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Oregon State University's student-run newspaper since 1896.
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BarometerThe Daily
TUESDAY, APRIL 23, 2013 • OREGON STATE UNIVERSITYCORVALLIS, OREGON 97331 DAILYBAROMETER.COM VOLUME CXVI, NUMBER 120
SPORTS, PAGE 4:
Skotte, WilliamS battle for middle linebacker
For breaking news and updates
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Bringing barley back, cultivating respect for the grain President not to comply with summonsn Summons sent by
Representative Rosoff appears to be without statutory backing
By Don IlerThe Daily BaromeTer
Amelia Harris, ASOSU president, will not be fully complying with Representative Nick Rosoff’s sum-mons last week of documents from the executive branch.
The documents Rosoff requested included attendance records and performance evaluations for cabinet members, as well as an overview of business conducted by the executive branch during the year. Rosoff asked that his request be filled by Tuesday, April 23, before 6 p.m.
“We are not submitting all the information he requested,” Harris said. “But we are in conversations
n An old grain finds new prominence for healthy diets, distinctive brews
By Tiffany Woodsoregon’s agriculTural progress
Under a blue sky in a field near Corvallis, a com-bine spits nearly a ton of barley seeds into a bin on the back of a flatbed Ford. Pat Hayes plunges his hand into the golden kernels. This is the first time he has harvested this variety, named Alba, on such a large scale. Hayes, the head of Oregon State University’s barley breeding program, made the genetic cross that gave rise to Alba 15 years ago. He has been evaluating it in the field since. He’s hoping the high-yielding grain will be a hit in beer, food and livestock feed.
Alba is just one of about 10,000 experimental barley varieties Hayes is growing and analyzing. He’s working hard to get a little respect for the grain and keep consumers robust and regular. Hayes touts barley as a way for farmers to diversify their crops and cash in on a growing interest in microbrews and whole-grain diets.
Barley is one of the world’s oldest cultivated crops. More than 10,000 years ago someone in the Middle East ate it, didn’t die, and consequently
started growing it. Its genus name comes from the word hordearii, or barley men, in reference to the Roman gladiators who grew burly eating barley. Today, however, barley is barely acknowledged even though it was the world’s fourth most-produced cereal in terms of metric tons in 2010, grown mainly for animal feed. Barley is thought of as a gummy gruel for orphans in a Dickens novel, unless you’re in Tibet, where the dietary staple is a dumpling called tsampa, a mix of barley flour,
tea and yak butter.
Honey-colored fields of barley used to be a more common sight in Oregon. The state’s out-put peaked at 21.9 million bush-els in 1957, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. In 2011, the state’s farmers har-vested just 2.4 million bushels, earning gross sales of $10.6 mil-lion, according to a report from the OSU Extension Service, the lowest production since 1909. That same year, barley made up only 2.5 percent of all grains harvested in Oregon in terms of
bushels, and it ranked 47th in gross sales among the state’s agricultural commodities.
At OSU’s Hyslop Farm near Corvallis, 10 acres of barley heads chatter in the breeze. With clip-boards in hand, Hayes and his team are
MITch Lea | THE DAILY BAROMETER
presidential candidate Brett Deedon and vice presidential candidate Victoria redman talked about their previous asosu experience in the debate on monday.
courTesy of Lynn keTchuM | OREgOn’s AgRIcuLTuRAL PROgREss
osu barley breeder pat hayes examines harvested barley at osu’s hyslop research farm. near corvallis, oregon.
MITch Lea | THE DAILY BAROMETER
elena christie, candidate for asosu speaker of the house, emphasized proper training of legislators.
MITch Lea | THE DAILY BAROMETER
speaker candida te Thomas Bancroft argued for well-researched legislation.
MITch Lea | THE DAILY BAROMETER
robbie ohanesian, vice presidential candidate, and running-mate Jackson lile, presidential candidate, value their own outside perspective — as students new to asosu — in their platform.
Debate, agreement among candidatesn ASOSU general election candidates for president,
vice president, speaker of the house discuss issues in a lightly attended debate session
By Gabriella MorrongielloThe Daily BaromeTer
Candidates for ASOSU president, vice president and speaker of the house gathered in the Memorial Union Monday afternoon for a debate. Both tickets’ platforms included furtherance of student body inclusion, which by evidence of an audience turnout barely over 10 people, seemed fitting.
“We want to pioneer ASOSU on this campus as something that every student can be involved with and enjoy,” said Jackson Lile, candidate for ASOSU president. “Most students on OSU don’t even know the acronym of ASOSU and that they can take part in this ongoing conversation here on campus.”
Lile and his running mate, Robbie Ohanesian, have no prior experience within student government. This, however, has not prevented them from developing firm viewpoints on various campus issues, which have been translated to fit their platform.
“We are running a campaign with three specific goals:
Increase involvement with student clubs and organizations in ASOSU, put a freeze on tuition and halt the first year experi-ence,” Lile said.
When opponents, Victoria Redman and Brett Deedon, voiced their concern for the other two candidates’ lack of experience, Lile was quick to respond.
“We recognize there will be a learning curve for us. However, we are willing to work our hardest to make sure every student at OSU has a good experience,” Lile said.
In contrast, presidential candidate Deedon and vice presidential candidate Redman boasted their extensive experience within ASOSU and as lobbyists on both state and national levels.
According to Redman, she and her running mate already have momentum with the issues at hand and therefore, in light of people’s recent contempt with ASOSU, can do every-thing to earn the organization a better rap.
“I owe it to the university to keep exercising the skills that I have gained,” Redman said. “Brett and I have the ball rolling and are driven by our passion and our clear vision running for these positions.”
Deedon and Redman’s campaign primarily addresses pub-lic safety, the looming effects of the sequestration on OSU’s
See eLecTIons | page 2
See BarLey | page 2 See PresIDenT | page 2
‘‘
‘‘
We need to create an environment where we can call each other out.
robbie ohanesianASOSU vice presidential candidate
‘‘
‘‘
We are asosu, every student on campus is asosu.
