LUNCHEON GUESTS TAKE TIME OUT FOR A CHUCKLE Laughter was often noted Monday at the Oshawa Rotary Club's Civic Day luncheon. These six men were caught by a Times photographer en- joying themselves and no doubt trading quips and barbs, prior to the luncheon, Left to right, Club president Stanley Lovell, a Board of Education trustee, Michael Rudka, Sep- arate School Board trustee, Mayor Lyman Gifford, Dr. Claude Vipond, Board of Edu- cation trustee, Ald. Norman Down and guest speaker Crown Attorney Bruce Affleck. They were among the more than 100 elected representa- tives, civic officials, Rotar- ians and other special guests attending the annual lunch- eon. . --Oshawa Times Photo Indonesia-Malaysia Tension Builds As Paratroops Arrive Pi From AP-Reuters : SINGAPORE (CP) -- Fifty ore paratroopers arrived from Hngland today as part of a Brit- ish buildup amid fears of es- calation of the undeclared war) ae Indonesia and Malay- a. Britain has flown in 100 para- troopers and the remaining 400 men from the 2nd Parachute Battalion are due to be airlifted by Thursday. Another 500 men of a Gurkha battalion are com- by ship from Hong Kong, pe Pd the total of British and other Commonwealth troops in few days and four minesweep- ers and two patrol boats were being taken out of inactive sta- tus in Singapore. The moves are part of the British government's decision to strengthen its land and sea forces in the Far East in the face of increasing attempts at incursion by Indonesian infiltra- tors against the Malaysian fed- eration. The Malaysian government announced Monday that it would retaliate 'under the rule of hot pursuit": should Indonesia attack |donesian mission this week and go home "'to talk things out." Some sources expressed be- lief that Palar hoped to per- suade President Sukarno not to make the withdrawal final. But in Jakarta, the Indonesian Herald said the withdrawal de- cision "is irrevocable." newspaper usually reflects the try. | In Hong Kong, British Air| Vice-Marshal P. C. Fletcher} said Indonesia does not have |lar, said he would close the In-| The| the technical ability to escalate its campaogn against Malaysia into a large-scale conflict. "Indonesia's ability to handle her large assortment of sophis- ticated weapons is doubtful,'"' he said. "Her ability to use her air striking power effectively is questionable." At the UN, Palar met with Canada's Ambassador Paul viewpoint of the foreign minis-/Tremblay Monday. A_spokes- man said Tremblay expressed Canada's concern over the im- pact the Indonesian withdrawal might have on the UN. in force. Ind s Malaysia alone to more than ment that it was withdrawing from the United Nations came 7,000 J lafter intelligence reports that ALL'S FAIR IN * The paratroopers are to move} r ; Indonesia is massing forces at aaa Gani mainland for bases surrounding Malaysia. "Britain's most modern air-|CLOSING MISSION eraft carrier, Eagle, was ex-| At the United Nations, Indo-| pected in Malaysian waters in ajnesia's chief delegate L. N. Pa-) Numismatists Plague Mint OTTAWA (CP) -- The Ryya Canadian Mint has been flooded with mail orders for its pack- aged sets of uncirculated 1965 coins, the delight of collectors. More than 300 bags of mail were piled up at the mint this morning in response to the pre- viously - announced acceptance of starting Jan. 1. | "It was estimated they contain| drders for close to 3,000,000) coin sets. «Demand for these sets has ballooned in the last few years. 1H 1958 the mint sold 18,000 sets. resses with gloved hands to hape, they are encased in plastic. LIMIT SALES Face value of the sets is $1.91. Last year they were lim- ited to 50 sets for each cus- tomer, at a price of $3 a set. This year the mint has placed a limit of five sets a customer and raised the price to $4. The 1963 sets, purchased for $3 each, already are selling among collectors for $7 a set. Thus a person who had bought 50 sets for a total cost of $150 LOVE AND A GAS PRICE WAR PHOENIX, Ariz, (AP) -- "Gimme 50 cents worth of gas," said the customer. "And while you're at it, sweep out the car and tighten up the wheel nuts." The harried service station operator complied, then was handed a $20 bill to change. The attendant made change and breathed a sigh of relief-- only to find another driver waiting in line with similar