2008年11月14日星期五

Yahoo! News: Elections

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Yahoo! News: Elections

THE INFLUENCE GAME: Lobbyists adapt to power shift (AP)

Posted: 14 Nov 2008 03:11 AM CST

In this Sept. 8, 2004 file photo, National Rifle Association Executive Vice President Wayne LaPierre gestures during an interview with The Associated Press in Washington. 'We're always looking for good ones,' LaPierre said when asked if he's seeing Democratic staffers leaving Capitol Hill to fill a growing demand for Democratic lobbyists. 'If they do, give us a call.' (AP Photo/Ron Edmonds, File)AP - Wanted: Democratic congressional aide seeking new career. Must have strong powers of persuasion, excellent connections and good marksmanship. Contact the National Rifle Association's government affairs office for details.


Officials: Sen. Clinton eyed as secretary of state (AP)

Posted: 14 Nov 2008 02:37 AM CST

In this Tuesday, Nov. 4, 2008 file photo, Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton D-NY addresses the press after she voted  in Chappaqua, NY. Clinton is among the candidates that President-elect Barack Obama is considering for secretary of state, according to two Democratic officials in close contact with the Obama transition team. (AP Photo/Craig Ruttle)AP - Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton is among the candidates that President-elect Barack Obama is considering for secretary of state, according to two Democratic officials in close contact with the Obama transition team.


Facing Palin factor, Romney mulls political future (AP)

Posted: 14 Nov 2008 02:12 AM CST

In this Oct. 23, 2008, file photo former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney answers questions during an interview at an early morning fundraiser in New Orleans for state Sen. Bill Cassidy.  Romney, an unsuccessful candidate for the Republican presidential nomination,  is focused on where the spend Thanksgiving rather than when to head back to Iowa or New Hampshire, a top aide said. (AP Photo/Bill Haber, File)AP - Tagg Romney was in his office the other day when the door opened and in popped his father, Mitt Romney, dropping off the family dog.


Crowd of 1 million could attend Obama inauguration (AP)

Posted: 14 Nov 2008 12:08 AM CST

In this Jan. 20, 1981 file photo, shows a wide angle view from the Capitol balcony as President Ronald Reagan, visible at center, addresses the nation following his swearing-in ceremony in Washington.  President-elect Barack Obama's inauguration is expected to draw 1 million-plus to the capital, and already some lawmakers have stopped taking ticket requests and hotels have booked up.  (AP Photo, File)AP - President-elect Barack Obama's inauguration is expected to draw 1 million-plus to the capital, and already some lawmakers have stopped taking ticket requests and hotels have booked up.


Dean: Dems 'big tent' party now (Politico)

Posted: 14 Nov 2008 03:47 AM CST

Politico - When Howard Dean got to Washington just under four years ago, he didn’t know what to expect.

VP-elect Biden hopes to be a hands-on No. 2 (AP)

Posted: 14 Nov 2008 12:10 AM CST

Vice President Dick Cheney and wife Lynne Cheney, welcome Vice President-elect Joe Biden, right, and his wife Jill Biden to the Vice President's official residence at the Naval Observatory, Thursday, Nov. 13, 2008 in Washington.   (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)AP - Vice President-elect Joe Biden was all smiles Thursday when he paid a courtesy call the man he will succeed, Dick Cheney. But he has insisted he wants to be nothing like him. Biden has called Cheney "the most dangerous vice president we've had probably in American history" and said he couldn't name a single good thing Cheney had done.


McCain asks Georgia voters to back Sen. Chambliss (AP)

Posted: 13 Nov 2008 11:49 PM CST

Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz) greets supporters after a rally for Sen. Saxby Chambliss (R-Ga.) Thursday, Nov. 13, 2008 in Atlanta. (AP Photo/John Bazemore)AP - Republican John McCain implored Georgia voters Thursday to back Sen. Saxby Chambliss in next month's runoff, warning that Democrats will increase taxes and cut defense spending and the GOP needs to strengthen its ranks.


Obama resigning Senate seat effective Sunday (AP)

Posted: 13 Nov 2008 07:01 PM CST

Seen in file photos are Tammy Duckworh, a disabled Iraq war veteran and currently the Illinois veteran affairs director, U.S. Reps. Jesse Jackson Jr., of Chicago and Jan Schakowsky, of Evanston, Ill., Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan and Illinois Senate President Emil Jones. The five have been mentioned as potential candidate to fill the seat of President-elect Barack Obama who said Thursday, Nov. 13, 2008, he would resign from the Senate effective Sunday, Nov. 16. Under state law, Democratic Gov. Rod Blagojevich will name Obama's replacement he said he expects to make a decision by year's end, (AP Photo/Staff)AP - President-elect Barack Obama said Thursday that he will resign from the Senate effective Sunday.


Ayers reflects on Obama in new afterword to memoir (AP)

Posted: 13 Nov 2008 08:04 PM CST

U.S. President-elect Barack Obama answers a journalist's question during his first press conference following his election victory in Chicago, November 7, 2008. (Jason Reed/Reuters)AP - Bill Ayers, the Vietnam War-era radical who was a campaign headache for Barack Obama, says in a new afterword to his memoir that the two were neighbors and family friends. Ayers' reflections appear in a new paperback release of his 2001 memoir, "Fugitive Days." The Associated Press obtained a copy of the new afterword Thursday.


Democratic sources: Biden chooses chief of staff (AP)

Posted: 13 Nov 2008 06:15 PM CST

Vice President-elect Joe Biden arrives for meeting with Vice President Dick Cheney and wife Lynne Cheney at the Vice President's official residence at the Naval Observatory, Thursday, Nov. 13, 2008 in Washington.  Biden was accompanied by his wife Jill, not shown. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)AP - Vice President-elect Joe Biden chose as his chief of staff a man who once served in that same role for Vice President Al Gore, Democratic officials said Thursday.


Obama gets the Clinton band back together (Politico)

Posted: 14 Nov 2008 03:48 AM CST

Politico - Here's how you can tell the campaign is over and the transition has begun: Barack Obama's aides now wear suits and ties, their desks are in the Federal Building on 6th Street in Washington, D.C.—and Clintonites are everywhere.

Pressure mounts in Minn. Senate ballot recount (AP)

Posted: 14 Nov 2008 03:07 AM CST

Minnesota Secretary of State Mark Ritchie listens to a question during a news conference Wednesday, Nov. 12, 2008 in St. Paul, Minn., where he announced the members of the state canvassing board for the statewide recount of nearly 3-million ballots in the tight U. S. Senate race between Republican Sen. Norm Coleman and Democrat Al Franken.   (AP Photo/Jim Mone)AP - Minnesota is preparing to move a seemingly stalemated U.S. Senate election into the tedious process of a statewide recount as it readies an army of workers to sort through nearly 3 million ballots.


Obama likely to push courts away from right (Reuters)

Posted: 14 Nov 2008 02:34 AM CST

Two men stand on the front steps of the Supreme Court in Washington February 16, 2006. (Jason Reed/Reuters)Reuters - President-elect Barack Obama will have a chance to appoint dozens of sympathetic judges to U.S. federal courts over the next four years, reversing the judiciary's shift to the right under President George W. Bush.


Obama considers Hillary Clinton for secretary of state: report (AFP)

Posted: 14 Nov 2008 02:32 AM CST

US president-elect Barack Obama is considering naming former first lady Hillary Clinton (seen here on November 10), his onetime rival for the White House, as his secretary of state, according to NBC News.(AFP/Getty Images/File/Stephen Lovekin)AFP - US president-elect Barack Obama is considering naming former first lady Hillary Clinton, his onetime rival for the White House, as his secretary of state, NBC News reported late Thursday.


Eyes on US defense secretary amid rumors he may stay (AFP)

Posted: 14 Nov 2008 02:00 AM CST

The Washington rumor mill has gone into overdrive this week with speculation that Defense Secretary Robert Gates (pictured) could be asked to stay in his job by president-elect Barack Obama.(AFP/Getty Images/File/Logan Mock-Bunting)AFP - The Washington rumor mill has gone into overdrive this week with speculation that Defense Secretary Robert Gates could be asked to stay in his job by president-elect Barack Obama.


Hoop-star Obama could have basketball court built at White House (AFP)

Posted: 14 Nov 2008 01:25 AM CST

President-elect Barack Obama shoots a basketball on a school court in Elkhart, Indiana. Richard Nixon had a bowling alley installed at the White House; Gerald Ford, a swimming pool; and now, the residence of US presidents could house a basketball court to cater to the sporting talents of Obama.(AFP/Getty Images/File/Mark Wilson)AFP - Richard Nixon had a bowling alley installed at the White House; Gerald Ford, a swimming pool; and now, the residence of US presidents could house a basketball court to cater to the sporting talents of president-elect Barack Obama.


