on north gatanga and further boxed up Tshombe's bat tered forces at Kolwezi, his emergency headquarters 150 miles northwest of Elizabethville. U.S. Air Force Globemasters flew in technical supplies as the United Nations continued its mili tary buildup for a possible strike at Kolwezi and a push southeast Albania, China Hit For Kremlin Attacks MOSCOW (IF) In a major propaganda broadside, the Soviet Communist party demanded yes terday that Red China and Alban ia stop attacking the Kremlin's policy of so-called peaceful co existence. An editorial covering . nearly 2 1 / 2 pages of Pravda ended, however. with what sounded like a plea for an ideological peace conference. "The Communist parties," said the party newspaper, "have a tested method of settling conten tious issues by way of collective discussion. Our party has always advocated this method." It came only a week before the leaders of the Communist world assemble in East Berlin for the sixth congress of the East Ger man Communist party. U.S. experts said yesterday they expect the growing Moscow-Pek ing rift to be a central issue at the Berlin Communist meeting. They figure Khrushchev may also pave the way for a later shakeup in the high command of the East German Communist re gime. Khrushchev may well pay lip service once more to the long standing Kremlin program for neutralization of West Berlin and ouster of Western troops. But Washington specialists report no hard evidence pointing to a ser- IF in the rush of returning to school you find yourself pressed for time to have that favorite outfit cleaned, you can bring it to Campus Cleaners by 3 p.m. and it will be ready.the same clay. Try this speedy service soon! Next to the Post Office MOISE TSHOMBE ward along the border of North ern Rhodesia. Moving in behind the U.N. take- ious revival of the Red push on West Berlin just now. Buttressing the assessment that the Moscow-Peking row will be a principal order of business at the East German party conven tion opening in East Berlin Jan. 15 is the rising tempo in the bloc— dividing public dispute. Soviet and Red Chinese propa ganda organs accused each other of betraying the Communist cause and playing into the hands of im perialism. Although neither. the Moscow newspaper Pravda nor the Chi nese "Red Flag" magazine men tioned the other side by name directly, in their rival editorials, it was clear who they were strik ing at. Strategists Feel Taxes May Be Cut by June WASHINGTON (/P)—A tax cut on part .of 1963 income is pos sible if the House can vote on the issue by June, highly placed strategists calculated yesterday. The chances for a reduction in volving 1963 income, which Pres ident Kennedy is expected to ask, were not rated exceptionally high by congressional sources closest to the problem. But neither was such a possibility being written off. THE POINT i . .i . - .i . a..th0U..- : ::. : qt . 0::4':q . e: . ! .. ::*.- i '.. THE DAILY COLLEGIAN. UNIVERSITY PARK. PENNSYLVANIA over, the Leopoldville government named an administrative head of Katanga to secure economic and political victories for the central Congolese government. There seemed little choice for Tshombe but to accept defeat and console himself with a measure of power as a provincial leader or to fight a guerrilla war that few believe he could win. DIPLOMATIC informants told AP correspondent Dennis Neeld in Elizabethville, the Katanga capital, that the United Nations probably will present Tshombe an ultimatum demanding that he sur render Kolwczi without a fight. Secretary General U Thant has made clear through a New York spokesman that he now wants action, not words, from Tshombe toward making effective Thant's plans for reunification. If he agrees, the informants said, Tshombe's chances of re maining provincial president of south Katanga in a reunified Con go are good. If he refuses, U.N. forces will attack Kolwezi, they said, and .Tshombe would be dead politically. U.N. undersecretary Ralph Bunch, who flew to the Congo on a special mission over the week end, said he had no plans to meet with Tshombe. He said the time for negotiation is over. LONDON (AP)—Strong denials in London and Washington of pub lished reports that British bomb ers pierced North American de fenses in mock H-bomb attacks, two months ago raised some ques tions yesterday. Did Britain's high-flying, swift Vulcan bombers actually break through in the big North Ameri can defense drills of 1961, whose results remain secret? And were the stories of the Vul can's reputed successes, splashed in four London newspapers de signed to bolster the argument that the Skybolt miss,ile, aban doned by the United States, might still be a weapon in the nuclear arsenal? The Vulcan was to carry the Skybolt in Britain's nuclear deter rent force before the United States decided to drop develop ment of the air-to-ground missile. ALONG WITH the Defense De partment, the British Air Min istry