Weather Report Light snowflurries today and tomorrow. Much colder. High 24, low 18, The Hometown Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Ajax, Bowmanville, Pickering and neighboring centres, She Oshawa Times Second Class Malt Post Office Department Price Not for payment Postage in Cash, 10 Gack ger cabs OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1964 ggg Poe VOL. 93 -- NO, 293 TWENTY-TWO PAGES -- eeeeeeeneengeneeeensteenntsninnencinnmanaegesennenee: NATO'N Force Not Discussed By Ministers PARIS (Reuters) -- French) Foreign Minister Maurice Couve de Murville kept U.S. State Secretary Dean Rusk waiting today and when they met, a foreign ministry spokes- man said, they did not discuss the NATO nuclear multilateral force issue. The spokesman said Rusk and Couve de Murville talked about The Congo, Southeast Asia, and Eastern Europe. Rusk planned to meet later ferring with Premier Georges Pompidou. The foreign ministry spokes- man said Rusk and Couve de Murville also discussed prob- lems due to come up at the the three - day NATO minis- terial council meeting starting here Tuesday, which is ex- pected to be dominated by the {nuclear force question. | But the spokesman said the [nuclear force issue and other today with President Charles/nuclear problems did not come de Gaulle. jup at the Rusk-Couve de Mur- Couve de Murville arrived 10) ville meeting this morning. He minutes late for his meeting|refused to give details of the with Rusk. He had been con-' discussions. NATO Multilateral Force Not For UK: Defence Man LONDON (Reuters) -- British)leaving for the NATO minister- Defence Secretary Denis Healey|ial councit session in Paris, said today he thought it "ex-|Healey said Prime Minister] tremely unlikely' that Britain|/Harold Wilson had made it RALLY 'ROUND YOUR FLAG, BOYS Itll Be One OTTAWA (CP)--The govern- ment is bracing for a hectic week, starting today with show- debate in the Senate, which could extend inte the, new year. down votes on closure, the Red} Ensign and the maple leaf flag' in the Commons, The votes, extending into the early hours of Tuesday, likely will be followed by these devel- opments; --A new flag fight in the Com- mons, this time over the of- ficial status of the Union Jack. --Opening of a protracted flag --Opposition members press- ing for the first Commons question period in two weeks THESE ALSO RAN to grill ministers over furni- ture purchases, and the ad- | ministration of justice. Hectic Week --Opening of a public inquiry THE OLD... into Conservative allegations . of bribery by one ministerial assistant and coercion by an- other in a narcotics case. The cabinet and the various parties were expected to hold emergency strategy meetings before the Commons opening at 2:30 p.m. EST. Party whips were summoning all MPs to Ottawa, (Continued on Page 21) | } Canadian Minister of Ex- ternal Affairs Paul Martin, ieft, talks with French For- eign Minister Maurice Couve de Murville after a formal conference at the i 'MARTIN TALKS WITH FRENCH FOREIGN MINISTER d'Orsay in Paris today. (See story on Page 2.) --CP Wirephoto would join.a NATO multilateral|clear Britain reserved its posi- force, tion on this proposal, for a 'Speaking to reporters before 38 Soldiers (2 of U.S.) Die In Para Transport Crash SAIGON (AP) -- Thirty-eight soldiers including two Ameri- cans killed in. the crash of a paratroop transport plane are reliably reported to have been training for operations against the Communists outside South Viet Nam. that of another U.S. serviceman in a ground action against the Viet Cong Sunday brought to 236 the number of U.S. troops killed in combat in South Viet) Nam since December, 1961. The C-123 paratroop plane crashed into a mountain Friday night after taking off from Da Nang Airport, 90 miles south of North Viet Nam. Officials would make no com- ment on the crash, However, highly reliable sources said the troops were training for com- mando action outside Viet Nam, presumably in North Viet Nam or against Viet Cong supply trails through neighboring Laos. |380 miles northeast of Saigon. The two American deaths and The plane smashed into 1,600- foot Son Tra Mountain, known to Americans as Monkey Moun- tain. It is within a secret mili- tary reservation called Spanish Beach on the South China Sea, near Da Nang, a coastal city The American killed in ground action Sunday was with an armored column that was attacked 25 miles south of the North Vietnamese border. A U.S. spokesman said 11 South} Vietnamese troops were killed in the engagement, 39 were wounded and 17 Viet Cong bod- ies were found. Four Viet Cong terrorists mined an American officers' barracks at Thu Dau Mot, 15) miles north of Saigon, before dawn today, killing a South Viet- namese passerby and wounding four American officers and six | NEW YORK (AP) -- Ernesto (Che) Guevara, No. 2 man in Cuba, says his country. is "not sending arms to Latin Ameri- can countries," but he admits it has helped train subversives there. 