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AAC585 | Open 24 Hours • Ask about free pickup and delivery | exp 12/31/98 Searching for the best airline schedules and fares? Adventure in Travel a locally-owned travel asency has an online bookins ensine! • specify your own preferences and parameters for searches • request schedules and lowest fares • book airline flights for U.S. and foreign destinations • book hotel reservations worldwide • receive tickets/documents by mail • service fees waived • seven days a week, 24 hours a day www. trave I poi nt. com/adventure 6 Ornnnn Dailv Frmralri Tuftsriav DflCfimhfir 1 Students to restore Millrace site Landscape students design improvements to beautify the waterway By Tricia Schwennesen Oregon Daily Emerald A soggy blanket of autumn leaves blew across the wet pave ment as students dashed to catch the black tarps covering the em bankment before they flew into the water. “We gotta really move to make this happen," Assistant Professor Stan Jones said to his landscape architecture students. Despite dark skies and inter mittent rain showers, students in the fourth-year landscape archi tecture studio continued to lay down basalt rocks and plant na tive Oregon vegetation on the banks of the Millrace, a campus waterway across Franklin Boule vard, on Wednesday. This year, 15 landscape archi tect students designed improve ments to the waterway in front of the physical plant in a process called applied stream bank restoration. Changes included building a new viewing deck, planting native vegetation to at tract native species of birds and rebuilding the embankment to prevent further erosion. “The focus of the studio is for students to take on a project that they design, detail and then con struct,” Jones said. The Millrace is about a two mile stretch of water diverted from the Willamette River that used to power wheels on several mills in the early 1900s. “It’s hard to tell in construction how much you will get done be cause the weather is always a fac tor,” said Peter Dixon, a land scape architecture major. “It’s a cool opportunity, a cool project to be able to improve the University scape.” The goal of the project was to stabilize the bank while increas ing native vegetation and wildlife. Over the years, the Millrace has been subjected to pedestrians, a parking lot, an overpopulation of ducks and land erosion. Jones said the vast number of ducks living in the Millrace is due to people feeding them human food, such as white bread. “We want to help people un derstand why they shouldn’t feed Scott BamettZHmemlil Stan Jones helps restore part of the Millrace across the street from the Onyx Bridge the ducks what they feed the ducks,” Jones said. “We are in creasing the diversity of plant life and increasing the habitat for a variety of species.” Jones said the challenge for stu dents is to find “a way to balance things that would and couldn’t change with things that should be able to change - like the stream.” Red willow, rushes and dog wood will replace compressed clay, and the new vegetation should attract more species of na tive birds. To encourage Osprey to dwell near the water, students will in corporate into their plans a nest ing pole for the hawk-like bird, a native Oregon species that hunts in water.The students also de signed a bio-swale, which will take rainwater run off from the parking lot and treat it, Jones said. Students gleaned information from other courses about what types of materials to use and where to find them. For example, the new deck is being built out of recycled plastic lumber, a combi nation of recycled milk bottles and wood products. “It doesn’t rot as quickly. It lasts longer, and it takes advantage of recycled products,” Jones said. Students stressed the impor tance of using materials that don't hurt the environment. Dixon said even the erosion control blankets, called geo-tex tiles, are a good protective layer for the soil. “Those blankets are neat be cause they’re totally organic and they hold the soil together,” Dixon said. Landscape architecture major Dryden Jenney said there are some drawbacks to the project. “Some of the drawings didn’t fit the site and we had to make ad justments,” Jenney said. “Some materials weren’t available, and we’ve made some compromises.” Jones said the studio helps stu dents see the connection between the designs and what is actually built in the field, he said. Jenney said the Millrace studio project has been one of the best experiences because she is a “hands-on learner.” “It’s been really educational just making that connection,” Jen ney said. “Designing something has been so arbitrary, we’ve nev er really had our own site, and this time it’s been so wonderful because the site was so close to our studio, and we could go mea sure things.” Jenney said the manual labor was fun and it was good to get her hands down in the dirt. “Sometimes group projects can be very stressful, but this went very smooth,” Jenney said. Jones and his students said the $30,000 project should be com pleted in the next couple of weeks. “Aesthetically, it’s just going to be a much nicer environment for people to come down and visit,” Jones said. Virtual Office Systems Inc. in Partnership with The University of Oregon Bookstore 2387 West 11th Ph. 343-8633 Open Mon-Sat 11-6 The “Ultimate ’’ Pentium II® 350 • QDI BX Board, lOOMItz • #9 Revolution 4MB AGP • 6.4G Western Digital • 64 MB 100 Mhz SDRAM • Yamaha 3D Sound • 36XCD, 56K V.90 •17".28 SVGA Monitor • Ergo Mouse, Keyboard • Win 98 on CD installed • 1 Yr. Parts, 2 Yrs Labor $1389.99 Quality Custom VOS Systems: We build them... We back them... We service them... ...all local! The “Workhorse" AMD KB 300 AMD K6 300 with MMX® 4 MB Diamond Stealth 2.5G Western Digital 32 MB SDRAM Yamaha 3D Sound 32X CD, 33.6 modem 14” .28 SVGA Monitor Ergo Mouse, Keyboard Win 98 on CD installed 1 Yr. Parts, 2 Yrs Labor $859.99 VOS Inc. Systems are also available at the U of O Bookstore. 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