demands. This situation arises from the fact three Phoenix. service stations cut prices two cents a gallon last week--selling regular for 31.9 cents and ethyl for 33.9--and put up signs advertising same. The Arizona Gasoline Re- tailers Association didnt' ap- prove. It said such signs start gas price wars, So it called out its troops. PICKETS APPEAR Pickets with 'unfair to AGRA" signs first appeared at the three stations. Then came a string of cars driven by men wearing uniforms of other oil companies. The driv- ers ordered small purchases of gas, paid for them with large bills and demanded ex- tra services. The campaign was launched, said association President Henry Cox, because the stations '"'were using their price signs as a weapon to intimidate other dealers to in- cite a gas war." Both sides claimed victory of sorts. "We've been doing about four times more gas business than usual," said Roy Gay, a station owner, Price signs at the stations remained up through the pick- eting. Cox says no new action is planned at present. "We just wanted to show an oil com- pany we have an organiza- tion," he said. Last year it received orders for\now could sell for $350, a tid yd sets before cutting offigo09 profit in less than a Fond new orders at the end of| Mint officials said they have April. \been amazed at the way the 2The sets consist of one coin|sets rise in value among numis- of each denomination. The coins|matists. The mint has no con- ~ gte picked off the mint's|trol over prices once the sets avoid scratches. In perfectiare in the market. Man Surrend TORONTO (CP)--The beaten body of seven-year-old Deborah Johnson of Toronto was found early today in the basement toy department of a hardware store almost directly beneath her home about: seven hours after she was reported missing. Coroner Dr. Hans Sepp said the girl had been indecently as- saulted and then beaetn and kicked to death. | A man surrendered himself to police early today with two law- yers, David Humphrey and Ed- ward Merzec. No charges were laid immediately. ers After Girl's Body Found dren of Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Johnson. She had been left in the care of her 20-year-old un- cle, David Prain, while her pa- rents were out looking for a new place to live. More than 200 policemen were searching for the girl when her body was found. An autopsy showed the girl's skull had been fractured and her liver lacer- j ated. Shortly after the parents missed Deborah, a description was broadcast at 9:15 p.m. Monday, about which time po- Deborah was one of four chil- lice believe the child was killed. WEATHER FORECAST Cloudy, TORONTO (CP) -- Official forecasts-issued by the weather office at 5:30 a.m. Synopsis: Cooler air is ex- pected to cover the province by Wednesday morning. While skies will be. variable in the cooler air Wednesday it should Colder North Winds Wingham sssecee Hamilton .... St, Catharines Toronto ...++. Peterborough . Trenton «+++ Kingston . Sexual Counter-Offensive Soon Against Viet? SAIGON (AP) -- The South Vietnamese government de- ployed more soldiers around Binh Gia today, and a counter- offensive against the Viet Cong appeared to be under way. Sporadic sniper fire was re- ported during the night and a road convoy was hit with small arms fire, but casualties were light. The area 40 miles east of Saigon was quiet today. Gen. William Westmoreland, commander of U.S. forces in 'Viet Nam, was expected to di- rect the U.S. side of the de- veloping effort to counter the Viet Cong offensive in Binh Gia. U.S. reconnaissance bombers crossed the battle areas repeat- edly Monday, taking aerial pho- tographs, possibly in. prepara- tion for a drive against Com- munist forces around the em- battled Roman Catholic refugee village. < Viet Cong units made new at- tacks Sunday night and Mon- day, shattering a three-day lull in fighting around Binh Gia. Six Americans have been killed in the fighting around Binh Gia, and two others are missing and believed captured. Government casualties are believed to be in the neighborhood of 500. Saigon, scene of student riots and demonstrations Monday, was calm today, although the main Buddhist secondary school of 5,000 students was on strike and more trouble was expected. CAMPAIGN PLANNED? There were indications that Buddhist students