New techniques help to solve murder case MADRAS (AP) — The unsolved disappearance of a girl, new forensic techniques and a misguided attempt at reward mon ey helped authorities solves 15-yuar-old murder case and con vict two men. Roger Dalo Beck, 44. and John Arthur A< kroyd. 41. have been convitied of aggravated murder for raping, stabbing and shoot ing Kayo |ean Turner, who was attacked while jogging in the Camp Sherman area. A Jefferson Circuit Court Jury convicted Beck Monday night Ackroyd was convicted lost month. Turner. 15, of Eugene, disappeared on Christmas Eve 1978 when she went jogging in the Santiam Summit community of Camp Sherman, where she had been vacationing with her fam ily. Her remains wort! found eight months later. She had been shot and stabbed. Ackroyd had reported setting Turner on the day she disap peared. Ackroyd led police to her remains eight months later, saying he had stumbled across some of her clothing while he was walk ing his dog. "He was trying to go for the reward money." said Jefferson County District Attorney Bill Hanlon. "If he could have kept his mouth shut, this case would have gone nowhere.” However, authorities didn't have enough evidence to proceed and the case remained unsolved. Hanlon credits the Linn County sheriffs office with help ing break the case in 1990, when they began investigating Ar.k royd again, this time in the disappearance of his stepdaugh ter. Rachanda Pickle, 13, in Santiam Canyon Further help in cracking the Turner case came last year, when now forensic tests on her remains showed she had been shot and stabbed. "We didn't know prior to 1992 that she had been shot and stabbed,” Hanlon said. "X-ray work done on a shirt showed a load fragment similar to a bullet fragment imbedded in shirt material.'' Turner's husband, Noel Turner, said Tuesday that he had not been sure that a guilty verdict would be returned in Ber k's trial ( ici Ready tor People on el the Oregon (oast Spring lierm at l)IMB m ( harlcsroti, lOregon lake PS407 Coastal Resources Policy 3 Credits Winter term CRN 29739 I4:OOMWF Riiy Mcdlcr, Inmnctor 260 Camdon Open on Thanksgiving 4: 30pm-9: 30pm Prompt service with reservations 484-6496 - 1775 W. 6th • Eugene “31 years of Quality Service” Mercedes • BMW • Volkswagen Audi • Datsun • Toyota -GERMAN - AUTO SERVICE, INC. j 342-2912 2025 Franklin Blvd. Eugene, Oregon, 97402 Espresso man shapes appetites PORTLAND (AH) — Away from his own Port land espresso bar. when he is desperate for a good espresso. Alev Fisenko asks to set* the person in charge He hands over his business card: Espresso Coffee Consultants, it reads Stores-Marketing Training "I usually charge S"50 a tla> for my consulting." he tells the person, "hut for you. I will trade some of my knowledge for one t up of espresso if I may make it myself ” Espresso has been the center of Alex Fisenko s existence for a long time — before lattes si ented the air in corporate offices, liefure espresso blends Im>i ame as common as < hewing gum. before Seat tle boasted its first espresso bar And since 1986. the man who helped shape the San Francisco Bay area's appetite for espresso has made Portland his home base, quietly operating American Espresso — o coffee and yogurt shop on the edge of Portland State University. (Jkrainian-bom Fisenko set his sights on enlight ening Americans about i of foe: The bottomless cup of dishwater — a fixture of American restaurants — wasn't worth the water it was brewed with A man with strong opinions and an impatience for red tape, he approached his mission with a mix ture of persistent e. enterprise and intelligence. At "ifi, Fisenko has mellowed since 1969. when he opened the 3-Cs, a pioneering espresso bar in Berkeley. Calif It seated seven and took in 5*15 on a typical day. Me went on to open a total of 16 plai es specializing in espresso drinks — not food, not socializing — in Berkeley. San Francisco, Sacramento. Portland. Ann Arbor. Mich., and Columbus, Ohio. Anierit an Kspresso is big and walled with win dows, with al! tiie charm of a poster-decorated i afeteria Professors and bac kpack-toting students frown into textbooks and binders, a penc il in one hand and a Si 50 tall double latte in tin* other Fisenko eves his place likr .1 watchful mother Cool, damp mornings — espresso-drinking weath er — elate him And college neighborhoods suit his open-shirt. sassy sensibility I ell Alex I isenko, "Clive me .1 second, " and he'll let vuu know w hen a se< Olid is up. The silver-haired Fisenko is full of stories, and he moves his hands like butterflies ill flight as he tells them f'he day the polit e came to Coffee Renaissance in Berkeley to question him about Patty Hears!, who stopped in regularly with her walrus uiustiH bed boyfriend anti ordered mochas. The time 111 San ( rant isco when an elegant cus tomer turned out to fie Dr Ernesto Illy — famed in t offee 1 in.lot — who invited Fisenko. Ins wife, Oksana, and their son to v isit his roasting plant in Trieste, Italy. Opening day a year