News
Community Safety Department Director To Resign Amid Tension With Cambridge Police Department
News
From Lab to Startup: Harvard’s Office of Technology Development Paves the Way for Research Commercialization
News
People’s Forum on Graduation Readiness Held After Vote to Eliminate MCAS
News
FAS Closes Barker Center Cafe, Citing Financial Strain
News
8 Takeaways From Harvard’s Task Force Reports
Cuban counter-revolutionaries can A member of the Cuban Revolutionary After the 26th of July movement in According to Ray, "nobody in Cuba Ray does not blame the U.S. for Cuba's swing toward Communism. "No U.S. policy could have changed what has happened in Cuba," he insisted. Cubans who come to this country to seek aid "practically had to sew up their pockets to keep the U.S. from putting checks in them." But Castro refused all government aid, insisting that he would take money only from private U.S. banks--because he was certain no private bank would risk economic support to the revolutionaries, Ray maintained. Ray does not discourage U.S. aid to the MRP, despite friction between him and the CIA. "We'll accept arms from anybody, anything except American troops," he declared.
A member of the Cuban Revolutionary After the 26th of July movement in According to Ray, "nobody in Cuba Ray does not blame the U.S. for Cuba's swing toward Communism. "No U.S. policy could have changed what has happened in Cuba," he insisted. Cubans who come to this country to seek aid "practically had to sew up their pockets to keep the U.S. from putting checks in them." But Castro refused all government aid, insisting that he would take money only from private U.S. banks--because he was certain no private bank would risk economic support to the revolutionaries, Ray maintained. Ray does not discourage U.S. aid to the MRP, despite friction between him and the CIA. "We'll accept arms from anybody, anything except American troops," he declared.
After the 26th of July movement in According to Ray, "nobody in Cuba Ray does not blame the U.S. for Cuba's swing toward Communism. "No U.S. policy could have changed what has happened in Cuba," he insisted. Cubans who come to this country to seek aid "practically had to sew up their pockets to keep the U.S. from putting checks in them." But Castro refused all government aid, insisting that he would take money only from private U.S. banks--because he was certain no private bank would risk economic support to the revolutionaries, Ray maintained. Ray does not discourage U.S. aid to the MRP, despite friction between him and the CIA. "We'll accept arms from anybody, anything except American troops," he declared.
According to Ray, "nobody in Cuba Ray does not blame the U.S. for Cuba's swing toward Communism. "No U.S. policy could have changed what has happened in Cuba," he insisted. Cubans who come to this country to seek aid "practically had to sew up their pockets to keep the U.S. from putting checks in them." But Castro refused all government aid, insisting that he would take money only from private U.S. banks--because he was certain no private bank would risk economic support to the revolutionaries, Ray maintained. Ray does not discourage U.S. aid to the MRP, despite friction between him and the CIA. "We'll accept arms from anybody, anything except American troops," he declared.
Ray does not blame the U.S. for Cuba's swing toward Communism. "No U.S. policy could have changed what has happened in Cuba," he insisted. Cubans who come to this country to seek aid "practically had to sew up their pockets to keep the U.S. from putting checks in them." But Castro refused all government aid, insisting that he would take money only from private U.S. banks--because he was certain no private bank would risk economic support to the revolutionaries, Ray maintained. Ray does not discourage U.S. aid to the MRP, despite friction between him and the CIA. "We'll accept arms from anybody, anything except American troops," he declared.
Ray does not blame the U.S. for Cuba's swing toward Communism. "No U.S. policy could have changed what has happened in Cuba," he insisted. Cubans who come to this country to seek aid "practically had to sew up their pockets to keep the U.S. from putting checks in them." But Castro refused all government aid, insisting that he would take money only from private U.S. banks--because he was certain no private bank would risk economic support to the revolutionaries, Ray maintained. Ray does not discourage U.S. aid to the MRP, despite friction between him and the CIA. "We'll accept arms from anybody, anything except American troops," he declared.
Ray does not blame the U.S. for Cuba's swing toward Communism. "No U.S. policy could have changed what has happened in Cuba," he insisted. Cubans who come to this country to seek aid "practically had to sew up their pockets to keep the U.S. from putting checks in them." But Castro refused all government aid, insisting that he would take money only from private U.S. banks--because he was certain no private bank would risk economic support to the revolutionaries, Ray maintained.
Ray does not discourage U.S. aid to the MRP, despite friction between him and the CIA. "We'll accept arms from anybody, anything except American troops," he declared.
Want to keep up with breaking news? Subscribe to our email newsletter.