Oshawa Times (1958-), 27 Jun 1966, p. 1

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PARRA NN AER 2 TM MAN KILLED AS TWO CNR FREIGHTS CRASH NEAR OSHA HUNDREDS OF een VIEW FREIGHT WRECKAGE FROM NEARBY MacDONALD « CARTIER FREEWAY ADJACENT LINE Photo By Joe Serge ULINRAYTQUE LHP Comins a mtr Home Newspaper Of Oshawa, Whitby, Bowman- ville, Ajax, Pickering and neighboring centres in Ont- erlo end Durham Counties. VOL. 95 -- NO. 135 16¢ Single 5S¢ Per 1 Sac roy, A ; j Zhe 0s hawa Sines OSHAWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, JUNE 27, .1966 Outigrtant 0 Barons Cote Hel Veit Oita nt jc r payment of ULI Saturday after two Canadian National Railway freight trains backed into each other about two miles east of Oshawa. Dead is Gerald Moher, 38, who was pinned under the boxcar when the cabooses of the two trains smashed into each other shortly after 12 noon. Hundreds of motorists on the Macdonald - Cartier Free- way, adjacent to the rail line, stopped to view the wreck- age. Pour cars were derailed, blocking the CNR , Toronto- Montreal main line, INJURED Jerry Hysted, a trainman, Myron McTaggart, a fireman, | and Larry a@ conduc.' tor, all of Belleville and Wal- ter Rogers, a t an from Stirling, were treated at Osh- awa General Hospital and dis- charged yesterday with the exception of Mr. Hysted, who suffered a broken leg. The accident occurred about 2% miles east of the downtown CN station where a through freight train from Montreal to Toronto was back- ing up to take a run at a steep grade on the line. As it did, it backed into a freight bound for Toronto from Mont- real that was backing into Oshawa to pick up extra cars, TRAINS RE-ROUTED CN trains were re-routed over Canadian Pacific Rail- way lines for about 10 hours until the tracks were cleared, LLL TTT Weather Report Sunny, some clouds, Cooler, Low tonight, 62; high tomor- row, 80. Postage in THIRTY-FOUR PAGES RCs Clash With Police In Warsaw By GENE KRAMER WARSAW (AP)--About 1,000) hymn - singing Polish Roman| Catholics clashed with club- swinging police Sunday night in two attempts to march on Com- munist party headquarters in} Warsaw. ~ At the height of the outbreak, helmeted police charged into a) chanting crowd of youthful sup-| ithe celebration this year of the| millennium of Christianity in Poland. Sunday night's demonstrations | started after more than 50,000 Catholics jammed St. John's Cathedral and nearby streets for} | services concluding a week-long | celebration of the millennium in! Warsaw. Hundreds of Communist party porters of Stefan Cardinal Wy-| workers blocked street intersec- ezynski, the Polish primate, and|tions to try to keep Catholic swung their truncheons. Several! crowds from surging into the persons were arrested. The violence erupted 10 years to the month after the bloody| 1956 riot of Polish workers in| Poznan, which set off a shock| wave felt throughout the Com- munist world. The trouble in Poznan was a forerunner of the! Hungarian revolution. The Catholic hierarchy and) Poland's Communist regime} have been at odds for months marched toward the downtown over a proposal by Polish bish-! ops for Polish-German reconcili-| ation. bs As a result the government rejected a proposed visit to Po- land by Pope Paul, barred Car- dinal Wyszynski from travelling abroad and closed Polish bor-| ders to foreign pilgrims during | tinued on. icentre of the city. One group of more than 5,000) {Catholics massed outside the |palace of Cardinal Wyszynski. When traffic police attempted to clear the streets, angry dem-| onstrators lashed out with um-) brellas. About 1,000 of the demonstra- tors chanted "primate, primate" jand "Catholics unité" as they Premier Robarts (right). and Ontario Tourism Min- ister James Auld mop their brows after completing nine _ holes of golf att the new 5 a Negro Sunenders | headquarters of Wladyslaw Go- mulka's ruling Polish United Workers (Communist) party. A truck carrying eight riot po-| lice tried to stop the marchers. | The demonstrators shifted to the; _ other side of the street, shouted| "Gestapo! Gestapo!'"' and con-| Protestant Extremists Said Set To Hit In Belfast BELFAST, Northern Ireland (AP) -- Three young men be- lieved to. be Roman Catholics were shot in Belfast's Protest- ant district Sunday. One was Killed, the others severely in- jured. -- The shootings sparked fears that Protestant extremists plan to step up violence during their celebration July 12 of the Or- ange cause. An emergency meeting of La- bor members of Parliament was called in London to discuss the situation. The Queer and the Duke of Edinburgh are scheduled to visit Belfast next week. Youths Destroy | In Fatal Shooting MONTREAL (CP) -- A 24- year-old Negro surrendered to city police Sunday night, three hours after a younger Negro |was shot to death in a midtown | movie theatre. The victim, Wayne Hudlin, 21, The