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The central governmen: faces many prob- lems it cannot handle without help. Steps are being taken to shift the sis to civilian aid as a massive long-term project but a sizable UN force will be maintained to guard against a new flareup of violence, There is no thought at UN headquar. ters of withdrawing UN forces completely. One of the tasks assigned to the UN originally was to help the central government main- tain law and order. That is taken to include stopping any kind of trouble ranging up to civil war. COULD CAUSE CONFLICT Trouble could come from two sources, Most likely is an out. break of tribal warfare, tradi- tional in The Congo. The other possibility is that the power struggle among Congo political factions could lead to a military conflict. The latter is not expected but the political situation is too un- certain to rule it out. Premier Cyrille Adoula has enemies and the national army has yet to demonstra'e how loyal it would be to the government in a polit- ical crisis. At any rate, the UN is not planning to liquidate its Congo force until the situation is much more stable, There will be a sharp reduction, however, and this will ease much of the finan. cial pressure the UN has felt for 2% years. U.S. Ambassador Adlai Stew enson and UN Undersecretary Ralph J. Bunche, in an eX. change the other day, con- cluded that the major part of the UN Congo job still was ahead. MUST MAKE REPAIRS Bunche, also an American, went on to say that reduction of the UN military force would open the gate "for what we're really in The Congo for, what we really hoped to do, and that is the most massive technical assistance effort in human his- tory." ' One of the most urgent prob. lems is the restoration of roads, bridges and railroads damaged or destroyed during the fighting. Other projects include long- term assistance in public ad- ministration, education, health, agriculture and engineering. The capitulation of Katanga President Moise Tshombe is ex- pected to lead to easing the central government's financial plight. It will be getting a share of the taxes from Katanga's copper and cobalt mines as soon as production is restored. The UN is pressing for a quick agreement between the central government and Ka. tanga province on a division of these revenues. UN officials also are trying to speed up ap- proval of a constitution under which The Congo would have a federal government. Editor Settles Into New Job | For Diet OTTAWA (CP) --Burton T. Richardson, 56, a former editor of the Toronto Telegram, is settling into his new job as one of Prime Minister Diefenbaker's special assistants. Mr. Richardson, succeeding John Fisher who is being ap- pointed commissioner of Can- ada's 1967 centenary adminis- tration, will be one of Mr. Dief- enbaker's private secretaries primarily concerned with news media, His appointment has not been formally announced, pending action on orders-in-council for- mally establishing the cente- nary administration and Mr. Fisher's appointment to it. Mr. Fisher, known for his broad- casting as Mr. Canada, has been the prime minister's spe. cial assistant since July, 1961. A native of Selkirk, Man., Mr. Richardson was educated at the University of Manitoba, Syra- cuse University and the London School of Economics. He was a reporter for the Regina Leader Post, the Winnipeg Free Press--serving in Winnipeg, Ot- tawa, Washington, London, and as a war correspondent in the South Pacific--and editor of the Saskatoon Star-Phoenix and Ot- tawa Citizen before joining The Telegram as its editor in 1953. He was appointed Washinton correspondent for The Telegram last year and covered Prime Minister Diefenbaker's confer. ence with Prime Minister Mac- millan last month in Nassau. It was there that Mr. Diefen. baker asked him to join his per- sonal staff. Mr. Richardson wrote a bio- graphic profile of the prime minister, entitled Canada and Mr. Diefenbaker, which was published last spring. 2. Mamma eR ag ESOS