7 E | | || | 1. | neil | 4 This woman’s face embodies all the horror that has been visited upon the suffering people of Korea—a people who struggled long years to free themselves from the oppression of imperial Japan and NOW see their hopes of freedom and independence sacrificed to the €stern imperialist policy of “containing Communism.” 6 Not until the Korean People’s Army, having driven the U.S. . oS Wee s P armed and reinforced South Korean ule Mela me pes See 7 atest? Set < Lanter Ge. | Usan, had itself been forced to abandon its cap! In face 0 oom Ze gape a7 | alr and naval nower, did the Chinese volunteers entersthe war. Then, rye. at PI are D cacmcow ¥ {| Provoked by bombing of Manchurian towns and threa‘2ned by Ameri- é ages | fan troons on their borders, they swept such interventist troops as 4 7 these out of North Korea. Le Crs Chace fof ites fe foe | >. Clapme fF Meh, Ba hes 4 i f Z 4 Z | 4 On ees te. Ame, Laniec'h, filer” Slee Vea. oe | Vee i GM it L$ | heed q , a 4Z Ve lpeiliee yg mo, | Chad frien | ie y, Be Coed frencont Open HSM ; | q 8 What the General Assembly’s resolution—44 votes for, 7 against, . , © abstentions—mean to the people of Korea is typified by this Picture of destruction caused by U.S. bombing. Three million Koreans have been killed since the outbreak of War one year ago. Ten millions have been made homeless. Cities have been reduced to ruins. The industries created in North Korea by the proud effort}; of the working people, all in the space of five Years. have been wrecked. The only thing that has not been destroyed § ® the unconouerable snirit of the Korean people themselves. Peace means an end to the destruction in Korea, caused at the 0st: of the people’s living standards in the Western countries. & What about the men who appear on the casu uty lists onty in the steadily climbing figures of those declared “missing”? Several thousand Americ in prisoner's -cf war like those shown in top picture are now in Korean camps. For them the war is over. except for y.e constant danger of bombing and he strafing by their own planes and they are eager for its end. Hundreds of them have added their voices a a to the millions throughout the world clamoring for 2 neaceful se‘tlement. “Tet the Koreans settle qheir a i own. affairs without interference.” their messages state. “We should not be here.” The nhotostat in an the centre above is a call for neace signed by 4Q0 American POY’s. And at bottom is a picture that He tells its own story of the fear in the heart of every wife, every mother, seeing her man go to war. “End the war in Korea” is the demand that will help to remove tho dread of another conflict haunting the hores and dreams of the neople everywhere. PACIFIC TRIBUNE — JUNE 22, 1951 — PAGE 7