The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, February 24, 2003, Image 5

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    AGGIELIFE
THE BATTALION
te Sing 365. Browse
letter of artists’ names,or
i engine. Search by artist,
' the best archives for song
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NATION
THE BATTALION
Monday, February 24, 2003
with 8,
? 3 each
KRT CAMPUS
i Jones took home seven
Is at Sunday night’s Grammys,
mg for the mournful tune.
dia.Arie, who wasnominat-
r seven Grammys last year
>st them all. finally got her
wo, winning for best vttto
uitive perfomia/tce fa.,
le Things” and best Rki
n for “Voyage to India.”
mong the other winners:tlie
ously unheralded Funk
icrs. The groundbreaking
: band for Motown
rds, the focus of the recent
nentary “Standing in the
aws of Motown,” won two
ies.
ime other veteran artists
I to bulging trophy cases:
man B.B. King won two,
! in his career, while
ly Cash won his 11th and
Bennett his I Oth —while
egend Solomon Burke wot
st.
Ve got a Grammy, baby!’
: said as he hoisted his
my.
e disc “Vaughn Williams:
. Symphony” garnered
awards, including best
cal album.
e show opened with Dustit
ran — one in a revolving
of New York-based hosts
reducing a reunion per-
nce by lifetime achieve-
award winners Simon and
akel. The pair, who sang
Sound of Silence,” have
I a tumultuous relationship:
as their first performance
er in a decade.
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95
Families of dozens who died
in nightclub fire visit scene
By Matt Apuzzo
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
WEST WARWICK, R.I. —
For days, they’ve lived with the
video images of their relatives
jammed in the doorway of a
burning nightclub, many
screaming in terror as they
struggled in vain to break free.
On Sunday, for the first time,
the parents, siblings and chil
dren of the dozens of victims
who couldn’t escape were
allowed to walk up to the
charred rubble of The Station
nightclub to pray and say goodbye.
Their visit came as the death
toll from the tragedy was raised
to 97, after the governor
announced that yet another body
had been pulled from amid
the debris.
They stepped off buses into
the rain outside the club, where
firefighters had left dozens of
roses for them to hold or place at
a makeshift memorial, already
piled high with cards and flowers.
At least one person was over
come and taken to an ambulance.
“These families are going
through such a tragedy, such an
emotional odyssey right now,
and their hearts are broken, and
they still don’t know in many
cases whether their loved one
has been positively ID’d,” said
Gov. Don Carcieri, who met
with the families several times
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KRT CAMPUS
Ann Ellis Hickey, left, and her husband Raymond Hickey of West Warwick display a photo, of missing friend
Bonnie Hamelin, at the scene of The Station nightclub fire in West Warwick, Rhode Island.
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©
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Warwick
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SOURCES: Associated Press; ESRt
in the days after a rock band’s
pyrotechnics turned The Station
into a raging inferno.
On Sunday, he ordered a no-
fly zone within 5 miles of the
site to give the families privacy
to mourn.
“The agony they’ve been
going through for the last 48
hours almost has turned into
what you’d expect, the kinds of
questions: 'Why did this hap
pen? Did it have to happen?
What caused it to happen? Did
some individuals cause it to hap
pen?”’ Carcieri said. “We’re
asking all the same questions.”
The band was just getting
into its first song Thursday night
when sparks from the pyrotech
nics ignited foam tiles in the
ceiling and quickly spread
flames over the crowd of more
than 300. Fire officials said the
entire building was engulfed in
three minutes.
Little remains of the one-
story, wooden nightclub today
but ashes.
Against one partial wall lean
bouquets of flowers, stuffed ani
mals and American flags that
police had gathered from
mourners, who had been kept
behind a chain-link fence sever
al yards from the site. Amid the
growing makeshift memorial are
high school pictures, poems,
even an unopened can of Budweiser.
James Morris, 36, of
Warwick, stood outside the
fence where a steady stream of
mourners stopped Sunday to
pay their respects. He said he
was supposed to attend the con
cert Thursday, but didn’t feel
like going out that night. Six of
his friends went without him
and haven’t been heard
from since.
“It’s unbelievable,” he said,
hugging his two sons. “It’s just
awful. They were all young guys
in their 20s, early 30s.”
A memorial service was
planned Sunday night, described
as “prayer unplugged,” and
mourners were encouraged to
bring acoustic guitars to honor
the victims.
Forty-two of the 97 people
killed in the blaze had been
identified by Sunday afternoon,
Carcieri said. He said 80 sur
vivors remained hospitalized,
about two dozen of them in crit
ical condition.
Three days after the fire,
questions remained about
whether the heavy metal group
Great White had permission to
set off the fireworks — and
whether anyone should face
charges in the deadly blaze.
The club did not have a per
mit for the special effects. While
the leader and an attorney for
the band — which returned to
Los Angeles without guitarist
Ty Longley, missing since the
blaze —: have said the group got
permission from the club before
setting off the special effects,
the club’s owners insist they
never approved pyrotechnics use.
“It was a total shock to me to
see the pyrotechnics going off
when Great White took the
stage,” said Jeffrey Derderian, a
Providence television reporter
who had owned the club with
his brother since 2000.
Derderian spoke publicly
Saturday, breaking down in tears
and struggling to regain his
composure as he talked about
the victims.
“This tragedy has claimed
the lives of our friends,” he said,
“people who are husbands,
wives, mothers, fathers, sons
and daughters. We will some
how live with this grief, like so
many other people, for the rest
of our lives.”
Derderian was at the club the
night of the fire and said he tried
to help as many people as he
could get out alive.
