Word: castros
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...have been compared to Fidel Castro, to Nasser and many others. One should be careful in drawing such analogies. We mean to undertake a specific experiment in Algeria. There is the socialism of Mao Tse-tung and the socialism of [moderate former French Premier] Guy Mollet. For us. socialism means the liquidation of privileges." But, said Ben Bella, there would still be a "place for a free, capitalist economy. We do not intend to nationalize." And in his most important promise. Ben Bella vowed to maintain Algeria's ties to France, as specified in the Evian agreements. "The French...
...every day, Fidel Castro's strident Radio Habana Cuba fills the hemisphere's airwaves with Communist propaganda in an effort to stir a rebellion here, provoke a riot there, create chaos everywhere. Last week one of his neighbors had had enough. In Washington, Foreign Minister Jose Antonio Bonilla Atiles of the Dominican Republic went before the Council of the Organization of American States to lodge an official protest that Radio Habana was "attempting to destroy−by inciting to riot and murder−our beginning democracy...
Calling itself "The Free Voice of America," Castro's radio spends 22 hours a day broadcasting its Marxist spiel in Spanish, English, Portuguese and French from six powerful transmitters, five of them 100,000 watts, in the Cuban town of Bauta, 23 miles west of Havana. Built with Swiss and Czechosloyakian equipment at an estimated cost of $35 million, the station started operating in April 1961, and ever since has blasted the hemisphere with half-truths and diatribes...
Before his return to the U.S. last March. ex-CBS Newsman Robert Taber, a founder of the Fair Play for Cuba Committee, figured in Castro's English-language broadcasts. Another who still does is Barbara Collins, also known as "Beardless Barbara," the 25-year-old daughter of a New Jersey clergyman. With her small daughter in hand, she skipped to Havana on a cruise ship, took out Cuban citizenship, and now chats winningly about the charms of Communist Cuba. Robert Williams, 37, a North Carolina Negro who fled the U.S. to escape kid nap charges, denounces...
...Marin, has convinced most Puerto Ricans that they have more to gain than to lose by their loose association with the U.S. It is estimated that there are fewer than 400 nationalist agitators among the island's 2,350,000 population. Some have gone over to Fidel Castro's Cuba; Campos' wife Laura, and one of his aides, Juan Juarbe, serve as members of Castro's delegation to the U.N., where they picture Puerto Rico as "the slave state of the Americas." The rest sit around dreaming up ways to make a noise...