'We have: helped some Latin American companieros (com- rades) acquire séme military! knowledge," the Cuban minister of industry told newspaper men at a Columbia Broadcast- ing System studio Sunday after appearing on television. Guevara predicted "there will! be fighting in every country of Latin America,' saying '"'revo-| lutionary conditions are ripe." *. . « In Venezuela, Colombia} and Guatemala, there is al-| ready fighting taking place,"| emerge. We are mot the ones who create revolutions, It is the imperialist system and its allies --the ones who create revolu- tion." JEERED BY EXILES About 150 jeefing Cuban ex- iles were held back by barri- cades and policemen on foot and on horseback when Guevara showed up at the studio on West 57th street for an interview on Face the Nation. As the black - bearded, 36 - year-old right-hand man of Pre- mier Fidel Castro stepped from a police-escorted car, the exiles screamed assassin, On leaving the studio, after appealing on television for bet- ter relations between Cuba and he said. |the United States, Guevara di He mentioned "oppres-| rected that his car drive again sive conditions that Latin|past the crowd of Cuban pick- Latins 'Ripe For Revolt Says Cubas No. 2 Man Guevara's car. It was the clos-| est thing to any violence aimed at him since an abortive ba- zooka shot Friday at the United Nations building where he was speaking, "denouncing the United States. The bazooka shell, fired across the East River. from Queens, exploded in the water about 100 yards from the UN headquarters on the Manhattan shoreline. The' perpetrat- ors have not been caught. STORMED POLICE LINE Among those in the crowd of pickets Sunday was the 27-year- old Cuban woman who had! stormed through a police line in} front of the UN building an in- stant after the bazooka rocket firing. Waving a seven ~ inch hunting knife, she had tried to| climb a wall to get inside the| UN and, she said later, to kill American countries exer.\¢ts, said Police Inspector Wal- cise against their peoples," and|ter Henning, who had charge of asserted: "There comes rebellion and South. Vietnamese civilians. DEPARTMENT STORE BLUES Santa, Forget The Garlic NEW YORK (AP) -- Re- marks a department store Santa Claus gets tired of hearing: "Last year I told you I wanted a bike and ya brought me a pair of roller skates, ya bum. This year I want ya to get it straight. Bring me a bike." "Let me down, let down! I want my mama!" "We like you to show en- thusiasm, Roscoe, but don't you think you're overdoing it a bit? Just kiss the children --and let the mothers alone." "Hey, fellow, I have to play Santa Claus for my kids on Christmas Eve. How about letting me in on a few se- crets of the trade?" "Tf I catch you smoking a cigar again while on duty, I'll have to ask. you to turn in your suit." "Of course, they din't real whiskers. When he takes you up on his lap, give them a big pull--and I betcha they'll come right off in your hands." "No, -no, no, Johnny. You mustn't punch Santa in the stomach. He's a nice man." "Would you mind keeping an eye,on my little boy while me afterward new Cubas will the security force. One. person in the crowd) hurled: a cigarette lighter at and.a pink dress, and some grown-up play shoes, and a new coat, and a teddy bear that really growls, and... and... and ad Guevara. Subdued by two policemen at| the time, she was brought to} court on felonious assault charges and reléased on bond. She was booked under the name of Gladys Perez and said she resided in Jersey City, N.J. She said she came' to the United States two years ago from Cuba, where her husband had been killed and she raped. While jailed briefly here, she tried slashing her wrists with a sharp bobbypin. | "Your 'ho, ho, ho' sounds a little hollow this morning, Roscoe. I suggest you'd bet- ter practise up on it during your lunch hour." "I know my iittle girl didn't mean to get her lollipop stuck in your' whiskers, Santa. If we can just find a pair of scissors, I think I can cut it out." "The kid next door told me that Santa Claus is really your father, but you sure don't look much like my old man to me." "The toys in this depart- | ment aren't moving very fast, | Roscoe. If they don't start | selling soon, you're going to | have to.take them home for | your Christmas pay."' "I'm the fire department | inspector. It's my duty to-| check your beard to be sure it's: fireproof. Hold still, Quit | squirming, Now where did I put those-matches?" "You ought to have had bet- ter sense than to eat a garlic bread 'sandwich, Roscoe. I'm | | End Patronage, PM Requested | OTTAWA (CP) -- The wah dent of the Civil Service Fed- eration asked Prime Minister Pearson today to eliminate pol- itival