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About Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 18, 1956)
THE CAPITAL JOURNAL Salem, Oregon, Tuesday, December 18, 1956 Pace 2 Section Pact Restricts Russian Troop Use in Poland Israelis Pull Further Back Nixon to Take I AG's Campaign Literature Not Oliloi Vienna Contempt Grounds, Judges Sf inisiiicniuuii ITALY APPEALS FOR OIL Syria to get oil supplies flowini ROME An Italian Foreign once more through sabotaged pipe. Ministry source said Tuesday that lines but reported that the answer Italy has appealed officially to was "not encouraging." NATO-Like Pact Entered Into hy Two Nations By COLIN FROST WARSAW ifl-Poland and the TKL AVIV. Israel tfi Israeli fortes pulled back another 15 miles on the Sinai Peninsula lues-, I 11C I Ipi'linnil PORTLAND (L'Pi-Ten Multno-1 phlet. He contended that tho ma oay- IHWJiiiviiiuuH county circuit judges, while tenal, which went to prospective This carried their withdrawal to uAsiiivrTOV uji Vice Presi- critical of Attorney General Rob-(jurors in the state, jeopardized a line about 47 miles east of the ,J"'J (nr Vienna to- ert Y. Thornton's choice of cam- his right to a free trial. Langley Suez Canal. , L thV.nnt the Dliht - paign literature, ruled that it did is under indictment for conspiring Yugoslav units of the 11. X. " "e" Mcg1"01 iU5,it' con,;mpt of court to open up the city to gambling Emergency Force are occupying ?' ""m into Austria, j charges. The contempt charge had and malfeaseance in office, the territory evacuated by the Is- .' u.. n,. aik- 'been sought by Multnomah County The judges wrote in their opin- cow said the semiannual meeting raelis. G(.n Williom Rogers and eight District Attorney William Lang- ion: "It was not the best part of of the Soviet Communist parly's, There was no official indication ,h,.r onv.rnmeni aides. Nixon ar- '''' ...... . - good judgment by the attorney Central Committee hud been post-1 how soon Israel's forces will pull ranlt.j to leave by special air ,m,u unui iiiuiiujuy, ji pmaiui; DacK me remaining la miles 10 rce D ane this afternoon. During his three-day stay, Nixon will talk with Austrian government until January. It had been be-1 the border. lleved that the meeting might open yesterday but the visit to Warsaw of Shepilov and Zhukov, both important committee mem bers, could have had some con- Sen. MeClelian To Buck British Interest Belief Sv.iet Union have signed a formal non'on wl'Vn(: postponement. ; M-eeincnt spelling out many of "'"'"J.'iSrlA J 11 U'lTSt JU'I let I in their Communist-controlled t.ie technicalities to i govern luture " I homeland. c-rraions oi nussian troop, m- - '- WAMILM.IU w-sen. aicuci-, Nixon, who undCTtook the trip Poiand. isoiuicrs giniraiiy win ne suojeci (D-Arki said today he will op- nn fnstr,lction, frnm President . accord concluded last l-J- a request for cancellation of FlcnTwer!T, scheduTed tn i ii. '.. . an 2-mi lon uouar inieresi pay- Sundav ted against o her Russuns or dur- Britain owes the United ' ing the performance of official j ' n duty. Any offense by Poles against .!.-, , , w. Soviet soldiers is to be handled ouiiun.su mi , a:, 1 OI liailll HOlliail as if It involved Polish soldiers, n wi" asK congress jnija ti. c.,:-i i d thetic" consideration of the recent land for any damage caused "by I British request. The money is due actions or neglect of Soviet mili tary units or persons serving with them ... to Polish institutions District Attorney William Lang- Presiding Circuit Judge Frank general, who was then a prosecut ,1. Lonergrn signed the memoran-, jng attorney, to have published dum opinion yesterday. I what he as prosecutor would un- Langley's motion for contempt ! questionably rely on as evidence ikiuu -! n'.nnr ctnriOC in IMP VOIPrS (Mim- ' t nn " IIC ;j t U,nln lUr. n,,nH ' f !"- - ' null. of more than 135.000 refugees who have crossed into Austria during the past month rather than stay I ? ached last month during the visit of Wladyslaw (iomulka, Poland's "nationalist" Communist party chief. Stipulating that Soviet troops arc in Poland "temporarily," the agreement declares again that Polish sovereignty will be respect ed and that Soviet forces will not interfere in Poland's domestic a'fairs. Many other parts of the Z!3rcement read like a pact be- and citizens of third countries on the territory of the Polish Peoples ' -een the United States and nn Krpublic. NATO ally where American! Poland in turn agreed to corn troops arc stationed. pensatc the Soviet Union for