Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, July 06, 2004, Page 3, Image 3

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    CHANGE OF HEART
Erik R. Bishoff Online & Photo Editor
Student Dusty Welch (foreground) and others from Professor Stan Jones’s Landscape Architecture Design/Build class
break ground on the Heart of Campus project at the intersection of 13th and University Monday, July 28th.
IRAQ
continued from page 1
of the war and in the Gulf for sever
al months in 2003, his brother told
the newspaper.
A Hermrston 1 ligh graduate, Hus
ton had once worked for his parents'
excavation company, but wanted to
see the world beyond Hermiston.
When he shipped out, he told his
parents not to worry over him.
"Think of all of the married
Marines with kids," he wrote his
parents. "Not some punk like me."
Matthew Huston said he will re
member his brother as an avid hunter,
a music lover and an artist. "He was
the life of the party," Huston said.
"Everyone that met him loved him."
lames Huston was the sixth Marine
to die in the past month in the Al An
bar province, a Sunni-dominated area
west of the Iraqi capital that has been a
hotbed of anti-U.S. resistance. It in
cludes the cities of Eallujah, Ramadi
and Qaim on the Syrian border.
More than 850 11.S. service
members have died since the
beginning of military operations in
Iraq in March 2003, according
to the U.S. Defense Department.
Included in that figure are at
least 24 soldiers killed with close
Oregon ties.
Funeral arrangements for James
Huston have not been made yet, but
the family is meeting with a member
of the armed services to make final
preparations.
Information from: The Hast
Oregonian
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The June 29 story "Student Senate issue resolution supports GTFF" erroneously reported that academic senators are absent this sum
mer, and thus did not participate in the vote on the resolution. In fact, Senators Sol Hart (graduate/law), Rodrigo Moreno-Villamar (social
science) and Stephanie Stoll (science) were present at the meeting. The Emerald regrets the error.
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Erik R. Bishoff Online & Photo Editor
Preferred Construction workers Kirk Miller and Jim Devorak attach ceiling timbers at the
University Longhouse construction site Thursday afternoon.
LONGHOUSE
continued from page 1
was condemned at least twice, and that
it was the people who visited it, rather
than the structure, that gave it life.
"( The) people that used it were of
good spirit, and that spirit will even
tually be put into the new long
house," Florendo said.
Florendo said it took a while for
everyone involved to agree on what
they wanted.
"There were too many ideas," I'lo
rendo said, adding that the Native
American community was promised
the new house more than 20 years
ago. By the time everybody had their
say, had agreed on what they wanted
to do and found an architect, the cost
of the building had gone up 10 times.
"It's going to be a wonderful de
sign," he said. "It will be something
really beautiful."
Betties believes the longhouse is a
place where everyone can come together.
"It contributes a safe haven," he
said. "It's more than just a building;
it's a place where the community sup
ports the longhouse and the long
house supports the community."
omiedrawhorn@dailYemerald.com
NANOTECH
continued from page 1
green chemistry and established the
world's first green chemistry lab in
1997. Me works with a process
called biomol
ecular nano
lithography to
develop envi
ronmentally
friendly tech
niques.
Hutchison
compared this
process to build
ing a statue. The
current process
involves build
ing from the
top down, cut
ting away at a
Jim Hutchison
University
researcher
larger piece of material to eventually
create the object desired. Biomolecular
nanolithography is a process of build
ing from the ground up. This means
that all of the materials gathered to
build the object are used in its creation.
I lutchison and his team next hopes
to attach nanoparticles to electric
leads and wire them into circuits to
see whether the technique can be
used to create functional circuits.
This isn't the first time Hutchinson
has conducted successful scientific
research.
II is recent breakthrough comes on
the heels of the U.S. patent 1 lutchison
received in May fora new manufactur
ing process for making gold nanopar
ticles without using dangerous and en
vironmentally harmful chemicals.
benbrown@dailyemerald.com
Oregon Daily Emerald. A campus tradition — over lOO years publication.
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