Medium One Topping Pizza $3.50 * Order 3 for free delivery eoa-gaicac 409 WHO’S WHO AMONG STUDENTS IN AMERICAN UNIVERSITIES AND COLLEGES 1999-2000 TEXAS A&M UNIVERSITY Who’s Who applications are now available for both undergraduate and graduate students in the following locations: Commandant’s Office (Military Sciences Building) Student Programs Office (Second Floor MSC) Student Activities Office (125 John J. Koldus Building) Sterling C. Evans Library Office of Graduate Studies (125 Teague) Office of the Dean of each College Office of the Vice President for Student Affairs (10th Floor Rudder) Completed applications must be received by the Student Activities office no later than 5 p.m. on Friday, October 1, 1999. They may be hand-carried to the Student Activities office, sent through Campus Mail (MS 1236), or sent through US mail. (See the application for addresses.) Questions may be addressed to Sandy Briers in Student Activities (845-1133). There’s no chance for appeal. Take the LSAT and do it right the first time. Take Kaplan. Class starts October 5 in Aggieland! Enroll today! 1 -800-KAP-TEST kaptest.com AOL keyword: kaplan 'LSAT is the registered trademark of the Law School Admissions Council. Kaplan gets you in. Acct 209 Stasny r impr™zrr ~—— Thu Sept 30 Rggp ‘ 7pm 1 ) L «* : : '(> / '-..-7"V Acct 229 l est Reviews Sun Sept 26 6pm-9pm L? „ Tue Sept 28 Li lOpm-lam Acct 229 Billy’s Video Mayes Mon Sept 27 10pm Dr. Knttchman Wed Sept 29 10pm Acct 327 Bana 303 Stein & Darcey Part I Sun Sept 26 3pm-6pm Parti Sun Sept 26 4pm-7pm Part il Mon Sept 27 7pm-10pm Part II Mon Sept 27 4pm-7pm " Econ 202 Dr. Allen Test Review Sun Sept 26 9pm-12am .. j Econ 203 Dr. Chun Part 1 Mon Sept 27 5pm-7pm Part II Tue Sept 28 5pm-7pm Part HI W’ed Sept 29 5pm-7pm Thu Sept 30 5pni-7pm Math 142 Part 1 Sun Sept 26 7pm~9pm Part II Mon Sept 27 7pm-9pm Part III Tue Sept 28 7pm-9pm Part IV Wed Sept 29 7pm-9pm Math 151 Part J Sun Sept 26 1 Ipm-lam Part II Mon Sept 27 1 Ipm-lam Part III Tue Sept 28 llpm-Iam Part IV Wed Sept 29 Upm-lam Math 152 Part 1 Sun Sept 26 9pm-llpm Part 11 Mon Sept 27 9pm-l I pm Part III Tue Sept 28 9pm~l 1pm Part IV Wed Sept 29 9pm-l 1pm Mgmt 211 Majors Parti Mon Sept 27 5pm~7pm OR Spm-lOptn Part 11 Tue Sept 28 Spm-Spm OR 8pm-11pm mil! ■ ■-< V', - v. ■ > (.1: 4 v:.,.- wpiliiliili ' ' • ' Mgmt 363 Non-Majors Part I Mon Sept 27 10pm-12am silgll Mktg 321 DeWaid Tue Sept 28|J, Wed Sept 29 7pnt-10pm L-p) 7pm-1 Opm ■ Tickets go on sale Sunday at 2:00 PM. 4.0 & Go is located on the comer of SW Pkwy and Tx Ave, behind KFC next to Lack's. Check our web page at http://www.4.0andGo.com or call 696-8886(TUTOR) Page 6 • Monday, September 27, 1999 World Brothers survive Taiwan earthquake ordf ie Bath TAIPEI, Taiwan (AP) — Two brothers were pulled to freedom yesterday after five and a half days buried alive in the wreckage of Taiwan's killer quake, saying they survived by eating a few apples and playing cards in the small space where they were trapped. Amid the devastation and shattered hopes, Taiwanese were cheered by the improbable sur vival of Sun Chi-kwang, 20, and Sun Chi-feng, who turned 26 Wednesday, one day into their 130-hour ordeal in the wreckage of a collapsed Taipei building. The brothers were rescued even as powerful aftershocks continue to jolt Taiwan. A particular ly strong one hit early yesterday, killing at least three people on top of the more than 2,000 who had already died. Onlookers applauded as the younger Sun, stripped to the waist but staying upright and hold ing a bottle of water he got from rescue workers, was lifted to safety by a crane. His brother was rushed away on a stretcher. Their mother, Liu Luan, heaved with sobs of joy as her sons came out alive, speaking so fast she was almost incoherent. “I kept thinking, ‘This is not possible, this is not possible,’” Liu told reporters at the scene. "I kept praying for them all the time.” The brothers were hospitalized in stable con dition. Doctors were checking them for possible internal injuries or dehydration. “They are both very clear and conscious of what happened,” Dr. Su Chong-jen, chief of surgery at the hospital where they were taken, said. “What they need now is rest." The Sun brothers had been playing bridge when the 7.6-magnitude quake struck in the wee hours Tuesday. The 12-story building they were in crumpled, flattening parts of the hotel, offices and apart ments it contained. The brothers’ parents and sis ter were not at home at the time. ‘The jss I )rrow “/ kept thinking, 'This is not possible, this is not possible. ,,f — Liu Luan Mother of victims trapped under rubble The two kept up their spirits by continuing their card game while they waited in the small space, their