The bard gives us advance notice of his upcoming medieval K-pop releases
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An error occurred while searching, try again later.RON JACOBS welcomes an investigation of the murders of US leftist activists that tells the story of a solidarity movement in Chile

Chile in Their Hearts: The Untold Story of Two Americans Who Went Missing after the Coup
John Dinges, University of California Press, £24
AS they often did, the headlines in the New York Times brought more bad news the morning of September 12, 1973: “Allende Out, Reported Suicide. Marxist Regime in Chile Falls in Armed Forces Violent Coup.”
I read the article while waiting for my professor to appear in the Fordham University classroom where my political science class was held. The coup leader and new president of Chile was a military officer named Augusto Pinochet. As one would expect from the Times in 1973, the article mostly repeated the media releases filtered through Washington. In other words, no mention was made of Washington’s role in fomenting the right wing unrest leading to the coup nor was any suggestion made that Washington had foreknowledge of the incident.
Most people who had been following the situation in Chile assumed differently; of course the US knew about the impending coup. In the days to follow, supporters of the Allende Popular Unity government began to talk on WBAI radio and at rallies and forums about what they knew. I made it to a rally at Union Square later that week where speakers condemned the coup and the US involvement.