and other agi- tation groups would try to mount a co-ordinated campaign opposing the civilian govern- ment of Premier Tran Van Huong. In Hue, 400 miles. north of Saigon, 100 students passed the first night of a 48-hour anti-gov- ernment fast, but widespread public support for the protest did not materialize. Student leaders in Hue have promised that if the government has not granted their demands by Wednesday, they will adopt "stronger measures." The im- plication was that the students are planning riois. North Viet Nam accused the United States, South Korea and South Viet Nam of a "scheme to bring South Korean _ troops into the war in South Viet Nam." Sources in Seoul said last week the South Korean govern- ment had decided to send about 1,200 non-combat troops to South Viet Nam as technical instruc- tors. South Korea sent 116 mem- bers of a mobile surgical unit HUSTLERS HIT 'BOOMING' CITY CHICAGO (AP) -- Burglar alarms went off, dishes shat- tered and at least one dog went berserk, Aside from that, Chicago es- caped unscathed Monday from its first exposure - te sonic booms from U.S. bomb- ers. The sound of a flight of Strategic Air Command B-58 Hustlers on a simulated bombing run was "about equal to a lively cocktail party," said Joseph Fitzger- ald, assistant city build- ing commissioner. Fitzgerald rigged a noise meter in the window of a downtown build- ing. He said it recorded a noise level of 101 decibels, slightly below the measure- ment that causes the human ear to start hurting. Area residents reported that two booms which shook the south side were dull rum- bles in The Loop--the city's centre--and were not heard at all in many suburbs. The booms were the first of about 200 which Chicagoans can expect during the next three months as B-58 crews practise bombing targets in the area, which an air force spokesman says closely re- sembles an unnamed poten- tial enemy target. and 10 combat instructors to South Viet Nam last September. Nigerian LAGOS (CP)--Nigeria's pres- ident and prime minister said Monday night that they have settled the six - day constitu- tional crisis over last week's controversial election that threatened to break up the Ni- gerian Federation. President Nnamdi Azikiwe asked Prime Minister Sir Abu- bakar Tafawa Balewa to form a "broadly based national gov- ernment'? on the basis of last Wednesday's balloting, which opposition parties boycotted after Balewa refused to post- pone the election, the first since Nigeria gained its inde- pendence from Britain in 1960. Azikiwe, an easterner and for- mer leader of the largest party in the opposition United Pro- gressive Grand Alliance, said elections would be held "'as soon Settled: Azikiwe Crisis the boycott. This includes all of eastern and parts of midwest- ern Nigeria. The balloting also will be re- examined in districts where such a small number voted as to make "a mockery' of the election, the president said. In constituencies where the opposition charged that nomin- ation irregularities took place, the matter will be taken to court, Azikiwe said. The UPGA, which draws most of its strength from Nigeria's eastern and midwestern re- gions, charged that its nomin- ees were not allowed to regis- ter their candidacies in the Moslem north, the nation's most populous area. The victories there and in western Nigeria of the northern-based Nigerian Na- tional Alliance, led by Ralewa, as possible' in areas where no jballoting took place because of gave it a majority in the 312- seat House of Representatives. STUDENT STUDY RESULTS 6 Children Die In Fire KIRKLAND LAKE (CP) -- A 14-year-old girl leaped through a window to safety but six other children died early Tuesday when fire destroyed a_ two- storey frame house at Tarzwell, 14 miles south of here. The six victims were all chil- dren of Mrs. Margaret Wilson, who was in Kirkland Lake at the time. Dead are David, 11, Robert, 9, John, 8, and three others, in- cluding a one-year-old. Theresa Wilson, the oldest of the seven children, said she was babysitting and had fallen asleep clad in slacks and a sweater. She awoke about 12:30 a.m. to find the house filled with smoke. The girl said she aroused the younger children before leap- ing through the window into about two feet of snow and call- ing to the others to pass the one-year-old baby to