i Daily-Friday, November 2, 1979-Page 5 Use Daily Class iffieds lop 9s op WESTERN BROGUES 9 -do ,r' r ., >°= (s;M t . AP Photo UNIVERSITY STUDENTS in La Paz, Bolivia, carry, away the body of a man killed when soldiers fired at crowds op- posing a military coup Thursday. Military takes power in Bolivia I 3 , '. f i }N 1 (Continued from Page 1) diplomatic sources here who asked not to be named. Telephone calls to newspapers and radio stations in other provincial cities indicated virtually all army garrisons were supporting the coup. TROOPS IN Cochabamba fired on student protesters, killing one and wounding seven others, the Cochabem- pa newspaper Los Tiempos reported. - The clashes in La Paz ended by night- fall. The streets were clear and rebel soldiers calmly patrolled their posts. Armored vehicles and hundreds of troops surrounded the presidential palace, other key government in- stallations and the National University. They seized La Paz radio stations and closed the capital's international air- port. THE 47-YEAR-OLD Natusch, a for- mer agriculture minister and until two weeks ago, commander of the military, college, declared himself president and said he would guarantee freedom for Bolivia's political parties. Guevara, who took office Aug. 8, went into hiding. He issued a signed appeal for military units in other parts of the country to rescue his government, but there was no immediate sign of any counter-coup. Two T-33 jet fighters swooped low, over the business district yesterday iorning, signaling that at least part of the air force was behind Natusch. MILITARY COUPS are part of the political scenery in this impoverished South American nation of five million people. There have been about 200 coups in its 154 years as a republic. In 1970, there were three coups within a 24- hour period. In Washington, the State Department expressed deep concern over the military coup in Bolivia and said the maintenance of democratic rule there is of "great importancet" Department spokesman Thomas Reston hinted that the United States may adopt retaliatory measures again- st the rebel forces which ousted the three-month-old government of President Walter Guevara Arce. OTHER OFFICIALS said the Carter administration plans to review the en-. fire range of U.S. relations with Bolivia, The coup was launched just nine days after Secretary of State Cyrus R. Van- ce, in La Paz for a general assembly of the Organization of American States, appealed personally to Bolivia's military leaders to respect the democratic process here. It was the third Latin American political upheaval within three months. A revolution drove out Nicaraguan President Anastasio Somoza in late July, and a coup ousted El Salvador's President Carlos Humberto Romero earlier this month. U.S. OFFICIALS, who asked not to be identified, said a return to military rule in Bolivia would appear to set back one of the most promising political developments in Latin America in recent years. Bolivia is a member of the five nation Andean Pact, which has emerged as a major pro-democratic political force in the hemisphere. All five nations - Venezuela, Colombia, Peru, Ecuador and Bolivia - had been undergoing a rare period in which all were either un- der democratic rule or were in the process of establishing constitutional government. The officials said the Andean Pact played an important role last summer in influencing the new Sandinista government of Nicaragua toward moderate policies. As officials see it, the influence of the Andean Pact would be diminished if the military were to assume power in any of the member countries. * ~~AM~q 9 4 *' 4K the LATEST am eLecTronic cames * You can play SOC worth of - pinball or video games with your U of M student * ID PLUS this coupon. 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