Page 2 NEWS Wednesday, M j THE BATTALION Di(?ru FIpps PM R\DE:LUnfl 5o you Have the Tiaae Travel Techmolo^ To SEAJb me It5 3^ST UA) TESTED > PM So [jHATb THE (JorST that Coul-D H/1PPEX) To ME , hoc ? That's it/? I C/IA) LIVE UlTHouT \A)G You Remmser- Fur B/Utt! ... o£ You xi/6pT Get STOCV-. (A) T(/H£ ; boo/<-iEb To E/JbuRE AaJ ETEZajity Of A)oTHIvGa)ESS. You cToulDaJ’t Take IT/ YoU'v£ obviously MEUER 5/)T ThrouOH A College CLAbS HAZING Adrian pharmacies want to fingerprint customers who buy OxyContin ;PULASKI, Va. (AP) — Six pharmacies will soon be able to ask'customers wanting the pow erful painkiller OxyContin and spine other narcotic drugs to provide their fingerprints. Police provided the finger print kits hoping to deter pre scription fraud. The invisible- ink prints will be kept at the pharmacy. “If we take just one or two bad bottles off the street a month then we’ve accomplished a lot,” said Detective Marshall Dowdy. Police and pharmacy officials plan to meet next week to deter mine when pharmacists would require the fingerprints, police said Tuesday. Hailed as a miracle painkiller for cancer and chronic-pain pa tients, OxyContin is widely abused, especially in Appalachia. Ground-up pills are snorted or injected, giving abusers a hero in-like high. Since 1998, OxyContin and oxycodone, the narcotic’s active ingredient, have been linked to more than 100 deaths nation wide. j. David Haddox, senior medical director for health pol icy at Purdue Pharma, Oxy- Contin’s manufacturer in Stamford, Conn., said finger prints would be acceptable if applied to the purchase of all comparable drugs. The fingerprint system, man ufactured by CrimeBite, also is Companies Wednesday, J; spend mortjj: on drug ad used by grocery stores that cash payroll checks. Company presi dent Lydia del Rossi said Pulas ki is the only town she knows of using it to help fight prescrip tion fraud. “Once that fingerprint is there, it’s hard to say you didn’t do it,” said Leslie King, the pharmacist at a Pulaski super market. “I don’t know if it will cut down on people who are using it, but maybe it will make people realize it is a felony.” WASHINGTON (AP) — Major drug makers spend near ly twice as much to advertise their medicines than to research and develop them, says a con sumer group that blames ag gressive marketing for soaring drug prices. Families USA said Tuesday that drug makers sometimes spent three times as much on ads and compensation for executives than on research and develop ment. The group analyzed data from the Securities and Ex change Commission, which reg ulates the stock market. 'The advocates rejected con tentions by some companies that the cost of developing new medicines is causing the escala tion of prices. “Pharmaceutical companies charging skyrocketing drug prices like to sugarcoat the pain by saying those prices are need ed for research and develop ment,” said Ron Pollack, execu tive director of Families USA. Pharmaceutical executives, however, said the group had unfairly condemned the indus try for its success and distorted the money spent on promoting new drugs. “When the pharmaceutical industry does well, patients do even better,” saidjackie Cottrell, a spokeswoman for the Pharma ceutical Research and Manufac turers of America, based in Washington. Families USA, a frequent critic of rising drug costs and the drug industry, based its report on an analysis of company rev enues from sales, the net profit made and the percentage of sales revenue spent on markera ministration, research an velopment. 1 he infora used came from 2000. P" ' 1 he group examined™ nies it said were amongtr.:( 50 in making drugs for erlv. Adding drug cover;; Medicare, a federal prog the aged and disabled ajor L lids at it; rently a hot political issue with 1 uesil | Hpens wk " >ng one- Ads raise drug chance to s cost for seniors jn me seco A recent study found that drug S | companies actually pay mpniH » marketing than they do for res& AITIGI and development on the SOmsI Most Y; prescribed drugs to seniors g 0( )IK . Percent of revenue apentlorwjL top 50 drugs for seniors in? , ,, Boone Marketing, advertising-, player. I le administration H' > • , ^■er highs ■tegory w Merck and Co. Inc. 15% 6% administration Research and Develops nd has hg at this Pfizer Inc. 15% Bristol-Myers Squibb Co. 30% 11% Pharmacia Corp. 37S 15% Abbott Laboratories 21% to American Home ProductsCs sational SC W, 13% Eli Lilly and Co. 30% 19% Schering-Plough Corp. Host unlik 39V Runnct Kunierez, tfk Red Sc by himself ■ Cy You Hlemens, 1 firm as it is for this aw time, Clen 36": 14% Allergan Inc. 13% SOURCE: Families USA [Lartmez i ^al compt Rqokie Huzuki, Se come a fon threaten in major leag But how c rookie wht 10 years in Mexico Continued from Page 7 ! “The message I bring yovi is to think hard about it,” one of the messages warns. “Don’t take the risk. People do die at the border; it’s a reality.” . Another spot warns against using smugglers, kfiown as “polleros.” “The