her. But after calling three times without getting an. answer, she ran one-quarter mile through |the snow without shoes to arouse a neighbor, STANFORD, Calif. _| permissiveness U.S. college women hasn't, changed much since 1930, a| (AP) claimed today. But, the four-year study of 49) ern U.S. women's college also) showed ". college students have evolved patterns of sexual behavior that will remain stable for some Freedman. Freedman, assistant dean of| undergraduate education and al research associate at the Insti-| tute for the Study of Huma n| Problems, reported his findings) in the current issue of the Mer-| rill-Palmer Quarterly. Little Change Seen In Sexual Standards. The pattern of sexual be- among/havior that has evolved, Freed-|crews succeeded shortly before man said, "consists of petting, intercourse among some en- Stanford University researcher|gaged couples. and early mar-iducting electricity into Cape riage." The 49 young women. were students at an unidentified east-|studied for four years, Free-\land nothing seemed amiss. man's report said, and several toward pre-marital love. Other findings which ran con- | ital intercourse among college women usually is restricted to their future husbands; and pro- miscuity is probably confined to a sma percentage of col- lege women--probably a lower proportion than among high school girls. VATICAN CITY (AP) -- The fourth and final session of the Vatican ecumenical council will start next Sept. 14, the Vatican press office announced today. The council, first to be held by the Roman Catholic church in 92 years, was convened by Pope John Oct. 11, 1962. It has met annually each fall for two months since then. The third session of the coun- jell, which was attended by more than 2,000 bishops and ended last Nov, 21, took the most mo- mentous decisions. Progressive bishops were clearly in the ma- jority, but the conservative fac- tion fought determinedly throughout the session. The council approved the ba- sic text of a draft declaration of non-Christian religions which Ecumenical Council Starts Next September says the Jewish people as a whole cannot be blamed for the crucifixion of Christ. This will come before the fourth session for final voting. Also awaiting action at the final council session are a dec- laration on religious liberty and a schema, or council topic, on the problems of the major mod- ern world, including birth con- trol and nuclear arms. The declaration on religious liberty was strongly opposed by the conservative minority. At its request the Pope refused to al- low the declaration to come io a vote at the third session even though more than half of the bishops petitioned him to allow them to endorse it through a vote. Smash D rug Ring HOLY Cecilia De Brun, 5, of Wil- fowdale zooms out of a snow tunnel at Pioneer Village, near Toronto. The tunnel was dug fhrough a well packed snow- .|don, Toronto: Variable cloudi- SNOW bank. Toronto's parks were filled over the weekend with sledding, skating and tobog- be a pleasant day. Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, Lake Huron, Niagara, Lake On.|s tario, Windsor, Hamilton, Lon/E ness and colder. Winds north 15. Georgian Bay, Haliburton Kil- laloe, Timagami, Algoma,|/Moosonee North Bay, Sudbury: Sunny/Timmins with a few cloudy periods Winds north 15. White River, Cochrane: Vari-) able cloudiness and colder.|DaWwSON «...+++00- -65 Light winds. Victoria teneeeseees 34 Western James Bay: Mainly|Edmonton .. "37 cloudy with a few snowflurries| Regina ...+.s000.. -22 and colder. Light winds. {Winnipeg ....+e008 "14 | Lakehead Forecast Temperatures Sault Ste. Marie Low tonight, high Wednesday | White River .. | Observed Temperatures Low overnight, high Monday -57 40 sees } At Air Force Base | PLATTSBURGH, N.Y. (AP)jtaken action against 40. The A ring of alleged marijuana|newspaper says it had learned -jusers at the massive U.S. Stra-/that, of the 40, one airman had tegic Air Command installation|been acquitted and that one here has been smashed by air|court martial resulted in a mis- Cape Breton Gets Power HALIFAX (CP)--Weary Nova Scotia Power Commission | i midnight Monday in repairing leet - broken power lines con- {Breton Island. For most residents of the is- After heavy icing snapped that American|thousand other students were|crossarms