8A - The Michigan Daily - Monday, November 22, 1999 NATION/WORLD I Students mourn deaths of 12 killed at Texas A&M COLLEGE STATION, Texas (AP) - Thousands of classmates, families and friends gathered in churches across Texas on Sunday, quietly sobbing and praying for the 12 people killed when a four-story pyramid of logs col- lapsed at Texas A&M University. "I'm here to help the Aggie family from what has been a tragic situation in the state of Texas," a somber Gov. George W Bush said before an evening memorial service at Central Baptist Church near the campus. "It is a time to pray and a time to hear the word." Bush, who did not speak during the service, signed the guest books of all 12 victims, three of whom were buried yesterday. The leaders of their congregations and others tried to comfort the mourners during services throughout the day, and they addressed the sur- vivors of Thursday's tragedy. "The reason you are here this morning is not luck," said Dwight Edwards, senior pastor of Grace Bible Church. "God is not through using you for his purpose." The logs have'been stacked annually for 90 years as part of the runup to the football game "A lot of people don't understand Texas A&M, and the deeper things people don't understand about Texas A&M are the values that we embrace"." - Bill Anderson Memorial Student Center president against rival University of Texas. The bonfire is a deeply held tradition on this football-mad cam- pus of 43,000 about 90 miles northwest of Houston. Local, state and federal officials planned to map out an investigation strategy this week to determine how the 40-foot pile collapsed. But Charles Anderson, pastor of A&M United Methodist Church, said the answers would do little to comfort those left behind. "Answers won't hold your hand," he said. "Answers won't hold you in their arms, and answers will not sit by your bedside on a sleep- less night." A busload of students attended the funeral Sunday of Jamie Hand, 19, an environmental design major and artist who sang at her church and was buried near her home in Henderson. Many of the group gathered in front of her cas- ket to sing the "Aggie War Hymn." "If Henderson was a magical kingdom, Jamie Lynn Hand was without a doubt its princess," Rev. Ron Barney told about 1,500 mourners. Services were held in Austin for Christopher Breen, 25, an A&M graduate who had returned to help pass on the bonfire tradition. Breen's family kept the ceremony private, but in a state- ment recalled his love of the outdoors and thanked those who offered support. "He loved people, and we thank all of his friends for letting us know how much he meant to you," the statement read. "Sharing your mem- ories broadens our knowledge of Chris and the many facets of his character." In Katy, near Houston, a funeral was held for Christopher Lee Heard, 19, a pre-engineering major and a 1999 graduate of the Marine Military Academy, a private military prep school in Harlingen. Almost 100 young men in uniform from the academy and the A&M Corps of Cadets attend- ed the service. Heard's drill instructor recalled him as a prankster who would fill boots with shaving cream. Others remembered his love of hunting and fishing. At First Baptist Church in Bryan, about 50 students knelt around the altar and prayed during a moment of silence. At least eight of the students killed in the accident attended the church in the last month, said minister Tim Owens. Owens invited people to speak about what they were thankful for. One man replied: "Thank you for giving me and my fellow co- workers the ability to rescue some of the Aggi from the bonfire." One of seven people still hospitalized was released Sunday. Of the remaining six, two were in critical condition. About 70 people were stacking the logs when the pile gave way. Some students were hurled from the structure; others were trapped in the shifting logs. Bill Anderson, student president of the Memorial Student Center, a campus building that honors fallen Aggies, said the university spirit of honor, integrity, faith, hope and fame is essential now. "A lot of people don't understand Texas A&M, and the deeper things people don't under- stand about Texas A&M are the values that we embrace," he said. "We're going to survive this because of those values and I know that." FBI tape shows call to Soviet Embassy following assassination not Oswald's WASHINGTON (AP) - Hours after President Kennedy was assassinated, FBI agents reportedly lis- tened to a tape of a phone call that a man identifying himself as "Lee Oswald" had placed to the Soviet Embassy in Mexico City. They made a startling discovery: The voice on the tape was not Oswald's, government records say. This controversial tape has been a question mark in the assassination investigation since Kennedy was killed Nov. 22, 1963. Only now - 36 years to the day after the murder - has the government released a flurry of new details about it. The CIA said years ago that the tapes on which it recorded the call were erased. Documents released in recent years said otherwise. The latest and newest of declassified documents offer more evidence that the tapes survived. The discovery that the voice on the tape was some- one other than Oswald was a "disquieting discovery because the man who impersonated Oswald was still at large," said John Newman, an ex-military intelli- gence analyst, author and professor at the University j of Maryland. Oswald was in Mexico City in September and October 1963. During his one-week stay, he contact- ed the Soviet Embassy and the Cuban consulate, inquiring about visas needed to go to the Soviet Union via Cuba. It is widely known that the CIA bugged tele- phones and took surveillance photos at both the embassy and consulate. But the agency maintained that it had routinely erased and reused tapes of the phone intercepts. A message from the CIA's Mexico City station to headquarters on Nov. 24, 1963, said: "HQ has full transcripts all pertinent calls. Regret complete recheck shows tapes for this period already erased." It was also known that while he, was in Mexico City, Oswald had contact with Valeriy Kostikov - a man that one CIA memo described as a "case officer in an operation which is evidently sponsored by the KGB's 13th Department responsible for sabotage and assassination." It was the caller who is thought to have imperson- ated Oswald who links him to this Soviet spy unit known as Department 13. Newly declassified documents - some released in the past six months - say that after the president was shot, a Navy plane carried a top-secret package from Mexico City to Dallas and landed there about 4 a.m. EST the day after the murder. Former FBI Agent Eldon Rudd, later a Republican congressman from Arizona, was aboard the plane. "There were no tapes to my knowledge," Rudd said in a telephone interview. "I brought the pictures up (from Mexico) and it was my understanding that it was just pictures." Documents contradict Rudd's understanding. A newly released memo dated Nov. 27, 1963, from FBI headquarters to its office in Mexico City, stated: "If tapes covering any contacts subject (Oswald) with Soviet or Cuban embassies available, forward to bureau for laboratory examination and analysis together with transcript. Include tapes previously reviewed Dallas if they were returned to you." And a transcript of a telephone call FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover made to President Johnson just six hours after the plane arrived in Dallas supports the belief that FBI agents listened to a tape that suggest- ed an impersonation. "We have up here the tape and the photograph of the man who was at the Soviet embassy using Oswald's name," Hoover told Johnson, according to a transcript of that call released in 1993. "That picture and the tape do not correspond to this man's voice, nor to his appearance. In other words,it appears that there is a second person who was at the Soviet embassy down there." While they would not speculate about the identity of the caller, several assassination researchers veri- fied more explanations: could have been impersonat- ed by a CIA officer who called the Soviet Embassy simply to furnish details about Oswald was doing in Mexico City. Or, maybe someone was trying to link Oswald to the KGB's assassination unit before Kennedy's mur- der. a m m m FI-A U U II * ' I m