Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (May 2, 2005)
j Oregon update | 02-472 For full information visit our website https://uodistinctions.uoregon.edu phone 541-346-3902; or e-mail uodistinctions@cas.uoregon.edu Stand out from/the crowd Enhance your education with the Professional Distinctions program Compliment your liberal arts degree with a specific set of professional perspectives and skills. A program by the College of Arts and Sciences ,and the Career Center GET EXPERIENCE [ now hiring advertising executives ] Gain real-world experience, earn unlimited commission and set your own hours. Contact Advertising Director Melissa Gust at 346-3712 or at ads@dailyemerald.com for more information. £.rrv Or\We sva\^v° £u9ene’ QK OtoV O tea00 03^ erne ra\d pro n®' 2006 '2m** sP*^e'n ideperyl <5ef& ^ ,mPuS eflce \0 eovi© . G**"*. ^ „ofl\ P"0 LnsWP5'*' „^se'S comrt"' atW® rtsefs . Boos'® .irne^ . exc®6' \y3\O'O0 -SJ53 \ec M* af^ rcc© •wed 2006 5a\esp( ets°° 0H^e Ve3* OnW ets'W ot Ofe9°n 9006 Oregon Daily Emerald The independent campus newspaper for the UO community IN BRIEF Vancouver man dies in small plane crash PORTLAND — The authorities identified the pilot of a small plane that crashed along some railroad tracks not far from Portland International Airport. Eric Molstead, 43, of Vancouver, Wash., was the only occupant aboard the plane when it went down Saturday night near the Heron Lakes Golf Club, said A.J. Jackson, spokeswoman for Portland Fire and Rescue. Molstead died at the scene. ; It was not known where the pilot was headed, but there is a private air field that serves small planes just across the Columbia River from Port land International Airport. National Transportation Safety Board investigators were examining the wreckage Sunday. Entire Oregon coast closed to clamming NEWPORT — For the first time since 2002, the entire Oregon coast is closed to clamming. A naturally occurring toxin has ex ceeded safe limits in razor clams, prompting state agriculture officials to close north coast beaches last Tliesday, followed by the closure of central coast beaches on Thursday. South coast beaches had already been shut down. The toxin, domoic acid, is produced by algae and is stored by razor clams in their fat. Eating contaminated shell fish can cause minor illness within minutes, with symptoms including vomiting, diarrhea, abdominal cramps and headache. Severe cases can result in memory problems and even death. When beaches were closed to clam ming in October 2002, it took a year before some finally reopened. Other beaches never did. This time, it’s anyone’s guess when clam digging will resume. Ninety-five percent of clamming in Oregon occurs on north beaches. “At these levels, I’d say we’re done for the summer,” said Matt Hunter, shellfish biologist with the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife in Astoria. For people who flocked to Clatsop Beach, an 18-mile stretch from Sea side to Astoria, it was a disappointing end to what had looked like a very promising spring clam dig. At Bud’s Campground in Gearhart, they were turning people away before the clam closure was announced. Af terward, many campers packed up and went back home. “The main disappointment was that people had made plans and came all the way down here,” said campground owner Bill Roady. ( Biologists at the state Department of Agriculture barely saw it coming, e spokeswoman Deb Cannon said. “In Clatsop, the levels of domoic acid went from 11.5 (parts per million) to 57 and 68 in three days, which is a huge jump,” Cannon said. Levels f above 20 parts per million are consid ered unsafe and trigger the closures. Goldschmidt papers transferred to Portland PORTLAND — The city of Portland is now in possession of three boxes of documents dating from former Gov. Neil Goldschmidt’s term as mayor in the 1970s. The papers were already public, but interest in them grew after the former governor admitted a year ago to sexu ally abusing a 14-year-old girl while he was mayor of Portland. Secretary of State Bill Bradbury said the state has now released all of Gold schmidt’s records of state and city service that it possibly can. City auditor Gary Blackmer said the three boxes of documents will join a collection of 80 other boxes that cover a period of what he calls fundamental change in city business. The Associated Press