The Obama Transition: What Will Change Look Like? (Time.com)

Posted: 14 Nov 2008 01:25 AM CST

Time.com - With the election won, the Obama team faces the realities of governing. What the transition reveals about the kind of President Obama will be

Ex-Maryland lt. governor running to head GOP (AP)

Posted: 13 Nov 2008 10:35 PM CST

AP - Former Maryland Lt. Gov. Michael Steele is running to be the next chairman of the Republican National Committee.

Steele's in for RNC chair: 'I want the gig' (Politico)

Posted: 13 Nov 2008 09:56 PM CST

Politico - Former Maryland Lt. Gov. Michael Steele shook up the emerging race for chair of the Republican National Committee Thursday, announcing that he would join the contest in an appearance on Fox News's "Hannity and Colmes."

Hillary Clinton emerges as State dept candidate (Reuters)

Posted: 13 Nov 2008 08:57 PM CST

Senator Hillary Clinton (D-NY) accepts a Glamour Woman of the Year award from Glamour magazine in New York November 10, 2008. (Lucas Jackson/Reuters)Reuters - Sen. Hillary Clinton emerged on Thursday as a candidate to be U.S. secretary of state for Barack Obama, months after he defeated her in an intense contest for the Democratic presidential nomination.


Kerry Wood

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Kerry Wood


Kerry Lee Wood (born June 16, 1977 in Irving, Texas) is an American baseball right-handed pitcher who is currently a free agent. Wood has recorded over two hundred strikeouts in four different seasons between 1998�2003, with a high water mark of 266 K's in 2003. In recent years, he has had three serious arm injuries, and has only started a total of 14 major league games from Opening Day 2005 through the middle of 2006. Wood returned to the Cubs during the 2007 season as a relief pitcher and served as the team's All-Star closer in 2008.

Kerry Wood Early life
Wood became a high school phenom while attending Mac Arthur High School in Irving, Texas, for his first three seasons of high school baseball. He continued his domination of batters at Grand Prairie High School in his final season as a high school player.[1]


Kerry Wood Professional career

Kerry Wood 1995-1998
The Chicago Cubs drafted Wood as the fourth overall selection in the 1995 Amateur Draft. He spent three years playing in the Minor Leagues. His best season in the Minors came in 1996, when he posted a 10-2 record for the Daytona Cubs.[2] He spent his final two years in the minors playing for the Iowa Cubs.[2]


Kerry Wood 1998
A much-hyped prospect in the minor leagues, Wood made his MLB debut on April 12, 1998. He wasted no time showing the world his talent when - in only his fifth career start on May 6, 1998 - he threw a one-hit, no walk, 20-strikeout shutout against the Houston Astros, tying Roger Clemens' record for strikeouts in a 9-inning game and breaking Bill Gullickson's single-game rookie record of 18 strikeouts in 1980. The game is considered by many to be among the most dominant pitching performances in the history of baseball.[3] According to statistician Bill James's Game Score system, which attempts to assign a numerical value to a start, Wood's performance scored 105, the highest in the history of baseball.[citation needed] Moisés Alou, then of the Astros, called Wood's pitching performance "the best" he had ever seen.[4] Soon after the game, t-shirts started circulating around wrigley with the phrase "We got Wood!"[citation needed] The t-shirts remain popular today.[citation needed]

Wood finished the 1998 season with a 13�6 record, and despite missing the last month of the season with elbow soreness easily won the National League Rookie of the Year award. By season's end, Wood, who had come to be known by the nickname "Kid K," established himself as the Cubs' ace.[citation needed] He pitched one game in the playoffs against the Atlanta Braves, but suffered the loss. That would be his last appearance in a Cubs uniform for more than a year.


Kerry Wood 1999�2003
During Spring Training of 1999, Wood underwent Tommy John surgery to repair damage to the ulnar collateral ligament in his right elbow. He missed the entire season to rehab from the surgery.

Wood returned in 2000 and struggled to an 8�7 record, but the following season, he returned to form. In 2001, Wood began a string of three straight seasons in which he began to once again show the promise he displayed as the young phenom just a few years earlier. He went 12-6 with a 3.36 ERA. The following season (2002), Wood finished 12�11 with a 3.67 ERA, but perhaps more important was the fact he didn't miss a start all year long, setting career highs with 213.6 innings pitched and 33 starts. In both seasons, he struck out 217.

In 2003, Wood continued to improve, setting career highs with 266 strikeouts, 14 wins (as part of a 14�11 record), a 3.20 ERA, and 2 shutouts. He also walked 100 batters and surrendered 24 home runs, also career highs, but was selected as a National League All-Star and helped lead the Cubs to the playoffs.

Wood teamed with fellow right-hander Mark Prior to form a dominating 1-2 punch dubbed "Chicago Heat" by the media, that led the Cubs to a NL Central title. Wood earned two wins in the Divisional Series against the Atlanta Braves and was the starter in Game 3 of the 2003 National League Championship Series, which the Cubs won in extra innings. However, the Cubs lost in seven games to the eventual World Series champion Florida Marlins. In the decisive Game 7, one day after the infamous Steve Bartman incident, Wood hit the first home run by a pitcher in a NLCS game since another Cub, Rick Sutcliffe, did so in Game 1 in 1984. However, the Marlins won the game 9-6. Wood was charged with the loss and the Cubs were eliminated.


Kerry Wood 2004�2006
Based on their promising 2003 performance and off-season moves, Kerry Wood and the Cubs were featured on the cover of Sports Illustrated for the 2004 Season baseball preview issue and were predicted to win the World Series. Perhaps another example of the so-called "SI Jinx," Wood went just 8-9 during the season and was sidelined for nearly two months with a strained triceps. Meanwhile, the Cubs led the Wild Card race by two games with a week to go in the season. However, they lost seven of their last nine games - including two losses by Wood - to finish 89-73, two games behind Houston, and out of the playoffs.

In 2005, the Cubs―and Wood―continued to struggle. On August 31, 2005, Wood underwent season-ending arthroscopic surgery. During Spring Training the following year, Wood suffered several setbacks which required an additional surgery on his knee and time off shortly after that for falling out of a hot tub. Finally, on May 18, 2006, Wood returned to the Cubs' rotation when he pitched in a game at home against the Washington Nationals. He took the loss, giving up four runs and three home runs while striking out six in five innings. In June, Wood returned to the DL with a sore shoulder. The following month, the Cubs announced that Wood had sustained a partially torn rotator cuff which was likely to keep him from pitching again for the rest of the year. At the end of the 2006 season, the Cubs exercised their option on Wood's contract and bought out the remaining $13M.


Kerry Wood 2007�present

Wood pitching as a member of the Class A Peoria Chiefs of the Midwest League in July 2007With his long history of injuries and inability to stay in the starting rotation, Wood accepted the Cubs offer to join their bullpen in 2007, signing an incentive laden one-year contract for $1.75 million. Wood explained at the time he felt he owed both the Cubs' Organization and their devoted fans for all the time missed due to his injury plagued past. Wood attempted to sustain a regular throwing schedule and appearances during Spring Training games. However, Wood was placed on the 15 day DL with soreness in his elbow and was then moved to the 60 day DL. He began playing catch on May 21. In his first rehab stint against in Cubs Rookie Ball, he struck out all three batters he faced. On July 24, he pitched 1 inning with the Peoria Chiefs, throwing 9 pitches. He made back-to-back appearances on July 26 and July 27, throwing his fastball between 92-94mph with no discomfort.

The Cubs activated Wood from the 60-Day Disabled List on August 3, causing many to believe that he would make his actual return on that day.[5] In the seventh inning, however, Lou Piniella opted to send Bob Howry to the mound, and most fans, eager to see Kerry back on the hill, mistakenly gave Howry a standing ovation, only to realize moments later it was actually not Wood.[6] Piniella later stated he wanted Wood to receive a "softer landing", or in other words, make his return in a game where the Cubs have a comfortable lead over their opponents.[7] Wood made his return on August 5, with the Cubs trailing the New York Mets by four runs.[8] He pitched a single inning, during which he allowed one hit, and struck out another batter.[8] Piniella praised Wood's performance, stating "He threw the ball real good", and "His breaking ball had some bite to it, and he threw it up there about 93-94, about what we expected".[9] Since then, he has remained healthy appearing in 22 games and posting a 1-1 record with a solid 3.33 ERA.

