Oregon Daily THURSDAY, JULY 14,1994 85° LOW 50° H«lm«t. The band tries to follow up tfx>ir debut album Meantime 3 Cosmic crash. Jupiter and comet meet with a bang 4 Rud« hottMcoming. Ems drop first game of home stand to Yakima Nf*l ( COMMUNITY Old artillery shell found under bridge Bomb: Navy divers recover unexploded shell from under Ferry Street Bridge, traffic comes to a halt By Edward Klopfenstein For the Oregon lAvty Emerald U.S. Navy divers removed a World War II era artillery shell from underneath the Kerry Street Bridge Wednesday, stopping rush-hour traffic for about an hour as crews transported the bomb to a area just outside of town. By mid-morning, the five member Navy team from Whidbev Island. Washington, detonated a secondary charge to the outside shell and blew it up, said Kugene Public Safety Department spokesman Tim Birr The bomb was destroyed at a disposal site at the Dave Burks Regional Training Facility near Short Mountain. If it had been a standard shell, it would have held lr> pounds of high explosives, enough to rain shrapnel across five football fields "It's a surprise." Birr said. "How it got there, we don't know." The years spent on the river bottom deactivated the detonator and could have affected the charge, which would have effectively deat ■ Turn to SHELL, Page 4 Astronomers are watching for Jupiter-comet collision Crash: Observatories around the globe trained on event By David Thorn Oregon Iki y Emerald As thev Iriiin their instru ments on tin- planet Jupiter beginning July 16, astronomers at the University's Pine Moun tain Observatory will t>e joining many of the world's other sky watchers. Beginning that day, the 21 massive remnants of a broken comet will start crashing into Jupiter's gaseous surface, in what will be the largest such collision within our solar sys teni to be recorded in human history. "W© have no idea what to expect." said Greg Bothun, director of Pine Mountain and an associate professor of physics at the University. "We're just hoping to monitor the planet for the next week and see what the data looks like.*' The event is unique not only I recause of its scale, but also because it has been anticipated by astronomers. “This is the first collision of a kilometer-sized object that we've known about in advance," Bothun said "The technology for knowing (that an object is on a collision course) has only existed for about a hundred years." The comet called Shoemaker Levy 9 was first discovered in March, 1993, by California-based astronomers Eugene and Carolyn Shoemaker and David l.evy. It was already in pie< es by then. Nine months earlier, in July 1992. it had passed too close to Jupiter and was torn apart by tidal forces i a used hv the massive gravitational pull of the planet. Even in pier es. the comet has almost completed another orbit of Jupiter an orbit that will come to an abrupt end beginning this weekend The impacting comet frag ments ranging in size from one half to two-and-one-half miles in diameter will enter Jupiter's atmosphere at a speed of .17 miles a second. Scientists are divided over what will happen to the pieces after that Some expect them to break up almost immediately, possibly creating an awesome meteor shower Others think the fragments will plunge deep into Jupiter's dense atmosphere, until the gravitational pressure of the solar system's largest planet causes each piece to vaporize and explode in a massive fire ball. similar to a nuclear explo sion, only many thousands of times larger. Some estimates have placed the power of that explosion at between 200 and 20,000 times the explosive energy of the world’s entire nuclear arsenal. The enormous blast will occur on the far side of Jupiter, out of sight from Earth. But the lack of optically visible effects isn't stopping Hothuu and legions of other astronomers from directing their attention Turn to CRASH, Page 4 Lee Carpenter (above), one of the producers of Worm Digest Magazine, which helped organize Uday Bhawalker's speech Wednesday, mixes compost Into her worm trough. These red worms (left), also colled "red wlgglers, “ can eat up to halt of their body weight In compost every day. p***» t>r l SHJNfxi at ’vmi Worms hold key to waste management Wigglers: Naturally turn garbage into soil enhancing fertilizers By Don Reynolds fv> Oegun (lady f mwjM The key to a more sustainable future may h« wriggling a few inches under our foot. said par ticipants at a Eugene workshop last night. “Welcome to a real awakening in the world of worms," Stephen White, one of the cosponsors of the workshop, told 40 or so gardening enthu siasts. Earthworms can process tons of garbage every day. turning it Into a humus- rich soil. Worm farmers can address two problems at once: waste management and soil depletion. "Every square foot of soil is a recycling cen ter.” said featured speaker IIday Hhawalker Hhawalker, founder of the Hhawalker Earth worm Research Institute, of Pune, India, said that earthworm biotechnology can he used to nourish home gardens and to dispose of Turn to WORMS, Page 4