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The Battalion

The Student News Site of Texas A&M University - College Station

The Battalion

The Student News Site of Texas A&M University - College Station

The Battalion

Rudder Association members advocated to remove gender-affirming care from A&M
Rudder Association members advocated to remove gender-affirming care from A&M
Members of TRA worked as part of push to stop practice on campus
Nicholas Gutteridge, Managing Editor • July 3, 2024
Texas A&M outfielder Hayden Schott (5) celebrates a home-run with Texas A&M outfielder Jace LaViolette (17) during Texas A&M’s game against Tennessee at the NCAA Men’s College World Series finals at Charles Schwab Field in Omaha, Nebraska on Sunday, June 23, 2024. (Hannah Harrison/The Battalion)
A&M baseball receives host of recommitments to program after Earley hiring
Luke White, Sports Editor • July 5, 2024

Just a week after the Texas A&M baseball roster took a major hit with a host of players entering the transfer portal, newly-hired coach Michael...

The Gladiators and other participants run off at the starting line to compete in the Red Bull Can You Make It? Challenge.
The long march of the Gladiators
Ian Curtis, Sports Reporter • July 1, 2024

Weston Cadena — blissfully unaware of the irate staff inside of the skyscraper in Bratislava, Slovakia, that he has made his playground —...

Chancellor John Sharp during a Board of Regents meeting discussing the appointmet of interim dean Mark Welsh and discussion of a McElroy settlement on Sunday, July 30, 2023 in the Memorial Student Center.
Analysis: Chancellor Sharp’s retirement comes with new dilemmas
Nicholas Gutteridge, Managing Editor • July 2, 2024

Texas A&M System Chancellor John Sharp announced Monday he will be retiring on June 30, 2025.  A figure notorious in state politics,...

Ripa’s sister paid $15 million by surgeon

PHILADELPHIA (AP) – A jury has ordered a Philadelphia surgeon to pay $15 million to the sister of television talk-show host Kelly Ripa for failing to properly repair her broken ankle.
Linda Ripa, 30, was an aspiring model and actress when she was nearly killed in a 1999 car accident that fractured her pelvis, sternum and ankle and endangered her eight-month pregnancy.
She claimed in her lawsuit that a surgeon who operated on the ankle three days after the crash rushed her into surgery unnecessarily without telling her of the risks, then improperly set her broken bones.
Medical experts testifying for Ripa at trial said the operation left her foot permanently deformed, made it difficult to walk and caused nerve damage that gives her constant pain.
A lawyer for the hospital where the surgery was performed called the judgment excessive and said he planned to appeal. Ripa had offered to settle for $2.4 million, but was turned down by the doctor, who said her nerve damage was caused by the crash, not the efforts to heal her.
The jury announced its verdict on Friday.
”I’m going to hazard a guess that the plaintiff, and the plaintiff’s lawyers, in their wildest dreams, did not anticipate this case bringing in $15 million,” said David Corujo, a lawyer for Frankford Hospital.
Ripa’s lawyer, Roberta D. Pichini, said the jury’s verdict was just. She said Ripa lost her ability to work as an actress, and, because of her pain, could not accept a $150,000-per-year job to work as her sister’s personal assistant.
Kelly Ripa, co-host of ”Live With Regis & Kelly” and an actress in the ABC comedy ”Hope & Faith,” testified by videotape at the two-week trial in Philadelphia’s Common Pleas Court.

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