Brett Deedon ASOSU presidential candidate
‘‘ ‘‘ craft brewers want to be able to
create something that is unique, different
and good so they can tell a story as part of
their marketing.
Zach christensenOSU graduate and McMinnville farmer
2• Tuesday, April 23, 2013 [email protected] • 737-2231
GENERAL ELECTIONS APRIL 21–26Vote online @ asosu.oregonstate.edu/elections
Earth Week
[email protected] | 541-737-5398
Sponsored by Campus Recycling, SSI and other partners. Accommodations for disabilities may be made by calling 541-737-5398.
April 20-27TODAY’S EVENTS:
13th Annual Community Fair
11 am-3 pm | MU QuadActivities at 50+ booths plus free
Styrofoam recycling!
Environmental Justice Conversation
5-6:30 pm | Student Sustain. CtrBring your ideas and together we can
create tangible projects.
UPCOMING EVENTS:WEDNESDAY, 4/24
OSUsed Store Earth Sale12-3 pm | http://tiny.cc/april24coupon
Your Power to Create Positive Change in Apparel 12:30-2:30 pm | MU 221
“Addicted to Plastics” Film4-6 pm | Gleeson 100
THURSDAY, 4/25Sustainability Bike Tour 2:15-3:15 pm
Campus Creature Census 3-5 pmEco Film Festival: “YERT” 5:30-7 pm
CalendarTuesday, April 23MeetingsASOSU Senate, 7pm, MU 211. Weekly meeting.
Educational Activities Committee, 5:30-7pm, Student Media Confer-ence Room, 120 MU East/Snell Hall. Discuss funding requests and policy changes.
EventsOSU College Republicans, Noon-4pm, MU Quad. 2nd Amendment Week. Many events including a concealed handgun class, guest speaker Lars Larson and a drawing for a firearm.
Career Services, 11am-4pm, CH2M Hill Alumni Center. Spring Career Fair. There will be employers from various industries to connect with students and alumni, offer jobs and intern-ships, and provide other future career opportunities.
Campus Recycling, 11am-3pm, MU Quad. Earth Week Community Fair - activities, booths and free styrofoam recycling.
Center for Leadership Development, Noon-1pm and 2-3pm, MU 206. “How to be a Juicy, Succulent Leader.” Come learn how to be a happy, creative, and well-balanced leader.
Wednesday, April 24MeetingsASOSU House of Representatives, 7-8:30pm, MU 211. Weekly meeting.
SIFC, 5pm, Native American Long-house. Weekly meeting.
EventsOSU College Republicans, Noon-4pm, MU Quad. 2nd Amendment Week. Many events including a concealed handgun class, guest speaker Lars Larson and a drawing for a firearm.
Pride Center, 6-8pm, Pride Center. Come enjoy mocktails as we discuss high risk alcohol consumption with the queer community.
Thursday, April 25MeetingsBaha’i Campus Association, 12:30pm, MU Talisman Room. Is a Universal Religion Possible? Devotions and discussion.
EventsOSU College Republicans, Noon-4pm, MU Quad. 2nd Amendment Week. Many events including a concealed handgun class, guest speaker Lars Larson and a drawing for a firearm.
Friday, April 26MeetingsOSU Chess Club, 5-7pm, MU Com-mons. Players of all levels welcome.
SpeakersPride Center, 3-4pm, Pride Center. Educational event focusing on trans* health and its various aspects, difficul-ties, and resources. Brenda McComb and Beth Wasylow are presenting. Become a more informed individual.
EventsOSU College Republicans, Noon-4pm, MU Quad. 2nd Amendment Week. Many events including a concealed handgun class, guest speaker Lars Larson and a drawing for a firearm.
Pride Center, 4-6pm, Upper Dixon Classroom. Locker Room Health: Mental & Physical. Learn and discuss the many obstacles that those in the queer community and the heterosexual community face when using the locker rooms at Dixon.
M.E.Ch.A. de OSU, 10pm, Snell Inter-national Forum. Celebrate our 20th Anniversary as an established student organization! Dance the night away! Free pastel (cake)!
OSU Music Department, Noon, MU Lounge. Music a la Carte - Platypus Clarinet Orchestra. Audience members are welcome to bring lunch to enjoy during the performance.
BarometerThe Daily
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They argued the First Year Experience is a ship that has sailed and their opponents’ tenacity with the issue is untimely.
“The FYE was last year’s issue and these conversations and this movement should have been happening last year,” Redman said. “Although we realize it is an issue, we also rec-ognize there are a lot of greater issues affecting Oregon State.”
Lile countered Redman’s statement by saying his and Ohanesian’s campaign is not about abolishing or repel-ling FYE, but rather pursuing exemption status for houses and people affected by the ini-tiative in a negative way, par-ticularly Greek life.
“With OSU having such a thriving Greek community, I don’t think we should be forc-ing students to live somewhere else when they can have an awesome first year experience in a Greek house or off-campus co-op,” Lile said.
After Deedon mentioned that the retention rate for students living on campus has proven to be especially high, Ohanesian argued that academic success is not limited to on-campus residents.
“The same retention rates and support system that OSU is arguing are only available on campus are also available in Greek life,” Ohanesian said.
ASOSU’s participation in the Oregon Student Association was a topic largely included in the debate, as there have been discrepancies in past ASOSU communities concerning the relationship.
ASOSU has been part of the OSA since the early ‘70s, and all candidates agreed the organiza-tions is vital to the university.
“It is something that unites all higher education institutes in Oregon, especially when it comes to lobbying at the state,” Lile said.
Redman believes OSU stands as one of the strongest mem-bers of OSA. According to her, Oregon State helps to support students and carry the knowl-edge so that other universities and the state of Oregon can move forward.
When asked on behalf of student media what each can-didate envisions ASOSU looking like in the future and whether or not the organization was in need of structural reform, the response varied.
“In ASOSU there is a sense of entitlement that can develop,” Lile said. “What we are all about is that students on campus are doing awesome things and ASOSU needs to be there to usher these students along. We want to make sure students feel important and don’t view student government as ‘high and mighty.’”
Lile and his running mate also advocate more commu-nication within the execu-tive cabinet in order to avoid miscommunications.
