The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, August 29, 2000, Image 13

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    Tuesday, Augusi25,J
collapsij
,500 to $11,000 per but
re trying to get a better;
vhat condition the built
vhich is why we’re
the buildings, A lot oftii
m tell if you can see
said Barbara Grat
woman for Mayor Joki
udge approves settlement for
claims of diet drug damage
mayor, who has been in
ce January, made a$25(1
ght-removal program oi
terpieces of his campak
t to get off the groum
romised the money wiki
y fall.
tie meantime, License
tions has been usingn
aurbside demolition”:!
ector determines a hoa
> collapse, the city aiu
i companies to s
pot. The low bidderko
miediately.
i her stoop across the si
Me Duffy watched it
/ afternoon as an excanta
a tore into the remainsofti
rd rowhouses. The ah
uildings caved in
another sad chapter n
, decades-long
'y’s North Philadelpt
rhood.
ial!
epi res Sept. 30, 2CXX)
e. College Station, Tx
mer /Must hove coupon
uesday, August 29, 2000
NATION
THE BATTALION
Page 5B
PHILADELPHIA (AP) — A
ederal judge has approved a pro-
rosed $3.75 billion national settle-
nent of health claims stemming
join the diet drug combination fen-
ihen, which has been linked to po-
entially fatal heart valve damage.
Under the settlement approved
Monday, fen-phen users would get
gp to $1.5 million, though most
would get far less, depending on
their level of injury and how long
(hey took the drugs. The settlement
also includes money for future med
ical monitoring.
U.S. District Judge Louis C.
Bechtle gave preliminary approval to
the settlement in November. Barring
an appeal, attorneys said fen-phen
users could begin receiving settle
ment checks as early as January.
More than 9,000 lawsuits have
to I
mbers for
ition???
again...
&n llou/e
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ic MSC Box Office in
th at 5 p.m., complete
r recognized student
ish, check, aggie
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KETING TEAM
i of your special needs
Workers
demand
job security
BATH, Maine (AP) — Strik
ing workers at the Bath Iron
Works, builder of Navy destroy-
; ers, walked picket lines Monday
in a demand for more money and
job security.
About 85 percent of the union
. members who cast ballots voted in
favor of the strike, the shipyard’s
first walkout in 15 years, said John
Portela, a union financial officer.
A shipyard spokeswoman said
the company felt its offer was fair
and that the overwhelming rejec
tion of the contract proposal for
4,800 employees came as a sur
prise. “We’re preparing to go
back to the table,” spokeswoman
Sue Pierter said Sunday.
( The workers’ contract expired
at midnight, shutting down pro
duction at one of only two ship
yards that build Aegis destroyers.
The last strike at the subsidiary of
iGeneral Dynamics was a 99-day
walkout in 1985.
“I want what I’m worth, and
General Dynamics can well af
ford it,” Paul Avery, a shipyard
rigger, said Monday. As managers
arrived at work Monday morning,
dozens of rowdy shipbuilders
waved signs and yelled at them.
At another military contractor,
nearly 3,000 workers went on strike
Sunday against 10 Massachusetts
plants of Raytheon Co. Most work
at the company’s Andover plant
which makes most of the Patriot
missile, Raytheon’s best-known de
fense product. Hawk defense sys
tems are also made there.
Raytheon workers’ union,
the International Brotherhood
of Electrical Workers Local
1505, said the company’s pro
posals for a four-year contract
don’t do enough to protect man
ufacturing jobs.
>ale Now i-
Lexas A&l
>kstore in
he MSC
by the Department of
ctivities, contact Rf 11
it ryana stuact.tamu^'
tions
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been filed against American Home
Products, maker of fenfluramine, the
“fen” in the fen-phen diet drug com
bination. The Madison, N.J.-based
company sold the combination under
“The settlement
resolves the vast
majority of the
claims and po
tential claims
that the compa
ny was facing”
— Michael Scott
attorney representing
American Home
the brand name of Pondimin and also
made Redux, a chemical cousin.
The drugs were withdrawn in
September 1997 after a Mayo Clinic
study linked fen-phen to potentially
fatal heart valve damage. The second
drug in the combination, phenter-
mine, was not linked to the problems.
“The settlement resolves the
vast majority of the claims and po
tential claims that the company was
facing, and it’s a very, very signifi
cant step forward in resolving the
litigation,” said Michael Scott of
Philadelphia, one of the attorneys
representing American Home.
Attorney Edward F. Blizzard of
Houston had objected to the settle
ment in June on behalf of a group of
diet-drug users, saying it would
likely be reversed because of all the
other lawsuits pending.
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Bureau to construct
fencing for bat caves
•
ATTENTION
SPRING 2001 STUDENT TEACHERS
(except HLKN anti AGED)
WHAT:
MANDATORY- Pre-Student Teaching
Informational Meeting
WHEN:
Tuesday, September 5, 2000
TIME:
8:30 P.M. WHERE: 601 Rudder Tower
PHOENIX (AP) — Only pitch-
black shafts with drops of up to 600
feet are left where roughly 100,000
copper, gold and silver mines once
operated throughout Arizona.
To humans, these abandoned
mines represent an injury waiting to
happen because of their collapsing
tunnel walls and leftover toxic gas
es. But to the 28 bat species living
in Arizona, they are home.
The Bureau of Land Manage
ment and the Arizona Department
of Game and Fish are working to
eliminate the threat by building bat
gates that will still allow bats .in
while keeping humans out.
“For bats, (the mines) are a way
to escape the heat,” said Elroy Mas
ters, a wildlife biologist for BLM in
Lake Havasu City. “And the mines
protect them over the winter if we get
freezing days so they can hibernate.”
The gates are made of steel and
iron and have small spaces that are
just large enough to let bats through.
Masters is currently working to
construct fencing and bat gates at
Lake Havasu’s Cienega Mining
District, where there are about 90
open shafts.
“We’re trying to protect bats to
keep them from becoming listed on
the Endangered Species Act,” Mas
ters said.
Bats have a low reproductive rate
of about one baby per year, said Tim
Snow, a non-game specialist for Ari
zona Game and Fish.
Despite their relatively well-hid
den existence, biologists say bats
serve several important functions,
such as pollinating saguaro and
agave plants and controlling insects.
“They’re prolific insect catchers,”
said Yar Petryszun, a bat researcher
with the Department of Ecology and
Evolutionary Biology at the Univer
sity of Arizona. One bat can consume
about 200 insects an hour — up to
half its weight in one night, he said.
Petryszun Works with the U.S.
Forest Service monitoring bat pop
ulations and studying how they
adapt to using bat gates at an aban
doned copper mine at the Coronado
National Memorial on the Arizona-
Mexico border.
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