The Michigan Daily-Friday, September 28, 1979-Page 9 Author reports Chile ruined by overthrow At their groceries in 1978, Americans bought the equivalent of 79,318,000 one- pint jars of pickles, making them a bigger seller than corn, tomatoes, beans or peas, according to National Geographic. UNDERGROUND COMIX orporate crimp , anld more' A Periodical Retreat. o -Cc ATfloor bixrksto I0oks " periodic als °a cards " paper cuts 3364 2S.STATEF,663-0215 r> By MARY GAITSKILL "You just can't imagine the horror. Death, torture, beatings, and mass jailings were commonplace. Social ser- vices such as public health were dismantled. There's now no medical care for most people; if you have a sick baby in Chile, it will die." This is how Caroline Richards, an American history professor and writer, describes life in Chile during and after the military coup overthrowing President Salvador Allende in 1973. Richards and her husband lived in Chile from 1966 to 1974, and she has written a novel about the coup called "Sweet Country." "AMERICANS DON'T fully under- stand what went on there," Richards said in an interview yesterday. "Our country helped overthrow a democratically elected president and is still keeping the junta in power. This has- happened repeatedly. It's no ac- cident that there are no democratic countries in South America." Richards describes "Sweet Country" as a paradigm of what happens when a leftist government tries to carry out middle of the road reform without using force. She said that when she arrived in Chile, it was a progressive, stable and democratic society with wide political ,--participation and a highly developed , Tabor movement. Chileans were ob- sessed with politics, said Richards, and did not separate it from their private lives. RICHARDS ALSO said dominance is 4 key concept in Chilean psychology, that the main question in Chile is, 'Who's going to dominate me?' Chileans, unlike Americans, don't generally think in terms of escaping domination, she explained, but only of resettling the situation so that the domination is less painful. With Allende's election, there was at last hope that this trend might be broken, she said. "That hope was part of why the tragedy was so intense." No one really expected Allende to win the election, said Richards, and when he did, "the working class left was jubilant - they wanted to prove that a Marxist leader could take the country into socialism peacefully." ALLENDE'S Popular Unity Coalition was reformist, not revolutionary, and Allende was very cautious about preserving traditional freedoms, said Richards. In three years of power, Allende nationalized major industries (which upset ITT in Chile), put factories to work full steam, started agrarian reform and instituted many social welfare programs, said Richards. The GNP went up, she continued, and unemployment was dramatically reduced. However, she continued, after a year of the Allende regime, the opposition was able to organize. Richards said the opposition was largely the middle- class, who were afraid of the left and who were "victims of propaganda." ACCORDING TO Richards, the up- per-class right-wing had almost full control of the broadcast and print media, while the governnient only had one radio station and one TV station. "The major papers in the country were running full page ads exhorting the military to overthrow the gover- nment," said Richards, "and Allende allowed it because he didn't want the rightists to be given a chance to scream, 'The Communists are taking our freedom away'." Richards also said the right promoted sabotage and formed terrorist groups. The U.S. provided arms and money for the right-wing junta. The U.S. went so far as to pay Chilean truckers $10 million to go on a strike which paralyzed the entire country, she said. Richards added that in Chile, truckers are in the middle-class, and were largely opposed to 'Allende to begin with. DESPITE THE conflict and upheaval, when the next election oc- curred, Allende won by a large majority, said Richards. Then, she con- tinued, the army, which has been largely trained in the U.S., realized it would have to use force. She describe4,:the aftermath of the junta as "terror" with torture, death and neighbors "denouncing" each other regularly. abortion . _Free Pregnancy Testing Immediate Results rConfidential Counseling Complete Birth Control Clinic Medicaid e Blue Cross (313)941-1810 Ann Arbor and Downriver area t l(313) 559-0590 Southfield area Northland Family Planning Clinic, Inc U-M Office of Major Events Presents EAGLES TH E LONG RUN I' Dolly Photo by DAVID HAFR AUTHOR CAROLINE RICHARDS was at East Quad last night to discuss Chile before and after the military coup that ousted Marxist President Salvador Allende in 1973. TO11U R 7 9 the Uniersity of Michigan school of Music Deportment of Ance Offers Fall Courses in Beginning-Intermediate Modern Beginning Ballet Intermediate Modern Intermediate Ballet Advanced Modern Children's Ballet (ages 8-12) Young Dancers Contemporary Dance Workshop (ages 12-18) September 24-N9ovember 17,1979 Don)011 Ilcy *ZiGlm Frcy Don Feidcr eC Wa ish T-1111o tll)yB. Schil-iit T-Two concerts SATURDAY AND SUNDAY Group wants special prison unit closed OCT. 13, 14 Crisler Arena Faculty: Gay Delanghe Willie Feuer For information call 763-5460 or write: Department of Dance Christopher Flynn Susan Matheke Dance Building 1310 N. University Ct. The University of Michigan Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109 Tickets $12.50- $10.00, $7.50 at Michigan Union Box Office, Schoolkids' Records, Huckleberry Party Store, Where House Records, all Hudson Stores [OfR INE O RNA rLI N: 763-2071 (Continued from Page 1 figure was originally determined by the Federal Bureau of Prisons. BUT MIKE AUN, public information officer for the bureau, said the federal agency "never made that statement." A Justice Department spokesperson also denied that the department made that statement, saying "There hasn't been one (a suicide in the unit) since '76 r '77." The prisoners in the control unit filed a class-action suit against the gover- nment in 1975, charging that several characteristics of the program - like the long hours of solitary confinement, alleged harassment, and small cells - were unconstitutional since they were cruel and unusual punishment. The ruling in that case, handed down in 1978 by U.S. District Court Judge James Foreman, allowed the program to continue with a few modifications: every cell door would have to have an opening, and 30 minutes per day would have to be allowed specifically for exercise. The case is presently in the appeals process. Meyers' committee, which was foun- ded in 1975, currently is collecting signatures to present to prison officials, urging that interfaith religious leaders be allowed to tour the unit. One such request was rejected last year. IN CONCEIT HILL AUDITORIUM 'I 1t~ , Qti 5 Oscar Peterson SEP1. 30 ;DEXTER GORDON U & SUN R A - w W f-. w U