Page 14-Friday, May 4, 1979-The Michigan Daily State Dept. WASHINGTON (AP) - The State Department was guilty of extreme inef- ficiency and serious mistakes in judgment in its reaction to events leading up to the mass murder-suicide at the Peoples Temple commune in Guyana, a department report said yesterday. But the report said it would be "pure speculation" to say whether improved performance by the department might have prevented the deaths of Rep. Leo Ryan, (D-Calif.), and fpur companions or those of more than 900 followers of the Rev. Jim Jones. The report noted U.S. Embassy of- ficials in Guyana "were severely cir- cumscribed by their basic lack of police or investigative authority." The guyanese government did not try to keep a close watch on the jungle en- campment, the report said. A CONGRESSIONAL inquiry of the Jonestown tragedy also is under way. The State Department report, written by retired department officials John | CHARLES CHAPLIN I.*ftBCE inefficient during Guyana incideni Crimmins and Stanley Carpenter, por- evaluations of paranoia of Jones orf the warded to Washington. McCoy men- trays a U.S. Embassy that feared potential for tragedy. tioned her warning to officials in the harassment by the Peoples Temple, "CONCERN ABOUT the department's Latin-American bureau, and of a Washington bureaucracy that FOIA ... reduced embassy reporting but he dismissed it as "nonsense." buried warnings it received about a and led to an emphasis on the purely Five months later, when Ryan told possible tragedy. factual at the expense of the the department he wanted to go to One instance cited as a grave error speculative and analytical," the report Jonestown to investigate complaints was the handling of a June 1978 ex- said. from parents of temple members, he change of telegrams between the More errors occurred in the handling was not warned. The department, the Georgetown embassy and Washington. of the warning from Jonestown defector report said, did not consider Jones or U.S. AMBASSADOR John Burke Deborah Layton Blakey that Jones was his followers dangerous to outsiders. recommended in his cable that he be rehearsing his followers in mass THe report recommended that the authorized to ask the Guyana gover- suicide. department review "the necessity and nment to take a more active role in Blakey escaped from the commune practicality of seeking amendment of policing the commune. May 12, 1978, and went to the embassy the statutes" such as the FOIA, which it But, the report said, the embassy for help. She gave a signed statement to says hindered the department, and it staff was fearful the Peoples Temple consul Richard McCoy accusing Jones urged improvements in the consular would obtain a copy of the cable of running "a concentration camp" and corps. through the Freedom of Information she told him about the suicide rehear- Department spokesman Hodding Act, which gives citizens the right to see sals. Carter said no disciplinary action had government documents. The temple HER WARNINGS had little or no im- been taken against any individual in- was adept as seizing on any shred of pact, the report said. The statement she volved in handling of the Jonestown evidence to claim harassment and con- signed at the embassy was never for- case. spiracy, the report said. THerefore, the cable contained none of the embassy staff's subjectiv 1952 eduction department l 1952 edu~iORdepatmen Spit LIMvE LIGH T CHAPLIN, BUSTER KEATON, CLAIRE BLOOM, & NIGEL BRUCE star in the story of an aging music-hall comedian, whose life might appear to be a failure-but whose abundant courage give strength to a young female protegee who he can only love paternally. Chaplin's pathos is at his height in his last master- piece-laced with some of his most freshly inventive comedy. Music and ballet composed by Chaplin. SAT: Bogart in THE MALTESE FALCOM SUN: Jacques Ttis MR. HULOT'S HOLIDAY CINEMA GUILD 730&10:00 OLDARCH150 MARTIN SCORCESE 1973 MEAN STREETS Scorcese's first critically acclaimed film, set in New York's Little Italy, a world of hyperactivity and violence, populated by loan sharks, brawlers and hooli- gans competing for their own brand of honor. HARVEY KEITEL stars as the troubled young heir to a local Mafia family. ROBERT DE NIRO gives a brilliant performance as the hot-headed Johnny Boy. (112 min.) SAT-Robert Altmans A WEDDING SUN-TruffautGs JULES & JIM TONITE AT ANGELL HALL, AUD. A 7:30 & 9:30 $1.50 (Continuedfrom Page3) vantageous for higher education overall. He said he felt its effects will depend on some of the unsettled details of the similar legislation prior to the current bill. "There may be danger in a separate department because there is less interest in higher education," he said. Supporters argue a separate depar- tment would save up to $100 million a year, increase efficiency and accoun- tability, and streamline the gover- nment's management of educational activities. Jim Crutchfield, an aide to U.S. Sen. Carl Levin (D-Mich.), said opponents feel the separate department is giving government a larger role than the community. He said most educational programs would function out of the Department of Education but some, such as Native American education programs, will stay in the current bureaucracy. Frank Hartman, education con- sultant with the state Department of Education, said, "I've actively suppor- ted the bill for the Department of Education since it was introduced by Senator (Abraham) Ribicoff (D- Conn.). I think education is being ex- pressed as a triumvirate. We need ac- cess to the White House and you get there through the Cabinet." McLaughlin loud but soulful, Coryell fine (Continued from Page 13) cluded, could not. His tone was rich, his solos kept the listener absorbed and his return to the tune's main theme con- tinually delighted the audience. This is a notable achievement considering the tune itself has been widely overplayed. Coryell's singing, although not out- standing, was slow and soulful. He began his last number singing, then built to a crescendo during the guitar improvisation and, finally effectively slowed back down to finish the song. Coryell's playing in general was ex- citing. He did sacrifice some technical skill, missing a few notes in order to maintain his level of vibrancy. But Coryell seemed to be having fun with the audience and was as en- thusiastically received as was McLaughlin. Both musicians seemed to be putting a great deal of feeling and ef- fort into their work. The Ann Arbor Film Cooperstive presents at ML 3 $1.50 FRIDAY. MAY 4 BANANAS (Woody Allen, 1971) 7 & 10:30-MLB 3 This time Woody is Fielding Melishl an inept tester of bizarre gadgets. After losing Louise Lasser, a strike oriented New York radical with an irresistable overbite, Woody heads for South America, revolution, and a fake Fidel Castro beard only to earn the enmity of the C.l.A.-F.B.I. Can this schlep survive? "An indecent funny comedy."-V. Canby. With Howard "the man you love to hate" Cosell. CASINO ROYALE (John Huston, etal., 1967) 8:30 ONLY-MLB3 A shimmering combination of slapstick, black comedy, corny jokes, zingy one-liners, triple entenders, gorgeous women, parody, spoof, fantastic sets, costumes, and gimmicks, underlined by the famous score by BURT BACHA- RACH. With WOODY ALLEN, PETER SELLERS, URSULA ANDRESS, ORSON WELLS, DEBORAH KERR, PETER OTOOLE, and more. TOMORROW: MarIon Brando in A STREETCAR NAMED DESIRE and ON THE WATERFRONT Sunday May 6, 2:30pm730pm Pbwer Center Tickets: $1.50 Children, $3.50 Adults. Jacobson's Tix/ Info, Murphy's Landing (Briarwood), Sylvia Studio of Dance (525 E. Liberty), Willoughby's LittleBoot Shops (Washtenaw Ave. and Stadium Blvd.) Box Office Prior to Performance