of the commission's questioned on their attitudes)main line atop a hill in Anti- jgonish County, emergency jsources of electricity provided time to come," said Mervin|trary to popular opinion, Freed-|towns and rural areas in north- man Said, showed that pre-mar-|ern and northeastern Nova Sco- tia with enough power to main- tain normal lighting and elec- trical services. Power commission linesmen were exhausted by chasing wire |breaks all over Cape Breton in OTTAWA (CP)--Top organ- izational brains of the Liberal party were meeting here today to put finishing touches on the party's plans for the next fed- eral election campaign. Informants said Monday the meeting doesn't mean that Prime Minister Pearson is on the verge of dissolving Parlia- ment in an effort to win a ma- jority of seats for his embattled, minority administration. But it does mean the party organizers are assuming that 1965 is a sure-bet election year. They want to be ready to swing into action on a moment's no- tice. The senior campaign officers from the provinces and from Liberal headquarters will dis- cuss establishment of a speak- er's bureau and the party's campaign advertising and fi- nancing plans. Also up for discussion will be eampaign touring by the prime minister, now on holiday in Florida. PEARSON'S DECISION Barring a defeat in the Com- mons on a question of confi- dence in the government, the decision on an election date is Mr. Pearson's. Parliament resumes Feb. 16 amid some signs that the gov- ernment will be unable to count as heavily on voting support on important matters from the nine Social Credit MPs. Social Credit Leader Thomp- son has issued a clean-house-or- else ultimatum which Mr. Pear- son rejected at a press confer- ence last Thursday before leav- ing for his Florida holiday. Mr. Thompson's party has been the government's voting mainstay on a number of occa- Grit Organizers Girding Loins For 1965 Election sions. However, if this support - is withdrawn, the Liberals ex- pect the 13-member Ralliement des Creditistes led by Real Ca- ouette to bail them out on cru-'* cial votes. The Liberals, preparing for the next election, have nomi- , nated candidates in about 15 per - cent of the 136 constituencies they lost to other parties in the 1963 election. STEP UP NOMINATIONS Party sources said nomina- tions will be stepped up in these ridings in the next few months. Nominations in the 129 ridings they now hold probably won't be held until an election is an- . nounced. : The party has been putting special organizational emphasis on the Prairie provinces--main centres of Conservative strength--in recent months .un- der direction of Hazen Ar- gue, Saskatchewan campaign chairman, Those attending the meeting will include national director Keith Davey; Finance Minister Gordon, the national campaign chairman; Tom Kent, Mr. . Pear- son's policy adviser; Richard O'Hagan and James Coutts from the prime minister's staff; and campaign chairmen and co- chairmen for each province. They include: George Van Roggen and Law- rence Jolivet, Vancouver; Reg Easton, Edmonton, and Ed O'Connor, Calgary; Mr. Argue; Douglas Everett, Winnipeg; Senator Dan Lang,_ Tor- onto; Bob Giguere, Montreal; Charles McElman, Fredericton; Jack Cruickshank, Rocking- ham, N.S.; John Nicholson, Charlottetown; and Charles Granger, MP for Grand Falls- White Bay-Labrador. FUNDS FOR CLINICS SOUGHT Birth Control Hassle Again MILWAUKEE (AP) -- The controversial birth control issuejplanned parenthood clinics is flaring anew in Milwaukee/would be established to distrib- Under the proposal, five' County as federal funds arejute birth control supplies and sought for establishment of cli-|information. The project would nics in low income neighbor-|cost about $50,000 of which 90 hoods. per cent would come from fed- After reviewing heated argu-jeral funds. ments from both sides, the So-} The commission had taken cial Development Commission|the proposal under advisement of Greater Milwaukee voted 7\after a public hearing attended to 1 Monday to seek funds under|by more than 300 persons Dec. the Anti-Poverty Act for five|16. : birth control clinics. Most Rev. William Cousins, The lone dissenting vote was|Roman Catholic Archbishop of cast by county Superintendent|Milwaukee, opened the hearing of Schools Michael Kies, who|With