■nu Wednesday • January 18, 1995 IL- 3 A I I Al l ON The Battalion • Page 9 lave el >g! lists the| e team’s 1 Dunedin I onto Blue! te a few! 31ue Jay s I tarkmarj h most 0! re bein| 5 aroundl ne would | irolina. mer play. J want 11 ow abou: [ ledulede irnia las: I re post y rains ed those mpers in 3 that.’’ -ions in- or cover I be turf. I cs from •ds and | )ctober, lebrate | hardest hdown to get e noble ground. ; again nd the e thing fun at dng to d said, I play rant to brings it’s my g that icago, n end msive | 49ers nship luring ya ■ I can think letely ylvia Jack day,” Iways ty 00. y the Ana- on in ' is a here is a >ney, may ze of P- Sen. who i for roup ot. ret a “No say, aton mil- Na- one ting s — LS aw- too ible rst ct,” s a on- )lis ick ar- ,on ild for is- Transportation of nuclear waste questioned by groups WASHINGTON (AP) — Tons of high-level ra dioactive waste would be shipped through Texas if the federal government pursues its plan to open a nuclear storage dump in Nevada, accord ing to a report prepared for Nevada officials fighting the proposal. Opponents of the proposed Yucca Mountain repository Tuesday released a Nevada state agen cy’s report detailing state-by-state rail and high way routes likely to be used in the shipment of spent nuclear fuel to Nevada. The study’s authors suggest that use of the Nevada repository would require more than 15,600 truck or rail shipments through 43 states over a 30-year period. In Texas, which has two nuclear power plants, radioactive waste would travel by rail on three cor ridors, the report said. One route would stretch from the South Texas Nuclear Project near Bay City north through Houston and Fort Worth and onto Oklahoma. A second route would start at Texas’ only other nu clear power plant, Comanche Peak near Glen Rose, and would head west near Abilene and Lub bock and onto New Mexico. The third route, with nuclear cargo originating in Oklahoma, would cut through the Panhandle and near Amarillo before heading west to New Mexico. The Yucca Mountain repository, located almost 100 miles northwest of Las Vegas, would be de signed to hold as much as 70,000 tons of high-level nuclear fuel. The federal government wants the storage site in operation by 2010. The anti-nuclear groups want Congress to reject an effort to designate Yucca Mountain as the na tion’s nuclear storage dump and convene a com mission to decide what to do next. “The new Congress should realize that a hasty decision to transport these highly irradiated fuel rods will affect the health and safety of millions of Americans, not just Nevadans,” said Michael Mar- iotte, executive director of the Nuclear Information and Resource Service. Public Citizen, the U.S. Public Interest Re search Group, Safe Energy Communication Coun cil and Military Production Network joined Mari- otte’s group in releasing the study. In a statement Tuesday, the Nuclear Energy In stitute defended the industry’s 30-year track record as one of virtually unblemished safety in transporting nuclear waste. More than 2,000 ship ments have been made in the United States with out incident, the institute said. In the seven cases where transportation accidents occurred, the ship ment containers weren’t breached. “Anti-nuclear groups like Public Citizen and the Nuclear Information and Resource Service are try ing to scare as many people as possible, as soon as possible, before a waste storage facility is even sit ed,” the institute said in a written statement. Dog digs up nine buried puppies OAKLAND PARK, Fla. (AP) — A dog owner who did n’t want a litter of nine pup pies allegedly buried them alive, but their mother res cued them the next day, dig ging them out of their 2-foot- deep grave. All nine survived, and the veterinarian caring for the mother and squirming, sight less puppies has received 25 adoption offers. The owner admitted bury ing the puppies because he didn’t want them, said sherif fs Sgt. Sherry Schlueter. “He doesn’t believe in spaying or neutering, but he does believe in burying his dogs alive and killing them.” The puppies were born Sun day and were buried in a brown paper bag a short time later. The owner '‘tamped down the earth with a shovel,” Schlueter said. The puppies’ mother, Sheba, was apparenlty watching the burial. When Sheba got off her chain Monday, she unearthed her puppies as a neighbor watched. The neighbor, realiz ing the puppies had been buried alive, called police. “They were a little dehy