doctor said by telephone. When their water ran out, they were forced to drink their own urine. From his hospital bed, Sun Chi-kwang said he even managed to give his sibling a birthday gift. “My older brother told me that never in my life did 1 celebrate his birthday with him, so I said to day I would celebrate with you and I gave him my necklace,” he said. He told TVBS television that while trapped he had “a very strange dream" in which "there was someone beside me saying that behind there was a hole from where I couldgei "I thought that was really strange my older brother. He asked me what it said fate could not have been talkingto went back to sleep," Sun said. "A little later 1 saw a hole, and indeed out to be a big hole,” he said, referringte |jjt. I’ll rescuers carved into the rubble to reach; Emergency crews worked into tls through a light drizzle in hopes of savi;* lives in the Taipei building, though they* c u nm whether anyone else was stillaiB hjs 2: building was one of the hardest-hit strucB Taipei, the capital. f | Yesterday's aftershock — a sizable ear: in its own right — brought downsomek in central Taiwan, the hardest-hit regie cracked walls as far away as Taipei, 90 the north. Its magnitude was estimateda 6.5 by different sources. The aftershock killed three people,® least 58 and buried another 20 in themkB| Although there have been thousands B shocks, Sunday'- wa- big enough to sen;B his 6 ened peoph sc in vmg mt of theirhoinesiB. ^ open spaces. Others donned motorcycler-™ “Nobody here dares to stay homeai said university student Lee Wen in the Puli, where water, electricity andtelepl vice have yet to be restored. “They all stave Deaths from the new tremor,andmon unearthed on Sunday, brought theconfe from the quakes to 2.056. “I W< he ba cam ffen fens Russian warplanes bomb Chechen capital Plane crash: jn Sou GROZNY, Russia (AP) — The Russian military on Sunday warned it may launch ground operations Islamic in while the capital SERGEYEV against militants Chechnya warplanes bombed Chechen for a fourth day, pounding industri al and communi cations facilities. Four Russian jets flew repeatedly over the city’s southern Oktyabrsky district yesterday morning, firing rockets and dropping bombs, the In terfax news agency said. The district is the site of Chechnya’s now-destroyed tele vision broadcasting center as well as oil wells. Russian Defense Minister Igor Sergeyev said he could not rule out the possibility of launching ground operations in the break away republic. Until now, the military has fa vored an air war that would keep Russian casualties to a minimum. “There are several variants of a plan for ground operations, which will be implemented depending on the situation that develops,” Interfax quoted Sergeyev as saying. He spoke while visiting sol diers recovering from Dagestan battle wounds in a Moscow mili tary hospital. “The main aim of all the plans is to eliminate the bandits” and “to cre ate a considerably deep security zone around Chechnya," he said. The militants are separatists who want to form an independent Islam ic nation in what is now southern Russia. The Russian military said the air raids are aimed at preventing mili tant incursions from Chechnya into the Russian republic of Dagestan, where they fought Russian forces in August and September. Increasingly, however, Russian leaders have vowed to eradicate the militants altogether. Eyewitnesses said that over the past four days, Russian air raids have destroyed more than 100 oil pumps, reservoirs and small refineries in and around Grozny that are believed to be controlled by Chechen rebel field commanders. The oil was the basis of a prof itable business providing low-grade gasoline to other Russian regions. Russian planes also struck sus pected rebel camps near Chechnya’s border with Dagestan on Saturday, the ITAR-Tass news agency said, cit ing the piovisional federal press cen ter in Dagestan. Col. Gen. Anatoly Kornukov, commander of Russia’s Air Force, said in a television interview Sunday that the air campaign against Chech nya could last another month. Russian military commanders ap peared to be considering a major raid into Chechnya to put the mil itants on the defensive and stop their incursions into surrounding Russian territory. While Russian has massed ar mored forces on the Chechen bor ders, military analysts say the force is too small to mount a full- scale invasion of Chechnya. The Russian military is short of everything from trained infantry to food, and an invasion of Chechnya could risk a major de feat — not unlike the kind it suf fered during the 1994-96 war, when it lost control of Chechnya to a much smaller, poorly-armed guerrilla force. Nonetheless, Russian public opinion appears to favor tough ac tion against Chechnya in the wake of a series of apartment bombings in Russia during the past month that have been blamed on the Chechen militants. Meanwhile, Chechens tried desperately to flee the bombing in their republic. An estimated 40,000 people ar rived in the neighboring republic of Ingushetia, prompting the In- gushetian authorities to close the border on yesterday. in Hawaii ‘W with go KAil l \ KONA, Hawawg yyg — A sightseeing airplane*!