Castro Not Co NEW YORK (AP)--"New ev- Abyssinia and the Secon d idence may change the picture,| World War. He has been on] but on the evidence available The Times staff for 39 years. and on my personal knowledge He first met Castro Feb. 17, of Fidel Castro, 1 have always 1957, nearly two years before| said and I still say that he was| Castro came to power. The in-| not and is not a communist." |terview, in a remote mountain] Herbert L. Matthews, veteran region, lasted three hours and foreign correspondent and now conducted in whispers, an editorial writer of the New Maithews says, to avoid discov-| York Times, gives this ap ery by army patrols of Pres- praisal of the Cuban premier in/ident Fulgencio Batista who his book The Cuban Story, just|weie hunting Castro. published. "I could not claim, myself, at| Matthews also says in the the time to have had any idea] {book that: lof the terrific impact my story| 1. U.S. policy in Cuba since was going to have or the chain {about 1900 is partly responsible| reaction it was going to set up for the conditions. that finally|in the whole Western Hemis-| {exploded into revolution. phere. I knew I had a sensa| 2. After Castro came to power|tional scoop." | i> » he American press, ra: Matthews became involved in| |dio, television, Congress, Pen-yno Cuban controversy after a tagon, state department, the|g ons tide of anti - American-| {business world, and so forth, ic, "Geyeloped in Cuba, the {helped to build up Communism|prniied States and rive Luba irresistibly into/20a Castro developed closer| {the Communis , angie ~ i 3. Prior to the abortive land- Yes with Commu A, ry t ings last April "the (U.S.) Cen- Matthews wag' accuse o tral Intelligence Agency was having gone beyond the ro e of making the most obvious mis- correspondent, of misjudging| trends or forces influencing ve all knew that in|ihe ; |iaies SJ we a Castro behind the scenes and 4. The New York Times re- thereby contributing to earlier - hE :. 1S isconcenti J nies ceived reports that Soviet Pre 3 S. Miscorceptiont. He ge We F o ¢ ere 1s Any bas ese ac- ! a mier Khrushec hev consid : 3 ; ered Castro "romantic and un- " [reliable" and "all accounts pers 118. AID STUDENT'S MOBILE MENAGERIE |agreed that Khrushchev clearly "7s U3 AD lindicated he could not and did| The Cuban revolution, .M books in Greek and Hebrew, pot trust Fedel." thews es, was a revolt wants to be a teacher. He's Pe ita . against a sm , corrupt, looking for a night-watch- 5. From the standpoint Of wealthy ruling class whom the 'e i a y news coverage "I have neveriyys fad put in power and man's job to pay for further he Tah fsunder- t studies {seen a big story so misuI helped keep in power. 1 am not Shab _|stood, so misinterpreted and s0|iaving of course, that we de- | badly handled as the Cubaninperately chose or wanted revolution. venal politicians, corrupt busi-| * hd ' | Matthews, 61. covered thenessmen and an atmosphere! | | lerican Spanish Civil War, the war in'darkened by gambling, narcot-| cusations Mat- ing on his bachelor of arts de- gree at Queen's University in Sharing an extensively re- vamped 1956 station wagon with four Siamese cats and a | Kingston. Mr. Tyrrell, who 105-pound Alsatian dog is Gary | calls the station wagon home Tyrrell, who at 41 is work- | and has lined its walls with Times Writer Thinks {United States, at broke relations 15t Baby Carriage, Sunshine grey and white $15 It's good as mew. For information call. Telephone 72 But it was not a Communist|to play a role in the body's re- { Strikes Animal ics and prostitution. Nor was BUY = SELL . and selfish. a bombardment of ray f| es os DEFENCE MOVE cepted, condoned, worked with! In rats at least, there is an|Tise in the blood proteins is part stay in power. | sons, for strategic reasons and invasions of bacteria, a scien-| €€ Is. : "WANT ADS" any time different kinds of rats to radia-| would be no Cuban revolutionised of the irradiated animal,lagain as much radiation as ism" are running strongly to-/Downs Jr. of the Tennessee | At the same ti is aj. He says Castro "'was out to ame {yne, tere ls 2 winner, proposed underground tion that was necessarily left.|téin elements--such as gamma|space flyers or young men in revolution, he contends. [sistance to disease {damage their genetic material.| IT'S SO EASY, FAST, ime OSHAWA TIMES, Mendey, October 2, 1961 15 When Radiati | . | en Radiation Resu ts mimie | j there any excuse for the Cu, LAFAYETTE, Ind. (AP)-- normal after only six days fol- bans who were so dishonest|What happens when radiation--| lowing the radiation episode i "I do say, and history willlatomic energy--strikes a living RENT Li SWAP is bear me out in this, that we ac-| animal? { Dr. Downs believe: that the and helped this ruling class 10/jmmediate drop in the numberof the body's protective mech-| LET THE ye orb of a certain kind of white blood EMIS , sHiuigted by. fhe sud e so for business rea- cells that help protect against/den destruction of white bloo 0S HAWA TIMES in the name of Stapling. je | list Teported. | There is also a remarkable Matthews writes that if the 0 0" oo © day and a|difference in the resistance of| since 1900, had insisted on so-|half this kind of white cell com- |: oh So ; } : . a A tion, Dr. Downs said. Soe cial reforms in Cuba "htere pletely disappears from the strains of rats could take half DO IT FOR YOU today. a | 4 anil LN explained Dr. William G.