sttnuttsm ' ■i IS Hail uicide aftermath \cenes of horror is semes- > Evans irt prints up clear- roadcast- srogram- icgin the includes Jay, and nd Holy Box,” ail day, and aturday. on both ine their plitor's Note: UP1 correspondent Cumberbatch was among the group of foreign correspondents ’ach the scene of the Jonestown suicide. Following is his first- report. we d Fund esidents ichhasa College Wootan roblems res have 14.33to ers By NIGEL CUMBERBATCH United Press International JONESTOWN, Guyana — The leb-air auditorium where the Rev. m Jones and some 900 of his >ople’s Temple cultists committed icide was a scene of unspeakable jrror. |wo apparently well-fed dogs andered among the bodies that ere blackened and swollen by the ropical sun, the flesh already falling am the bones. The faces were so Dated visual identification was im- issible. The bodies were coated with a [easy substance, apparently the pedant sprayed over the piles the decaying dead. Hair was be- toing to fall off the scalps of some the victims. Bre stench was not as bad as we id expected but was still clearly fegnizable a quarter mile away. US. soldiers, wearing blue lasks, fatigues and white surgical Ives, were picking up the bodies, lung them in dark green plastic Igs and dragging them to a nearby Brovised helipad in a field where ey were laid out in a row. Dne by one the sacks were loaded pard a helicopter and ferried to Itthews Ridge, 35 miles to the iithwest, from where the Ameri- ns removed the bodies to getown and then to the United ;ram to i hours various >-4508, e prices eeting idster r hire .ed by at the d the dense ess to itness red to agent se yron il for case, id on ighly legal ince, lourt den- jl.lt 1 the jena with \rti- ■-old m hher Jably JJourt ire to sand ,inda jling from Jy of rourt ;her, dpa- fthe Liz rdy LJavii Jafflie * Stert pendl 1 Lov /of 1 .icM xc^uiaiiuiib wuuiu iiu anger the auto industry. Off! J s in the agency, which will for- jg, ly release the report next ■ith, were skeptical of the find- Pji; My impression after reading the ument is that most of it came Rogers ^ ‘t from auto industry spokes- Barry Felrice, acting admin- 1, j| e Scoi itor for plans and programs, told Free Press. “I don’t think they much independent analysis.” ^jugC^ hitHarbridge House Inc., which the study, defended the findings said it would not change the -£ary' Iclusions regardless of the agen- iliiih tsii reaction. he report also warned that if a ssion forced Ford and GM to go ide their own corporate struc- sfor money, the result could be investment drought for the two ler firms, which are less attrac- to investors. from a wood stove and a metal dry ing plate, a dairy and pig pens, which did not stink nearly as much as the decaying bodies. As we boarded a Guyanese mili tary helicopter to leave the settle ment, I took a final look around. My eyes fell on the children’s play ground with its blue, yellow, red and brown ornamental totem poles. There was an empty swing. I wondered if children would ever play there again. JFK pix evidence discounted Guyana body idents sought United Press International DOVER AIR FORCE BASE, Del. — Fingerprint experts and other specialists examining the bodies of 912 victims of a mass suicide and murder in Guyana said Monday it may take three weeks to identify all the dead. So far only 29 of the bodies, including that of the Rev. Jim Jones, People’s Temple leader, have been identified. A team of morticians and fingerprint experts worked to process the bodies as hundreds of relatives called the base trying to find if their family members are among the dead. A C-141 cargo plane arrived Sunday from Georgetown, Guyana with the last 183 bodies which were unloaded from the belly of the plane and stacked inside the freezing warehouse. Army Maj. Brigham Shuler said that with the arrival of the last shipment of bodies from Guyana, “the major thrust of one of the most obvious parts of this mission is over. ” The identification process is being conducted mainly through fingerprinting, Shuler said. So far, 532 bodies have been finger printed as the mortuary team rushed to get prints before the bodies decomposed too badly. The irritable, overworked sol- sb were dismayed by the time the oumalists arrived Friday. They learned only hours earlier that grisly task would take twice as as expected because they had d more than double the 400 es initially reported by mese police. II the bodies were face down and by were still embracing others. (he first sound we heard was the mune’s power generator which ntinued to hum through the Igle stillness that otherwise was bctured only by bird calls. At the death auditorium, police, pops and Guyanese pathologists ;d the furniture about to get to bodies, overturning Jones’ ed chair from where he haran- his disciples and supervised leath ceremony. small plaque on a pillar pro- led “Love One Another” and a ;r sign over the stage read se who did not remember the are condemned to repeat it.’ le two stray dogs that were still — there were three dead, ap- ntly from eating poison — occa- tlly strolled through the pile of lining bodies, sniffing at them, le sophisticated commune sted a soap factory, mechanics , laundry, a clothes dryer made United Press International DALLAS — The manager of the Texas School Book Depository has disputed a photo expert’s conten tions that a recently discovered film shows at least two persons — min utes before the assassination of John F. Kennedy — at the window from which the fatal shots are generally believe fired. Roy S. Truly said any stranger filmed in the sixth floor window “would have no way of getting out of the building unless he flew off the roof. ” Truly, discounting the findings of Robert J. Groden, a staff consultant on photographic evidence for the House Assassination Committee, hypothesized the film shot by amateur photographer Charles L. Bronson showed “reflections or shadows moving or something like that.” Truly said he and a Dallas policeman who rushed up the stairs of the building to the seventh floor would have seen any strangers at tempting to leave. Jesse Curry, Dallas’ chief of police at the time of the assassina tion, declined comment Sunday. But Curry, in an interview with the British Broadcasting Company last December, said he had doubts about the Warren Commission’s single-gunman theory and that he believed a conspiracy was still a pos sibility. Neither the mother nor brother of Lee Harvey Oswald was excited about the recent disclosure. “I am so sick and tired of all this, ” Marguerite Oswald said in Fort Worth. “There’s supposed to be images back in the bushes and this and that. And nothing has mate rialized.” Oswald’s brother, Robert, of Wichita Falls, declined comment. Hundreds of persons visited the assassination site in downtown Dal las Sunday, many discussing the film that was uncovered nearly 15 years after Kennedy’s death. EVERY WEDNESDAY a died' 10% OFF 10% discount is not valid on merchandise already on sale or for FERTI-LOME products HARDY GARDENS 1127 Villa Maria Bryan 846-8319 TOKYO STCJIK KOUSC AGGIE SPECIAL $295 DINNER Includes: Sweet and Sour Chicken Egg Roll Fried Won Ton Chop Suey Fried Rice Fortune Cookies Specials good for students Tues., Wed., Thurs. & Sun. Closed Mondays 2025 Texas Avenue Townshire Shopping Center 822-1301 tudy sees iito industry ops closed A LARGE VARIETY OF TITLES INCLUDES CHILDREN’S BOOKS United Press International DETROIT — A federal study irns that Chrysler Corp. and rican Motors Corp. could be d out of business in the next years by tightening government lation of the auto industry, ntents of the study done by a Iton research firm for the Na- mal Highway Traffic Safety Ad- istration were outlined Sunday report by the Detroit Free omestic automakers are facing [her government requirements safety, pollution and fuel lomy by 1985. Only industry its like General Motors Corp. Ford Motor Co. may survive test, the study said, particularly lere is a recession. The smaller firms will either e to be unusually skillful or un- limonly lucky to reach 1985 with ket shares and a product adth similar to those of the past, ” nterim report on the study said. 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