shootings, in Malvernia native of New Brunswick, was Street, were seen by three teen- watching the western movie age girls. One said that the man! Duel at Diablo, starring Sidney killed, Peter Ward, 18, was shot Poitier, in the Capitol theatre. as he lay in the road. Witnesses said he was accom- She said that another man panied by two young girls, sit- was shot in the leg as he held ting at either side of him, near his hands up. the back of the movie house. There have been a series of ---- ROBARTS, AULD COLF IN SIZZLING HEAT per Canada golf course at Morrisburg, Ont., in better than 90-de gree weather. They called it quits at half- _way round the 18-hole course which was officially opened at Upper Canada Village Saturday. The premier scored a commendable 50 for the nine holes. De Gaulle Sees Missile Launch LENINGRAD (AP) -- French; The spokesmen reported Sa- officials disclosed today that|turday that de Gaulle had seen President Charles de G au!1le)the Soviets launch an unmanned witnessed the launching of avearth satellite into orbit from missile 'as well as an earth sa-| their centre for space research tellite during his visit to the|and military rocketry in Baiko- closely guarded Soviet s pace nur, in a desert area about 1,200 centre in central Asia Saturday. | miles southeast of Moscow. Although the spokesman did| The Soviet press has made no not say so, it apparently was a| mention of de Gaulle's visit to military rocket. \the space centre FIVE UNION OFFICIALS GIVEN TWO MONTHS Heat Wave End Looms higher than the record set in 1963. ~ Sudbury registered 89, break- ing a 1943 record of 88. Else- where in the province, Hamil- ton recorded 97 and Windsor had a high of 99. Ottawa was 92 degrees. No cases of heat prostration were reported in Metropolitan Toronto but several persons were admitted to hospital with heart conditions and other ail- ments aggravated by the heat. Most residents moved out to parks and swimming pools. More than 30,000 took the ferry trip to Toronto Island and an- other 10,000 jammed Darlington Provincial Park near Oshawa. TORONTO (CP) -- Tempera- tures soared across Ontario Sunday, setting records in three Ontario cities, but the weather office predicted relief today. Cooler air moving into south- ern Ontario from the northwest will bring an end to a four-day heat wave that produced tem- peratures in the 90s. Skies will be sunny and the weather office predicts tempera- jtures near the seasonal §80- \degree range. Residents of Toronto swel- tered Sunday through a high of 94 degrees, breaking a previous record of 92 set in 1954. It was 87 in North Bay, one degree Beer Bottle Feud Delays Unloading Of 17 Vessels TORONTO (CP) -- Sentences of two months each were im- posed on five Peterborough un- ion leaders convicted June 6 of contempt of court. Another 21 men each received a 15-day sentence. All were taken immediately to the Pe- terborough jail. Mr. Justice G. A. Gale im- posed two-month sentences on Charles Clark, William Mul- ders, Stanley Rouse, George Rutherford, and Victor Skur- at. All had been convicted of con- tempt for violating an injunc- tion restricting picketing at the strikebound Tilco Plastics Co. plant in Peterborough. Chief Justice Gale said in his judgment June 6 that mass demonstrations outside the Tilco plant Feb. 23-24 were ille- gal in the face of a court in- junction limiting pickets to 12. CALLS IT CHALLENGE He said the illegal picketing was well planned and deliber- ate and was an open challenge to the authority of the court. The Tilco strike last Dec. 14 TORONTO (CP) -- An argu-|with a liquor violation. ment over half a bottle of beer| E. B. Griffith, general mana- today held up unloading of 17|ger of Toronto harbor commis-| | ships, 'some with perishable|sion, said there will be no ne-| goods, in the port of Toronto. | gotiation on the issue. A wildcat strike by 150 check-| 'As soon as the men retura| ers in 90-degree heat was joined|to work there will be a meeting by more than 500 longshoremen| within 10 minutes to discuss the after»a checker was charged! whole situation,' he said. violent incidents in Belfast this | year, following conflict between| the Protestant majority and the TURBULENT MISSISSIPPI MARCH ENDS Catholic minority. Religious fecl- ing has been one of the chief reasons why Northern Ireland has remained in the United Kingdom and refused to join the predominantly Catholic Irish Re- public. By JOHN 8S. LANG _| JACKSON, MISS. (AP)--The long and turbulent Mississippi | marc h has ended with James H.