Class: Geography 101 T0rm: Fall 1991 Instructor: Lane Xr it District 1) Define the follcfjing: A) Tundra B) Tropics C) Topigraphical Mapping D) Travelogue E) Turkestan 2) If it here would i| 3:15 p.m. in ^lsenada, what time is it in |anaa? you find these three regions Dordogne, Lot Tarn? 4) Compare and cc|Jtrast the Gobi, the Kalahari, and the Mojave. 5) You are in yugene, Oregon. You can ride an LTD bus anywhere. Anytime. All term long. Just show your student I.D. How does this compare with the other great transit systems of the^orld? BONUS >ufl 6) Take the bu,, „ . from Amazon Park to Armitage Park. Describfj the terrain in 500 wordfl or less. djj C 1991 Une Winyt Oiilnc! Exxon, Alaska reach second spill settlement JUNEAU, Alaska (AP) A second settlement has been reached in government lawsuits against Exxon C.orp. over the nation's largest oil spill, u spokesman for C,ov Walter | Hickel said Sunday. Details of the settlement were being withheld until a formal announcement Monday at the governor's Anchorage office, spokesman Eric Kehmnnn said. An earlier settlement, an nounced in March, fell apart when u federal judge rejected the criminal plea bargain and the Alaska House voted down (lit? entire agreement Negotiations between Exxon, the state and federal govern ment resumed earlier this month. The trial of federal criminal charges against Exxon over the Exxon Valdez spill is scheduled to begin Oct. 7 in Anchorage. Exxon spokesman Bill Smith in Irving, Texas, declined to comment on the new settle ment. Justice Department spokesman Doug Krovisky in Washington said he was un aware of any settlement or an nouncement. Under the previous settle ment, Exxon and a subsidiary agreed to plead guilty to four misdemeanors and pay a record Slot) million fine. Two felony pollution charges would have been dropped Exxon also would have paid S900 million over 11 years to restore damaged natural re sources. That money would have settled the state's civil claims against Exxon and any future claims by tire federal government. But it wouldn't have affected private lawsuits seeking a total of S59 billion in damages from the oil giant. The settlement would have been the largest of an environ mental damage case in U S. his tory. It would have provided immediate cash to continue the spill cleanup and avoided years of lengthy and costly court bat tles. Opponents argued the crimi nal fine was inadequate consid ering Exxon's wealth and the damage its tanker caused. The) also noted the settlement's true value was far less than SI bil lion because of the effects of in flation over the 11-year payout period. Pressure has been building on Exxon to settle the govern ment litigation. In (hit past two weeks, fishermen, landowners, cannery workers, Native Alas kans and other private interests agreed to drop their spill law suits against the state and fed eral government. That meant a united front of plaintiffs suing Exxon. The tanker Exxon Valdez spilled nearly 11 million gal lons of crude oil in Prince Wil liam Sound when it slammed into a reef on March 24, 1989 The oil killed countless fish and thousands of marine birds and mammals. It also was dev astating to the region's native villages, where most residents still live off the land and sea. Joseph Hazelwood, the ship's captain, was accused of drink ing on shore before the tanker left Port Valdez, but he was ac quitted of statu charges that he operated the ship while intoxi cated.