“We need to create an envi-ronment where we can call each other out,” Ohanesian said. “Not in a strict manner, but try-ing to help each other create a more community feeling within ASOSU.”
Deedon sees ASOSU adopt-ing more technological inter-faces in the future.
“We need to realize how to reach out to larger communi-ties as well,” Deedon said. “We are looking to potentially make apps and create a new website.”
If elected, Redman hopes to discuss restructuring congress with the elected speaker of the house. She feels the large size of ASOSU is one of the organiza-tion’s greatest strengths.
Lile agreed, but mentioned that the way in which ASOSU’s power is allocated could use some restructuring as well.
In their closing arguments, both tickets emphasized the importance of getting more of the student body involved.
“We are ASOSU, every student on campus is ASOSU,” Redman and Deedon concluded.
Lile and Ohanesian reminded the audience that they are out-siders with no experience in student government and will therefore bring a “fresh flair” to ASOSU.
“We want to create a more wholesome and knit commu-nity on campus,” Lile said.
The presidential and vice presidential debate was pre-ceded by a brief debate between Thomas Bancroft and Elena Christie, candidates for speaker of the house.
Both candidates agreed to promote a culture of account-ability if elected and fill each senate and congress position with individuals dedicated to doing their job.
Bancroft especially advocated making sure all legislation pass-ing through ASOSU has been thoroughly researched and is of high quality.
Christie focused more on training representatives to more efficiently complete their jobs and better promote ASOSU.
The ASOSU general election ballot is open now through 10 p.m. on April 26 and can be accessed at http://asosu.oregonstate.edu/elections.
Gabriella Morrongiello, news [email protected]
eLecTIonsn Continued from page 1 Clarification
The Daily BaromeTer
In a column in the April 16, 2013 issue enti-tled “Caffeine popular on campus despite side effects,” the column was not clear in stating that Four Loko no longer contains caffeine in its formulations and when it removed caffeine and other additives from Four Loko. According to Phusion Projects, the maker of Four Loko, it voluntarily reformulated Four Loko to remove caffeine, guarana and taurine on Nov. 16, 2010, and ceased shipment of the caffeinated version of the beverage on Nov. 17, 2010. Four Loko no longer contains caffeine.
CorrectionAn article published
on April 19 titled, “OSU students celebrate World Amateur Radio Day” contained a mislead-ing error. The article, in quoted material, referred to KBVR-FM as a commercial radio sta-tion, when in fact KBVR-FM is a noncommercial educational station. The Barometer regrets the error.
with the legislative branch in order to provide the information to them legally.”
Speaker of the house, Jacob Vandever, sent an email to representatives on April 19, stat-ing that summons to the executive branch needed to be voted on by either a committee or the entire house and could not be sent by an individual. He encouraged representatives to look at forming a commit-tee reviewing ASOSU.
Rosoff sent a summons to members of the execu-tive branch requesting docu-ments from the executive branch on April 18, includ-ing several representatives’ names on the signature line. However, Vandever denies having given permission to Rosoff to affix his name to the email.
After Rosoff sent the sum-mons on April 18, Harris sent him an email stating that he did not have statutory authority to request the documents. Rosoff sent a reply to Harris later that evening, which the Barometer received through a pub-lic records request.
“I find it interesting that you mock me to open with your response. You may feel as though you have gotten away with many things this year but everything you’ve done
will remain a part of who you are forever,” Rosoff wrote in the email sent the evening of April 18. “By man-handling power within the organization you have done the students a disservice. By denying accountability you have done yourself a disservice.”
In an email sent on April 19, Rosoff called Vandever’s email requesting a committee be formed “a cute suggestion.” He said he had reports from within the administration that he would present at the next house meeting.
Cabinet members are paid monthly stipends and are required to work 10 or 20 hours per week depending on their positions. Their salaries are paid for by stu-dent fees, coming from the ASOSU budget approved annually by the Student and Incidental Fees Committee.
Rosoff recently lost a bid to be ASOSU in the primary election a week ago. Rosoff had been sanctioned dur-ing the election, preventing him from campaigning for a
week, after he was found breaking campaign rules.
Harris’ term as ASOSU president ends on June 1, when the winner of the election will be sworn into office. ASOSU presidents serve one-year terms.
Don Iler, editor-in-chiefon Twitter @doniler
PresIDenTn Continued from page 1 ASOSU
general election opens
The Daily BaromeTer
Voting for the Associated Students of Oregon State University election is now open to students.
Voting opened at 10 p.m. on April 21 and will extend through April 26, when it will close at 10 p.m. Presidential and vice presidential can-didates Brett Deedon and Victoria Redman will run against Jackson Lile and Robbie Ohanesian.
Thomas Bancroft is run-ning against Elena Christie for the speaker of the house position.
Students can find the cam-paign platforms for both pairs of candidates online at asosu.oregonstate.edu/candidates.
‘‘ ‘‘ By man-handling power within the organization you
have done the students a disservice.
nick rosoffASOSU Representative
Once I had a conversation with a student about what it would be like if I were a
professor. Since I’m a science major, the topic of biology came up. This student then told me that I would be a bad biology teacher because I would only teach one side of biol-ogy. Since I was confused by this, she then told me that I wouldn’t be teaching creationism because of my atheist beliefs.
This was a strange prospect for me, but even more than strange, and even comical, I found this scary. In an academic setting, the boundary between faith and science is blurred.
I often have to tell people that science, especially within the field of biology, does not, and never will, deal with anything supernatural or magical. I am tired of people taking a book, written a few millennia ago by some “Stone Age” men, to be the absolute way the world was formed. And yes, I am referring to the Bible.
This book, while influential in the early history of mankind, now is used as a tool for the dumbing down of America. For example, the largest
denomination in the United States, the Southern Baptist Convention, is still rigorously opposed to progress in basic human rights.
The worst aspect of this is that even now many school boards are voting to teach a so-called “contro-versy” in schools that claim evolu-tion is a “science in crisis.”
Here’s something everyone needs to realize: There is not, nor has there ever been, a controversy about the veracity of findings with evolution.
