_‘ r' the door would he the Mill. Charlottetown, Mom, Mar. 11. 1008. TI S I i tee ers mistake. Ten years without a fork and . cosed. ‘knife. only a spoon. No mirror S b l Violence inc 1 ud ed t'orccd o: "omb or even a hair brush.. a ‘driliikinfl fof] l\'.'zilcrdupb to llialf a 'Tgn years without seeing a des- 88 0" 0 0W“ 5' eNitric tis Teeth were pulled out raw. U S R hitCkS- No reading, no writing, no whis- ' ° Some prisoners were 'nflated tlini: 0r singing. Just '0 Years 1 with bicycle pumps. Others were at sitting rad waiting and al- CLEVELAND iAI’l—With or- continually rapped on their ways hungry. ‘ders snowballing and backlogsi .knii'-"‘~s wih a steel 'prl‘ig1 About ‘3 months I worked in mounting the last two W8€k5,l holdim: a lead ball at one end. ‘a factory 16 hours a day. Later steelmakers have been forcedl ‘ Beating was done in the 09113,. I met old pals again a; I found lto reinstate normal lead times.‘ .whcre the blindfolded victim myself at Aiud. a Transylvanian Steel m'gazlne reports. Iwas token. ja'l for political prisoners. urrying to keep pace with Trousers down. he had to ONE LAVATORY the fastest market upswing in} squat with knees up to his cliin.- Their 53cc; were dried uplmore than a Year. PFOducel‘Sl His hands were handcuffed he-land sallow. They walked bare. 'once again are quoting tour- to! low and between the knees. Un- ‘ foot in torn. filthy rags. The ma- ‘ Six-W901i dEUVU‘y 0" Cold r011€d . idel' the knees an iron pipe was‘ jority were over 30 and had sheets, the metalworking weekly Passed- The ends of the Dlpebecn officers in the old army. says. were placed on tWD Chairs and or politicians. In the courtyard. “There's "0 WhaWi‘Yj‘m mail a hood drawn over the victim's ‘there was only one lavatory1boom," the publication Con-i head. A wet sheet was placed with three places, which snottinues. “but enough accelera-l on his bare bottom. The beating.people had to use in the twoltion to convince even skepticsi was administered with a broom. fhoups allowed. that they should boost their fore . stick or iron pipe on the bottom[ Many walked around in cit. ‘casts and relight idle furnaces or soles of the feet which swung cles talking while name of the j ahead of sch . . round alternately. as the vic- ; older men sat on the ground andl‘ “March shipments of mill pro- tim revolved on the pipe meaned against the wan In from iducts will exceed last month’s by F 01' the "A-bomb." the victim [of the lavatory was a never- i 15 0F 30 Per cent" . was similarly hound. drawn unwinding queue. In one corneri The trade journal says mid-7 to the Celiihg and dropped Olljpeople were washing their dirty western mills are quoting? the cement . llinen and in another tattered un- longer deliveries on wide sheets ; Then came the trial at night. iderclothing was stretched on thelthzn on narrow ones. and east-‘. With ll0 PUbllC. n0 famliih no wall to dry. :ern mills report stretchouts on; Witnesses, with lawyers 85- Yet despite the may hard-icold rolled sheets (three to sin signed by the court. The sent-lships, prisoners managed toweeks), galvanized sheets (foul-l ence was 25 years hard labor. A l keep their sanity. They learned l to five weeks), and low siliconl 1 prison cflerkdreadlotiét the sentgilanguages, poetry, told stories, lshwt (late April). ' ‘ence a ew ays a r in one 0 ‘spoke about their rofessions. l lthe jail corridors. Chessmen were mad: of breadlSOME BOOST SUPPLY w e r e backgammon i “Although some users have in- pieces_ Those who were caught creased their inventories lately.; playing were sent to isolation few have “"3, it I" Strikel oils on bread and water. some-. 39 purimses- the magazmei l { ‘NOW YOU KNOW' WOMAN SLAIN wn BOO'BYTRAW ; mgr; gguaggggégwm Body of Mrs. Gloria Dellerose. she was killed with two bursts band. Pasquale. 27. admitted Isponéexlfis Iagemncan come. tmes for a week. 'llhey came.$i; .star'tl‘hleethierzzgt StOCkplIng‘ 19. is slumped against steering from double-barreled shotgun early Sunday he murdered his 1 The clerk whisued_ n Wasn't back and resumed from Where, “The contrast bet-ween this‘ a they left off. . - To this writer, who was re. years buildup and the one a .leased 21,5 years ago, it is au‘yefir ago is noteworthy. in Jan-: jjust a bad dream. A longluary. 1962. mill shipments of 6.-. Edream' but a dream_ tons exceeded consump- But for tens of thousands of lilo“ by about 909,000 t9“? and. (hers n astem Europe it gumade. a substantial addition to till stark and bitter reality. ‘usor inventories In January of ch15 year. mill shipments of 5.- BUILT MANY HOMES 1.700.000 tons fell about 300,000 Nearly 500,000 new homes tons short of estimated con- wcre built There were 10 years of eating 1 only boiled food. no eggs, no 1950 and 1960 milk, little meat. Only barley, .,. $5.14.“: ithere anything else you could do in this large world except work for the Americans?’ “ ‘I knew of nothing else,‘ I said. ‘Well,’ was his final com- ment, ‘now you know.