len toi ^urs 5 around Chechen ca:# 31 back off its ground assaiisr:| ad out On Wednesday, Russia J nd west, tightening their lioid",I AT A&M UNIVERSITY College Station, Texas Volume 106 * Issue 59*16 Pages MIIIMlINNRIIIMMIMMiMIIIIIMIIIMMIMN )ni Ime Russian-occuit Chechnya BONHRE TRAGEDY Stack falls killing at least 4, students still trapped 1994-96 Chechen s claim thousands :ul beaten at such no from other qui toil of Churches i Orthodox Patriarcl ispmportionateand iployed by the Rut contributing to ost seriousness.' anyers fork iborers thm uilk outonti BONN, Germany ivvyers for Nazi-era irers were threatet n of talks on a coi tt lenient yesterd any raised its offer, orneys said. There were hi Id boost the $37 ered with someoftltfi gest companies, Ed' e of 12 lawyers iple forced to workl my (.luring World V A settlement figurej .3 billion was pr< an that would not sai neys' denimds, FsgjM vters, but he dd not e(V "ThemajornyoithelA ready to walk out ks," he said This sixth round oft, dishing a fund to pay fi • victims has stalled o' ch money survivoi A German envoy tight there was BY BATTALION STAFF t feast four students were d early today when the fire stack-collapsed into a gerous heap of heavy wire logs. J1 Mbout 2:20 a.m., a crane lift- fla log hit the stack too hard, „ ,.,, JRarently cracking the center- >day talks, whichbegijff^ k asej witnesses said, .would result m a settl^gg^j^ pyj suddenly, trapping 1 am certainly notp : -|k ers on an d near the stack, istic, Germangoven:-*] | iear d a snap, centerpole lator Otto Lambsdoii a( ^p e d an d all of stack came 11 know what will coi.M n f as t e r than anyone could end, how wecan ji^” /^deen Dryden, a other we can procee pL omore g enera y studies anibsdortt,speakingijjUj. w ] 10 was working at the ■man Radio, called on p4] re f res hment stand, compromise. Bm nex t thing I knew, peo- yers said they woii||^ ere p 0 ing crazy, and tnere ir demands for reh re bodies on the ground.” n higher. Police confirmed that four Vleanwhile, German. J( jents were dead and at I the government iihsi four were trapped under i over who shouldo% fallen logs, ney. A College Station Medical German companiesMer spokesperson said 12 compensation fundi|(|ents were hospitalized, under the piressureoi-ree of which were in critical i lawsuits in the Unitt® ition. Hie companies wants-Officials reported that Corps lent to protect themis Cadets Company K-2 was e lawsuits in tteirking on the collapsed side light on behalf of ikBonfire. e and forced labored Other Corps units and resi- fut as the negotiaiknce halls on the stack site gged on, lawyerssifife the FHK Complex, ht be better just to|| ?s in court. •agan yesterday bn ay’s settlement pro] terous,” even after nent said Mondayi 1 ! ? its part of the offer' to $1.6 billion. ’he companies billion but saidthi e trouble raising Hint. awyers unveiled an t study Mondays| nan industry ma’ -day equivalent ) billion using Na forced labor. -ambsdorff disn y, saying it was": doesn’t get us an; he fund, so farind 1 nan firms, aims to about 235,000 slave] leople whom led to work to ration campsbutsl Iso eligible for coi ' Id be the hundred: Is of forced labored Jews from Eastern igh those numbers ute. rorn 1.5 million )le ultimately 'ayment. Moses Hall, Aston Hall, Com pany D-2, Company C-2, Company K-2, Squadron 16 and Squadron 17. Bonfire officials said at least 24 workers were on the stack when it collapsed. Hillary Jones, a University Police Department (UPD) se curity officer, said the UPD critical-incident response team, urban search-and-rescue teams and communty fire de partments and emergency medical-response teams re sponded to the collapse. She said an off-duty officer witnessed the collapsed. Michael Guerra, hall council president for the FHK Com plex, was escorting a worker from the site to her residence hall when the stack fell. “I was in complete disbelief,” Guerra said. “I nad just seen it standing; then it was down. It’s something that should never have happened. It’s something that you never expect.” Guerra said more than 30 people from the FHK Complex were at the site, and at least two were unaccounted for more than three hours after the fall. About 4 a.m., redpots called for assistance to trans port logs and rescue trapped workers. Guerra said precau tions taken by Bonfire orga nizers had saved lives. “By the time I was able to get back to the site, the rescue efforts were being coordinat ed,” he said. “One good thing about Bonfire is there is a line of command that went into ac tion tonight. The situation was handled as best as it could be under the circumstances.” No one officially comment ed on the plans for this years’ and future Bonfires. Clockwise from top to bottom: Bonfire collapsed around 2:20 a.m.; (top rightt) Students were trapped beneath the fall en stacks; (immediate right, immediate below) Students gather to pray; (bottom right) Students raise thier pots vol unteering to help rescue oth ers from the stack; (bottom left) Emergency personeel help those that were injured by the fallen stack. Students bind together Several thousand A&M stu dents gathered Thursday morning to find Bonfire stack collapsed onto itself. Questions like ‘Why’ and “How’ largely went unanswered as thousands of students pulled themselves out of bed and streamed onto the Polo Fields. Most students were forced merely to observe and wait impa tiently outside police lines. Shouts of frustration and con fusion, as well as anger and sad ness, moved through the assem bled student body, but the most common expression was one of blank disbelief. Most of the students who stood in the cold, also stood in the dark with only rumors and second hand stories. A number of students talked hurriedly on their cell phones, some calling to check on friends’ whereabouts, others to tell their parents, who soon would be re ceiving news reports back home. Many of those who worked on this year’s Bonfire came out dressed in work clothes and pots. These students moved anx iously from one area to the next, looking for an opportunity to help. Others sat silently staring at the pile of logs that hours ago was Bonfire stack. Students were seen sobbing see React on Page 2.