The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, February 17, 2004, Image 14

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Tuesday, February 17, 2004
Three dead, five injured as crane
collapses onto freeway bridge
By John Seewar
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
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Beautiful Sterling Jewelry
TOLEDO, Ohio — A crane
collapsed onto a construction
site at an interstate bridge
Monday, crushing a tractor-trail-
er and killing three workers, tire
officials said.
Five other injured workers,
including one in critical condi
tion, were taken to St. Vincent
Medical Center, hospital
spokeswoman Gloria Enk said.
Authorities at the scene said no
one else was trapped, and no
motorists were injured.
Traffic had been open on
Interstate 280 when the crane
collapsed about 2:30 p.m. and
fell between the northbound and
southbound lanes on the high
way’s approach to the bridge
over the Maumee River south of
downtown, Toledo fire Capt.
Robert Krause said.
Dawn Croydon and her hus
band were driving south across
the bridge when they saw a huge
dust cloud. As they approached
and the dust cleared, they saw
workers hanging limp in their
safety harnesses.
“I’m still shaking,” Dawn
Croydon said from her home in
suburban Northwood.
The 2 million-pound crane
was moving at the time it col
lapsed, said Joe Rutherford,
spokesman for the Ohio
Department of Transportation.
The cause of the collapse was
under investigation.
Lucky Davis, 33, of Toledo,
said he was driving north on I-
280 about 50 yards from the
crane when he heard a crack.
“It was like the loudest thun
der I’ve ever heard in my life,”
Davis said. “It was like a split
second and I heard people
screaming. I was in shock.”
The interstate was closed in
both directions after the collapse.
The crane was part of a $277
million project to build a new
six-lane freeway bridge along
side the four-lane Craig
Memorial Bridge.
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WORLD
THE BATTALIOS
Restaurant
offer more
low-carb fart
By^ Sarah Karush
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
DETROIT — As Burgt;
King promotes bunless
and Subway hawks low-carl
sandwich wraps, some upscali
restaurants are pouring on k
cream and perfecting flourb
batter in their own appeal ii
those on Atkins-style diets.
The Rattlesnake Club, oneol
Detroit’s most fashionabli
restaurants, added a low-cail
menu about a year ago
local hot spot, Opus One,
nine low-carb entrees to iis
lunch menu last fall.
“It’s because, quite frankly,!
eat that way,” said OpusOneco
owner James Kokas.
His low-carb menu is a
simple substitution process:
Hold the croutons on the chick
en caesar salad and serve
meat with a bearnaise sauct,
consisting primarily of
and egg yolks.
In emphasizing protein over
starch, many high-end restau
rateurs say they are simply fol
lowing their own changing
preferences.
Rattlesnake Club chef-owner
Jimmy Schmidt says he has Ions
avoided refined carbohydrates
like white flour, white rice anil
refined sugar in his own
and he tries to keep those ingre
dients to a minimum in tk
Rattlesnake’s overall menu.
About a year ago, he took in
step farther with a separate
carb menu, which offers three
choices each for appetizer, entree
and dessert, as well as two salail
choices. Schmidt estimates
accounts for 20 percent to 30 per
cent of his Detroit sales and upto
50 percent at the other Rattlesnake
Club in Coachella, Calif.
Customers “are
because they don’t have to
’Well, I'd really like the tender
loin of beef, but I don’t want the
potatoes,’” Schmidt said. “
simplifies it.”
From Malpeque oysters
champagne (net carbs: 3gtams)
to the “gingered pumpkincteme
brulee martini” (also 3
the Rattlesnake’s low-carbmeoii
doesn’t sound like diet fare,
full four-course low-carb meal
costs $69.
While there is still
debate about the potential bene
fits or dangers of low-carb diet
in the medical community, Ik
trend shows no sign of
About 10 million people, or3i
percent of the population, wert
on a regimented low-carbdietai
of September, according to tk
market research company ""
Group.
Low-carb food has alv/aji
been available in restaurant!
Ordering steak instead of past
is an obvious choice, so many8
the recent changes have jin
been a matter of marketing.
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NEWS IN BRIEF
Death of Aborigin
teen sparks riots
SYDNEY, Australia (AP)'
Mainly Aboriginal rioters sf
fire to a train station andpeliei
police with gas bombs M
during a nine-hour street bai
that began after a teenaf
died, allegedly while I
chased by officers.
The overnight rioting i
Redfern neighborhood
Aboriginal ghetto of Australia!
most populous city, left 40 d
cers injured and highligiili
continuing tensions betwee'
authorities and the n«
original inhabitants.
The street battle followed fl*
death of a 17-year-old AborigiN
Thomas Hickey, who
impaled on a fence whenhei^
from his bicycle. His r
claimed officers were chastl
the teen, an allegation
police deny.
Dean to continue
presidential bid
MILWAUKEE (AP)- .
advisers says it’s time logo,'
defiant Howard Dean saysti« s
staying, despite a zero-for-1i
record in Democratic pres#
tial primaries and caucus#
Unresolved for the one
front-runner is how he
ceeds from here. 1 ,
Advisers to Dean are urt
him to abandon the race i
loses Wisconsin and con#
several options, including drop'
ping from the race out# 1 ;
suspending his campaign
least acknowledging Kt
accomplishment and redif#
his own efforts.
lawsuit Ti
calling el
ability to
The si
federal c
response
ty officia
ber of da
voting at
commun
Prairie V
Jonah
with the
for Civil
said stud
voting a
place fro
over tw
County c
only one
a,m. to 3
Tues
nearly
weeks
Prairie V
Attorney
last year
matically
ty electii
That
Houston,
an opinii
Prairie V
simply di
as their n
Goldn
change
under Se
Rights
Departme
to show i
thepositi
“Duri
precleare
mg,” he i
not been
Accor
neys, the
hy federa
two days
allotted f