patronage from all areas of the public service, Claude Edwards said in a letter to the prime minister that the federation's 72,000 members feel any Canadian should be able to obtain a gov- } | jernment job and have securityjofficials said the Ajax was not jin holding it on the basis of|fired on at any stage by the! competence and ability and not as a result of political influ- ence, Its been a long time, bu years. where Generals wlil meet A game. Dignitaries from Boston executives of the OHA, president Russ Humphreys, opening ceremonies. of board and president of N. The contingent from the local Oshawa citizen. t Tuesday night Oshawa Gen- erals return to the Motor City for the first time in 11 The setting is the Apanking new Civic Auditorium St. Catharines Black Hawks in a. regular scheduled Ontario Hockey Association Junior Bruins, sponsors of Generals, city officials and Generals' Q.C., will be on hand for the Representing Bruins will be Weston Adams, chairman ational Hockey League team, along with General Manager Lynn Patrick and chief scout Harold 'Baldy' Cotton. OHA will include Pat Patter- son, president and Matt Leydon, first Viee-president and In Man's TORONTO (CP)--Dr. H. B. Cotnam, chief coroner for On- tario, said Saturday that the body of a Welland man has been exhumed and an inquest into his death will be held in Welland Dec, 18. He said he ordered the ex- humation of the body of 67-year- old Roy Earl Carpenter. after learning there were irregulari- ties and discrepancies in the man's death certificate. He said Mr. Carpenter's death in Welland County Gen- eral Hospital Oct. 2 was not re- ported to a coroner until after 'Irregularities' Death the man had been buried. Dr. Cotnam said when the irregu- larities in the certificate were brought to his attention, Mr. Carpenter's body was exhumed in mid-November and an au- topsy was held. In Welland, Bernard Ennis, chairman of the board of gov- ernors of the hospital, said he and the. hospital administrators are aware of the facts in the jease, but could not comment | further. Dr. Cotnam said Mr. Carpen- ter was originally admitted to hospital as a heart patient. SINGAPORE. (Reuters)--The first two sea skirmishes be- tween Indonesia and Common- wealth forces protecting the Malaysian Federation took place Sunday night in territor- ial waters off the coast of Sing- apore, In one, the Australian mine- sweeper Teai returned fire from two small boats believed to be motorboats or motorized sampans, In the other incident, the British frigate Ajax fired sev- eral rounds at an unidentified, fast - moving vessel after sight- ing six ships intruding into Malaysian waters on its radar screen, In the Ajax action, the un- identified ship turned back into Indonesian waters, There was| no report on whether it had) been hit. The incidents occurred in the Straits of Malacca, the stretch of water separating the penin- sula of: Malaya from the huge Indonesian island of Sumatra. Malaysian defence ministry | intruding. craft. But in the Teal action three Indonesians were killed and| THE TIME S today... Seven Juveniles Charged--Page ll John Dryden. Elected: Whithy Township Reeye--Page 5 Toronto Mariboro's Whip G Ann Landers--13 City. News--11 enerals--Page 8 | Obits--21 Sports--8, 9 Indonesia, Commonwealth Forces Skirmish At Sea. two were wounded. Four other Indonesians were captured. There were no injuries or damage to the Australian mine- sweeper which picked up the Indonesian vessels on its radar screen during an anti - infiltra- tion patrol. One of the Indonesian vessels escaped in the Teal action but the Australian minesweeper re- covered a quantity of arms and {ammunition and,some Indone- |sian papers from the other. One source said the fact that Ajax fired meant that the un- identified craft failed to re- spond to a challenge and in- truded directly into Malaysian waters, | Master contract negotiations between the United Auto Work- ers and General Motors of Can- ada Ltd., are today expected to reach the' principal economic issues -- wages and pensions, A union spokesman said today that the talks in a downtown Toronto hotel began at 9 a.m. Sunday and broke up at 3.30 am. today. "They dealt with non-economic issues -- skilled trades, production standards, and transfer of operations," he said, "The sub - committees worked on wages, pensions and ppl y loyment benefits which the master com- mittee may discuss today." The spokesman said that pros- pects for a settlement are good "You do not sit up until 3.30 a.m. unless you are getting somewhere," he stated, ECONOMIC ISSUES "There is a likelihood of a discussion. of the economic issues," said a company repre- GM Talks Move To Key Issues GENERALS HOMECOMING SET| Prospects For Settlement 'FOR NEW CIVIC AUDITORIUM In Toronto Reported Good if they do. They are now get- ting into the really intensive