He was generally limited to one inning per outing and has not appeared in games on back to back days, though he did pitch in both halves of a double header on September 15. Wood was a major contributor to the Cub's NL Central Division Championship down the stretch in late September, earning a win and 8 holds. Wood filed for free-agency on November 11, 2007, though he suggested that he wanted to remain in pinstripes for the 2008 season. Despite multi-year offers from other teams, Wood agreed to a one year, $4.2 million deal with the Cubs.[10]

Wood, along with Bob Howry and Carlos Marmol, competed for the role as the Cubs' closer after Ryan Dempster was moved to the starting rotation.[10] After posting a 2.84 ERA in the spring, Wood won the job. He recorded his first career save April 3, 2008 with a win over the Brewers.[1][2] Wood has since recorded 33 saves in 39 opportunities, 82 strike-outs and a 1.12 WHIP. He was selected to the 2008 MLB All-Star Game as a relief pitcher on July 6, 2008 along with six other teammates.[11]

Wood was placed on the 15-day DL on July 24, 2008 with a blister on his right index finger.[12] He returned to throw a scoreless inning against the Houston Astros on August 5, 2008.

On November 13, 2008, after acquiring closer Kevin Gregg from the Florida Marlins, Cubs general manager Jim Hendry announced that the organization does not plan in resigning Wood. [3]

Jonestown

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Jonestown
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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"Jonestown, Guyana" redirects here. For the community in Demerara, Guyana, see Jonestown, Demerara.
For other uses, see Jonestown (disambiguation).

JonestownGeorgetownKaituma
Peoples Temple Agricultural Project ("Jonestown", Guyana)Jonestown was the informal name for the "Peoples Temple Agricultural Project", an intentional community in northwestern Guyana formed by the Peoples Temple, a cult from California led by Jim Jones. It became internationally notorious in November of 1978, when 918 people died in the settlement as well as in a nearby airstrip and in Georgetown, Guyana's capital. The name of the settlement became synonymous for the incidents at those locations.

On November 18, 1978, 909 Temple members died in Jonestown, all but two from apparent cyanide poisoning in an event termed "revolutionary suicide" by Jones and some members on an audio tape of the event and in prior discussions. To the extent the actions in Jonestown were viewed as a mass suicide, it is the largest such event in modern history. The incident at Jonestown was the greatest single loss of American civilian life in a non-natural disaster until the events of September 11, 2001.

The poisonings in Jonestown followed the murder of five others by Temple members at a nearby Port Kaituma airstrip. The victims included Congressman Leo Ryan, the first and only Congressman murdered in the line of duty in the history of the United States.
Jonestown Origins

Los AngelesSan FranciscoUkiahBakersfieldFresnoSacramentoSanta Rosa
Some of the Peoples Temple's California LocationsMain articles: Peoples Temple, Jim Jones, and Peoples Temple in San Francisco
The Peoples Temple was formed in Indianapolis, Indiana, during the mid-1950s.[1] It purported to practice what it called "apostolic socialism."[2] In doing so, the Temple preached to established members that "those who remained drugged with the opiate of religion had to be brought to enlightenment―socialism."[3][4]

After Jones received considerable criticism in Indiana for his integrationist views, the Temple moved to Redwood Valley, California in 1965.[5][6]

In the early 1970s the Peoples Temple opened other branches in California, including in Los Angeles and San Francisco. In the mid-1970s, the Temple moved its headquarters to San Francisco.[7]

After the Temple's move to San Francisco, it became more politically active. After Peoples Temple participation proved instrumental in the mayoral election victory of George Moscone in 1975, Moscone appointed Jones as the Chairman of the San Francisco Housing Authority Commission.[8] Unlike other figures considered as cult leaders, Jones enjoyed public support and contact with some of the highest level politicians in the United States. For example, Jones met with Vice Presidential Candidate Walter Mondale and Rosalynn Carter several times.[9][10] Governor Jerry Brown, Lieutenant Governor Mervyn Dymally and Assemblyman Willie Brown, among others, attended a large testimonial dinner in honor of Jim Jones during September 1976.[11]


Jonestown Jonestown established

Jonestown Jonestown before mass migration

Houses in JonestownIn 1974, the Temple leased over 3,800 acres (15.4 km2) of jungle land from the Guyanese government.[12] The site was isolated and possessed soil of poor fertility, even by Guyanese standards.[13] The nearest body of water was seven miles away by muddy roads.[13]

Jones saw Jonestown as both a "socialist paradise" and a "sanctuary" from media scrutiny that had started with newspaper articles by Lester Kinsolving in 1972 in the San Francisco Examiner.[14] Guyana's socialism matched what he conceived to be his own communal-agrarian ideals.[15] Former Temple member Tim Carter stated that the reason for choosing Guyana was the Temple's view of creeping fascism, the perception of the dominance of multinational corporations on the government, and perceived racism in the U.S. government.[16] Carter said the Temple concluded that Guyana, a predominantly black, English-speaking socialist country, would afford black members of the Temple a peaceful place to live.[16] Later, Guyanese Prime Minister Forbes Burnham stated that what may have attracted Jones was that "he wanted to use cooperatives as the basis for the establishment of socialism, and maybe his idea of setting up a commune meshed with that."[15]

A small group of Peoples Temple members began the construction of Jonestown. The Temple encouraged some of its members to move to Jonestown, which it called the "Peoples Temple Agricultural Project".[12] Jones began cultivating relationships with Guyanese officials before the Temple created its settlement at Jonestown. In 1976, Guyana executed a lease with the Temple for over 3,000 acres (12 km2) of land in Northwest Guyana, retroactive to April 1974.[17]

In 1974, Guyanese government officials granted the Temple permission to import certain items "duty free." [13] Later payoffs to Guyanese customs officials helped safeguard shipments of firearms and drugs through Guyanese customs. [18] The relatively large number of immigrants to Guyana overwhelmed the Guyanese government's small but stringent immigration infrastructure in a country where most people wanted to leave.[19] Jones reached an agreement to guarantee that Guyana would permit Temple members' mass migration. To do so, he stated that Temple members were "skilled and progressive", showed off an envelope he claimed had $500,000 and stated that he would invest most of the church's assets in Guyana.[19] Guyanese immigration procedures were also compromised to inhibit the departure of Temple defectors and curtail the visas of Temple opponents.[20]


Prime Minister Forbes BurnhamJones purported to establish Jonestown as a benevolent communist community, stating: "I believe we're the purest communists there are."[21] Marceline Jones described Jonestown as "dedicated to live for socialism, total economic and racial and social equality. We are here living communally."[21] Jones wanted to construct a model community and claimed that Prime Minister Burnham "couldn't rave enough about us, uh, the wonderful things we do, the project, the model of socialism."[22] In that regard, like the restrictive emigration policies of the Soviet Union, Cuba, North Korea and other communist republics, Jones did not permit members to leave Jonestown.[23]


The Temple's house in GeorgetownThe Temple established offices in Georgetown and conducted numerous meetings with Burnham and other Guyanese officials.[24] In 1976, Temple member Michael Prokes requested that Guyana's Prime Minister Forbes Burnham receive Jones as a foreign dignitary along with other "high ranking U.S. officials."[25] Jones traveled to Guyana with Lieutenant Governor Mervyn Dymally to meet with Burhnam and Foreign Affairs Minister Fred Willis. [25] In that meeting, Dymally agreed to pass on the message to the U.S. State Department that socialist Guyana wanted to keep an open door to cooperation with the United States.[25] Dymally followed up that meeting with a letter to Burnham stating that Jones was "one of the finest human beings" and that Dymmally was "tremendously impressed" by his visit to Jonestown.[25]

Temple members took pains to stress their loyalty to Burnham's Peoples National Congress Party.[26] One Temple member, Paula Adams, was involved in a romantic relationship with Guyana's Ambassador to the United States, Laurence "Bonny" Mann. Jones bragged about other Temple members he referred to as "public relations women" giving all for the cause in Georgetown.[27] [note 1] Viola Burnham, the Guyanese Prime Minister's wife, was also a strong advocate of the Temple.[15]

Later, Burnham stated that Guyana allowed the Temple to operate in the manner it did on the references of Vice President Mondale, Rosalyn Carter and Mayor Moscone. [28] Burnham also said that, when Deputy Minister Ptolemy Reid traveled to Washington in September of 1977 to sign the Panama Treaties, Mondale asked him "How's Jim?", which indicated to Reid that Mondale had a personal interest in Jones' well being.[28]


Jonestown Investigation and mass migration

Migration to Jonestown (Migration figures after June 1978 are not known, Jonestown Report)Further information: Peoples Temple in San Francisco
In the summer of 1977, Jones and several hundred Temple members moved to Jonestown to escape building pressure from San Francisco media investigations.[29] Jones left the same night that an editor at New West magazine read Jones an article to be published by Marshall Kilduff detailing allegations by former Temple members.[29][30] Jonestown's population increased from 50 members in early 1977 to just under 1000 at its peak in 1978.