polleros, those who traffic in human be ings, are not your friends. We know they aban- djon people in the deserts, in the mountains, be side rivers and they wind up drowning,” Hernandez says. ' “They have raped girls,” he continues. “Think Bard about it. Don’t risk it. ... Stay in Mexico. Seek opportunities here.” v The Estrella Blanca bus line has agreed to skew the spots, which run from about 40 to 70 seconds, along with regular feature films on 5,200 buSes in Mexico. The bus company said 350,000 people a month ride the buses. Hernandez said some bus operators in the United States have of fered to show the spots as well. ^ Mexicans have continued to attempt illegal crossings, even though U.S. officials have built walls to make crossings difficult. - ^‘My conscience would not let me sleep if I was dot doing everything possible to save, if neces sary, one single life,” Hernandez said, noting that he deals with victims and survivors of border crossing disasters as part of his job. Fox and President Bush have also vowed to work more closely on making the border area safer. While Mexico is discouraging illegal cross ings, the U.S. Congress is considering laws that would let more Mexicans cross legally for tem porary jobs. , One of the videotaped clips urges those who make the trip to seek the safest, cheapest way to send money back to their families. Such remittances — running at a pace of more than $8 billion a year — are now Mexi co’s third-largest source of foreign income af ter oil and tourism. Another spot notes that AIDS is spreading in areas of Mexico where large numbers of people emigrate. “Citizens are going to the United States, they are being infected with AIDS and then are passing it on to their families,” Hernandez says in the ad, again urging them to stay home and find work. Hernandez noted that the government also is sponsoring other ads on national television dis couraging illegal border crossings. , He said the efforts to protect migrants and to create alternative jobs in Mexico were motivated in part because “in Mexico, we want to have the moral authority to be able to demand that our countrymen are treated well abroad.” Violence kills KINGSTON, Jamaica (AP) — Backed by heli copter gunships, soldiers deployed in a troubled Kingston neighborhood Tuesday, patrolling streets blocked with debris from days of gunbattles be tween police and government opponents that have killed 22 people. Crouching low with machine gun at the ready, a trooper passed the body of an elderly man sprawled face down in a pool of dried blood, ap parently from a bullet in the back. Residents of Tivoli Gardens, the besieged neighborhood, said the man was killed Sunday. “Anyone who tided to move got shot at. It’s pure murder from both ends ... the police and die gangs,” said Claudia McKay, a 2 3-year-old seamstress. The violence has been concentrated in the cap ital, Kingston, in southeast Jamaica, though there have been isolated protests and roadblocks that po lice quickly dismanded in the nordiern resort towns of Montego Bay and Ocho Rios. There were no reports of tourists leaving, hut a new U.S. travel advisory against western and down town Kingston raised worries the disturban ces could hurt Jamaica’s vital $1.3 billion tourism industry. Prime Minister PJ. Patterson ordered Jamaica’s entire army—more than 3,000 troops — to deploy Monday night to reinforce security forces trying to 22 in Jamaica put down fighting between gangs affiliatedwP two main political parties. “The government cannot stand idly by and low criminal elements to hold this country tor som,” Patterson said. On' I iiesday, there was only sporadic fightffl! ter troops moved in. “It’s an unpredictable situation ... the polices the army are maintaining a heavy presence, 1 police spokeswoman Dahjia Garrick. But the opposition Labor Party says author' have been targeting only its followers in the® down launched Saturday. Since then, at least 22 p pie have been killed, including three police oft and one soldier. One of die police deaths camel day when an officer was hit in the head byai thrown by protesters 40 miles from MontegoE Correction In Tuesday's Battalion the Cent of Management Informatic Systems should have bet abbreviated CMIS. — ■" American Red Cross HOT BLOODED AGGIE t SUMMER BLOOD DRIVE } July 9 - 13, 2001 SPONSORED BY ALPHA PHI OMEGA i ^ f ~ i ' RnddBr-Bloodmohils Zachary-Lobby it ■* Mon. & Tues.-lt:00'4:00 Mon.&FrI. 9:45-4:00 Wefl.&Thurs.'9:45-5:45 Tues. 8:00-12:30 * '* FrL'9:45-5:00 Sbisa-Bloodmoblie BecCeoter-Lobby * > t Mon. & Tues.'l:00-6:00 Mon.-THurs.-3:30-9:00 l * .* Wed.TIilirs.& Fri.-12:00'7:00 i l , Bio Bio-Lobby Vet School-Lounge V, *- v/ MOO. & Tues.'8:45-1:45 Wed.Thurs.&Frl.-10:30-4:00 v Get extra help when you need it - free. Prep for the October LSAT during the summer! 800.2Review | www.PrincetonReview.com * CSM is a tutaok rf I* UwSAetfMs*®#! fot. The Pitasn Anmk is «f rfSetei ftrwlw «iSA£. 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