AWaiariawayieximyimcsaysatiaicatcesce uajiayiacimivmi.miimicasiansaun Newsman warns against Yankee horror stories es i wor PL'AISE “Beware of exaggerated horror Stories attributed to Allied soldiers freed in Korea. Some of those i circulating in the U.S. are bunk.” This is what John Walters, the London Daily Mirror’s correspond: ent in Korea cabled his paper. The Mirror front-paged his warn- ing and added its own editorial comments on U.S. “hate propa- _ Sanda” intended to poison public ~ Pinion. ‘At the same time, in Korea, Lieut, General Harry Wells, :com- Mander in chief of Commonwealth forces, issued this statement: ° “From our interviews with re- Patriated prisoners-of-war we have 9ained -no knowledge of any death March or similar ill-treatment.” ligiey MIUTUGRIO POE MT TTT TT TTC CULT LOL Ub Sth a NSA a a ab aaa IRS SE Unionists in Greece fight police terror LONDON The eleventh congress of the Greek Confederation of Labor rach opened in Athens last wéek, oe preceded by police terror Sainst progressive delegates. A typical case is that of K. yaenikelaou, who, early in March, eae elected president of the Ath- Bee Union of, Restaurant Employ- ‘ Ae 5,000 members. He was gate elected as the union’s dele- to the congress. c sn March 17 he was arrested ‘Aw &xiled to the barren island of Sie Efstratios. A few days later besinge ee committee protested every his arrest, whereupon Ri Member of the executive arrested and sent to exile. bee the arrest of trade union Bresg S — freely elected at con- by Gean March 1946, as reported S pores, Bagnall in the British the S Union Congress report for year—and their subsequent squa de ioe execution by firing mene he unions have been run Overnment stooges. that sbite this and despite the fact m iT pai ‘of experienced and in their trade unionists are now - impriso Sixth or seventh years of have pe the Greek workers aie