Splash down Two-year-old Mason Goidbeck splashes m the water fountain in the Eugene Downtown Mall Wednesday afternoon Cash For Textbooks Mon -Sat Smith Family Bookstore 768 E. 13th 1 Block F rom Campus 345-1651 | Wrecked train blocks 1-84 MOSIt'K. Ore (Al>) — A lane of Interstate 84 remained closed Wednesday as workers tried to | remove a derailed freight train from the south side of the high way. Eight rairs and two engines in the 36-car Union Pacific train jumped tho tracks shortly be fore 8 p.m. Tuesday. No one was injured. I One derailed freight car car ried wood pulp, anothnr car ried lumber and a third carried I steel. The other five derailed curs want empty, said railroad spokesman Alex Tice. About 200 gallons of diesel fuel spilled from one of tho en gines when it overturned and caught fire, said Cliff VValkey of the state Department of Envi ronmental Quality in Bend. He said most of the fuel was cleaned up. and tho railroad had hired a company to remove the contaminated soil. Damage to the train was esti mated at more than $200,000. The cause of the wreck was un der Investigation. Women artists display work at Kems center By Daralyn Trappe Emerald Assocaie Editor "Women's Struggles, Wom en's Visions," an exhibition opening Saturday at the Maude Kerns Art Center, features works by more than 35 female artists. Including never-before seen paintings by the late Uni versity professor for whom the gallery Is named. The exhibition's opening day was organized to coincide with Kerns' 116th birthday The art ist was the department head at tho University's School of Art Education for 26 years, begin ning In 1921. Several of Kerns' paintings, 39 on paper and six on canvas, were recently restored to their original condition and will be on view and up for sale begin ning Saturday evening from 4:30 to 6:30. Admission Is free, but a $2 donation Is suggested. Clare Feighan. administrative director of the galiory, said the paintings, done while Korns was in her 60s, are difficult to define. “She began doing abstract artwork late In her life and these paintings are from that time," Feighan said. "She be gan her works on paper, did most of design and color there and then did some on canvas.” In 1950, Kerns was a found ing member, along with about 15 other artists, of the Eugene Arts Center. The center moved into a building at 1920 E. 15th Ave in 1963 when Kerns put the down payment on it. She died two years later and the gallery was renamod In her honor. Along with the restored paintings by Kerns, the latest exhibit features works of acryl ic, oil, bronze, watorcolor, print, photography, sculpture and quilting by contemporary artists from across the country. Some are quite unique, such as the full-body cast of a preg nant woman, and several are abstract But there is an over riding theme. Interim director Martha Snyder said, of the de piction of women’s struggles and visions. The showing of this artwork will be from 7 to 9 p m. Satur day and will include birthday cake and a celebration of Kerns' life. The exhibit will run through Sept. 30 and during the two month period, many work shops and panel discussions on women and art are planned. Topics include women artists responding to war, art as thera py, feminist art criticism and many others. For moro information, pick up a flier at the gallery or call 345-1571. Regular hours are Tuesday through Friday, 10 a m. to 5 p.m. and Saturday and Sunday, 1 to 5 p.m. DOE includes Oregon in Hanford emergency plan mam SALEM (AP) — Oregon finally has been in cluded in U S. Department of Energy emer gency plans for accidents at the Hanford nu clear reservation in southeastern Washington. The major concern is possible contamina tion of water and crops In the food chain. Bill Sanderson. a stain energy Department spokesman, saia 1 uesaay. Typically, plans for a nuclear accident cover SO miles around a nuclear plant. Although the Oregon border is only 35 miles away from Hanford, federal officials long have believed a range of hills and prevailing winds would prevent any contamination in Oregon A 1900 study showed that Oregon could face slight danger. San derson said. "At 10 miles you evacuate people. At 50 miles you talk about airborne fallout on crops, pasture land, where contamination could be taken up Into the food chain." he said. Parts of Morrow and Umatilla counties in northeastern Oregon, including the cities of Hermlston, Umatilla and Boardman. are within a 50-mile radius and will be included in federal plans. Oregon officials are chlofly concerned about the potential for an explosion inside one of 177 underground waste tanks containing high-level nuclear and toxic chemical waste at Hanford. The waste was produced from 1944 to 1988 by nine military weapons reactors and several chemical factories that purified plutonium for nuclear bombs. "We agree with experts who say it is possible that a single lank could explode." said Mary Lou Blazek. a Hanford expert with the Oregon Energy Department. Others, including Son)a Anderson, a former Hanford chemical engineer, believe an accldont involving more than one tank is pos sible. Blazek said she has seen no evidence to support Anderson's theory. Federal officials at Hanford say the risk of an explosion in some of the tanks is extremely low and that the risk is even lower that ra dioactivity could reach Oregon. Engine Service 1000 S. BerteUen Rd. M • Eugene OR 97402 One block north of W. 11th • Nolan Ind. Plaza Specializing in German Autos for 34 Years • Mercedes • BMW • Volkswagen • 342-3952 Student and Faculty Discounts RIGHT ©N TARGET Oregon Daily Emerald 346-3712 CORRECTION An article In Tuesday's Emerald gave the wrong per centage Increase In tuition recommended by the Oregon State Board of Higher Educa tion as part of Its plan to amend a reduced budget In 1903-95. Students can ex pect their tuition to rise 30 percent in the next bienni um.