drated, and they all had a lot of sand in them,” said Dr. Cin- di Bossart, a veterinarian now caring for mother and pups. Six of the nine puppies “are really, really bright and alert. Three of them are a little bit behind the rest of them,” she said. “The fact that they’re even here today is a real miracle.” Prosecutors will decide whether to file charges. The owner could be charged with aggravated animal abuse. The puppies are a Rottweil- er-chow-Labrador mix, and most are black and tan. The mother “obviously knew what was going on and what happened,” Schlueter said. “This dog is really quite a hero as far as I’m concerned.” HAVE YOU 3 PICKED UP YOUR # 94 AGGIELAND ^ PURCHASED YOUR # 94 AGGIELAND Si ORDERED YOUR '95 AGGIELAND ^^ieking up or purchasing your Aggieland is easy. If you ordered Pc ^ ka ^ ar I, ' bring your Student ID to room 216 in the MonrlowP 0na u c Bu l ildin g beiween 8:15 a.m. and 4:45 p.m. members lf° U ^ anc ^ s bow it to one of our enthusiastic staff for $30 rJ..c^° U • IC ^ no * or der a '94 book, you may purchase one the 1 995 Arin7 X | ln ^ oom 230 Reed McDonald. If you did not order classes, you e?| S 0 ^ ee °P^ on when you registered for fall '94 McDonald. Cash 5 l r'U 0rC i er one ^ or f^ us * ax ' n R ee d American Express '~ ,ec K, VISA, MasterCard, D iscover and college yearbook —^Aggieland ' s nation's largest 2 pounds. ^ P a ges, 2-1/4 inches thick, weighs almost Quake: Bridges, structures collapse despite engineers 5 plans Continued from Page 1 sipping water trucked in by the fire department because so many water lines were fractured. Rikihiro Sumino said he es caped serious injury because his blankets padded him when a dresser fell on his bed. “I never dreamed we’d get hit by a quake like this here in Kobe,” Sumino said. “I figured it would happen in Tokyo, but I never thought it would hap pen to us.” He added: “You really can’t trust those experts. They all said that this wouldn’t happen. They said our highways and buildings were safe, not like America. But we’ve proven them wrong.” Takarazuka, Ashiya and Awaji Island were also dam aged in the quake, which oc curred a year after a magni tude 6.7 quake killed 61 people in and around the Northridge area north of Los Angeles. The shaking lasted about 20 seconds and snapped vital life lines to western Japan, cutting hundreds of miles of rail service that is the transport lifeblood of many workers here and knocking out power and telephones. Elevated highways collapsed, crushing vehicles underneath. A bus sat perched on the edge of a fallen section of highway. The devastation shattered Japan’s belief that sophisticated engineering would enable its newer buildings and roads to withstand a major quake. / “I think rescue measures have been very slow,” said Tokyo Uni versity professor Osamu Koide. “I think there was a lack of quake- preventive knowledge.” Following damaging earth quakes in the United States, Japanese experts had confi dently predicted that roadways in this country would stand up to even a serious quake. But sections of several major ex pressways collapsed, as did many modern buildings. When the earth quakes The Kobe earthquake^ is the most devastating of a r-J series of quakes that began in Japan Dec. 1 ^ 28. What makes Japan rumble so furiously? Sea of Japan The Iben Browning Theory... Factors of proximity and alignment of the sun and the moon produce high tidal forces on the Earth’s surface. ...or internal factors... Seismologists believe earthquakes depend on the internal processes of the earth, not the external processes of the sun and the moon. ...like the thrust fault Scientists know the earthquakes around Japan occurred near an area where one plate is plunging beneath another. The descending plate is consumed by the earth’s interior and is recycled. Plates in the Earth’s crust The earth’s crust is divided into several plates. Almost ail the world’s seismic activity occurs near or along plate boundaries. These plates, floating on soft, hot rock, move relative to one another, building pressure and tension. Sometimes, the plates slip, releasing tension and causing severe earthquakes. AP Graphic /■ <04*% Ttf-CsbC* -- Swing into Your Job Search at the Career Center. Don't Miss Out! On-Campus interviews for full-time jobs, summer jobs & internships, and co-op begin soon! You must be registered with the Career Center to participate, so Register NOW! 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