Statesman, Salem, Ore., Sun., Oct 21, "S3 (Sec I)-3
Poland Expected to Seek Financial Aid From United States Once Ties to Russia Are Broken
By JOHN M. RIGHTOWEK
(SUry M M page aM)
WASHINGTON, Oct. 20 -The
leaders of Communist Poland s
resistance to domination by Mos
cow are expected to seek financial
and economic support from the
United States if and when they
succeed, in establishing relative
political independence.
State Department officials re
port there has already been one
sign of a Polish turn toward closer
ties with this country. The best in
formed authorities here say there
is no doubt that men like Premier
Jozef Cyrankiewicz and the newly
restored Wladyslaw Gomulka are
thinking about the manner in
which Yugoslavia's Marshal Tito
bolstered his own bid for inde
pendence eight years ago by ob
taining help from the United
States and other Western powers.
Foreign Policy Issue
The Polish bid to Washington
will pose a major issue in U. S.
foreign policy. It will raise such
questions as whether Warsaw
really has wrested control of Po
lish affairs from Moscow, whether
the new independence line can be
held, whether the whole thing is
part of some huge Kremlin "plot"
and what exactly are United
Slates interests in the new circum
stances. Initial thinking among Secretary
of State Dulles' top advisers is
that the Polish developments are
profoundly (avorahle The United
States has long expressed interest
In promoting the "liberation" of
Soviet satellite states Present in
dications therefore are that Polish
proposals for closer links with the
United States will be favorably re
ceived here
Invitation Rejected
In a recent note turning down
an invitation to send election ob
servers, the Cyrankiewici regime
called tor step to improvt War
Washington relations in a number
of fields. This provided the first
official indication to the State De
partment of what the impact of
the present revolt is likely to be
on Red Poland's attitude toward
the United States.
DuHes spent today at his resi
dence here. The State Depart
ment's Russian and Eastern Euro
pean expert were nwetinf la al
most continuous session.
State Department press officer
Lincoln White taid the department
would have no comment en such
matters as: Gomulka'i return to
high position after yean in prison
for opposing Stalinist dictation;
the visit of Soviet party boss
Nikita Khrushchev and other lead
ers, and the various reports of
troop moves or threatened moves
by the Russians to keep the Poles
from going too far.
Part of Patten
However, officials said privately
that Dulles regards the Polish de
velopment as part of the pattern
Demo Leader
Raps Taylor
For 'Sulking'
COEl'R D'ALENE, Idaho. Oct.
Jn Democratic Chairman
Ta il BuMrr Friday criticized the
write-in vote efforts of Glea Tay
lor, saying there is no room in the
party for "people who sulk.1'
Butter didn't mention the former
Democratic senator and one time
iff presidential candidate on the
rrogrcsue ticket by name in a
breaklat talk at Lewiston, Idaho,
in his speech. But It was obvious
who he meant hen he said:
' The derisions made in the pri
mary are obligatory to all men
sni women who believe in the
democratic form of government.
Those who don't want to open
ly and cooperatis ely support the
IeunMTaii' p:ir!y had better move
o er and openly support the Re
publican ticket
Frank Church. 32 year-old Boise
a'torney, unn the nomination
from Tavlor by 200 votes Taylor
ran an wtu'rtisement in a Boise
paper asking funtk; to wage a
write in campaign for the genera
election.
1
I.
of political ferment In Eastern
Europe which he talked about sev
eral months ago in connection wun
DuHes then contended that the
de-Stalinixation movement, includ
ing Khrusehev s recognition of
Khruschev's initial denunciation "fTresident Tito's right to operate
of Stalin and Stalin's years of an independent Communist move
terror and misrule. I ment in Yugoslavia, would almost
certainly go beyood Moscow eon
troL hi some countries at least."
Dulles suggested that the Russiaa
Reds were losing their grip oa
some of the Communist parties
outside Russia.
Hungary Blocks
Abortion Issue
VIENNA. Austria, Oct 20
A Hungarian parliamentary com
mittee has dared to disagree with
a minister of the Communist gov
ernment. The subject: abortion.
Justice Minister Knk Molnar
presented a bill legalizing abor
tion in Hungary to Parliamenl's
I'ulilie Health Committee, Buda
pest radio reported.
Molaar urged prompt passage. ;
but the committee balked and de-'
t ided the hill should not become
law for the time beinfc "
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