My issue isn’t with adults who believe this, because in this great nation you can believe anything you
3 •Tuesday, April 23, 2013 [email protected]
The Daily BarometerForum editorial board don iler Editor-in-ChiefMegan Campbell Forum Editorandrew kilstrom Sports Editor
warner strausbaugh Managing Editor Jack Lammers News EditorJackie seus Photo Editor
Editorial
LettersLetters to the editor are welcomed and will be printed on a first-received basis. Letters must be 300 words or fewer and include the author’s signature, academic major, class standing or job title, department name and phone number. Authors of e-mailed letters will receive a reply for the purpose of verification. Letters are subject to editing for space and clarity. The Daily Barometer reserves the right to refuse publication of any submissions.
The Daily Barometer c/o Letters to the editor
Memorial Union East 106 Oregon State University
Corvallis, OR 97331-1617or e-mail: [email protected]
As we all do, Boston suspect deserves justiceLast week was a trying period
for the people of Boston. The horror of multiple bombings,
the tragedy of innocents cut down in the prime of their lives, a city in lock-down and a massive manhunt have highlighted our uncertain reality and the evil intolerance breeds.
Because of widespread media cov-erage, we all feel as though these attacks were transgressions against us all. With one suspect killed, and the other captured, we at least have the solace of knowing their reign of infamy has ended. We are left with the hope that Dzhokar Tsarnaev will explain why he and his brother thought bombs would satisfy their grievances.
Yet, I fear his answers will only raise more questions, and the resilience the people of Boston have demonstrated will not translate into restraint by our leaders.
Some legislators, including Senators John McCain of Arizona and Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, have already pushed to label Tsarnaev an “enemy combatant,” a classification normally restricted to foreign nation-als captured on the battlefield. This would allow authorities to question him without counsel, and without being advised of his Miranda rights.
The right to remain silent, the right
to counsel regardless of your ability to pay and the assumption of innocence until proven guilty are foundations of our justice system. We owe a deep intellectual debt for them, but they are uniquely American and we are justifiably proud of them. Withholding those rights to any citizen diminishes us all.
There are several reasons authorities have considered revoking Tsarnaev’s rights. First, authorities only need to Mirandize a suspect when they plan to use his statements in court. Any good lawyer would immediately warn his client to remain silent, and in this instance, we are all anxious to hear his motives. Second, the law allows a Miranda warning to be withheld when there is an imminent threat to public safety. The federal government is advancing that argument to transfer Tsarnaev to federal court, where he will face the death penalty, which Massachusetts does not have.
Throughout the week, we’ve been reminded both of the resilience of the people of Boston, birthplace of the American revolution, as well as the extraordinary triumph of the
American spirit. But what I’m afraid of, and what we should all fear, is the ease with which resilience can quickly turn into a need for vengeance.
Tsarnaev remains a citizen of the United States, guaranteed the rights to a speedy trial and due process and protected by the right not to incriminate himself. His actions were heinous, but they have ended. The threat to public safety from Tsarnaev seems to be over. Now comes the part where we allow our system of justice — slow and cumbersome though it may be — to do its job.
Despite the presence of federal agents in the manhunt, including the admirable work of the FBI, this remains a crime against the people of Boston, and should remain at the state level. The federal government has a responsibility to ensure the safety of the United States from foreign aggres-sion, and the FBI works diligently to protect us all from legitimate threats within. But, in this interconnected world, nothing is truly domestic. Though this seems like an insur-mountable challenge to states’ rights, the events of last week have created an opportunity to re-evaluate the relationship between the state and federal governments.
Modern terrorism works — when it works at all — by undermining the
foundations of a society. It exploits the cracks in any plural civilization. Within our own highly pluralized nation, energized by the tensions between class, race, gender, religion and myriad other distinctions, those cracks are all the more vulnerable to widening into a rift when we allow the fundamental ideals of our society to be cast aside.
The idea of tolerant liberty embed-ded within the Constitution requires that we sometimes relinquish our thirst for vengeance and follow instead the dispassionate path of justice.
Tsarnaev deserves justice because we all deserve justice. Though he is accused of murder and terrorism, he has also sinned against those ideals for who our forebears fought and bled. The bereaved and the aggrieved deserve recompense. But we trust that by relinquishing their right to vengeance, the ideals of our found-ers are reified and our nation is made safer and more just. It is our duty to see that those same ideals of justice are maintained, even for the most vile offenders.
t
steven McLain is a senior in history. The opinions expressed in his columns do not necessarily represent those of The Daily Barometer staff. mclain can be reached at [email protected].
response to pells’ april 19 column
Pells overlooks some thingsDrew Pells finds two advantages
with bitcoins as a currency: privacy and value preservation. I disagree with both assessments.
Privacy: Pells worries about pri-vacy from government but not privacy from enterprise. But much of our personal data has been bought from us by businesses, not taken from us by government — and our complacency, not our currency, is to blame. There’s no reason to expect consumers to suddenly wise up just because the come-ons from Walmart, Comcast or Facebook are quoted in bitcoins rather than dollars.
Value preservation: To maintain buying power, a currency must be issued to match the total value of goods and services it’s traded for. An ample money supply produces inflation: the money you earned today loses value overnight. A too-scarce supply produces deflation: purchasing is put off today, because prices will be even lower tomorrow. Using a finite resource, such as gold — or bitcoins — as the currency standard presents the latter dan-ger: While growing our economy, one day we’ll find no new gold — or bitcoins — to accumulate as “scorekeeper.” Pells evidently desires such deflation, not value preservation.
He also likes bitcoins for the con-trol they wrest from government — vested in each of us, instead (several billion Ben Bernankes?). But I fail to see why this will be any more accurate in maintaining currency value. Neither politics, nor gold nor computer math is intrinsi-cally linked to our full GDP.
The optimum standard for any currency would be an “autopilot” immune to politics but fully linked to our economy’s “running total” value. The only such mechanism: everyone reporting every transac-tion daily to some central database — anonymously, of course. I’m not sure what alarms me more: that database in government hands or in private hands. All such hands are human — the point Pells overlooks, as usual.