} Properties "journey against fear'--saying White Supremacy Over- Meredith | portion of the grounds and adja-| "It's true that we got some cent areas, |mean white folks in Mississippi The final leg of the march--|. . . but these people can be from Tougaloo College on the) decent. | outskirts of Jackson to the capi-| 'There is oniy one thing that) | Meredith--who started it as aj|tol--and the rally were marked | is holding them back. And that) bond in the case. by a subdued atmosphere. thing is the system of white su- |near Hernando, 'Miss., after cov-| | ering 27 miles. A white man, Aubrey Norvell, of Memphis, was charged with attempted murder and is free on a $25,000 town'last Friday for a two-mile heavy police guard. walk to the courthouse under| = Meredith recuperated from|s his wounds in New York, where} = he is a law student at Columbia ; University. He walked at. the}: |when members of the Textile Workers of America (CLC) neers 21 Draw 15 - For 'Contempt' At Tilco Day Terms walked out. The plant has con- tinued to operate. : A suit against the owners for failure to bargain in good faith began in Toronto June 9 but was adjourned to July 4. The sentence imposed today on Harry Woodbeck of Peter- borough was suspended because he is convalescing from a heart attack. Top labor leaders in Ontario, who since the convictions were registered have called for united labor action to change the law on injunctions, were quick to react to today's sen- tences. David Archer, president of the Ontario Federation of La- bor, said the sentences were ri- diculous. Douglas Hamilton, secretary-treasurer of the OFL, said he was astounded at their harshness. "It is a bad law and poorly administered in this province. The sooner it is removed the better." George Watson, Canadian di- rector of the textile workers, issued a prepared statement calling for a national campaign to eliminate the use of injunc- tions in labor disputes. NEWS HIGHLIGHTS Buddhists To Continue Fight SAIGON (Reuters) -- The' moderate Buddhist leader, Thich Venerable Tam Chau said today that Buddhists would continue their struggle against South Viet Nam's ruling generals, using non-violent means. nied Premier Nguyen Cao Ky's claim that the political situation here now was stable. The monk de- TeNeEenE ATONEMENT as mMSTLE TET ANATTT ... In THE TIMES today... "Andy" Thompson Asks for Survey---- P. 13 TOMATO On Rampage In Montreal ' wath bro (CP) -- Several tundred youths went on a short gampage. of property destruc. the show was held. The crowd,} tion here early Sunday to ex- which included girls and boy,s press their displeasure at the then moved off down St. Law- early closing of a musical show rence Boule vard, causing more and dance which concluded ob- damage servances of St, Jean Baptiste, Police moved in. to break "up Day. the rioters and about 20 arrests Several cars were overturned|were made. Several persons and windows smashed in the|were injured, none seriously, 4 Meredith, 33, led the proces- the-"'governor and every other) sion along with a number of na- jvicinity of Jarry Park where| Person is going to pay attention! tional civil rights leaders, includ- to the Negro." "The system of white suprem-| RESPONSE GREATEST |acy will reign no longer" in the| . Meredith drew the greatest re- U.S., Meredith told a heavily-| sponse from the crowd, which guarded rally behind the impos-! couldn't hear half of what was ing state Capitol building Sun-| said from the flatbed truck that day served as a speaker's platform. Some 16,000 persons, Meredith said his father, now them Negroes, flowed through| dead, told him most white per- Jackson streets to jam into 'a\sons "are Pretty decent,"" ce i most of; ing Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.|. . . premacy. "The purpose of the march that I started three weeks ago was to point up and to challenge that thing at the base of the. system of white suprem- acy.' That thing is fear, STARTED, JUNE 5 Meredith began thejtrek Jurie 5 at Mempnis, Tenn.,\225 miles north of Jackson.\He was wounded by a blast of birdshot from shotgun the' next day King and other national civil tetahte figures rushed in to take up the marathon mission, turn- ing it into a Negro voter regis- tration crusade. They led the marchers off U.S. 51--the route planned by Meredith -- and /meandered through the heavily Negro-populated delta area. A sidetrip by auto to Philadel- phia, Miss., for a rally un- leashed violence and a_ task force from the march returned ta the east central Mississi front of Sunday's final proces-| = sion.for a while but he had to drop out and ride ahead in an auto because his. Jeg, still not healed from the birdshot wounds, began swelling. At the Capitol, King, heads Leadership Conference, Meredith, saying, bravery, his majestic scorn of crippling fear. that originated who the Southern Christian) = hailed |= "it was his| = Gaels Overpower Huntsville --P, 8 Durham Boys Build Picnic Sites -- P. 5 Ann Landers--16 City News--15 Classified --20 to 23 Comics--24 Editorial---4 Financial--7 Obits--23 Sports--8, 9, Theatre----13 Weather---2 Whitby, Ajax News--5 Women's--16, 17, 18 10, 11 ' (pi this march,'* Ja Pa

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