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<DIV>I wonder what people here think of the Allende government's attempts,
economic or otherwise, 25 years ago in Chile, before it was murdered. (As
far as I know, the only Marxist government that was elected into power. Arguably
a casualty of the cold war?) I saw the two powerful films on the coup and
the following struck me in Stuart Klawans's review:</DIV>
<DIV>"We hear that music again and again, as Guzman brings in more stories
of the disappeared. One of them was Jorge Muller Silva, the young
cinematographer for 'The Battle of Chile.' Several people, including Muller
Silva's father, help Guzman piece together the story of his death, which was
useful to the new Pinochet regime simply because it was so unnecessary. His old
friends recall that Muller Silva liked fine clothes and skirt-chasing, traits
that marked him in leftist circles as less than serious: a dandy among
revolutionaries. But everybody like him, and he knew everybody. Who better to
mark for a disapearance, if you wanted to spread terror as widely as
possible?"</DIV>
<DIV> </DIV>
<DIV>The only book I've seen on the coup is "Allende's Chile" by
Richard Boorstein. What do people think of it? Any other books you can
recommend?</DIV></DIV></BODY></HTML>