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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 18, 1956)
o 0 O O o o o ' oo o o Polish-Soviet Troop Agreement To Play Major Part in Calming Demonstrations c'ai-fciWj UP; The3 Commu-, of the government of the Polish j It meant there would De no J out to neip foiana s aeposea fijst nA-spaier Trybuna Ludu i peoples republic or of Polish ; further use of Soviet troops for said today the new Polish-Soviet authorities with powers vested local political purposes, ine su- O O 4 i i o troiyp ag.emicit would play "considerable role in calming Qdown tht mood of Pflar.d" where the hve been resent anti-So-vfet demonstrations. " , O O The agreement signed here ' Oo Moncjy night hy Polish and So t q 0 viet officials give Poland a vir- iuai veto over t.e ciovemem vi S.rie troops stationed in Poland arid control over Soviet troop movenrien'j) into and ou of Com miAi.a East Gfarmarty, Soviet Foreign Minister Dmit ri SaepilOv and Defense Minister Marshal (Seorgi Zhukov, who came here from Moscow for the ceTeicony, were expected to fly back today. That would ensure they ould not me B delega tion frm Yugoslavia expected tiere Wednesday. Schedule 10 Days of Talks Yugoslav Vfce President Sve tozar - Vukftanovic headed the group which is ctoming here for 103days gf talks on ideology and gelations with Russia. y Polish Communist "roup visited Bel grade in August and returned O with demands in? more indepeti eienctf5 fromMoscow. One of the key phrases in the Polish-Soviet agreement said: "The movement "ok Soviet jfoops outside their bases will in every case require the consent So 1 'C in them by the government." ' viet armed forces were called r... T1 r -.. in t -i t n i'twi i lii Mtimn i SNUBS UN DEBATE Hungarian UN delegate Imre Horvath reaches for his coat after his delegation walked out of the General Assembly in New York in protest against consideration of the Hungarian revolt. Horvath made it clear his nation was not leaving the UN itself, but only the Assembly for the duration of the debate. pro-Stalinist government quell a workers uprising at Poznan last June. The agreement added that "the training and maneuvers of So viet troops outside their bases are to be carried out on the basis of plans agreed upon by the Polish authorities." Moscow also confirmed the fact that the transit of Soviet troops to and from East Germany will require Poland's consent, but it pointed out this was men tioned in Moscow before the general terms were drawn up by a delegation headed by Commu nist Party leader Wladyslaw Go mulka. A long ocmmunique empha sized that the agreement provid ed for the "temporary" station ing of Soviet troops in Poland. Detroit (U.R) Hans J. Stein, 45, told a traffic referee he was "frightened" into speed ing by a motorcycle policeman who drew up alongside and glanced into the car. Referee John Carney imposed a suspend ed sentence, saying, "at least this alibi is original." Counseling Survey Nears Completion Returns from a survey to de termine the need of a family counseling service should be complete this week, according to the Jackson County Mental Health committee, which is con ducting the survey. After, the holidays, the com mittee said, a subcommittee will tabulate results of the survey. Committee members said that more than 200 professional peo ple have been contacted in the survey, and about 25 per cent of the attorneys returned ques tionnaires. More than 80 per cent of the public health nurses returned questionnaires, 12 min isters responded, and more than 60 per cent of the physicians contacted responded. More than 75 per cent of the social workers indicated a need for such service for couples with marital discord, families with, poor family relationships, and adults needing counseling on work adjustments. Several other groups have ex pressed an interest in the sur vey, and residents who are in terested may express their opin ions by writing the Mental Health committee, box 121, Med ford, committee members said. Tuesday, December 18, 19M MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE ?IVE Korean Orphans Get New Homes in State Portland (U.R) A group of 20 American-Korean orphans had new Oregon homes and new parents today after their arrival in the state yesterday, shepherd ed by Creswell farmer Harry Holt. Holt, who brought 89 orphans to this country on his last trip across the Pacific Sunday, ap peared tired at the end of the trip. But he said he had suffer ed no recurrence of fatigue that put him under a doctor's cafe earlier. There was a slight "mix-up" when the children arrived here yesterday. Holt said apparently a mistake had been made in id entification and that one child meant for a Los Angeles family had journeyed on to Portland while one- child meant for Ore gon parents had remained in Cal ifornia. , He said the situation could be corrected without undue hardship, though. Mrs. Holt was on hand at the Portland International airport to greet her husband and two chil dren who accompanied him on the last flight. New Buildings Due At Portland Convent Portland (U.R) A permit has been issued for construction of four .additional buildings, es timated to cost S965.000, at the Franciscan Sisters' Convent of Our Lady of Angeles in south west Portland, the county plan ning commission said today. Included will be a church, a residence for the chaplain, a gymnasium and dining quarters. The convent includes the St. Francis training school where nuns are received, and trained. lClothin tore Fttal o To Portland Woman Firtind vU.P.) A Portland woman who was severely burn ed last month . hen her clothing O v.5S set afire by sparks frqgj aO fireplace, died in locaPhospi tal n-esterday. Mrs. Lucy Grade. 