Unpasteurized milk recalled after outbreak of E. coli NORTHWEST PORTI-AND (AP) — Unpnsteur izod milk was removed from grocery stores after six people became ill with a virulent strain of K. coli bacteria. health officials said Wednesday. The Dragon Deportment of Agriculture rei oiled raw milk produced by Thomas Jorsoy Dairy in suburban Tigard. department spokesman Hruc« Pokamey said The strain of E. coll is the same one that contaminated mayonnaise at two Oregon Sizz.ler restaurants in Man h The botieria can cause bloody diarrhea and hemolytic uremic syndrome, a severe kidney complication Two people were hospitalized in mid-April after drinking the milk, but have been released, said Dr Kat rina Hedberg, deputy state epidemiologist The ages of the victims ranged from 'i to t>2 One < asst was reported in Decant bar. another in Man h and four in April, she said The (a sea were linked Tuesday, when the Agriculture Department issued the recall order and took samples from milk < onlainers and the HU c ows at the family-oj>er ated dairy. John Thomas, the dairy's owner, said the results of tests taken at ins farm will not Im- available until Friday. "Without finding it was definitely the milk, they shouldn’t condemn me, because we serve milk to sever al thousand |»eople." Thomas said "You spend 4.1 years doing something vou believe in, you don’t like to have it destroyed in 24 hours." he said. Thomas said he distributes about 350 gallons of unpas leurized milk a day and probably will not divert his product for pasteurization, who h heats the milk to kill bac teria and prevent disease Instead, the milk will remain at his farm pending the outcome of the investi gation. The stale has suggested the pasteurization until it locates which i attle are contaminated. Pokarney said. The infection spread when the milk came into contact with contaminated cattle feces, Hedberg said "We recommend that people refrain from drinking unpasteurized milk." Hedberg said "It’s considered to Ik* a health food, but as far as we’re concerned, there’s no nutritional value " Pokarney said there ure no plans lo stiut down the dairy during testing The milk was pulled from the shelves of Portland-area stores including Tred Meyer. Safeway, f ood for Less. Thrift way and Nature’s l-resh Northwest. The dairv'is the only supplier of raw milk in the Port land area, but there are nine distributors in the state The state regularly tests distributors of raw milk for contamination, but no specific test is requited to detect E. cob. Pokamey said Since January, three other cases of the E. coli strain have (wen confirmed but have not been linked to a source. Hedberg said "More cattle ore being infected." she said. "We're going to continue to see more outbreaks and more cases of this illness." Consumption of undercooked meat that has come in contact with cattle feces has been the most commonly identified source of the infection. In mid-March, dor^nsof people were infected with the same strain of E. coli — 0157:117 — after enting at two Sizzktr restaurants in Grants Pass and North Bend It was traced to salad dressing and sauces containing mayon naise that had been contaminated by meat. A different strain of E. coli bacteria killed two children and made hundreds of people sick in Washington last January after they ate at Jack in the Box restaurants. A third child also died after being infected with that strain of E. coli. but the death could not be specifically linked to the outbreak. Coastal eccentric uses appliances for street art CANNON HKAOI (Al') — "Sometimes he’d take perfectly good electric appliant es. wash ing machines, portable fans, vac mini cleaners — that kind of thing— and just drop them off in the middle of Mum Street He'd walk off u ways, and torn around and watch them. I don't know what he expected them to do Hut that was John." — Possible eulogy at the funer al of John Fraser, who is still alive. Such ii reinembronco might please Fraser, part-tlmo busi nessman ond civic leader, and full-time practitioner of imprac tical jokes artci the art of Dada. Around the mirth coast. Frus er is perhaps most widely known as the driver of THE VAN — a piece of modern art in progress, festooned as it is with plastic cows, stem iled Elvis mugs, lai - oner-covered French fries, and the tail-end of a surf board In Cannon Bench, his home of 1 !i years. Fraser is also known ns the owner of Once Upon A Breeze Kile Shop; publisher of the san aslu newsletter, "The Rocker;" perpetrator of innu merable weird pranks; and. at least a little ini ongruously, the former holder of two ek* led lo< al offices. "I don't know what you're going to make of this,'' Fraser siiid with a laugh, at the conclusion of a recent interview. Hard enough to make sense of someone who ads with apparent purpose. But what do you make of a guy who once blanketed the town with a fine layer of plastic tree frogs' And