any Veto Powera Extended damage caused by Polish state in The agreement elaborates on stitutions or citizens to the prop previous concession to Poland of er'y of Russian military units, its veto powers over the size and movement of Russian troops this country, even on training maneuvers. But key items left subject to later "special agree ncnts" included the size and de payment of the iiussian detach men Is, regulations governing the movement of Soviet troops in and out of Poland and the use of Polish military installations or public utilities by tho Soviets. Agree ments on these items arc sched uled to be worked out within three months. The earlier Moscow declaration said both countries agreed that Russian troops must remain in Poland because of (J German refusal to accept Poland's annex ation of East Germany territory at the end of World War II, (2) a lack of "sufficient guarantees against the rebirth of German militarism," (3 the presence of Soviet troops in East Germany, and ii) "the existing international situation." I SMI 'At War' With Grrmany Polish Premier Josef Cyrankie wicz was quoted hy Moscow radio ax pointing up the absence of a peace treaty with Germany in a dinner speech following last night's signing ceremony. "The presence of Soviet troops on th Elbe is the chief guarantee lor we security of Poland and the entire peace camp," Cyrankiewicz said, "inat is what calls for the temporary stationing of some Sov iet units in Poland." Soviet Foreign Minister Dmitri Shepilov and Defense Minister Georgi Zhukov arrived in Warsaw yesterday for the formal signing. They were scheduled to return to Moscow today. Well-informed sources in Mos- 10 Murderers Kick Up Fuss (her 'Brand' CHICAGO tR Ten nmvielrri murders in the Cook County Jail staged a short-lived demonstra tion yesterday, protesting the let tering "Max. Security" stamped on their khaki denims. The words had been stamped on because the slayers are quartered in the jail's maximum security section. They ripped the lettering off. "You're holding us like caged animals this is ball anil chain methods," triple slayer Laurence Neumann, identilied as the ring leader, told Warden Jack Johnson, tailor shop for patching and re- Johnson sent the uniforms to the stamping. servicemen or their families, eith er by neglect or direct action. ENDS TONITE ACTION! SUSPENSE! Bater&eet it at wi CNbmaScoP? HILDACRANE Jean Simmons Guy l;iriiMm STARTS TOMORROW THE y SIXTH OF JUNE Cinbm.ScoPE S"V, Plus DANNY KAYE GENE TIERNEY "ON THE RIVIERA" as interest on a ,TVi -billion -dollar U.S, loan to Britain in 1945, and on lend-lease debts. "I don't see any reason to for- Dies From Burns PORTLAND (UP)- A Portland woman who was severely burned last month when her clothing was set afire by sparks from a fire- give the interest." McClellan told P'VL. Ultu in a ,utai osP,ia' L a rennrlpr "Thev should be ro.ler(la quired to pay." He said he would not oppose a postponement of the payment if the British can't put up the money when it falls due, Britain is in a financial squeeze as a result of the Suez Canal crisis. Boy Falls on Picket Fence, Is Recovering PENDLETON (UP) A 10-year-old Pendleton boy was reported to be in "satisfactory" condition at St. Anthony's hospital today after falling on a picket fence. One of the pickets pierced his body. Hospital attendants said David Bloom was improving and said his survival from the accident was ".Miraculous." The boy was playing in a tree house at the family home Sunday when he fell onto the fence. One More than 5 million of the 23 of the pickets pierced his left million bicycles in the United j chest, narrowly missed his heart Static are ridden by adults, says and emerged from his back at the the Bicycle Institute of America. base of the neck. The memorandum continued, however, that the allegation does not have support as having been y done by Thornton in his capacity as attoney general, as an attor ney or a prosecuting attorney, but more in the nature of a political contest. Auto Skid Kills Oregon City Man OREGON CITY (UP) A 31-year-old Oregon City man was killed last night when he lost con trol of his car and it crashed into a roadside ditch throwing him from the vehicle and pinning him under water in the ditch. State police identified the victim as William D. Lakey, Oregon City. Phone EM 3-5798 , STARTS WEDNESDAYI ENDS TONIGHT! Everything But the Truth" ALSO "Ive" Lived Before" Mrs. Lucy Grady, 56, was ad mitted to the hospital Nov. 28. 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