a plea that it not be said he believed federal funds|.turned into an arena for re- could be spent in ways more di-|igious controversy." rectly. associated with the anti-| However, some Catholie poverty program. groups, including the §t. Vin- The commission voted ap-|cent de Paul Society, whith atds~ proval of the project, proposed|the needy, urged that the proj- by the Planned Parenthood As-|¢ct be rejected. Proponents re- sociation of Milwaukee, without|Plied that the clinics would pro- comment. aa Moe Merge gn Fe the rhythm The proposal now goes ~~ Ms control, the only method acceptable to the [can veto oe Knowles, who Catholic Church. 4 Rev. Benjamin GJenvick, di- Ford To Set rector of the Lutheran Society Strike Date | of Wisconsin and upper Michi- ple to be responsible parents." } gan, said the birth control proj- ect was a 'needed public health TORONTO (CP)--The Ford) council of the United Auto measure."' He added that there is a lack of access to informa- Workers of America (CLC) will decide today on a strike dead- HEAT WITH OIL the last three days. A. sleet storm and subsequent ice con- ditions caused all the prob- lems. Meanwhile, officials of CFXU- TV in Antigonish said Monday night it is hoped to get the re- broadcasting station back on the air by the end of this week. Fleming Kids Walter Gordon | TORONTO (CP)--Former fi- {nance minister Donald Flem- jing, a Progressive Conservative, jcouldn't resist a few playful \gibes Monday when he intro- duced his successor, Liberal Walter Gordon, at a luncheon meeting of the Toronto Cana- dian Club. | Ministers of finance should improve, said Mr. Fleming, president of the club, because they can profit from the mis- takes of their pred DIXON'S OIL 313 ALBERT ST. 24-HOUR SERVICE 723-4663 SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS tion which "enables poor peo- line for Ford of Canada work-| rs. | The council deferred its de- cision Monday as negotiations continued on a new contract for the company's Windsor and| Oakville plants. | Talks began Oct. 1. Last| month the minister of labor re-| leased a conciliation report} which ¢ d nor | dations, but cleared the way for COLBORNE NEW LARGER GROCETERIA LOCATION Colborne St. at Church St. ' 728-6341 Bewerw Nias Ps Ol oe DAILY 'TIL 10 P.M. 10% KING ST, WEST Phone 725-0444 Seven Daye a Week OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT © Groceries ©@ Fresh Fruits © Vegetables © Meats FREE DELIVERY | . In a sly reference to the gov- ernment's use of closure-to end the flag debate, Mr, Fleming) said finance ministers, when) not engaged in enterprises '"'in- volving closure or disclosure," are often pursuing "with what one used to dare to call unflag- ging zeal, schemes which usu- ally cost money." Gordon responded that he scrapped plans to make a detailed economic forecast in| his speech when he recalled how Mr. Fleming came under fire from the Liberal opposition for the same practice. Mr. force officiais, the Plattsburgh | trial. Press-Republican reports. ' " 'The newspaper says that reg Pp espe taped Pl jairmen were caught in a pre-| ™ ae ig dawn raid in September at the |base, Col. Richard Stewart, |Plattsburgh Air Force Base. )said: "Seven airmen have been The crackdown, the newspa-} | discharged for using marijuana. per says, followed the arrest of Six of them were young and an airman outSide the base a aed » biti oa die. civilian authorities. The airman,|, He said that the airmen came Lance Ramirez, 24 of New|{from "a large metropolitan York City, was convicted last|area'" and that several said week in Clinton County Court on|they used the drug before join- ing the air force, Windsor .. 25 35 St. Thomas ...+.++ London. ...+4+ ganing enthusiasts after the first snowfall in the area, Kitchener ...sssees Mount Forest .s+oe. 18 | Kapuskasing Earlton .... North Bay }Sudbury . a charge of possessing mari- juana Of: the 178 caught four months .ago, the Press-Republi- can says, the air force has|Lake Champlain. Plattsburgh, with a popula-} tion of about 20,000, is in north-| ern New York on the shores of; | HOUSEHOLDERS Save On \FUEL 4@° OlL 16 668-334] DX Fuel Oil BLACK'S JANUARY CLEARANCE | @ STORE WILL BE CLOSED ALL DAY WEDNESDAY "rn 72 Simeoce North 725-1912 STARTS Thurs., Jan. 7th Watch for Announcement in Wednesday's Oshawa Times