Christopher M. Coffin, Instructor, Physics Department,
Oregon State University
Make yeast our state microbeKnown as the Beaver State,
Oregon might also be recog-nized by a microorganism.
More specifically, an ale yeast known as Saccharomyces cerevisiae might become our state microbe.
Oregon’s House legislature passed the bill, House Concurrent Resolution 12, with no opposition. Now, Senate needs to pass the bill before the ale yeast can be adopted as the official state microbe.
We hope the Oregon Senate passes the bill as easily as the House did. Really, with everything else our coun-try and state has to deal with — like issues brought on by the recession or the sequester — passing House Concurrent Resolution 12 should be a no-brainer.
Oregon is a beer state, which makes the proposed state microbe rather appropriate. Oregon’s beer industry has a $2.8 billion impact on the state’s economy, and creates nearly 30,000 jobs, according to the National Beer Wholesalers Association.
Oregon State University even offers a fermentation science option in the department of food science and technology. That’s right, if you wanted to major in brewing, OSU is one out of a handful of universities that offer the program.
Oregon is known for its micro-breweries and wineries. There are 45 distilleries, 225 breweries and 800 wineries in Oregon as of October 2012, according to the Oregon Liquor Control Commission.
In Portland alone, there are 52 breweries, which is more than any other city in the world, according to the Oregon Brewers Guild.
If the bill passes, Oregon might very well be the first to adopt its own microbe. Oregon, however, is not the first to attempt this.
In 2010, Wisconsin tried to incor-porate the bacteria used to make buttermilk and cheese for its official state microbe. The Wisconsin Senate, however, did not pass the measure.
Hawaii is also currently working toward adopting an official state microbe.
Though these states may be the first to officially request state microbes, there are several recom-mendations for state microbes on the Internet. Each microbe is chosen for its relative relationship between it and the state.
Funny enough, there was a specific recommendation that the source of botox be the city of Los Angeles’ own microbe.
This might seem like a frivolous bill or topic of discussion. Truthfully, it probably is — especially when step-ping back to look at the state of our country.
Now and again, something light-hearted and entertaining, like a race to adopt the first state microbe, can brighten the state’s attitude.
We hope Oregon is the first to adopt Saccharomyces cerevisiae as the state microbe.
t
editorials serve as means for Barometer editors to offer commentary and opinions on issues both global and local, grand in scale or diminutive. The views expressed here are a reflection of the editorial board’s majority.
The Daily BarometerSteven McLain
kyoo Park Is a senIor In cheMIsTry.
There are places religion does not belong Letter to the Editor
See MurGa | page 7
The Daily BarometerHunter Murga
4 • Tuesday, April 23, 2013 [email protected] • On Twitter @barosports
The Daily Barometer SportsBeaver Tweet
of the Day
“Just got a vine and I just �gured out you probably shouldn't get on in class”
@EricMoreland15 Eric Moreland
Tuesday, april 23Women’s Golf
@Pac-12 Championships
All day, Valencia Calif.
Wednesday, april 24Women’s Golf
@Pac-12 Championships
All day, Valencia Calif.
Friday, april 26Softball vs. No. 22 Arizona
3 p.m., OSU Softball Complex
Women’s Track
OSU High Performance Meet
3 p.m., Whyte Track and Field Center
No. 5 Baseball vs. USC
4:05 p.m., Goss Stadium
saTurday, april 27Men’s Soccer vs.
Portland Timbers U-23s
11 a.m., Paul Lorenz Field
No. 5 Baseball vs. USC
2:05 p.m., Goss Stadium
Softball vs. No. 22 Arizona
3 p.m., OSU Softball Complex
COMING SOONThe Daily Barometer Athlete of the Week
The Daily BaromeTer
Only Laura Carlyle, who is arguably Oregon State’s best runner in program history, is ahead of sophomore Kinsey Gomez on the list of OSU’s all-time best times in the 5,000-meter run.
Gomez ran a time of 16 minutes, 24.17 sec-onds in the 5K at the esteemed Mt. SAC Relays in Walnut, Calif., on Friday. She finished in 10th place in the “A” section of the field.
Gomez’s time now sits at 41st in the NCAA
West Region, which puts her in good standing to qualify for the NCAA West Regional meet at the end of May in Austin, Texas.
The best 48 times make the field for regionals, and the runners have the opportunity to qualify for nationals, held at Hayward Field in Eugene, in June.
Gomez cut 14 seconds from her previous personal-best time. If her time had been only 0.17 seconds faster, it would have put her in the top 40 in the region over the last three years.
Gomez was named to the Pac-12 All-Academic Second Team in 2012, and was Oregon State’s top finisher at NCAA Regionals last year.
Gomez hails from Coeur d’Alene, Idaho, and was the Gatorade Athlete of the Year in 2010 and 2011.
The next meet for the Beavers, the OSU High Performance, will be in Corvallis at the newly built Whyte Track and Field Center. It will be the second meet hosted by Oregon State since the inception of the track center.
After the home meet, the Beavers will compete in four more meets over the next two weeks before Pac-12 Championships on May 11 in Los Angeles.
The Daily Barometeron Twitter @barosports
courTesy of sToDDarD reynoLDs gomez turns the corner in the 5,000-meter in the first meet hosted by osu since 1988.
Kinsey Gomez
OSU wins in 14 inningsn Junior Jake Rodriguez
had two hits, including the game-winning RBI single
The Daily BaromeTer
In the top of the 13th inning with two outs, runners on second and third and tied at three against Seattle University, Jake Rodriguez stepped to the plate.
The junior came up with a clutch single, scoring senior shortstop Tyler Smith for the game-winning run.
The No. 5 Beavers (31-8, 11-4 Pac-12) had lost two games to Washington on Saturday before getting redemption with an 8-0 victory on Sunday. Common sense said that OSU would carry that momentum into Monday’s game against Seattle University (15-23, 5-9 WAC).
At eight games under .500, with a 4.58 team earned run average, the Redhawks weren’t expected to pitch like they did.
But Seattle U was better than its ERA indicates, allowing only four runs in 14 innings.
