An inside look LaVerne Krause gallery in Lawrence Hall displays a different kind of exhibit. Page 3 Serve ace The Oregon women’s tennis team finished its season at the Duck Invitational. Page 9 Tuesday, November 13,2001 Since 1 900 University of Oregon Eugene, Oregon Volume 103, Issue 56 American Airlines Flight 587 crashes in Queens ■While the cause of the crash in New York remains undetermined, officials said preliminary reports point to accident, not terrorism By James Kuhnhenn, Seth Borenstein, Warren P. Strobel & Amie Parnes Knight Ridder Newspapers NEW YORK (KRT) — An American Airlines jetliner bound for the Domini can Republic from New York with 260 people aboard plunged into a seaside neighborhood moments after takeoff Monday morning, raising fears of an other terrorist act and again rattling the shaken airline industry. The cause of the crash, which ap pears to have killed everyone on board, remained undetermined, but officials said preliminary evidence pointed to an accident — not an act of terror. Six other people were reported missing on the ground in Queens. Eyewitnesses said the plane, a 13 year-old Airbus A300, appeared to ex plode shortly after takeoff from John F. Kennedy International Airport, then broke apart and went into a nosedive. It scattered debris, including an engine that appeared to separate in-flight, across several blocks and into a nearby bay as it hurtled to the ground. A key is sue for investigators will be whether the engine, one of two on the plane, fell as a result of mechanical failure or sabotage, or whether the engine’s separation helped cause the crash. By midday, authorities had recovered the plane’s flight data recorder, and Na tional Transportation Safety Board offi cials said it would be flown to Washing ton for analysis by federal safety experts. The fiery crash came two months and a day after the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. Authori ties, however, warned the public not to assume the incidents were related. “People shouldn’t speculate as to the cause,” New York Mayor Rudolph Giu liani told reporters at an impromptu news conference near the crash. “It may well have been an engine failure.... We shouldn’t jump to conclusions.” Nevertheless, U.S. fighter jets scram bled to patrol air space above New York. Bridges and tunnels into the city were closed, and all three major New York-area airports shut down for a period of time. U.S. spy agencies also combed through intelligence reports and eaves dropping transcripts looking for any clues that pointed to a terrorist attack, a U.S. official said. An estimated 175 of the passengers on American Airlines Flight 587 were Turn to Plane crash, page 8 Plane crashes in New York American Airlines Flight 587 crashed about 5 miles from Kennedy Airport, minutes after a 9:14 a.m. takeoff. 0 5 mi 5 km 0 Learning from Experience ■ Students can now follow their wanderlust and get academic credit on one of two Pacific Challenge trips By Erin Cooney for the Emerald Swimming with hundreds of dol phins, bungee jumping from the spot where the sport was invented, whitewater rafting, skydiving and surfing are only a few of the activities Emily Garten experienced on her trip to New Zealand and Australia last winter. Not only did Garten get to spend 60 days “down under,” but she earned 18 upper-division credits doing it. Garten went on the trip through a nonprofit or ganization called Pacific Challenge. The organization offers two trips a year. The New Zealand and Australia trip leaves in the winter and a trip to South east Asia, which the group offered for the first time this year, leaves in the fall. Pacific Challenge specializes in ad venture tourism, focusing on what its founder, David Wright, calls “experien tial education.” Jason Bussanich, a senior journalism major at the University, found out just what experiential education is when he went on the New Zealand and Australia adventure. Bussanich, who heard about Pacific Challenge from a friend, said his trip was “like (MTV’s) ‘Road Rules’ on steroids.” Participants in the New Zealand trip set out at the beginning of January and return in March. The itinerary consists of 37 activities spread out over 60 days. According to die Pacific Challenge brochure, the first three days offer black water rafting. Unlike whitewater rafting, this sport involves inner tubing on an underground river. Bussanich said rafters wear helmets with lights, but they turn off the lights once underground. The natural light from trails of glowworms light up the caves for the rest of the trip. The adven Turn to Challenge, page 8 Russell Weller Emerald Whitewater rafting is but one activity students can participate in on one of Pacific Challenge’s two trips offered each year to Australia and New Zealand and Southeast Asia. Ballot issues plagued by low student participation ■ Students can have a say in how more than $8 million in student incidental fees are allocated —and all they have to do is vote By Kara Cogswell Oregon Daily Emerald The ASUO special election begins today, but many students don’t seem to know — or care — about the issues on the ballot. “I didn’t even know there was an election,” sophomore Matt Klahn said. Low student interest in campus elec tions is nothing new. In last year’s ASUO spring elec tion, only 9 percent of the student body voted. Two measures on the ballot for the special election af fect how student in cidental fees are al located. This year, more than $8 mil lion — which works out to more than $170 per student, per term — go to fund programs such as student unions, football tickets and the Designated Driver Shuttle. Students involved with the ASUO have tried to get the word out about the special election by posting bright yel low fliers around campus. The ASUO will also place a voter’s guide to the ballots in today’s Emerald. Turn to Student tees, page 5 ASUO Special Election Vote on DuckWeb today and Wednesday Monday: Measures on the ballot this week Today: What students think about the incidental fee