Photo essay: Recovering from Katrina I 6A Oregon Daily Emerald An independent newspaper at the University of Oregon www. dailyemerald. com Since 1900 | Volume 107, Issue 42 | Friday, October 21, 2005 University officials aim to sell Westmoreland Apartments Students may have to move if higher education hoard approves the decision to sell the 404-unit housing complex BY MEGHANN CUNIFF & JARED PABEN NEWS EDITORS The University hopes to sell 404 apart ments, a childcare center and the 26 acres they occupy with the aim of using the potential tens of millions of dollars for projects that include improving stu dent housing closer to campus, several officials announced Thursday. The 582 people currently living in the Westmoreland Apartments, located more than 2 miles west of campus, will be able to stay until their leases expire on June 30,2006, the officials said. The 37 buildings make up the Uni versity’s largest off-campus housing complex. There are no plans to replace the apartments with other off-campus family housing. University officials decided to put the 45-year-old property up for sale because of high maintenance costs and the high potential cost of repairing the major structural problems on the site. Also, the site was originally built to accommodate students with children, but only about 13 percent of the cur rent residents have children, said Mike Eyster, interim vice president for Stu dent Affairs and director of University Housing said. There are only 360 leaseholders cur rently at Westmoreland, he said. “We started out as family housing, and we’re not really housing very many families,” Eyster said. “We started out full, with a lot of demand, and that’s not really the case right now. We started out trying to serve children, and there aren’t very many children living there.” Westmoreland residents with children will get first priority in relocating to the WESTMORELAND, page 5A MAP KEY Urban area ■ Park land | Water | University ★ Westmoreland Major roads » ■ 1 mi. gigg |igg| ? W. 18th Avenue § : _J»_ 4 Steven Neuman | Online/Supplements editor HEFTY COST SEEKING SPOTTER The Student Recreation Center released expansion plans totaling $21.8 million BY JOE BAILEY NEWS REPORTER isitors to the Student Recreation Center may have noticed a display of detailed V models and composites showcasing a plan for a future expansion, but students should not expect to see changes anytime soon. Physical Activity and Recreation Services has released a conceptual plan calling for ex tensive additions to the SRC. At an estimat ed cost of $21.8 million, the plan was drawn on funds the center does not have. An expansion of the SRC’s aquatic facilities forms the centerpiece of the proposal with the addition of a 12-lane lap pool, a warmer leisure pool and two spa areas. Currently, the SRC has only the Leighton pool. The proposal would also add three basketball courts and five racquetball courts. Additionally, the plan would add about 60 percent more space for aerobic and weight training, as well as enlarged locker rooms and a social space where students could congregate. The SRC was opened in its present form in 2000 after a $20 million construction project. The University was one of many across the na tion putting a stronger emphasis on building and improving recreation centers. Although PARS Director Dennis Munroe is en thusiastic about the potential additions, he cau tions students not to expect immediate changes. An artist’s rendering shows the swimming pool facility Physical Activity and Recreation Services would like to build at the Student Recreation Center. “We wouldn’t want to lead them to a false hope that we’re breaking ground tomorrow,” he said. Currently, PARS does not have money al located for expanding the SRC, Munroe said. Furthermore, it is unlikely that the same funding sources which paid for the construc tion of the SRC will be available for the next phase of the project. Original construction Prior to the SRC, students only had access to antiquated fitness facilities, prompting many students to join private, off-campus fit ness clubs, Munroe said. The SRC signifi cantly upgraded the campus’ recreation op tions when it fully opened in the fall of 2000. RENOVATION, page 4A Students help run election campaigns Candidates recruit college students who have an interest in politics and a willingness to learn BY CHRIS HAGAN NEWS REPORTER This November may seem like a down period in politics, but candidates are already looking for volunteers and interns to help get their campaigns running, and many are turning to students. Though many campaigns have only recently started looking for volunteers, some students have already signed on to do the little things that help keep the cam paigns and politicians running. Ariella DuSaint, a student from Lane Community College, is working with Democratic guber natorial candidate Pete Sorenson. Last spring, she went to Steve Candee, coordinator for political, government and legal internships at LCC, for a summer internship. Candee suggested checking out Sorenson’s campaign in the spring. She ended up trying it and is still working with the cam paign. “I do a lot of database work, organizing the office, mundane CAMPAIGNS, page8A Senior political science major Jason Shepherd volunteers for Lane County Republicans in hopes that the experience might lead to a career in politics. Chemicals in plane air incite FAA investigation Engine leaks spur a study into how air quality affects pilots, attendants and passengers BY EVA SYLWESTER SENIOR NEWS REPORTER Airplane pilots are responsible for con trolling large machines and keeping people safe every day. Yet exposure to toxic chemicals on their airplanes may impair their ability to per form these tasks, University professor Steve Hecker said. Ttoo research groups, one headed by Uni versity researchers and one headed by the Harvard School of Public Health, have re ceived a nearly $2 million Federal Aviation Administration grant to investigate how toxic chemicals affect pilots and flight attendants. Hecker, an associate professor at the University’s Labor Education Research Center and director of the center’s occupa tional health and safety programs, said a 2002 report by the National Academy of Sciences inspired the U.S Congress to di rect the FAA to perform research on air craft air quality. William Nazaroff, a member of the committee that produced the report, said in a 2003 statement before the U.S. Con gress that people inside airplanes can be exposed to contaminants, including ozone, even when the environmental con trol system is operating normally. When the system is broken, passengers may be exposed to engine oils, hydraulic fluids and deicing fluids. Nazaroff’s statement said the commit tee recommended research into the health effects of ozone, the effect of cabin-pres sure altitude, toxicity of engine fluids, pes ticide exposure in airplanes and low rela tive humidity. Hecker’s team is conducting a survey of pilots and flight attendants to determine how commonly and severely they experi ence health symptoms attributed to air craft chemicals. AIR QUALITY, page 4A