Jonestown Jonestown life after mass migration
Many members of the Peoples Temple believed that Guyana would be, as Jones promised, a paradise, or a utopia.[31] After the mass migration, Jonestown became overcrowded.[32]

After Jones arrived, Jonestown life significantly changed.[32] Entertaining movies from Georgetown that the pioneers had watched were eliminated in favor of propaganda shorts on Soviet life provided by the Soviet embassy and documentaries on problems such as elderly life in the U.S. and returning Vietnam veterans' adjustment to civilian life.[32] Bureaucratic requirements after Jones' arrival sapped labor resources for other needs.[32] Buildings fell into disrepair and weeds encroached on fields.[32] School study and night time lectures for adults turned to Jones discussions about revolution and enemies, with lessons focusing on Soviet alliances, Jones' crises and the purported "mercenaries" of Timothy Stoen.[32]

For the first several months, Temple members worked six days a week, from approximately 6:30 a.m. to 6:00 p.m., with an hour for lunch.[33] In mid-1978, after Jim Jones' health deteriorated and Marcy Jones began managing more of Jonestown's operations, the work week was reduced to eight hours a day for five days a week.[16]


Troolie CottagesAfter the day's work ended, Temple members would attend several hours of activities in a pavilion structure, including classes in socialism.[34] Jones described this study as like that of the North Korean system of eight hours of daily work followed by eight hours of study.[35][36] This also comported with the Temple's practice of gradually subjecting its followers to sophisticated mind control and behavior-modification techniques borrowed from post-revolutionary China and North Korea.[37] Jones would often read news and commentary, including some from Radio Moscow and Radio Havana.[38]

"Discussion" around the topics raised often took the form of Jones interrogating individual followers about the implications and subtexts of a given item, or delivering lengthy and often confused monologues on how his people should 'read' the events. In addition to Soviet documentaries, Conspiracy theory movies such as Executive Action, written by Temple attorneys Mark Lane and Donald Freed, and The Parallax View (incorrectly attributed by Jones to Lane and Freed) were screened and minutely dissected by Jones as primers on the 'true nature' of the Temple's capitalist enemies.[38]

Jones' recorded readings of the news were part of the constant broadcasts over Jonestown's tower speakers, such that all members could hear them throughout the day and night.[39] Jones' news readings usually portrayed the United States as a "capitalist" and "imperialist" villain, while casting "socialist" leaders, such as former North Korean dictator Kim Il-sung ("great leader of the revolution, is in the vanguard of the Korean working class"[40]), Robert Mugabe ("long known for his communist inspiration to the people of Zimbabwe… one of the revolutionary heroes"[41]) and Joseph Stalin (disturbed by people criticizing Stalin[42]), in a positive light.


Jonestown radio towerJonestown's primary means of communication with the outside world was a shortwave radio. [43] All voice communications with San Francisco and Georgetown were transmitted using this radio, from mundane supply orders to confidential Temple business.[43] The FCC cited the Temple for technical violations and for using amateur frequencies for commercial purposes. [43] Because shortwave radio was Jonestown's only effective means of non-postal communication, the Temple felt that the FCC's threats to revoke its operators' licenses threatened Jonestown's existence.[44]

Jonestown, being on poor soil, was not self-sufficient and had to import large quantities of commodities such as wheat.[45] Temple members lived in small communal houses, some with walls woven from Troolie palm, and ate meals which reportedly consisted of nothing more on some days than rice, beans, greens and sometimes meat sauce and eggs (more on others).[46][45] Despite theoretically having access to millions of dollars in Temple funds, Jones also lived in a tiny communal house (pictured below), though fewer people lived there than in other communal houses.[46] His house reportedly held a small refrigerator, containing, at times, eggs, meat, fruit, salads and soft drinks.[46] Medical problems, such as severe diarrhea and high fevers, struck half the community in February 1978.

Although Jonestown contained no dedicated prison and no form of capital punishment, various forms of punishment were used against members considered to be serious disciplinary problems. Methods included imprisonment in a 6 x 4 x 3-foot (1.8 x 1.2 x 0.9m) plywood box and forcing children to spend a night at the bottom of a well, sometimes upside-down.[1] For some members who attempted to escape, drugs such as Thorazine, sodium pentathol, chloral hydrate, Demerol and Valium were administered in an "extended care unit."[47] Armed guards patrolled the area day and night to enforce Jonestown's rules. Some local Guyanese, including a police official, related stories about harsh beatings and a "torture hole", the well into which the children were placed when they were perceived to have misbehaved.[48][49]


Jim Jones' cabinChildren, generally surrendered to communal care, addressed Jones as "Dad" and some at times were only allowed to see their real parents briefly at night. Jones was called "Father" or "Dad" by the adults as well.[50] The community had a nursery at which 33 infants were born.[51]

Up to $65,000 in monthly welfare payments from government organizations in the United States to Jonestown residents were signed over to the Temple.[52] In 1978, officials from the United States Embassy in Guyana interviewed Social Security recipients on multiple occasions to make sure they were not being held against their will.[53] None of the 75 people interviewed by the Embassy stated that they were being held against their will, were forced to sign over welfare checks or wanted to leave Jonestown.[54][53]

The Temple's wealth was estimated in late 1978 to be approximately $26 million.[55]


Jonestown Events in Jonestown prior to Ryan visit

Jonestown White Nights
Jones made frequent addresses to Temple members regarding Jonestown's safety, including statements that the CIA and other intelligence agencies were conspiring with "capitalist pigs" to destroy Jonestown and harm its members.[41][56][57] After work, when purported emergencies arose, the Temple sometimes conducted what Jones referred to as "White Nights".[58] During such events, Jones would sometimes give the Jonestown members four choices: (1) attempt to flee to the Soviet Union; (2) commit "revolutionary suicide"; (3) stay in Jonestown and fight the purported attackers or (4) flee into the jungle.[59]

On at least two occasions during White Nights, after a "revolutionary suicide" vote was reached, a simulated mass suicide was rehearsed. Peoples Temple defector Deborah Layton described the event in an affidavit:

"Everyone, including the children, was told to line up. As we passed through the line, we were given a small glass of red liquid to drink. We were told that the liquid contained poison and that we would die within 45 minutes. We all did as we were told. When the time came when we should have dropped dead, Rev. Jones explained that the poison was not real and that we had just been through a loyalty test. He warned us that the time was not far off when it would become necessary for us to die by our own hands."[60]

The Temple had received monthly half-pound shipments of cyanide since 1976 after Jones obtained a jeweler's license to buy the chemical to purportedly clean gold. [61].


Jonestown Stoen custody dispute
Main article: Timothy Stoen

John (right) (photo: Jonestown Institute)In September 1977, former Temple members Timothy and Grace Stoen battled in a Georgetown court to produce an order for the Temple to show cause why a final order should not be issued returning their purported son, John, to his mother Grace.[62] A few days later, a second order was issued for the arrest of John by authorities. [63]

The fear of being held in contempt of the orders caused Jones to set up a false sniper attack upon himself and begin his first series of White Nights, called the "Six Day Siege", where Jones spoke to Temple members about attacks from outsiders and had them surround Jonestown with guns and machetes.[64] The fiery rallies took an almost surreal tone as Angela Davis and Huey Newton communicated via radio-telephone to the Jonestown crowd, urging them to hold strong against the "conspiracy."[65] Jones made radio broadcasts stating "we will die unless we are granted freedom from harassment and asylum."[66] Guyana Deputy Minister Ptolemy Reid finally assured Jones' wife Marceline that Guyanese Defense Forces would not invade Jonestown. [67]


Jonestown Exploring another potential exodus
After the Six Day Siege, Jones no longer believed the Guyanese could be trusted.[68] Jones directed Temple members to write over a dozen foreign governments inquiring about immigration policies relevant to another exodus by the Temple.[68] He also wrote the U.S. State department inquiring about North Korea and Stalinist Albania.[68]

In Georgetown, the Peoples Temple conducted frequent meetings with the embassies of the Soviet Union, North Korea, Yugoslavia and Cuba.[69] Their negotiations with the Soviet Union included extensive discussions of possible resettlement there and the Temple produced memoranda discussing potential places within the Soviet Union in which they might settle.[69] Sharon Amos, Michael Prokes and other Temple members took active roles in the "Guyana-Korea Friendship Society", which sponsored two seminars on revolutionary concepts of North Korean leader Kim Il Sung.[70]