‘ " Then came years of crowded 0 cells, hunger—prisoners barely-iS had 1,200 calories a day, more; often less than l.000‘—bi:=atingsi and no medical attention. wheel of family's car in New rigged in the back seat. Police wife by triggering the shotgun. York's Bronx Saturday after said that Mrs. Dellerose's hus- (AP Wirephoto) I 1 Many Political Prisoners Believed Held In Russia By LEONARD KIRSCHEN LONDON (AP) —- Somewhere in Eastern Europe a train pulls out of a small station. Only one long black railroad car is left behind, isolated. It could be a baggage car. or a .,t. mail car—but it isn BABY LANDS GOOD PUNCH placed left jab when dad bent over for a kiss. (CP Wirephoto) IT'S COLDEST Liquid hrlium has a boiling didn’t expect to be taken liter- ally. Eleven-month-old Rodney popped one out with a well- Tom Welsh may have said he would give his eyeteeth for a strapping young son. but he secutive increase in ingot pro- ing schedules. It says output duction this week. but notedlwill be slightly more than the ‘tually the coldest thing known. in Ontario betweentsumption." that floods in some areas could12.140,000 tons it estimates the point of minus 452 degrees—vir- . S ;prevent steelmakers from meet- iindustry poured last week. teel predicts a seventh con- passport, spending too much .ettes and the cup of lime teal time playing bridgeit consortiifigiwith bread pumpkins, dehydrated potatoes. ti oreigners, cr icizing t e‘ - ‘picklcd and fresh cabbage and a i factory boss and making fun of . T139? ,fquowed smugmg for lfew dry beans thrown in. i the regme in coffee housflh ihou1s. sitting on a chair around ‘ ' itlie clock without sleep for sev- l I“ 1952. there.were some 200" icral days: then. from three to.I ‘ . 000 political prisoners in Roma-15m“,n days, an unintemmted ma 810"“ 'walk in the cellar or one‘s cell When kidneysfnil ' it has small windows, high up .1 . - p to we .. m , out of reach and they are cov- CHARGED As SPY ,fiflffi‘edau furniture had “0 ' d W .W- DOddS ered by black steel shutters “"5 Wm" 599‘“ 10 Years In: ' mung [finnfig ~ r: m s r' with horizontal slits. What’s in- Romanian lalls- inaconoan SCREAMS rm rienrouaw. side. you can't see: this is a jail During my own cross-exami- ‘. Sometimes during the inquiry. pfil, ,“fi'glgzz on wheels for killers. thieves nation. the infill“)! tried toithe door would be left open and kidneystonormal and political prisoners. prove that my "criminal activ- ‘ a recording played of a beating illity 'lou {col There are some 65.000 politi- ity" had begun with my post-with all the desperate shrieks of fun—in"? If: cal prisoners behind bars and barbed wire in Eastern Europe today. according to an organiz- ation called Ammsesty. That fig- ure doesn‘t include the Soviet 'nion Amnesty. an international or- ganization run fights for the release of political prisoners the world over and keeps tab on how many are still locked up. How many “politicals” there are in the Soviet Union is any- onc‘s guess. Amnesty says they run into hundreds of thousands. Prison statistic are ecret in Eatern Europe and in Russia The black railroad cars visit almost any station behind the Iron Curtain. east of Vienna. People have learn to know them and when they meet one. they turn their eyes away. It's better not to show your knowl- ed 9. POLICE ARRIVE The station springs to life. Six blue-clad men of the militia — he Communist police -— turn up. armed with machine-pistols. They've come to escort the pris- oners to the local jail. A long steel door slides open. The prisoners are pushed out and jump to the ground. Now 140 of tihe prisoners are standing huddled. car was meant for only 48. Some travelled a week on this a . 'l‘hc escort rccoils from a sour stink of sweat and unwashed bodies in filthy rags. They‘ve come packed tight like sardines in a tin and the w ws are small. The steel body and root of the car is so hot you can't touch it. The prisoners‘ faces are a parchment yellow. Their eyes. sunk deep in dark blue hollows. are eager to catch a glimpse the outside world. A column is formed. Th L’uards marching. The convoy shuffles off and the station is quiet again. ' Whether in Russia, Romania. .lungary. Albania or elsewhere in. Eastern Europe. scores of .léills are scattered over the ter- ritory. Political prisoners are always on the move N0 SOFTENING are inclined to soften up with regular old timers. So they are shifted. The arrests began in 1944. and few families in Eastern Europe Twelve years ago one in 10 of the adult population of the area 53W jail. labor camp or colony. . - — Ric arrests continue May, termsandonarclativclyflcxiblebaSIs. entering Canadian colleges or uni. ch22”: “‘9 mm“ “m In speeial cam. repayment my 116 versities. There's no better education. no university in the world that Fan teach you will three years gallon can." say the Commu- A man who comes him It!!! can be trusted. He will never want to go back again. i and those who stay? 802:! die there. Those who go on - {its find comfort h the maxim: Only the first three years are difficult." retexts for inning people "use from real and mm war crimes. economic some. ms. loam or own! to o the country without a edly effected by arrangement of certain intelligence services in Turkey seeking to establish a Western y net. t remalsed .undecided whether I was spying for the Americans or the Brit- ' h. 4 m l They wanted to find out all i 1business facts. but facts, concerned them. Every llittle bit of scandal was received left unexplored. sions ranged from heart-to-heart .talks to sadistic violence. I On intellectuals they first tried method one. If that failed they went down the list. start- lmy British and American con-I .tacts in the country. Not only_ also bed. with joy. Not a Single path was Methods of cxtorting confes-j war return to Romania. 3110E- the victim. 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