bargaining," he said. The sub-committees worked until the early hours of this morning on specific questions of thé three-year master agree- ment to cover the GM workers in Oshawa, Toronto, London, St. Catharines and Windsor, The unions main demand --~ wage parity with U.S. employ- ees of GM -- will not be dis- cussed until the sub-committees adjourn. Union spokesmen have said that the Canadian wage level is 50 cents to $1.per hour below the U.S,. level, Master contract talks began Friday after local plant differ- apes were sore Peck, 14,500 em- ployees at if | wa 6,275 at McKinnon hone St. Catharines, 1,150 at the GM transmission plant in Windsor, 1,000 at Frigidaire Products of Canada in the Toronto suburb of Scarborough and 650 at Gen- eral Motors Diesel. Limited in sentative, '"'and it is a good sign London, Ont. RESTRICTED BY SOVIETS MOSCOW (AP)--Four West- ern military attaches accused by the Russians of spying are being withdrawn from their em- bassy posts here because of So- viet restrictions placed on them for the last two months, the} U.S. and British embassies an-| nounced today. The three American and one British attaches had been de- nied permission to travel in the Soviet Union since they were forcibly searched Sept. 26 at Khabarovsk, the spokesmen said. They will leave the Soviet Un- ion within a week, the Soviet government was informed to- day. "Appropriate action is being taken" against Soviet military attaches in Washington and London, the American spokes- man said. In London, the British gov- ernment announced in the Com- mons that the Soviet Union has asked to withdraw an assistant naval attache from the Soviet Embassy in London. Western Attaches Moved From Moscow Embassies American and British spokes- men emphasized in Moscow that their attaches were not declared personna non grata, the diplomatic term for unwel- come persons who must be re- moved from their posts. The restrictions made their continued stay here useless, the British spokesman indicated. The attaches were accused of spying during a 4,000-mile train trip from Moscow to Khaba- rovsk in eastern Siberia in late September. The Russians said they confiscated pictures and notebooks from the Westerners to prove the charge. American and British embas- sies here charged Russian po- lice broke into the attaches' hotel room in Khabarovsk, searched them and seized their property. The Americans are Col, George A. Aubrey of Annapolis, Md.; Lt.-Col. Karl R. Liever of Osmond, Neb., both U.S. Army, and U.S. Air Force Maj. James A. F, Smith of Meers, Okla, The Briton is a naval attache, Lt.- Cmdr. Nigel N. Laville. A navy spokesman said the incidents indicated an increase in Indonesian activity in the Straits of Malacca. Boy, 3, Aunt Die In Fire TORONTO (CP) A three- year-old Peterborough boy and his aunt died today in a fire that raged through six houses in downtown Toronto. Rene Allen, 3, son of Mr. and Mrs, Richard Allen of Peterbor- ough, died with his baby-sitting aunt, Mrs. William (Sharon) Gaudry, 21, in a blaze that burned out four of the six brick houses near the Spadina Avenue garment district. Neighbors said Rene was vis- iting his grandmother, Mrs Woodstock voted in favor 83 Charged With D impaired driving and eight any three-day period in the NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Tractor Workers Vote To Strike BRANTFORD (CP) -- Workers. at three Massey-Fer- guson Limited plants here and one each at Toronto and of strike action during the weekend in their contract dispute with the company. rinking Offences TORONTO (CP) -- Toronto police arrested 83 mo- torists during the weekend in a pre-Christmas blitz against. drinking drivers. The 75 drivers charged with arrested on drunk driving charges Friday, Saturday and- Sunday is a record for city, police said. Arson In Catholic Church Fire? RENFREW, Ont. (CP) -- An investigator from the Ontario Fire Marshal's office is expected to arrive today to probe a Sunday morning blaze that destroyed 91- I go over to the lingerie de- partment, Santa? -I won't be gone more than a few mo ments."' |Margaret Gaudry, who was out at work when the fire started in mid-morning. Sharon was 'Margaret Gaudry's . daughter- in-law and a_ sister-in-law' of }Rene's mother, Theresa Allen, | afraid I'll have to dock you half a day's pay. The kids ROSCOE: PRA "ICE YOUR 'HO, HO, HO* *°"',come wih & mie How are blades, fatso?" Classified--18, 19, Comics--15 District Revort Fdilorial--4 Financial--21 20 Television--15, Theatre--14 Whitby News--5 Women's--12, 13, 14 Weather--2 year-old St. Francis Xavier Roman Catholic Church, It was the fourth fire in two months in this Ottawa Valley town, and both Police Chief Tom, Wark and Fire Chief M, J. Legris say arson is suspected, come § And a doll, and a doll carriage, and a toy piano, you fixed for don't punch Santa in the stomach i