FIRE KILLS 150 NEAR MANILA\Disco's sealed exit traps graduation crowd.Byline: Pat Roque roque: see croquet. Associated Press Associated Press: see news agency. Associated Press (AP) Cooperative news agency, the oldest and largest in the U.S. and long the largest in the world. Flames billowed through a discotheque packed with graduation revelers early today, sending them fleeing for a blocked exit and stampeding into narrow halls. Firemen picked the bodies of 150 people from the smoking ruins. Dozens more were severely injured, many with third-degree burns third-degree burns npl → brûlures fpl au troisième degré third-degree burns third npl → Verbrennungen pl dritten Grades . It was the worst fire ever in the Philippines and the worst in a nightclub since 1977, when 164 people died at the Beverly Hills Beverly Hills, city (1990 pop. 31,971), Los Angeles co., S Calif., completely surrounded by the city of Los Angeles; inc. 1914. The largely residential city is home to many motion-picture and television personalities. Supper Club Noun 1. supper club - usually a small luxurious nightclub cabaret, night club, nightclub, nightspot, club - a spot that is open late at night and that provides entertainment (as singers or dancers) as well as dancing and food and drink; "don't expect a good meal at in Southgate, Ky. Fire officials initially had feared that as many as 50 more bodies could be covered by the debris inside, but no more were found by midday. When the fire broke out shortly after midnight, there were an estimated 350 people in the Ozone Disco Pub in suburban Quezon City Quezon City, city (1990 pop. 1,669,776), former capital of the Republic of the Philippines, central Luzon, a part of the Manila metropolitan area. A suburb of Manila, taken separately it would be the most populous city in the Philippines. , many of them taking part in high school and college graduation parties, survivors said. The Philippines school year begins in June. "It was like hell," said disc jockey disc jockey (DJ) Person who plays recorded music on radio or television or at a nightclub or other live venue. Disc jockey programs became the economic base of many radio stations in the U.S. after World War II. Marvin Reyes, who watched flames catch the hair and clothes of screaming victims. Bodies of people who had tried unsuccessfully to escape were piled waist-deep in a narrow corridor leading from the dance floor. Others were crushed beneath a collapsed mezzanine ceiling. Investigators said the fire exit had been blocked by a new building next door. The wails of relatives searching for loved ones added to the chaos as firefighters put out the blaze. Rescuers soon accumulated the names of more than 100 people still missing from the disco. "I tried to announce there was a fire, but the microphone stopped working," Reyes said. "We saw smoke and tried to run outside, but were caught in a stampede," said one survivor, who gave only her first name, Rose. "I was stepped on, but managed to force my way out." She said two of the three friends she was with were missing. "I could not do anything," said Reny Megis, a door guard at the disco. "There was just a rush of people." Megis said his own son was among those killed inside. |
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