On October 2, 1978, Feodor Timofeyev from the Soviet Union embassy in Guyana visited Jonestown for two days and gave a speech.[71] Jones stated before the speech that "For many years, we have let our sympathies be quite publicly known, that the United States government was not our mother, but that the Soviet Union was our spiritual motherland," which was followed by extended cheers and applause from the Jonestown crowd.[71] Timofeyev opened the speech stating that the USSR would like to send "our deepest and the most sincere greetings to the people of this first socialist and communist community of the United States of America, in Guyana and in the world," followed by cheers and applause from the crowd.[71] Timofeyev also stated "I'd like to wish you, dear comrades, all the successes to your great, to your very big work you're doing here."[71]

By October 1978, Temple members met almost weekly with Timofeyev discussing a potential exodus to the Soviet Union.[69]


Jonestown Concerned Relatives
Main article: Timothy Stoen
Meanwhile, in late 1977 and early 1978, Tim and Grace Stoen participated in meetings with other relatives of Jonestown residents at the home of Jeannie Mills, and they collectively called themselves the "Concerned Relatives."[72]Tim Stoen engaged in letter writing campaigns to the Secretary of State and the government of Guyana, and traveled to Washington to attempt to begin an investigation. [73] In January of 1978, Stoen wrote a "white paper" to Congress detailing the problems and requesting that Representatives write Forbes Burnham, and 91 Congressmen wrote such letters, including Congressman Leo Ryan[74][75]

Feeling pressure from the United States, on February 17, Jones submitted to an interview with San Francisco Examiner journalist Tim Reiterman. [76] Reiterman wrote a story the next day about Stoen's attempts to gain custody of his son in the San Francisco Examiner, which prompted the immediate threat of a lawsuit by the Temple.[77] The repercussions were devastating for the Temple's reputation, and made most former supporters even more suspicious of the Temple's claims that it was being subjected to a "rightist vendetta."[77]

One day later, on Sunday February 19, 1978, Harvey Milk wrote a letter of support for the Peoples Temple to President Jimmy Carter.[78] Milk wrote that Jones was known "as a man of the highest character".[78] Regarding defecting Temple members pressing for an investigation of the Peoples Temple, Milk wrote "they are attempting to damage Rev. Jones' reputation" with "apparent bold-faced lies".[78]

On April 11, 1978, the Concerned Relatives distributed a packet of documents, including letters and affidavits, that they titled an "Accusation of Human Rights Violations by Rev. James Warren Jones" to the Peoples Temple, members of the press and members of Congress.[79] In June of 1978, Peoples Temple defector Deborah Layton provided the group with a further affidavit detailing alleged crimes by the Peoples Temple and substandard living conditions in Jonestown.[60]

Stoen represented three members of the Concerned Relatives in lawsuits filed in May and June 1978 against Jim Jones and other Temple members seeking in excess of $56 million in damages.[80] The Temple, represented by Charles R. Garry, filed a suit against Tim Stoen on July 10, 1978 seeking $150 million in damages. [81]


Jonestown Digging in
During the summer of 1978, Jones hired JFK assassination conspiracy theorists Mark Lane and Donald Freed to help make the case of a "grand conspiracy" by intelligence agencies against the Peoples Temple.[82] Jones told Lane he wanted to "pull an Eldridge Cleaver", referring to a fugitive Black Panther who was able to return to the United States after repairing his reputation.[82] In September 1978, Lane spoke to the residents of Jonestown, providing support for Jones' theories and drawing parallels between Martin Luther King, Jr. and Jim Jones.[82] Lane then held press conferences stating that "none of the charges" against the Temple "are accurate or true" and that there was a "massive conspiracy" against the Temple by "intelligence organizations," naming the CIA, FBI, FCC and even the U.S. Post Office.[82] Though Lane represented himself as disinterested, Jones was actually paying him $6,000 per month to generate such theories.[83]


Jonestown Declining health
Jones' health significantly declined in Jonestown, and a doctor who examined Jones in 1978 told him that he might have a lung infection.[84] Jones was said to be abusing injectable Valium, Quaaludes, uppers and barbiturates.[85] His once sharp voice later sounded slurred, words ran together and Jones would not finish sentences even when reading.[85]

Journalist Tim Reiterman was surprised by the severe deterioration of Jones' health when Reiterman first saw Jones in Jonestown on November 17, 1978.[51] After covering Jones for 18 months for the San Francisco Examiner, Reiterman thought it was "shocking to see his glazed eyes and festering paranoia face to face, to realize that nearly a thousand lives, ours included, were in his hands." [51]


Jonestown Ryan delegation's initial investigation in Georgetown

Leo RyanOn November 1, 1978, Congressman Leo Ryan, who represented a district in Northern California, announced that he would visit Jonestown.[86] Ryan was friends with the father of Bob Houston, whose mutilated body was found near train tracks on October 5, 1976, three days after a taped telephone conversation with Houston's ex-wife in which leaving the Temple was discussed.[87] Over the following months Ryan's interest was further aroused by the complaints of the Concerned Relatives represented by Timothy Stoen and the allegations following the defection of Deborah Layton.[87]

On November 14, 1978, Ryan flew to Georgetown, Guyana (150 miles from Jonestown), along with a team of 18 people consisting of government officials, media representatives and some members of the Concerned Relatives.[88] The group included Ryan, his legal advisor Jackie Speier (now a Congresswoman), Neville Annibourne (representing Guyana's Ministry of Information) Richard Dwyer (Deputy Chief of Mission of the US Embassy to Guyana), Tim Reiterman (San Francisco Examiner reporter), Don Harris (NBC reporter), Greg Robinson (San Francisco Examiner photographer), Steve Sung (NBC sound man), Bob Flick (NBC producer), Charles Krause (Washington Post reporter), Ron Javers (San Francisco Chronicle reporter), Bob Brown (NBC camera man), and Concerned Relatives representatives Anthony Katsaris, Jim Cobb, Sherwin Harris, and Carolyn Houston Boyd.[89]

The Peoples Temple's lawyers, Mark Lane and Charles Garry, initially refused to allow Ryan's party access to Jonestown.[90]


Jonestown Ryan delegation visits Jonestown

Jonestown Aerial (photo:Jonestown Institute)By late morning on Friday, November 17, Lane and Garry informed Jones that Ryan would likely leave for Jonestown at 2:30 pm, regardless of Jones' schedule or willingness.[91] Ryan's party did so at roughly that time, accompanied by Lane and Garry, and came to Port Kaituma airstrip, 6 miles (10km) from Jonestown, some hours later.[92] Only Ryan and three others were initially accepted into Jonestown, but the rest of Ryan's group was allowed in after sunset.[93] It was later reported (and verified by audiotapes recovered by investigators) that Jones had run rehearsals in how to receive Ryan's delegation in order to convince them that everyone was happy and in good spirits.[94]

That night, the Ryan delegation attended a reception in the pavilion.[95] While the party received a friendly reception, Jones said he felt like a dying man and ranted about government conspiracies and martyrdom as he decried attacks by the press and his enemies.[51] Two Peoples Temple members, Vernon Gosney and Monica Bagby, made the first move for defection that night. In the pavilion, Gosney passed a note to Don Harris (mistaking him for Ryan), reading "Dear Congressman, Vernon Gosney and Monica Bagby. Please help us get out of Jonestown."[96]


Road to Jonestown (photo:Jonestown Institute)That night the Ryan delegation (Ryan, Speier, Dwyer, and Annibourne) stayed in Jonestown.[97] The entire press corps and members of Concerned Relatives were told that they had to find other accommodations, and so they went to Port Kaituma and stayed at a small café.[97]

In the early morning of November 18, eleven Temple members sensed danger enough to walk out of the colony toward train tracks in order to take a train to Matthew's Ridge, which is located in the opposite direction from the airstrip at Port Kaituma along those tracks.[98][99] Those defectors included members of the Evans family and the Wilson family (the family of Jonestown's head of security, Joe Wilson).[98][100][101][102] When reporters and Concerned Relatives arrived in Jonestown later that day, Jim Jones' wife Marceline gave them a tour of the settlement.[103]


Entrance to Jonestown (photo:Jonestown Institute)That afternoon, two families stepped forward and asked to be escorted out of Jonestown by the Ryan delegation.[104] They were the Parks and the Bogue families, along with Christopher O'Neal and Harold Cordell, who were partners of women in the two families.[104][105][98] When Jones' adopted son Johnny attempted to talk Jerry Parks out of leaving, Parks told him "No way, it's nothing but a communist prison camp."[106]