The Redhawks shut down the OSU offense, which totaled 11 hits and four runs in a season-high 51 at-bats. The middle of the order had an especially hard time. The 4-through-6 hitters in the lineup went 3-for-22 in Monday’s game.
Sophomore outfielders Dylan Davis and Michael Conforto have been OSU’s biggest source of power this season, combining for eight of the team’s 12 home runs this season, but had rough outings, going hitless in 11 at-bats.
Despite the troubles at the plate, Oregon State got a lot of help from its pitching staff.
Junior right-hander Dan Child only threw 2 2/3 innings, allowing two runs before being replaced by senior Tony Bryant. Bryant allowed a run in the fourth inning to give Seattle U a 3-2 lead.
For the next 10 innings, the Oregon State bullpen went into lockdown mode. Junior Brandon Jackson, freshman Max Engelbrekt and senior Cole Brocker combined for 1 1/3 innings of scoreless baseball, setting the stage for junior Scott Schultz.
Schultz threw the remaining 7 1/3 innings, refusing to allow a single run. The right-hander scattered two hits and struck out three without surrendering a walk.
It was Schultz’s second-longest out-ing of his career and his longest of the season.
The Beavers return home for a three-game series with Pac-12 opponent USC starting on Friday.
The Daily Barometeron Twitter @barosports
n Joel Skotte, Josh Williams are leading candidates at starting middle linebacker
By Warner strausbaughThe Daily BaromeTer
With the departures of seniors Feti Taumoepeau and Rueben Robinson, there’s a hole up the middle to fill.
The Oregon State football team has two candidates to take Taumoepeau’s — a starter of 21 games in the last two seasons — spot at middle linebacker.
It’s a different dynamic now. Joel Skotte comes into his second year — and first spring camp — as the young up-and-comer. Josh Williams is a junior and has more experience with the program at OSU.
The Beavers foresaw Skotte, from Mountain View High School in Bend,
taking on a bigger role back in August when they elected to not redshirt him as a freshman.
“That was by design,” said defen-sive coordinator Mark Banker. “We wanted him to understand what it would take to play Division I football through special teams.”
Skotte recorded seven total tackles and one forced fumble in 2012 on the special teams unit.
Banker likes what he’s seen from the sophomore, but says he can be inconsistent with his technique and making reads.
“[He’s] pretty smart, very intuitive, understands the scheme,” Banker said. “He’s had his moments and then at times, because if he’s going to be our starter, there’s a certain expectation that comes. He has to stay out of the peaks and valleys.”
Skotte is listed as No. 1 on the
depth chart at middle linebacker, but as head coach Mike Riley has said before, the spring depth chart can and probably will look entirely different once the season starts.
The battle between Skotte and Williams will be an open competi-tion for the foreseeable future.
“[Skotte is] getting competition from Josh Williams,” Riley said. “I think that may carry right out into the fall.”
Williams has had a longer jour-ney to reach prominence with the Beavers. He was one of 10 freshmen to see the field in 2011, playing in four games. But after a one-game suspension leading up to the 2012 season, Williams did not play a game last year.
Now with the opportunity at a starting spot, and decent playing
kevIn raGsDaLe | THE DAILY BAROMETER
sophomore middle linebacker Joel skotte (left) and junior defensive end Dylan Wynn (right) wrap up Terron Ward at spring practice. skotte is the leading candidate to start at middle linebacker next season.
On to the next one
See LIneBackers | page 5
Spring football
conversationSpring football is in its final
week, and this year there is a buzz about what’s going on
with the Oregon State football team after a successful 2012 campaign.
Managing editor Warner Strausbaugh and sports editor Andrew Kilstrom have been covering the football beat for more than a year now, and it seemed necessary to (rip off Grady Garrett and Alex Crawford’s “Beavers Got Talent” running diary) have a discussion about what they’ve learned from spring camp in a loose, stream of consciousness format. Commentary from after the con-versation occurred will appear in parentheses.
He re’s t h e t r a n s c r i b e d conversation:
Strausbaugh: OK, so if I were to ask you what your biggest takeaway from spring football is so far, what would you say it is?
Kilstrom: There’s a ton of new faces that the casual Beaver fan will have no idea who they are come week one, and they’re going to have an impact, especially on defense.
WS: [Junior college transfer Steven] Nelson being the biggest one, I think.
AK: Nelson at corner, the defen-sive tackles [junior college transfers Edwin Delva and Siale Hautau] will start.
WS: Interestingly, Riley was asked Monday about who will take over Poyer’s spot in the nickel and dime packages, where he’d guard the slot receiver. He actually said it’d prob-ably be Murphy.
AK: Murphy’s a ball hawk. We know his specialty is going for that ball. (I’ve told a lot of people Murphy’s going to have a big year. C’mon Ryan, give me six interceptions, make me
See conversaTIon | page 5
warner strausbaugh@WStrausbaugh
andrewkilstrom
@AndrewKilstrom
[email protected] • On Twitter @barosports Tuesday, April 23, 2013 • 5
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linebackers michael Doctor (left), D.J. alexander (middle) and Feti Taumoepeau (right) close in on Wisconsin’s montee Ball on sept. 8, 2012.
time at the very least, Williams is starting to become the player he was supposed to be when he came to OSU as Defensive Player of the Year in high school in Los Angeles.
“He’s been in the program,” Banker said. “He had a two-year hiatus out of high school where he wasn’t really in any kind of shape [to play]. Since he’s been here, he’s been playing himself back into shape. This is the first year . . . [that] he’s been in much better physical condition.”
Linebacker is the shallowest position, in terms of personnel that can be counted on, for the Beavers right now. Senior Michael Doctor and junior D.J. Alexander are stalwarts at outside linebacker, but after junior Jabral Johnson and whoever doesn’t win the starting spot at middle linebacker, there are a lot of unknowns at the position.
“We’re doing better,” Riley said of the team’s depth at linebacker. “I’m not sure that they’re all ready for prime time yet, but we’re get-ting better.”
The Beavers need both Skotte
and Williams to be reliable in the fall, because they’ll need both of them.