|[others -- perhaps because of THIS LADY HAD RESULTS Feelings of "anti - Yankee. : {hereditary factors. | day throughout Latin America, Polytechnic Institute. Dr. Herman J. Muller of In- THE FIRST DAY -- Matthews writes. |diana University, a Nobel Prize make a radical, social revoly. | Marked increase in certain pro-|storage of sperm cells from globulin--which is also believed the armed forces who could be (exposed to radiation that might | - 3 : | Muller said these men could CASTRO DRIVEN In rats which survive thelgraw on such stores later when AND ECONOMICAL, TOO In his view, Castro was heavy doses of radiation, the|they wanted to father children. driven toward the Communist White cells take up to four|if a man should die or become| JUST DIAL side. He writes: | months Io serum to Boral, Dr.|sterile his cells still could be "M belief is that Fidel| : a meeting of theiysed if desired. 4 Casts ivy not RH naly want | American Institute of Biological ---- 18-5 MONDAY-FRIDAY 8-12 SATURDAY ¢ Sciences. But the protei .l to become tied up with the protein ele-| = REAL oe Minin and et on|ments of the blood return to 5 REACH SAFETY SMART PEOPLE READ AND USE them. I believe he was trapped PORT aux BASQUES, Nfld by his revolutionary aims and balance and objectivity. From|(CP)=Three United States hunt OSHAWA TIMES CLASSIFIED ADS the massive pressures against the time of the executions injers and two Newfoundland him from the U.S. policies and|Cuba in the early months of!ouide ac § 2 2 the attitude of the American 1959, the American press, Ses reached salety Saturday people." and television were emotionally| 21 being stranded for a week As to the coverage of the Cu- and overwhelmingly hostile. iP the southwest Newfoundland ban story, Matthews says few Once the label of Communism wilderness. The men were iden- reporters or editors were qual- vas Duel on Whig and his|tified as William Cyr and Wins- ified to handle it. And he régime -- is, too, was i B: id early in 1959--the hysteria that | 1oW Alessi, both of Bangor, Me., - Gey accompanies the American at-|Joseph Grant of Hampden, Me., A Greatest Jute oe titudle toward Communism|and Frank Ryan and John Far-| § 1 {worked its poison." |rell of Doyle's Nfld. | Lives In Australia BRISBANE, Australia (AP)-- city of 600,000. He Howard Gardiner (Bill) Ludwiglhis pension } N His $256.31 monthly pension § retired from the U.S. Navy as ui . a warrant officer in Hawaii in BOUGHT STORE is enough to keep the family By September, 1959, they had going without the business. July, 1957 and surveyed his ils enough for the down payment Hea cites these commonplace He had a pension of $256.31/on the Yeronga Service Store ljtems as examples of lower liv- a month. He was 46. He had aa corner grocery in the suburbiing costs: Man's hair cut 56 wife. five children, and a de-{of Yeronga, four miles out oficents; T-hone stedk 50 cents a sire to begin a new life. the city. He borrowed $6,720|p0und. But Brisbane prices are | The navy would fly him and|from the bank to complete the|lower than most other Aus- his family anywhere in the purchase. tralian cities. world outside the Iron Curtain) Today, with the pension still "Qver-all it's cheaper living," where he wished to live. coming in, business booming in he says. "And the opportunities Should he go back to Bris-/the shop, and the bank loaniin Australia are limitless for| bane, the sub - tropical Aus- being paid off, they are on t0Pianyone with initiative and! tralian city where he and hisof the bottom of the world. ideas." wife Pat met and married in| Not all Americans who have] ---- i 1945 during the war? migrated to Australia are as FE . 5 The Ludwigs reasoned, for | tisfied an the Lrdwigs. Some BEFECTIVE ADVERTISING one thing, that Bill's pension/pave stayed, though wishing Roig ANCE, England (CP)-- would go farther down under|ihov were home. Registered un-|; gre than 2,000 men applied for than it would in the United opployment in Australia at the jo 5 i a new tool-making fac- H States. |1atest count was 2.7 per cent of|.>rY ere which advertised that [ff The family became seven of|the work force. {it is "away from the bomb § the 1,341 American immigrants,| put the success of the Lud. [2% stockpiled] "And I was right about the § pension. It does go further." CANADA SAVINGS Buy yous now, by instalments THE ROYAL BANK OF of any branch of the "Royol | fut or for cosh, The ECONOMY READING PLAN: A VERY SPECIAL READER SERVICE| select any I magazines CANADA diplomats and resident busi-|wios is by no means an iso- nessmen who came to Australia| aia example of Americans from the U.S. in 1957. {coming to Australia and doing (They got here well before well. Stanley Yankus, the best known| «yg heen all over the world, American migrant who came|,ng Australia will do me," says from Dowagiac, Mich., in 1950. | 1 ydwig. He migrated to Australia to The family lives in a six. Protest Festriction: on at he room frame dwelling attached gould grow op is. Michigan to the shop. It has electricity, Tan is now is working RL Bi Sysiemand i an Adelaide department store|" ! at $44.80 a week. LIKE CALIFORNIA (Yankus told a reporter the| 'The climate," says Bill with other day: "I am happy here. |a grin, "is like southera Cali- My family is happy. Why should! formia -- except that it's better. we go home?) It doesn't get as cold in winter Bill Ludwig quickly got a or as hot in summer; and you job as storeman-clerk in a de-|never get fogs like those in partment store of Brisbane, a!San Francisco. BRAND NEW GAS Forced WISHING for pennies from heaven! Get cash when' you need it-- mei up to $2500.00 INE sometimes more. \/ NIAGARA FINANCE COMPANY LIMITED Largest All-Canadian Consumer Loan Comvany. YOU PAY ONLY (While this offer lasts) «+++ ONLY 1.80 A WEEK! Inquire today at . . . 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