Jones gave the two families, along with Gosney and Bagby, permission to leave.[107] Under the Pavilion, Don Harris of NBC handed Jones the note written by Vernon Gosney while other reporters huddled around Jones.[108] Jones told those reporters that, like others who left the the community, the defectors would "lie" and destroy Jonestown.[108]

After a sudden violent rainstorm started, some emotional scenes developed between family members.[109] Al Simon, an American Indian member of the Peoples Temple, was taking two of his children to Ryan to send them back to the United States.[109] His wife, Bonnie, summoned on the loudspeakers by Jones' staff, loudly denounced her husband.[109] He pleaded in vain with her to return to the U.S., but she rejected his suggestion.[109]


Jonestown The Port Kaituma airstrip shootings
Port Kaituma airstrip shootings

The tractor and trailer driven by the Twin Otter shooters, as recorded by Bob Brown of NBC News. One shooter is visible in front of the vehicle, having just fired a shot.
Location Port Kaituma, Guyana
Date November 18, 1978
5:20 p.m. � 5:25 p.m. (UTC-4)
Attack type Mass murder
Weapon(s) Firearms
Deaths 5[110]
Injured 11[110]
Perpetrator(s) Larry Layton (Cessna attack)
Suspected perpetrator(s) Joe Wilson (Twin Otter attack)
Thomas Kice Sr. (Twin Otter attack)
Ronnie Dennis (Twin Otter attack)
Approximately 5-6 additional Peoples Temple members (Twin Otter attack)
Because of the defectors, a second aircraft was required for those departing Jonestown. While this group began to depart, Congressman Ryan's group planned to stay behind in Jonestown to process any additional defectors.[111]

Shortly before the delegation departed for the airstrip, Jones loyalist Larry Layton demanded to join the group.[111] Several Jonestown defectors voiced their suspicions about Layton's motives.[111]

Shortly after the group left by truck transport, Temple member Don Sly (nicknamed "Ujara") grabbed Ryan while wielding a knife.[112] While Congressman Ryan was unhurt after others wrestled Sly to the ground, Deputy Chief of Mission Dwyer strongly suggested that Ryan leave Jonestown while Dwyer filed a criminal complaint against Sly.[113] Ryan did so, promising to return later to address the dispute.[114]

The truck departing to the airstrip had stopped after hearing of the attack on Ryan.[115] Ryan then boarded the truck, traveled with the group to Port Kaituma airstrip and arrived there later that afternoon.[115]

The entourage planned to use two planes, a six-passenger Cessna and a slightly larger Twin Otter, to fly to Georgetown.[116] The planes were not ready for departure when the group arrived; the group had to wait at the airstrip until approximately 5:10 p.m.[114]

Larry Layton was a passenger on the Cessna, which was the first aircraft to set up for takeoff.[117] Just as the Cessna had taxied to the far end of the airstrip, Layton produced a gun and started shooting at the passengers.[118] He wounded Monica Bagby and Vernon Gosney, and tried to kill Dale Parks, who disarmed him.[118]


Joe WilsonAt this time, the larger Twin Otter was partially boarded with passengers.[119] Concurrent with the shootings on the Cessna, a tractor with a trailer attached driven by members of the Temple's Red Brigade security squad approached the Otter.[119] When the tractor neared within approximately 30 feet (9.1 m) of the Otter, the Red Brigade opened fire on the aircraft while at least two members circled the plane on foot.[114] There were perhaps nine shooters whose identities are not all certainly known, but most sources agree that Joe Wilson, Jones' head of security, Thomas Kice Sr., and Ronnie Dennis were among them.[120]

A few seconds of the shooting were captured on camera by NBC cameraman Bob Brown.[121] Congressman Ryan, Bob Brown, photographer Greg Robinson, NBC reporter Don Harris and Temple defector Patricia Parks were killed in the few minutes of shooting.[121] Jackie Speier, Steve Sung and Anthony Katsaris were among the nine injured in and around the Twin Otter.[121] After the shootings, the Cessna's pilot and the pilot and copilot of the Otter fled in the Cessna to Georgetown, leaving behind the gunfire-damaged Otter and the injured Ryan delegation members.[118]

The murder of Congressman Ryan was the first and only murder of a Congressman in the line of duty in the history of the United States.[122]


Jonestown Deaths in Jonestown

Jones, Garry and DwyerBefore leaving Jonestown for the airstrip, Congressman Ryan had told Temple attorney Charles Garry that he would issue a report that would describe Jonestown "in basically good terms."[123] Ryan stated that none of the sixty relatives Ryan had targeted for interviews wanted to leave, the 14 defectors constituted a very small portion of Jonestown's residents, that any sense of imprisonment the defectors had was likely because of peer pressure and a lack of physical transportation, and even if 200 of the 900+ wanted to leave "I'd still say you have a beautiful place here."[123] Similarly, Washington Post reporter Charles Krause stated that, on the way back to the airstrip, he was unconvinced that Jonestown was as bad as defectors had claimed because there were no signs of malnutrition or physical abuse, while many members appeared to enjoy Jonestown and only a small number of the over 900 residents elected to leave.[124]

Despite Garry's report, Jones told him "I have failed."[125] Garry reiterated that Ryan would be making a positive report, but Jones maintained that "All is lost."[125]

A 44-minute cassette tape (the "death tape"),[126] recorded at least part of a meeting Jones called under the pavilion in the early evening. Before the meeting, aides prepared a metal vat with Flavor Aid, poisoned with Valium, chloral hydrate, Penegram[clarify] and cyanide.[127]

When the assembly gathered, Jones told the gathering "one of the people on that plane is gonna shoot the pilot, I know that. I didn't plan it but I know it's going to happen. They're gonna shoot that pilot and down comes the plane into the jungle and we had better not have any of our children left when it's over, because they'll parachute in here on us…"[126] Parroting Jones' prior statements that hostile forces would convert captured children to Fascism, one temple member states: "The ones that they take captured, they're gonna just let them grow up and be dummies."[126]


Jim McElvane
Christine MillerOn the death tape, only one Temple member, Christine Miller, openly disagreed with the decision for Temple members to commit what they had long referred to as "revolutionary suicide".[126] Miller argued that the Temple should attempt an alternative airlift to Russia.[126] After several exchanges in which Jones argued that a Soviet exodus would not be possible, along with reactions by other temple members hostile to Miller, Miller backed down.[126] However, Miller may have ceased dissenting when Jones confirmed at one point that "the Congressman is dead" after members of his "Red Brigade" squad returned from the airstrip after shooting Ryan. Jim McElvane, a former therapist who had arrived in Jonestown only two days earlier, assisted Jones by arguing against Miller's resistance to suicide, citing possible reincarnation.[126]

After the airstrip shooters arrived back in Jonestown, Tim Carter, a Vietnam war veteran, recalled the shooters having the "thousand-yard stare" of weary soldiers.[128]

After Jones announced that "the congressman is dead" no dissent occurs on the death tape.[126] Directly after this, referring to his Red Brigade security squad that shot Ryan, Jones stated "What the Red Brigade doin' one bit that made any sense anyway" and "Red Brigade showed them justice."[126] In response to reactions of seeing the poison take effect on others, Jones commanded "Stop this hysterics. This is not the way for people who are Socialists or Communists to die. No way for us to die. We must die with some dignity." In addition to Jim McElvane, several other temple members gave speeches praising Jones and his decision for the community to commit suicide, even after Jones stopped appreciating this praise and begged for the process to go faster.[126]


Aftermath of the suicides. The vat containing the poison is visible in the foreground.According to escaped Temple member Odell Rhodes, first to take the poison were Ruletta Paul and her one-year-old infant.[129] A needle-less syringe was used to squirt poison into the infant's mouth and then Paul squirted another syringe into her own mouth.[129] Stanley Clayton also saw mothers with their babies first approach the table containing the poison.[130] Clayton said that Jones approached people to encourage them to drink the poison and that, after adults saw the poison begin to take effect, "they showed a reluctance to die."[130]


Aftermath - Jim Jones pavilion chair and signThe poison caused death within around five minutes.[131] After consuming the poison, according to Rhodes, people were then escorted away down a wooden walkway leading outside the Pavilion.[129] It is not clear if some initially thought the exercise was another "White Night" rehearsal. Rhodes reported being in close contact with dying children.[129]