“What I hope happens is that we’re able to play one or the other without any drop-off,” Banker said. “Because at some point in time in every football game, no matter who’s the starter, you always need someone who can go in and keep the other guy fresh.”
Rueben Robinson provided ver-satility as a backup last year, with his ability to play outside and inside. Williams has played both in the past, but he also hasn’t had much playing time to fill that void.
Banker’s key word for the two vying for a starting spot was “consistency.”
“The guy that ends up starting is the guy that can feel confident in what they do first,” Banker said. “In the huddle, they can exude con-fidence and leadership. The biggest thing, the big word, is ‘consistency.’ Whoever ends up being the most consistent as we continue to prog-ress is going to be the guy that sees the most action.”
Warner strausbaugh, managing editoron Twitter @[email protected]
look like I know what I’m talking about, just this once.)
WS: Secondary’s going to be good. I love Sean Martin. That’s going to be my number one bold prediction: Sean Martin is going to be First Team All-Pac-12.
AK: You know, I asked him to be Facebook friends my freshman year and he accepted it. (I definitely sent the friend request, and don’t regret it. He’s probably unfriending me on his phone right now.)
WS: Defining moment in your life? AK: We’ve been Facebook friends since then
and now he’s a good player. (Maybe I should’ve been a scout. Of all the football players I could’ve randomly added, I chose then-true freshman Sean Martin. I’m a genius.)
WS: Don’t worry, I’m going to edit this a lot. (Whoops.) Because we don’t want people to think we’re ridiculous.
AK: No comment. Meanwhile . . .WS: There are three corners who could prob-
ably start for any Pac-12 team.AK: Yeah, I feel like they’re all above average
starters at least. Sean Martin and Rashaad Reynolds are as good as anyone in the Pac-12 as a tandem. They could be just as good as Reynolds and Poyer were last year.
WS: OK, here’s my theory on Sean Martin. He lived with [Jordan] Poyer for three years, I think.
AK: Think it rubbed off?WS: He was with him every day, and they
played the same position and Poyer was only a year older, but Poyer was so good.
AK: You have to see that and be motivated. I’m sure Sean Martin’s a little more athletic and he’s maybe a little bigger. But I’m sure he knows, ‘Physically, I should be able to do what he’s doing. And he’s an All-American.’ (Do it Sean, I want to be Facebook friends with an NFL player. Trust me, I could use the street cred.)
(Pause to think about how we’re going to make an article out of this, and why we’re even putting this in the newspaper in the first place.)
AK: The receiver position is probably the
other big one. It’s easiest to notice in spring. The easiest thing to notice, by far, is which receiver is catching the ball. Even more than the quarterback play.
WS: Look at [Richard] Mullaney. Him and Storm Woods were the darlings of spring last year. Storm ended up being really good, but when Mullaney came in he was good.
AK: He could have been big if [Markus] Wheaton wasn’t there. He’s solid.
WS: I think him being out of spring camp this year [recovering from offseason shoulder surgery] really hurts him, because he probably is the best guy out of that group right now.
AK: He probably could have been the clear-cut starter if he was playing in spring. And now, Obum [Gwacham] and Malik Gilmore have both had pretty good springs from what I’ve seen.
WS: I’m not too crazy about Gilmore yet. He’s still young and can look sluggish at times.
AK: His size and catching ability is solid. WS: He definitely has upside. And then
there’s Obum, who may have the highest ceiling on this team, but he really needs to capitalize on it this spring.
AK: I think he looks a lot better. He’s going to get playing time. Every once in a while, he makes that spectacular play.
WS: He had a nice play [Monday] for a touchdown (Wide receivers coach Brent Brennan went nuts. Also, Brennan and offen-sive coordinator Danny Langsdorf seem like best friends, I might even throw out the term, “bromance,” and it’s awesome.)
AK: Obum had an unbelievable jump ball the other day. (Reminds me of myself. I may have quit football as a sophomore in high school, but had I stuck with it I’d probably be playing at USC or Alabama right now. Oh wait, that’s my created player on NCAA 13.)
WS: Was it against [Malcolm] Marable? (Sorry Malcolm, there’s just a very distinct size difference when you go one-on-one with Obum.)
AK: I don’t know who it was against, but it didn’t matter. No one else is catching that ball. I think all those receivers will play. [Micah] Hatfield will get time.
WS: I think it could be like the 49ers in the
‘80s. You have [Brandin] Cooks playing Jerry Rice (Wow, I just compared the greatest wide receiver of all-time to Brandin Cooks. The stranger thing was that we didn’t bat an eye) and then the quarterback (No Joe Montana comparison yet) spreads the love among the other receivers, tight ends and running backs.
(Pardon the interruption, Barometer editor-in-chief Don Iler just walked in. Yes, we are actually just transcribing a conversation. He’s a big Sean Mannion fan. We know where this conversation is heading.)
WS: Who do you think should be the starting quarterback, Don?
DI: Sean Mannion, obviously. He has poise, leadership. They voted him as captain last year. As long as he doesn’t throw interceptions, I think he can be good.
WS: Thanks for the insight, Don. Might as well stick with the topic of quarterbacks.
AK: You think Richie Harrington is the clear-cut third-string QB, right?
WS: I do. He definitely looks better than [Brett] VanderVeen at this point. Look at the Cal game last year. Sure, the Beavers were up by more than 30, but he still led a drive that resulted in a touchdown against a Pac-12 school.
AK: If somehow Mannion and Vaz both got hurt, do you think they would try and win with Richie Harrington, or do you think they’d say screw it and take the redshirt off [incoming freshman Kyle] Kempt?
WS: Nah, I think they’d go with Richie. Kempt’s too skinny.
(We then discussed the height and weight of all the OSU quarterbacks, and then Andrew talked about a certain media person botching a Mannion interview at practice. Remember when we said there would be no nonsense from this point on? Sorry about that. But hey, you’re still reading.)
WS: I really wonder if the other players really do care about who starts. Is it a divided locker room, but no one is ever outspoken about it? Everyone has his own opinion, I’m sure.
AK: I’m sure the team’s a little split. Someone knows Sean better, hangs out with him more, so he might want him to win. And the same with Cody. But I really feel like they all like both guys.