denied the newspaper reports that four of the delta-winged Vulcan bombers slipped through the North American defenses two months ago and flew over New York, Washington, Chicago and Los Angeles, However, an Air Ministry spokesman did say that the Vul cans took part in Operation Sky- IS .1•1•0 MI Air Defense Penetration Denied 110 E. Beaver Avenue 'rules Fight WASHINGTON (A)—President Kennedy's legislative leaders will tell him when he returns from Florida today that they are opti mistic about winning a crucial battle over the House Rules Com mittee. Kennedy is openly concerned in the outcome of this battle, which will be . decided right after Con gress convenes tomorrow at noon. But he is staying out of a fight to change the Senate antifilibust er rules. This struggle could plunge the Senate into a filibuster before it even starts on legislative business. SENATE DEMOCRATIC Lead er Mike Mansfield of Montana clashed cold water on hopes voiced by some members that Kennedy would jump into the Senate scrap too. "The President is taking no part in this and should not," Mansfield told a reporter. "This is entirely a Senate matter." Mansfield spoke after Sen. Hu bert H. Humphrey of Minnesota, the assistant Democratic leader, said he and other supporters of a drive to adopt a stronger rule against prolonged debate hoped the President "would be as inter ested in the rules of the Senate as he is in those of the House." Mansfield said he hopes to post pone the Senate fight, with its shield II in October of 1961. U.S. and Canadian planes also participated in Skyshield 11, an exercise designed to lest the de fensive system of the North American continent, including the radar network. ITS RESULTS never have been made public. Informants pointed out that detailed results of such war games constitute important defense secrets. If British planes made a major penetration in 1961 their action would tend to bolster two con troversial strategic concepts, it was said. These are: o That there are many years of useful life ahead for the manned jet bombers as a delivery vehicle for the nuclear deterrent. And that Skybolt also has a future if its guidance and other problems could be worked out. U.S. sources rejected the sug gestion that rethinking might be necessary on the manned bomber and Skybolt questions. We address this to the young man who "borrowed" sixteen beautiful object; on the night of December 6. Deer Friend— Your grinning face with beer bottle in hand has been captured for posterity. In breaking the glass you triggered off an infra red camera located in the white box above our entrance way. While we may not recognize you in the picture, certainly others will, If the objects -"borrowed" are not returned by this evening your picture will be in the hands of the Dean of Men by tomorrow morning. This leniency is extended to you merely because we assume you were intoxicated. Co mittee threat of a filibuster by Southern opponents of• a rules change, un til after Kennedy has delivered his annual State of the Union message. This is set tentatively for next Monday. Kennedy has said in effect that "We are through if we lose" the fight to prevent the House Rules Committee from reverting„ to 12 members. This lineup in the past has enabled a conservative coali tion of four Republicans and two Southern Democrats— Chairman Howard W. Smith of Virginia and Rep. William M. Colmer of Mis sissippi—to dominate the com mittee. House Speaker John W. McCor mack, D-Mass., told newsmen he is optimistic about prospects for making permanent a temporary increase in the committee's mem bership to 15, which was approved by a 217-212 vote two years ago. Robena Miner Blasts Conditions CARMICIIAELS, Pa. (AP) A mine worker, in a dramatic out burst yesterday, told investigators of a coal mine explosion which killed 37 men that safety condi tions at the stricken Robena No. 3 mine were neglected except when inspectors were due to visit. Testifying in the fourth day of a public hearing at nearby Garards Fort, Joseph Baron, a shuttle-car operator in the U.S. Steel Corp.'s nearby Robena coal mine complex, said the only time Shuttle-car roadways are spiked to hold down coal dust is "when the inspectors are coming." IN ANSWER to questions, Baron said that when it is known that inspectors are coming "they rocicdust thoroughly, sprinkle the roadways with water, and make sure all the proper seals are on the machinery." Safety control by supervisory personnel inside the mine was "nothing but a big joke," he said in answer to questions. Baron also added some support to the testimony of miners who said earlier that methane gas was found in the Rohena No. 3 mine the day before the Dec. blast, contradicting testimony by an as sistant foreman. Fred Spoljarich, operator of a continuous mining machine, testi fying Saturday and again yester day, said he had detected gas and reported it. Advertisement PAGE THREE