Jones made reference to the cries and screams: "I don't care how many screams you hear, I don't care how many anguished cries, death is a million times preferable to ten more days of this life. If you knew what was ahead of you � if you knew what was ahead of you, you'd be glad to be stepping over tonight."[126] However, survivor Odell Rhodes stated that while the poison was squirted in some children's' mouths, there was no panic or emotional outburst and people looked like they were "in a trance".[132]

Jones was found dead in a deck chair with a gunshot wound to his head that Guyanese coroner Cyrill Mootoo stated was consistent with a self-inflicted gun wound.[133]

The events at Jonestown constituted the greatest single losses of American civilian life in a non-natural disaster until the incidents of September 11, 2001.[134]


Jonestown Survivors/eyewitnesses

Letter to Timofeyev from the Jonestown Institute.Three high ranking Temple member survivors claim they were given an assignment and thereby escaped death. Brothers Tim and Mike Carter, 30 years old and 20 years old respectively, and Mike Prokes, 31, were given luggage containing $550,000 US currency, $130,000 in Guyanese currency and an envelope, which they were told to deliver to Guyana's Soviet Embassy, in Georgetown.[135] The envelope contained two passports and three instructional letters, the first of which was to Feodor Timofeyev of the Embassy of the Soviet Union in Guyana, stating:

Dear Comrade Timofeyev,
The following is a letter of instructions regarding all of our assets that we want to leave to the Communist Party of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. Enclosed in this letter are letters which instruct the banks to send the cashiers checks to you. I am doing this on behalf of Peoples Temple because we, as communists, want our money to be of benefit for help to oppressed peoples all over the world, or in any way that your decision-making body sees fit.[136][135]

The letters included listed accounts with balances totaling in excess of $7.3 million to be transferred to the Communist Party of the Soviet Union [136][137][138] The Carters and Prokes soon ditched most of the money and were apprehended heading for the Temple boat (Cudjo) at Kaituma.[135] It is unknown how they were supposed to reach Georgetown, 150 miles (240 km) away, since the boat had been sent away by Temple leadership earlier that day.[135]

Just before start of the final meeting in the pavilion, lawyers Charles Garry and Mark Lane were told that the people were angry at them. The lawyers were escorted to a house used to accommodate visitors. According to the lawyers, they talked their way past armed guards and made it to the jungle, before eventually arriving in Port Kaituma.[139] While in the jungle near the settlement, they heard cheering, then gunshots. This observation concurs with the testimony of Clayton, who heard the same sounds as he was sneaking back into Jonestown to retrieve his passport.


Odell RhodesFour more people who were intended to be poisoned managed to survive.[135] Grover Davis, 79, who was hearing impaired, missed the announcement to assemble on the loudspeaker, lay down in a ditch and pretended to be dead.[140][141] Hyacinth Thrash, 76, slept through the suicide drills and awoke to find her sister and friends dead.[141][140] Odell Rhodes, 36, a Jonestown teacher and craftsman, volunteered to fetch a stethoscope and hid under a building.[129] Stanley Clayton, 25, a kitchenworker and cousin of Huey Newton, tricked security guards and ran into the jungle.[130]

The sheer scale of the event, as well as Jones' socialist leanings, led some to suggest CIA involvement, though the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence investigated the Jonestown mass suicide and announced that there was no evidence of CIA involvement at Jonestown.[142]


Jonestown Medical examinations
The only medical doctor to initially examine the scene at Jonestown was Guyanese Chief Medical Examiner Dr Leslie Mootoo. Mootoo visually examined over 200 bodies and later told a Guyanese coroner's jury that he saw needle marks on at least 70.[143] However, no determination was made as to whether those injections initiated the introduction of poison or whether they were so-called "relief" injections to quicken death and reduce suffering from convulsions from those who had previously taken poison orally. Mootoo and American pathologist Dr. Lynn Crook determined that cyanide was present in some of the bodies, while analysis of the contents of the vat revealed tranquilizers and two poisons: potassium cyanide and potassium chloride.[143]

Plastic cups, Flavor-Aid packets and syringes, some with needles and some without, littered the area where the bodies were found.[144] Mootoo concluded that the gunshot wound to Annie Moore could not have been self-inflicted, though Moore had also ingested a lethal dose of cyanide.[144]

Guyanese authorities waived their requirement for autopsies in the case of unnatural death.[143] Doctors in the United States performed autopsies on only seven bodies, including those of Jim Jones, Dr. Lawrence Schact, Annie Moore and Carolyn Layton.[143] Annie Moore and Carolyn Layton were selected among those autopsied, in part, because of the urging of the Moore family, including the two victims' sister, Rebecca Moore, who was not a Temple member herself.[143]


Jonestown Notes from non-surviving residents

Will of Marceline Jones from the Jonestown Institute.Found near Marceline Jones' body was a typewritten note, dated November 18, 1978, signed by Marceline Jones and witnessed by Annie Moore and Maria Katsaris, stating:

I, Marceline Jones, leave all bank accounts in my name to the Communist Party of the USSR. The bank accounts are located in the Bank of Nova Scotia, Nassau, Bahamas. Please be sure that these assets do get to the USSR. I especially request that none of these are allowed to get into the hands of my adopted daughter, Suzanne Jones Cartmell. For anyone who finds this letter, please honor this request as it is most important to myself and my husband James W. Jones.[145]

Annie Moore left a note, which in part stated: "I am at a point right now so embittered against the world that I don't know why I am writing this. Someone who finds it will believe I am crazy or believe in the barbed wire that does NOT exist in Jonestown."[146] The last line ("We died because you would not let us live in peace.") is written in different color ink. No other specific reference is made to the events of the day. Moore also wrote, "JONESTOWN ― the most peaceful, loving community that ever existed."[146] In addition she stated,"JIM JONES ― the one who made this paradise possible ― much to the contrary of the lies stated about Jim Jones being a power-hungry sadistic, mean person who thought he was God ― of all things."[146] And "His hatred of racism, sexism, elitism, and mainly classism, is what prompted him to make a new world for the people ― a paradise in the jungle. The children loved it. So did everyone else."[146]


Carolyn Layton (left) and Annie Moore (middle)Another note, found 25 years later, was buried among reams of unrelated paperwork. The document, titled "Last Words", unsigned, was attributed most likely to Richard Tropp.[147] The note contained references to the events of the last day:


Maria KatsarisWe did not want it this way. All was going well as Ryan completed [his] first day here. Then a man tried to attack him, unsuccessfully at some time, several set out into jungle wanting to overtake Ryan, aide, and others who left with him. They did, and several killed. When we heard this, we had no choice. We would be taken. We have to go as one, we want to live as Peoples Temple, or end it. We have chosen. It is finished.[147]

A note likely written by Tish Leroy stated:

Dad I see no way out - I agree with your decision - I fear only that without you the world may not make it to communism - Tish For my part - I am more than tired of this wretched, merciless planet & the hell it holds for the masses of so many beautiful people - thank you for the only life I've known.[148]

Found near Maria Katsaris' body was a handwritten note signed by Katsaris, dated November 18, 1978, witnessed by Jim McElvane and Marilee Bogue, stating, "I Maria Katsaris leave all of the money in the Banco Union de Venezuela in Caracas to the Communist Party Soviet Union."[149]

Found near Carolyn Layton's body was a handwritten note signed by Carolyn Layton, witnessed by Maria Katsaris and Annie Moore, dated November 18, 1978, stating, "This is my last will and testament. I hereby leave all assets in any bank account to which I am a signatory to the Communist Party of the U.S.S.R."[150]


Jonestown Deaths in Georgetown

Sharon, Martin and Christa Amos
Liane HarrisIn the early evening of November 18, at the Temple's headquarters in Georgetown, Temple member Sharon Amos received a radio communication from Jonestown instructing the members at the headquarters to take revenge on the Temple's enemies and then commit revolutionary suicide.[151]Later, after police arrived at the Temple headquarters, Sharon Amos escorted her children, Liane (21), Christa (11) and Martin (10), into a bathroom.[152] Wielding a kitchen knife, Sharon first killed Christa and then Martin.[152] Then Liane assisted Sharon to kill herself with the knife, followed by Liane killing herself with the knife.[152]

Jonestown Aftermath
Further information: Peoples Temple in San Francisco, Jim Jones, and Peoples Temple
At the airstrip, journalist Tim Reiterman photographed the aftermath of the violence.[153] Dwyer assumed leadership at the scene and, at his recommendation, Layton was arrested by Guyanese state police.[154] Dwyer was grazed by one bullet in his buttock during the airstrip shootings.[154] It took several hours before the ten wounded and others in their party gathered themselves together.[154] Most of them spent the night in a café.[154] The more seriously wounded slept in a small tent on the airfield.[154] A Guyanese government plane arrived the following morning to evacuate the wounded.[153] Five teenaged members of the Parks and Bogue families, with one boyfriend, followed the instructions of defector Gerald Parks to hide in the adjacent jungle until help arrived and their safety was assured.[155] Thereafter those members were lost for three days in the jungle and nearly died. Guyanese soldiers eventually found them.