and a half ago at his espresso bar in Ohio State University's stu dent union, when all of 17 customers showed up. Half were foreigners, he says with a laugh, and the rest were Seattle natives — thrilled to find espres so. Fisenko entered the espresso business with a friend m 1965. importing and selling Gaggia espres so machines 1 le rigged a machine in the back of his station wagon, offering sample cappuccinos to prosper ts The usual response w as. "Tastes good, imt no customer is going to order one " I isenko kept at it; Ins espresso bars followed In the fall of 197-t, Dave Olsen — now Starbucks' senior vice president lor coffee spent a couple ‘I furnished the coffees; he made the decisions — and the decisions were made on taste, not price. Almost everybody started copying what he was doing, right away.’ Milt Mountanus coffee roaster of days hanging around Coffee Renaissance, a larg er cafe that Fispnko opened in the early 1970s on Berkeley's Durant Avenue While Olsen, 47, sees his business style as very different from f'isenko's. he credits the elder man with prodding him into taking a risk with espres so. And in the spring of 1975, Olsen bought a (log gia from Fisenko and opened a cafe near the Uni versity of Washington. Coffee Renaisssance was a bohemian place, dec orated with burlap coffee bean bags and frequent ed by hippies. On the menu board, next to "Espresso — 35 cents." Fisenko wrote: "If you don't know what it is. don't order it. Try a cap puccino." The message struck some people as amusing, others as unfriendly. Either way. the spot was a turning point for him. "The lines were around the block in Berkeley to his espresso businesses." recalls Milt Mountanos, a third-generation San Franc isco roaster who han dled the only supply of fancy green beans in the United States in the 1970s. "I furnished the cof fees: he made the decisions — and the decisions were made on taste, not price. Almost everybody started copying what he was doing, right away." In 1981, when Fisenko’s landlord took over Espresso Experience —one of his Berkeley cafes Fisenko decided to break away from university neighborhoods. A reluctant leasing agent agreed to rent him a space in the heart of San Francisco's business district “These aren’t a bunch of hip pies.' he warned Fisenko. At that time. lattes am) cappuccinos were 65 (flits. His iirst dav at Km hart ad era Center. Kisenko pulled in StH On the se< and day. $20. On l)a\ i. he hung signs nil over the building, advertising the newest Espresso experience. "Listen to what happened." says Kisenko, chortling. " Those three-piece guys, these women in blouses and high heels and lipstick, come up and sav. 'Hoy. Alex, remember me? 1 used to hang around with you when I was going to Berkeley and now I am a finam ial adviser,’ or a lawyer And those people were desperate for espresso.” In 1986, he moved to Portland and sold his Kmbarcadero Center business. The Northwest, he believed, was ripe for espresso. A year later. Boyd Coffee Co. temporarily hired Kisenko to set up new coffee stores in Portland and Seattle Boyd’s roastenaster worked with him on a blend to serve in American Espresso. And the company recently bought one of Fisenko's Ann Arbor coffee bars Kisenko dreams of the day when it's possible to stroll into a Denny's in Iowa and get a decent espresso. "Then I know." he says, "my life’s mis sion will have been achieved." UCLA cited for its crematory’s fumes l.OS ANGELES (Al>) — UCLA was cited earlier this year because its campus crematory was send ing fumes into medical school offices, it was reported today. State investigators cited the university in August for operat ing an improper venting and exhaust system and also for vio lating worker safety regulations, the Los Angeles Times said. The incinerator was used by the UCLA. School of Medicine to cremate cadavers. It was shut down last week following the discovery of bloody scalpels, syringe needles and other haz ardous waste among cremated remains that were to have Inteii buried in Santa Monica Bay. The captain of the boat dis covered the waste when a bag of human remains accidentally broke open. UCLA officials called the mix ing accidental, but investiga tions into possible civil and criminal violations are under way. The August citations by the California Occupational Safety and Health Administration said emissions from the UCLA cre matory were entering medical school offices The university suul the bodies were being burned at tempera tures lower than necessary to kill bacteria and eliminate odors, the Times said. "As far as we know, the repair of the incinerator took care of that." David Meyer, the medical school's faculty research coordi nator. said Monday. Hut Lianne Lund, student affairs officer at the medical school, said employees reported headaches and nausea from fumes coming from the venting system as late as Oct. 20. RESUMES Give your resume a professional look, by having it typeset at Letter Perfect Graphics. Suite 300 EMU. 346-4381 9-5 Mon-Fri