then was award ed a handsome, wooden plaque for his yours of dedicated com munity service? "'1110 first few years I was here. 1 was a mime." notes Fraser "So people knew I had a little wack iness in me" before the election. Tending business at his kite shop, located in an out-of-sight mail just behind the boutiques that front Main Street, Fraser looks the part of a less-serious businessman. On a Tuesday afternoon, he wore sweat pants anti an un tucked rugby slurt On his feet were i anvas Converse sneakers — one bla< k. one white llis hair, graying at the temples, hung well below the collar line. In the sunlit back room of the kite shop, Fraser sot back in a director's chair and prepared for on interview. About him was a mass of unconnec ted do-dads. A ‘There were things that just didn’t make any sense at all—things like baby dolls impaled with carrots.’ —- John Fraser. Cannon Beach resident white diamond-shaped Wile fea turing the mug of Mad Maga zine's Alfred K. Neuman hung in front of a window. A cartoon greeting cart! featuring two peo ple inspecting a cadaver was tacked to a Tiling cabinet. A wide eyed Mattel doll wearing a nun's habit sat on a shelf. Fraser pointed out an item sit ting on the window sill — a piece of art he's been working on. he said. It's u pink plastic flower pot with n rock in it. A black sheet of cardboard bisects the pot verti cally. and on this are two block and white photos of o Kiri's face The one on top shows her with a ln>y in her mouth. The one below features a normal, smiling pose. A broken, ceramic flute lies .11 ross the pot. beneath the pic turns, and a plastic travel alarm dm k is taped to the pot's brim. Fraser said he's been working on the piece for some time, and it's apparent that he's proud of its progress. The piece is an example of the kind of art Fraser likes best — nonsense art He had studied all the major genres, but the one that (.aptivat ed him was Dada. a French movement earlier this century "There were things that just didn't make any sense at all — things like baby dolls impaled with carrots." F'raser said. In Cannon Beach, Fraser takes the theory of Dacia to the streets once every two or three months. His art-in-the-crosswalk series involves nothing but leaving an occasional electrical appliance in the middle of the street in front of Osborne's Grocery Store. Often, the fun is just seeing how long the thing will remain there, before some tourist — or the police — come along and remove it Last Cinco de Mayo — the Mexican celebration May 5 — Fraser lined up five jars of may onnaise along the road's median. He was pleased to find out that a few people got the joke. Prmiut rJ tn fHtfl through th< grm tout t unsuUrattan i*f KLL'CiKtX'O A M 4P 89 7FM • EUGENE Nttond Putw Radio ucoainiKmin Robinson Theatre X 00 p ut. April 22. 23. 24. 30. and May I. IW Matinee 2:00 p.m. April 25 Box office, 15031.3464111 The University Theatre Presents Chimera A theatre piece influenced by the culture of Balif* Colonial Jnn Sie&tawumt OPEN TO THE PUBLIC Sunday Breakfast Special $1.95 Daily (AH You Can Eat) Buffet - $5.00 LIVE MUSIC M ■ Country W/Sot. • Jau f OomPoaPoo Bunquftt • - Mh AtfOBObkl 1626 Willamette St 1 lam - 1 am 343-7645 $ [nido'sr w" Not Just For The Over 21 Crowd! “You don't have to he 21 to enjov our food." Open 11 am to 10 pm to all ages for food service 13th <& Alder • On Campus • 343-0681 Two more charged with killing teens OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — A team of stale and federal law enforcement officers arrested two young men Wednesday in the shooting deaths of two Oregon teen-agers, officials said. Richard Ayala and Steven Bowen, both 22 and of Okla homa City, were taken into custody without incident, said Mark Crawford, a U S, Mar shal’s Service spokesman. The arrests bring to seven the number of people taken into custody. All have been charged with first-degree mur der in the Feb. 2fi deaths of Nicie Clark, lfi, and Teresa Beasley, 17. Both victims were from Portland. The bullet-riddled !>odios of Clark and Beasley were found on a dirt road at the edge of Lake Hefner in northwest Oklahoma City One man arrested earlier in the case. Steve Lorence Thames, told authorities that several people planned to rob. kidnap and kill the victims, an affidavit said. Thames said a woman who picked up Beasley at the bus station told him the teen-ager had 3 kilograms of cocaine possibly worth $900,000. A plot then developed to steal the cot aine, the affidavit said last week. Chandra Denise Griham and Frederick N Blackmon were arrested in Oklahoma City. California authorities picked up (arreu Moore. 21. of G>s Angeles, and Camille Wallace was appre hended in Chandler. RIDE SHARE Traveling soon? Need a ride? Offering a ride? Rule Share brings together people needing ami offering rides any where in Oregon or throughout the country. For more information call 3*15-7600.