After escaping Jonestown, Odell Rhodes arrived in Port Kaituma on the night of November 18, 1978.[129] That night Stanley Clayton stayed with a local Guyanese family and travelled to Port Kaituma the next morning.[130] The Carter brothers and Michael Prokes were put into protective custody in Port Kaituma.[135] They were later released in Georgetown. Rhodes, Clayton and the two lawyers (Garry and Lane) were also brought to Georgetown. Michael Prokes committed suicide in March 1979, four months after the Jonestown incident.[156]

Larry Layton, who had fired a gun at several people aboard the Cessna, was originally found not guilty of attempted murder in a Guyanese court, employing the defense that he was "brainwashed".[157] Layton could not be tried in the United States for the attempted murders of Vern Gosney, Monica Bagby, the Cessna pilot and Dale Parks on Guyanese soil and was, instead, tried under a federal statute against assassinating members of Congress and internationally protected people (Ryan and Dwyer).[157] He was convicted for conspiracy and aiding and abetting the murder of Congressman Leo Ryan and attempted murder of Richard Dwyer.[157] Paroled in 2002, he is the only person ever to have been held criminally responsible for the events at Jonestown.[158]


Newsweek CoverThe event was one of the most heavily covered by the media and adorned newspaper and magazine covers for months after its occurrence. In February 1979, 98% of Americans polled said that they had heard of the tragedy.[159] George Gallup stated that "few events, in fact, in the entire history of the Gallup Poll have been known to such a high percentage of the U.S. public."[159]

After the tragedy, both the House Committee on Foreign Affairs and the State Department itself criticized the State Department's handling of the Temple.[160] Political opposition to Guyanese Prime Minister Burnham seized the opportunity to embarrass Burnham by establishing an inquest which concluded that Burnham was responsible for the deaths at Jonestown. [160]


Jonestown Former site
Now deserted, the compound at Jonestown was first tended by the Guyanese government following the deaths.[161] The government then allowed its re-occupation by Hmong refugees from Laos for a few years in the early 1980s.[161] The buildings and grounds were looted by local Guyanese people, but were not taken over because of their association with the mass killing. The buildings were mostly destroyed by a fire in the mid-1980s, after which the ruins were left to decay and be reclaimed by the jungle.

During a visit in 1998 to film a segment for the ABC news show 20/20, Jim Jones, Jr. discovered the rusting remains of an oil drum near the former entrance to the Pavilion.[162] Jones recognized the drum, originally adapted for use during meal times, as the drum used for drink mixtures used during the "white night" exercises, and which he believed was used to hold the poison and Flavor-Aid liquid used on November 18, 1978.[162]

There is now little left save an old oil tank turned on its side, and very little indication at all of the former settlement, other than aging fruit trees that were part of the Jonestown orchard, the oil tank, and an abandoned truck that was presumably owned by Peoples Temple.[163] The former pilot then led the host of the show to where the Pavilion once was and they found daisies growing where the bodies had once lain. While they were out in the jungle earlier in the show they had found a desk drawer while searching around.[164]

Westmont College

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
History
The school's mission is to "provide a high quality undergraduate liberal arts program in a residential campus community that assists college men and women toward a balance of rigorous intellectual competence, healthy personal development, and strong Christian commitments." Ruth Kerr, owner of the Kerr Mason Jar Company, established the school as the Bible Missionary Institute (1937), later renamed the Western Bible College (1939). During these early years, Ruth and the other founders decided that a liberal arts curriculum was the best direction for the school. In 1940 Dr. Wallace Emerson, the first president, renamed the school Westmont College, envisioning a Christian liberal arts college that would take its place among the best in the nation.

By 1944, Westmont College had outgrown its facilities in downtown Los Angeles. After a failed attempt to move the campus to Altadena in early 1945 the desperate search for a new campus led Mrs. Kerr and the trustees to the former Dwight Murphy estate in Montecito with its 125 acres (0.51 km2). Westmont purchased this property and moved to the Santa Barbara area in the Fall of 1945.

Set in the foothills of the Santa Ynez Mountains, Westmont's wooded and scenic acres provide an environment for a residential college. The campus includes buildings and land from two former estates and the historic Deane School for Boys. The grounds still feature the pathways, stone bridges, and garden atmosphere typical of Montecito, a suburb of Santa Barbara.

While Westmont has sought to preserve and use the original structures, it has also built new facilities, including the J. Misenhimer Library, the restored Westmont Art Center, the A. Nelson Science Building, the Murchison Gymnasium Complex, and the Ruth Kerr Memorial Student Center. They are currently anticipating the addition of the Winter Hall for Science and Mathematics, and the Adams Center for the Visual Arts as the completion of the master plan.

Westmont is ranked #111 in the US News & World Report "America's Best Colleges 2009" list of liberal arts colleges.


U.S. University Rankings


USNWR Liberal Arts College[1] 111
[1]


Westmont College Academics
Westmont offers 26 majors. The student/faculty ratio is 13 to 1; percentage of faculty with doctorates is 79%[2] those who are without terminal degrees are coaches who teach PE courses; average class size is 18.5[3]. The students come from 25 states, 11 countries, and 33 Christian denominations. Graduation rate in 4 years is 87%.

The majors are not impacted, therefore students are able to change majors easily. Students aren't required to declare their major until the end of their sophomore year so as to graduate on time.

The weekly student newspaper is the Horizon, which can also be found online at http://horizon.westmont.edu [4].

Campus
Westmont College is located a few miles off of U.S. 101 just to the east of Santa Barbara. The city of Santa Barbara is on the central Californian coast and is 100 miles north of Los Angeles and 250 miles south of San Francisco.

The campus itself resides in the hills of Montecito and features 110 acres (0.45 km2) of hills, gardens, and trees. A small creek runs down the campus often dry during summer and autumn and typically full during the rainy spring months and has even flooded campus buildings in El Nino years.

The campus has five on-campus dorms. The two freshman dorms are Page and Clark which are located at the upper corners of campus. Armington is at the lowest point on campus, and is usually the sophomore dorm. Emerson (formerly known as New Dorm and Everest), is at the top of campus and has ocean views in many of its rooms. Van Kampen, the most popular dorm for upper-classmen, is located in the center of the campus and was recently renovated and modernized in the summer of 2006. This renovation included rooms with new windows and cabinets. The bathrooms were competently updated and the kitchens added marble counter tops and large community refrigerators. A 60-inch plasma screen and a regulation size shuffleboard table were added to the Van Kampen lounge. Another option for upper classmen students is the Ocean View Apartments, a college owned apartment building on the east side of Santa Barbara.


Westmont College Off-campus programs
Westmont also offers a significant number of off-campus programs. These programs are run with a faculty member and include Europe semester, England Semester, Westmont in Mexico and the San Francisco Urban program. Westmont is also a member of the Christian College Consortium and there exists the opportunity to study at other Christian colleges including Seattle Pacific, Gordon and Houghton. Additionally, many students may participate in other qualifying programs, including semesters in New Zealand, Belize, Washington D.C., Chile, Italy, France and Lithuania. Students benefit from these programs which provide transferable credit while at the same time exposing them to a different area. Students may decide to do an internship while they are off campus, and many choose Washington DC or the San Francisco Urban program for this purpose. Some students may also go abroad to study a language or another culture as well. Another popular off campus program is in Italy, where students go to study art. Clearly, off campus programs are an important part of the Westmont experience with over 60% percent of students participating in a program during their time studying at Westmont.


Westmont College Spring Sing
Westmont hosts an annual event entitled Spring Sing. This event is a competition between the dorms with eight minute musical comedy skits. The dorms are further divided by gender into male and female houses (with the exception of the Emerson dorm).

The skits incorporate an average of four or five clips of popular songs with altered original lyrics. The lyrics are usually changed to reflect a humorous progression of the skit's main story.

Each Spring Sing house is lead by one or two directors. It is the directors' responsibility to lead their respective house in creating their Spring Sing skit. A director's job typically consists of helping coordinate the skit's script, lyrics, props, side-mics (to bring clarity to the lyrics), dance choreography, and any other snag that the production may encounter. The directors are typically seen guiding their house during the skit dressed in amusing costumes.

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