tragic aftermath of that coup, because not only for the Árbenz family, which, in some ways, were the kennedys of guatemala -- glamorous, young couple, jacoboarÍa Árbenz, their children, very good-looking, wealthy, but very committed to uplifting the poor in that country. and after the coup, they're sent into a terrible exile. no country will touch them, because cia pressure. the cia and the state department pressure every country, from mexico throughout latin america, not to take the Árbenz family in. they're finally forced to go behind the iron curtain to czechoslovakia to seek exile. they're not happy there. they finally end up back in mexico, but they're under tight supervision. the family is haunted. it's stalked wherever it goes. one of his daughters commits suicide. and jacobo Árbenz himself ends up dead under mysterious circumstances -- scalded to death in a bathtub in a mexico city hotel. his family today believes that he was assassinated. and given the fact that the cia had a death list of left-wing figures, journalists, political leaders, after the coup that were to be eliminated, that, you know, is a distinct possibility. so the