® people at We w; the flanks of the MaunaLKgj cano. There were no sumv.'i ‘ ‘The plane was totallyfel ished, just like a planewouitl if it went into rocks at a high f of speed,” Doug LtJ spokesperson for theHawaii'J canoes National Park,saiii. Rosc iu' news reidiedtteA mote spot on the BstfandJ Hawaii to recover dav nnli ning, saidit I the I hnwin i \HinrthURMtf. Team No details wewtedo/i 1. Floric ■ 2. Penr working witli (he touvx::. 3_ pj or j, Hig /.s/and Air, to notii) : 4. Texa, Butts said. 5. Big Island Air notified^ 6. M/chi] tiMiuuon.il Airport JtuBfenne I Saturday that its plane vA due with a pilot and nine gers, Marilyn Kali, a spo son for the state Departir;: Transportation, said. The plane had taken the airport at 4:30 p.m. Sat for a tour of the island’s Loa and Mauna Kea volcat j eXi ‘‘This is a shock to us I mu Mann, Big Island Air’s dire. Jg A | al; operations, said. Fireworks storage blows up, kills 50 MEXICO CITY (AP) — A series of explo sions ripped through a crowded area of street stalls and shops across from a downtown bus station in the central Mexican city of Celaya on yesterday, killing at least 50 peo ple, authorities said. Media reports said the tragedy apparent ly began when a fireworks storehouse ex ploded about 10:30 a.m. A few minutes lat er there was a second large blast. Some reports said it was caused when gas tanks used for cooking exploded at a nearby restaurant, while others blamed more exploding fireworks. The second explosion apparently trapped some rescuers who had responded to the first blast. Television footage showed some concrete buildings reduced to mounds of rubble, oth ers with their fronts blown off. The streets were piled with debris and bodies as fire fighters sprayed water on the remnants of the fire caused by the blasts. State spokesperson Francisco Aguilar said 50 people were confirmed dead and 76 oth ers were injured in this industrial city 120 miles northwest of Mexico City. Among those reported dead were a police officer, two Red Cross workers, two fire fighters, a local reporter and four children. “It’s a very big tragedy,” Mayor Ricardo Suarez said in an interview with the nation al TV Azteca network. Tfoops were called in to help police evac uate residents and seal off an eight-block area around the explosions as rescue work ers searched for more victims. Turkish police storm pris ±0 inmates killed in riot ANKARA, Turkey (AP) — Left-wing inmates curity forces at an Ankara prison for almost sever yesterday in a riot that left 10 inmates dead andsrj clashes in prisons across the country. The violence began early Sunday morning in^ Ulucanlar prison. Guards tried to enter a prison ward after beingL |ean off that the inmates were planning to escape by | a tunnel, the justice ministry said. 2. Penr The approximately 50 inmates barricadeoV p| ori( selves in their ward to thwart the search, firedL Mich and hurled bombs at the security forces, thenf ^ Texa statement said. g! Nebr Turkish police have little control over the count^L Tenn crowded prisons, and it is not uncommon for inm? have weapons and cellular phones. The security forces fired tear gas before sto' the ward 8. Virgi 9. Geoi 10. Gei ft. Put INTERN ^ TRAVEL- ABROAD en 9h ,u^ c a/7c/ Gerroa^V MSC L.T. Jordan Institute for International Awareness Infbmiationals September 28 7:00 pm Rudder 410 October 4 8:30 pm Rudder 404 October 20 7:00 pm Rudder 401 October 13 5:30 pm Rudder 402 October 28 8:30 pm Rudder 402 Come see us online at http://ltjordan.tamu.eclu • For more information or to inform us of your special needs, Csv please call the Jordan Office at 84S43770 or come visit us at MSC 223-1 112. Oh i>S%3. Ka Looking for the Key to Success? $ f How do you define success? Come & find out how 1.5 Billion pebpl define success & seek to achieve it! Join us for Cd Islam 101- Fundamentals of Islam! Sept 30 @ 7 pm in MSC 228 Contacts: /slantJ0J@taniu.edu; tel: 846-77/8 Visit our table in the MSC every IVed. between 11 ant-3pm Sponsored by Muslim Students’ Association I - Contrac IT'S NOT TOO LATE!! olora Iowa $ Misso Kansa Reserve your place in the 2000 Aggieland yearbook Turn in contracts in Reed McDonald 015. A $15 late fee does 1 AGGIELAND