56. w'as ad mitted to the hospital ov. 28. O Funeral Dsigrts froi HOPgE'S Q Greenhouse & Florist) ao? LOZIER LANE W Deliver0 2-6374 Your Best Bert in Gifts for en . . . Hero are Gifts Sure to Get a Warm Reception. O SLACKS ty La Jolla All Wools, Flannels, Worsteds and Gabardines flES 4:..Hfd... 52.130 $19.95 and op Qive a 1lIFT Certificate CHRIS The TAILOR SLltS? Open Wednesday Evenings 'til 9 Until ChrBtmas 0 ; Greatest Advances in Atomic o 0 - - Energy Uses Seen During 1957 o o o o o fEditor's not: This I oar of Krlps of 10 articles, written for the I ntted reM ttV Uaders in as' many fields, Kivlar o their forecasts as to the outlook far In their tpeclal- ) o - o o O o r LEWIS L. STRAUS? Chairman AEC Written For United Prest The coming year should wit nfsM the greetest advances yet O made in Peaceful uses of atomic ertwgy. This will be true around Ufe worlri, . ft the United States at six dif- C ferent plants from coast to coast the daily delivery of electrical energy derived from atomic fis sioti.will become a reality. The full- scale 65,000 kilowatt coetral station atomic plant at Shippingport, Pa., "will be sup- pljring commercial power to the Pittsburgh area. Smaller pilot 00 plants at the Ar-e;orme Labora- p tory, the Oak Ridate Laboratory crid the Army packaasr? lant at 0ortBehoir, Va,, will begin de livering electrical energy to their own localities. o Progress in Design O Power oWAll be pulsing from the sodium reactor experiment rln Southern Calitrnia, "and the j(3erjerl Electric company's pro totype -plant in Northern Calif- '-tornia will be feeiting into the westerrt commercial grids. The) year is also expected , to r,rj, great progress in ihe design O o .0 scaie power plants, eithet par tialljf er0 wholly financed by pri qqP vate investment irk New England, O o Great Lakes region, . t he 0.'ew Yorfc City "area, the great plains and at several other poirfls v.'liere the plans are now 0 O : coming into final focus. We believe that the Congress will surely provide the insurance protection for the pioneer ven tures in atomic power develop ment which was overwhelming ly endorsed by the Congressional Joint Committee on Atomic En ergy last year but which did not reach a floor vote in the con cluding days of the last session of congress. Cooperation Continued Elsewhere in the world the outlook also is for growing ac tivity. The prime event of 1956 was the adoption of the statute for the International Atomic En ergy agency proposed three years ago in President Eisenhower's Irish Rebels May Step Up Activity Belfast, Northern Ireland .U.R) Government authorities feared today that the Irish Re publican army plans to step up underground activity in Eng land in its battle against British rule of Northern Ireland. Police in Birmingham, Eng., arrested two Irishmen after finding explosives hidden in their homes. Police in Liver pool, Manchester, London and other major cities have been alerted to possible violence. Extremists raked a Northern Ireland police patrol with ma chine gun fire Monday night just five miles from the country home of Premier Lord Brooke borough. One policeman was wounded. historic address to the United Nations. We shall take our full part in the development of the agency's programs and opera tions in 1957. We shall continue to develop likewise our cooper ation with individual nations un der agreements for cooperation pursuant to the Atomic Energy Act. The rate of discovery in basic nuclear science has been acceler ating in recent years as wit ness the burst in 1956 of new knowledge about the particles of the atom. The new year could well prove no less fruitful. It is certain that more invest igators and more firms and in stitutes at home and abroad will make use of more radiosotopes for more benign purposes in 1957 than in any previous year. The furnishing of these extra ordinary tools has grown stead ily as one of our functions. Pendleton Boy Survives Fall Onto Picket Fence Pendleton (U.R) A 10-year-! old Pendleton boy was reported ! to be in "satisfactory" condi- I tion at St. Anthony's hospital j today after falling on a picket j fence. One of the pickets pierced his body. j Hospital attendants said Dav- id Bloom was improving and j said his survival from the acci- j dent was "miraculous." The boy was playing in a tree ! house at the family home Sun- j day when he fell onto the fence. I One of the pickets pierced his left chest, narrowly missed his heart and emerged from his back at the base of the neck. ! o Oo Your O G S ,1.3 0 , onop ' 0 At.. V r 1 A Ger 0 W I o 1 o 1 o I o e G3 o O o0 o o G O O 0 O o o o I o ristmas pin aw rarer raw il 1 MFDF0DD. 0DFG0N 1 1 A Wide Selection of . Gifts for Everyone Shop All 3 Floors MAIN. -FLOOR, BALCONY & 2nd FLOOR c OPEN NIGHTS TIL 9 P.M. 0oThe Store of a Thousand Thoughtful Gifts' m the gihIII sheu iwC Westing fc x " r t y--r -v S Tar C in o o O house o o OPEN Wednesday NITES TIL 9 o6 o O O U 4 Pick ANY of these Westinghouse Appliances and you'll please ANY. Lady on your list. 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