C'O LLEG°E 2 0 0 4 Classes begin June 21. For more information visit us at www.mhcc.edu At. mt hood .^ViS^^kCOMMUNITY COLLEGE 26000 SE STARK STREET, GRESHAM, OR 97030 UNIVERSITY OF OREGON It’s Here Now! 2004 Summer Session Registration Register for Summer Classes Book Your Summer in Oregon Summer Session starts June 21. Pick up your free summer catalog today in the Summer Session office, 333 Oregon Hall, at the UO Bookstore, or read it online. You can speed your way toward graduation by taking required courses during summer. Check Out Our Website! http://uosummer.uoregon.edu ROT continued from page 1A documents and series of photo maps. Rather than use CDs, Kelly said that when he can't put the largest series on hard drive he uses the "mass storage unit," a massive hard drive for library archives. Raenie Kane buys and sells used CDs for I he House of Records, a music store located at 258 E. 13th Ave. in Eugene. Kane said she had never heard of the CD rot phenome non, but identified the symptoms of CD rot as commonplace in the CDs customers try to sell to the store. "In the 13 years I've been buying and selling CDs, I've never seen holes in the surface of the silver," Kane said. "I've seen the clouding though, but I've always attributed that to a manufacturers defect, not age, but it certainly ruins the CD." The structure of a CD is essentially a data sandwich. A data-carrying lay er is placed between a layer of plas tic on the bottom and lacquer and a label on the top, according to Kane. In manufactured CDs, the data car rying layer is a slice of aluminum, while in writable CDs made for use with a home CD burner, the data layer is made up of a dye that is modified by the burners. Jerry Hartke, who runs Media Sci ences, Inc., a Marlborough, Mass, laboratory that tests CDs, said if the manufacturer applied the lacquer improperly, air can penetrate and oxidize the aluminum, eating it up much like iron rusts in air, according to a May 6 article from The Associat ed Press. Factors such as temperature fluctuations can also weaken the discs' structure causing the layers to pull apart. Burned writable CDs may have an even shorter lifespan according to PC-Active, a Dutch personal computer magazine. In a study of different CD-R brands published in August 2003, results showed CD-Rs are unreadable in as little as two years because the dyes in the CDs' recording layer fade. When the CD is made on a home burner, the writing laser "burns" the dye, which becomes dark, to represent a "1" while a "0" is left blank. If the dye fades, the reading laser perceives an entirely empty disc of zeros. CD rot is not likely to be a big problem for users who take care of their CDs, according to Hartke. It's more common that discs are ren dered unreadable by poor handling. "If people treat these discs rather harshly, or stack them, or allow them to mb against each other, this very fragile protective layer can be dis turbed, allowing the atmosphere to interact with that aluminum," he said. Tyrone Dion works at the CD/Game Exchange in Eugene, which buys and sells secondhand music. He said most people aren't careful with their CDs. "You know, I just chuck my CDs into a big old pile and they get all scratched so they don't live long enough to expe rience the effects of deterioration," Dion said. "We see a lot more of the media deterioration like scratches and mishandling than we see the actual de terioration of the (data)." Kane said she also gets mishan dled CDs. "People are trying to sell us all sorts of stuff," she said. "People are trying to give us the dredge of their" collections, so their CDs are not usu ally in the best shape." Contact the business/science/technology reporter at stevenneuman@dailyemerald.com. GIFT continued from page 1A outreach to those who could benefit from die materials. "Now I'll be able to focus more on the archives," she said, adding that her former job requirements included managing University records, such as student and personnel files. "Records management was a huge job." The library will also be able to hire a new employee to take on the records management position, giving Briston more time to collect materials. The Solari family has provided sup port for the University Libraries since the late 1980s by contributing to the Knight Library's expansion project, creating an endowment for informa tion technology and teaching, estab lishing a faculty fellowship for library staff members and funding an en dowment for library instructional services, according to the release. The money counts toward the University's Campaign Oregon: Transforming Lives, a fundraising initiative that aims to raise $600 million to support students, faculty, programs and facilities. Briston said the gift will provide the means to educate those who are un aware of the archive materials' diver sity or their value to the community and the state. "1 have everything from the ridicu lous to the sublime," she said. She added that some of the memorabilia she has collected and seen over her two and a half years working at the University are the "weirdest" out of the materials. "I don't know why I have a stuffed iguana," she said. "But 1 have a stuffed iguana." An alumna also donated a cowbell that was once used to heckle the Ore gon State University crowds during Civil War games, she said. But while some materials have humorous his torical value, others provide detailed accounts of notable events. For example, Briston said there are documents detailing how the Univer sity came to be established as the first public institution of higher education in the state. "All of these materials are unique," she said. Other items include the final screenplay draft of "Animal House," student dissertations and theses and a collection of historical photographs. Briston said there is even a photo of the University's first day of classes. Archive materials are located in the Knight Library, Fenton Hall and the Baker Downtown Center. The more than 12,000 boxes of material occupy over 19,000 linear feet of space. Briston said the materials provide students, faculty and community members many research opportuni ties. She said students in the Clark Honors College are using the presi dential office records and journalism students have used the photo archives to supplement documentaries. "There's lots of potential for use," she said. University Librarian Deborah Carver said the archives don't just track the University's past but also show trends in higher education throughout history. "I think there's all sorts of lessons to be learned from the University's past, " she said. Briston said she hopes better ac cessibility will increase interest in the collection. "I want to make sure everybody knows what I know," she said. Contact the higher education/student life/student affairs reporter at chelseaduncan@dailyemerald.com. You’re always close to campus. > www.dailyenierald.com