Daily Times-Gazette (Oshawa Edition), 31 Oct 1955, p. 12

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"ONLY HIGH-KICKERS QUALIFY A "cachi porra" (drum major) of the graduating class of Ecua- dor's Eloy Alfaro Military col- lege leads his group before the title, "'cachi porra', you must be able to kick shoulder high. The colorful exercises marked the 60th anniversary of the found- ing of the officers school, pat- military officers (in background) | terned after the U.S. military at the Pantheon in Quito City. | academy. ; Toqualify for the coveted | Central Press Canadian University President Requests Students Stop Bottle Hurling TORONTO (CP) -- Dr. Sidney Smith, president of the University of Toronto, Thursday night asked his students to behave themselves at the intercollegiate football game in Kingston Saturday. Dr. Smith was joined by other U. of T. officials in calling for a halt to acts of revenge, vandalism| and the manhandling of police and| throwing of whisky bottles during| the games. Dr. Smith said any retaliation for damage said to have been done to| Varsity Stadium by Queen's stu- dents recently, could set off a chain reaction resulting in serious per sonal injuries as well as wanton| destruction of property. J. P. Loosemore, secretary of! the university's athletic director- ate, said the chief of the univer- {sity police had submitted a report of the Queen's-Varsity game here, Oct. 22 in which he told of stu- dents throwing a number of liquor bottles on to the playing field. "While drinking in the stands is| difficult to control, much dangerous practices as hurling empty bottles] | must be curbed, in one way or an-| other," Mr. Loosemore said. The director said he has received a cheque for $475 from the Queen's Alma Mater Society, the student council, to pay for steel goal posts torn down at Varsity Stadium after | the Oct. 22 game. Treaty Clause _ Dispute J YORK (AP) -- The New| Wy, York State Power Authority is con- Syi sidering a challenge in the courts sti of a clause in the 1950 Niagara water diversion theaty with Can- porada The agency has not yet formally 4 authorized such a move. It hopes, however, that a decison invalidat-| ing the clause would mean a green light for the authority to develop] the vast hydroelectric potential of the Niagara gorge. [ A court ruling favorable to the) state authority's point of view| would take the Niagara power mat-| ter out of the hands of Congress and presumably close the door on| efforts by five upstate private utilities to win the Niagara rights. | " BY THE SENATE | The disputed clause was inserted . i. into the treaty by the U.S. Senate. ~* "4. It reserves to Congress the right "4 to decide how the Niagara water will be handled. Thomas F. Moore Jr., counsel for the state authority, said Friday night the authority feels the clause is invalid because it deals with a| purely domestic affair, not of interest to Canada. The authority, Moore said, feels that if the matter were left to the Federal Power Commission the . New York state agency would be « licensed to develop the Niagara, * because the law gives preferenc . to_public bodies. <4, State Authority Chairman Robert Moses has circulated a memoran- dum among his fellow members # gtating Governor Averell Harriman * "does not favor pursuing" the re- sort to the courts at this time. " HAS APPROVED PLANNING The state authority, however, has voted to spend $25,000 for en- |available to the United States at | zine distributors, Friday was or- Seen gineering plans. These plans would | be submitted to the FPC should Harriman change his mind. Moore termed the action as 'getting ready." The U.S. Army Engineers, the state authority and the Federal Power Commission place the amount of hydro-electric power Niagara at 8,000,000,000 kilowatt hours a year. This is one-third more than the maximum production the state au- thority will obtain by harnessing the International rapids section of the St. Lawrence river, which it is now doing. Que. Distributor | Goes On Spree MONTREAL (CP) -- Benjamin News, Ltd., newspaper and maga- dered for preliminary hearing Nov. 4 on a charge of distributing ob- scene literature. Sgt. Lucien Quintal of the city police department, said the com- pany distributed obscene literature published in the Toronto weekly tabloid Flash on five occasions in the last three months. Flash is the first publication or- iginating outside 'the province to be named in court proceedings in the city's current campaign against what it terms obscene literature. 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