h, ‘bE-’w’ __J ., . PRIORITY FOREIGN FROM : TO REF AmsBAssY, THE : SE RVICE(:EShi:h osm DEPARTMENT x)epartmont OF STATE. July 23, 1956; Deptsl 236, August 21, 1956. CA-697, ‘s WASHINGTON. ,AgL ‘g;. . ; ‘;”m,fl, ,L ~= lhe Only SUBJECT. Gf- H REC” D F -4 0 LO =/ uSu/v-/ ZEU4’-5 ! L/L/-6 1 OTHER &G& C/& 7 4’eC-d ~ i ino .C. ,-lf 4UU4U0 Radioactivefallout: matters. /“ ~isit of Dr. L. T. Alexanderand other 13r. Lyle T.ALEXANDER 1 of the Departmentof Agriculturearrived la Oslo on August 2S. The follwlng afternoon,accompaniedby an Embassy officer he spent with Dr. Torleif HVIEDElf,head of tha Physics Divlsiom ef the &fense Research Instituta,who had already been informedof the purposQ of Dr. Alexander ~s visit. Dr. Wlnden was most cooperative and, among other thhgs ~ readily agreed to Dr. Alexander~staking sei~ samples&em twenty spots in his own back yard. (These soil Sample* LU were shipped by air to the Departmentof AgricultureIn Washlngten.) -! There was a len hy discussionof tho fallout question in general,and al) in particularo the need (voicedby Dr. Alexander)for animal bones F 3 for testing. Dr. Hvinden indicatedthat he would promote cooperation between l?orwayand the U.S. in this matter. ~ 3 g 0 0 & LU m On August 27$ following a call at the Foreign Office. Dr. Alexander$ a Foreign Office representative(hut HEDEMAl$B, a working level official concernedwith atomic energy matters), and the Smbassy officer called on Dr. Reidar EKEB, head of the Blozwegian Radium Hospital,and a lengthy and technical exchange of ideas followed. That afternooaDr. Alexanderand the Embassy officer visited the Norwegian Agricultural College at Vollebekk (or Aas) some twenty miles south of Oslo, to di8cuss matters with Mr. Kjell SkEHBEIW, head of the Isotope Laboratory. ProfessorC)ttarMB3N0, head of the Pharmacologyand ToxicologyMvision of the VeterinaryCollege, Oslo, was with h. Steenberg. Dr. Alexanderrepeated his will$n esa to arrange for bone analyses. until such time (in the near futurer as the l$orweglans are equippedto perform this work, and to exchangs samplesand data with them. Steonberg N and Dybing,while whlontly lnterest6dIn these possibilities,were A somewhatnon-committal— perhaps becauso th~y had not yet wo~ed out J with Dr. Hvinden and others how all this should be coordinatedwlthfn Rorway and which organizationswould be responsible. W. Alexanderde> parted for Paris on August 28. The above calls were arranged through # the Foreignoffice, for PoMcy reasons. The Embassy -stands that Dr. Alexanderwas enttre~y satisfied .~ Mth ....what he accom lished here, and that he believesthat the Horue> advan-=~ ~tans:&ouzd b al!ow6d time to ,workout their plans and tg.,$take bge’’ofthe U.S. offer of further coowmation. There is no d~ubt but ~ L_ —-1 fl . . . . . ‘> .”.’ ...,,, .{” d ,(:!(N1’4yfl ~!~’ 7-TC35538:4 , - .—— q5p o JZ3~fo+wl, qd% ~ ..,..=_7, , , ● I

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