“It is very difficult to express
what I experienced in the club
that night,” he said. “Please
know I tried as hard as I could,”
he said, choking up and bowing
his head. “Many people didn’t
make it out and that is a horror
our family will live with.”
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Transplant death leaves
questions unanswered
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By Laura Meckler
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
WASHINGTON — When a heart and matching lungs were
donated in Boston two weeks ago, a computer generated a list of
patients medically compatible and awaiting transplants.
But the recipient of those organs — 17-year-old Jesica Santillan
— failed to make the list because, as tragically evident later, her
blood type did not match.
Her family came to the United States from Mexico so she could
get a transplant, and she had waited for three years when the organs
from Boston became available on Feb. 6.
They came from someone with blood type A. Jesica had type O.
Her body rejected the organs, she became critically ill and, despite
receiving a second set of organs Thursday, died Saturday.
Officials at Duke University Medical Center in North Carolina
have said they failed to ask about the blood type and have taken
responsibility for the error.
But why were the first set of organs even offered by transplant
coordinators?
Experts in the organ matching system say a mistake like this
might occur if a transplant coordinator is having trouble finding a
patient who will take the organs.
Despite the acute shortage, some donated organs are damaged, so
doctors are reluctant to take them. If they come from a child, as may
have been the case here, the organs might be too small for most peo
ple on the waiting list.
If a transplant coordinator is having trouble finding a match from
the official list of waiting patients, the coordinator might start con
tacting doctors to see if they have a patient who can use the organs.
“You may call some major (transplant) centers and say, T don’t
want these organs to go to waste. Do you have anybody?’” said
Howard Nathan, executive director of the Gift of Life Donor
Program in Philadelphia. “The most important thing is to give the
organ to a needy patient.”
It is not clear what happened in Jesica’s case, nor are details
known about the donor.
Could someone on the list have benefited from the organs? Were
they offered to everyone on the list before Jesica got them?
Whatever the rationale, the informal matching used in this instance
Worries some.
“The way we engender trust is by having a system that’s account
able,” said Dr. John Holman, a kidney transplant surgeon at the
University of Utah. He is chairman of the organ procurement com-
tnittee for the United Network of Organ Sharing.
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/fyou need someone to tzlk to...Mentors $re there to listen.
Mentors in the College of Agriculture
Dean's Office
Ms. Cady Auckerman
Ms. Shannon Murphy
Dr. Joe Townsend
Agricultural Economics
Dr. Curtis Lard
Dr. Kerry Litzenberg
Ms. Pam Vernon
Ms. Kathy Williams
Agricultural Education
Dr. Barry Boyd
Dr. Gary Briers
Ms. Summer Felton
Dr. Julie Harlin
Mr. Joe Karasek
Dr. Christine Townsend
Agricultural Engineering
Dr. Cady Engler
Dr. Stephen Searcy
Animal Science
Dr. T. Warren F.vans
Academic Programs Office
Ms. MaryAnn Raatz
Dean's Office
Dr. Glen Williams
Aerospace Engineering
Dr. Lei and Carlson
Ms. Sandy Ray
Biomedical Engineering
Dr. Fidel Fernandez
Civil Engineering
Dr. Ray James
Mr. Mike Linger
Dr. David Forrest
Dr. Howard Hesby
Dr. Jimmy Keeton
Dr. Shawn Ramsey
Dr. Chris Skaggs
Dr. Jodi Sterle
Dr. Martha Vogelsang
Dr. Thomas Welsh
Biochemistry and
Biophysics
Dr. John Ellison
Dr. Linda Guarino
Dr. J. Marytn Gunn
Dr. Gary Kunkel
Ms. Chara Ragland
Ms. Eileen Stephens
Mrs. Julia Williams
Dr. Ryland Young
Dr. James Wild
Entomology
Ms. Liz Andrus
Dr. Darrell Bay
Dr. Bob Wharton
Forest Science
Dr. Michael Messina
Mr. Shay Harman
Horticultural Science
Dr. David Byrne
Ms. Sharon Duray
Dr. Creighton Miller
Office of the Vice Chancellor
Ms. Patricia Gerling
Ms. Cady Auckerman
Plant Pathology and
Microbiology
Dr. David Appel
Mr. Larry Perez
Poultry Science
Dr. John B. Carey
Dr. W. F. Krueger
Mentors in the College of Engineering
Mr. Thomas Mather
Dr. Roger Smith
Computer Science
Dr. Walter Daugherity
Dr. John Leggett
Electrical Engineering
Dr. Michael Grimaila
Dr. Robert Nevels
Engineering Technology
and Industrial Distribution
Ms. Brooke Bond
Ms. Kaye Matejka
Ms. Heather McNeil
Mr. Larry Muehe
Industrial Engineering
Dr. Wilbert Wilhelm
Mechanical Engineering
Dr. Richard Griffin
Ms. Cathy Sperry
Nuclear Engineering
Dr. John Ford
Rangeland Ecology and
Management
Ms. Jennifer Funkhouser
Dr. Robert Knight
Dr. Mort Kothmann
Dr. Robert Whitson
Recreation. Park, and
Tourism Science
Ms. Katherine Mabray
Mr. Buzz Refugio
Soil and Crop Sciences
Dr. Harry Cralle
Dr. C.T. Hallmark
Dr. Dudley Smith
Wildlife and Fisheries
Sciences
Dr. Daniel Roelke
Student Recruitment &
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Mr. Wash Jones
Dr. Yassin Hassan
Dr. John Poston
Texas Engineering Extension
Station
Mr.Gene Charleton
Mr. Mark Evans
Mr. Jose Grimaldo
Mentors jre faculty, staff and administration dedicated to helping students.
Visit our website at http-.//mentors.t3mu.edu for more information on these ancj other Mentors!
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