Neither one is a [unit] or anything.
(Warner just bragged about talking to a cer-tain wide receiver and being on the background of a local TV station. Classic Barometer guys, thinking they’re cool and not totally insignifi-cant. The two loyal readers who have come this far are nodding their heads.)
(We’re just going to pretend our five-minute conversation about DJ Cloud Nine didn’t just happen.)
WS: OK, who’s a guy who didn’t do much last year that you think could be really good this year?
AK: One guy who I think is going to be the go-to possession receiver is Kevin Cummings. He was last year, but could be even more of it this year. He reminds me of a faster Shane Morales.
WS: He probably will be second in receiving behind Cooks.
AK: He’s the guy that runs that third route and there’s going to be a hole in the zone somewhere, and he’s not going to drop it. I could also see Murphy having a breakout year. And if [incoming freshman] Lawrence Mattison doesn’t redshirt, I think we see him on the field.
WS: Yep, goal line back. If he can get here; his eligibility’s still up in the air.
AK: Anything else? That’s a lot of stuff. (It really wasn’t, but it turns out we don’t have anything interesting to say.)
WS: It was a lot of stuff, but nothing was par-ticularly interesting. This might have been the worst idea we’ve ever had, and we’ve had a lot of terrible ideas. I feel like this is going to be one of those things that blows up on Twitter and we’re sitting there thinking, ‘What did we do?’
AK: Yeah, not interesting or funny. (Or this might be the greatest thing ever. Too early to tell.)
Warner strausbaugh, managing editor
andrew kilstrom, sports editor
on Twitter @Wstrausbaugh, @andrewKilstrom
conversaTIonn Continued from page 4
LIneBackersn Continued from page 4
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evaluating these thousands of different genetic crosses to see how well they resist disease, tolerate the cold and perform in the kitchen and brewery. They’re also taking note of their yields, growing some of them organically, and seeing how much water and nitrogen they need.
After all the measuring, weighing, malting and milling; the poking and prodding in the lab; cold winters, soggy roots, fungal infec-tions, insect bites; after enduring all this for years, only a handful of these varieties will make it to market. Consider that over the past 26 years, Hayes has released just 12 new varieties and germplasms. It’s not for a lack of trying: barley breeding just takes time when you’re hand-pollinating the flowers and waiting through at least one season to see if the desired traits show up.
But Hayes is working on speeding up the process. He’s using a technique called doubled haploid production. “By 2013, all of our new plantings here will be doubled haploids,” he says, scanning the field at Hyslop. The technique involves regenerat-ing plants from pollen in a petri dish, and creating genetically pure lines of barley in just one generation, as opposed to the six to eight years required through traditional inbreeding. The plant will produce the same barley year after year. Hayes emphasizes that this faster technique is not genetic engineer-ing; no DNA is added, removed or modified.
Breeding new barley varieties, howev-er, accounts for less than half of OSU’s work with the grain. For every new variety released, Hayes’ team publishes about 12 journal articles on their other research, which involves studying some of barley’s 30,000 genes. They’re trying to identify genes that allow barley to withstand low temperatures, resist disease and survive with little water and nitrogen. They’re looking for genes responsible for malting quality, nutritional properties and flowering time. They’ve partnered on this research with countries that include Australia, Germany, Japan, Scotland and Uruguay.
Walking among the rows at OSU’s farm, Hayes points out his barleys as if they were students in his plant genetics class. They’re under so much pressure to achieve. If they don’t, they’ll never graduate from his pro-gram. There’s Streaker, a “naked,” or hull-less, food barley that resists stripe rust and was named after the campus exhibitionists of the 1970s. It’s expected to graduate in 2013. Unfortunately, it’s a bit bronzed by a fungus called scald, the common cold of barley that eats away at yield and seed size. Next is Verdant, from the Class of 2010. It’s a high-yielder meant for livestock forage because it doesn’t have sandpapery awns — or beards, as they’re commonly referred to — that could hurt animals’ mouths. Then there’s Maja, which is getting chewed up by scald, but two shots of fungicide should clear it up, Hayes says. Alba is the tall beauty queen, the teacher’s latest pet. The screen-saver image on Hayes’ computer shows his wife smiling in front of a field of it. “The woman of my life and the barley of my life,” he says. On down the line is Charles, a variety from Idaho that has lamentably failed its midterm at OSU. The stunted plant is fall-ing over and ravaged by disease. “You would want fungicide fed into it intravenously,” Hayes says, adding that it’s an agronomic disaster in the Willamette Valley, although it does well in drier climates.
Getting barley into beer steins is one of Hayes’ priorities. The grain is, after all, an essential ingredient in most beers. Traditionally, big brewers have wanted bland
barley and relied on hops and malting for flavor, Hayes says. But barley is getting more attention thanks to an increase in small craft brewers and demand from consumers, says Zach Christensen, an OSU graduate and McMinnville farmer who grows and malts barley that he later sells to brewers.
“Craft brewers want to be able to create something that is unique, different and good so they can tell that story as part of their marketing,” says Christensen, who grows some of Hayes’ barley. “Consumers are looking for a locavore story and to have a beer they feel good about.”
With that in mind, Hayes is trying to develop barley that reflects the terroir — or soil and climate — of Oregon, much like wine grapes. Additionally, he and OSU researcher Alfonso Cuesta-Marcos are see-ing if genes influence the flavor of barley. They’re also breeding barleys that have desirable malting qualities. To be a malting barley, the grain has to be low in beta-glucan, a soluble fiber that impedes filtration dur-ing brewing and post-fermentation. OSU’s work has caught the attention of California’s Sierra Nevada Brewing Co. and Wisconsin’s New Glarus Brewing Co. The brewers plan to make beer from 50 to 100 exotic varieties of barley from around the world grown in 2012 by OSU. Then they’ll analyze how the beer tastes.
In addition to putting the bar back in barley, Hayes is trying to put barley back into people’s diets — with-out beer bottles. He sees potential in barley because it contains beta-glucan, which has been shown to reduce cholesterol. Its low glycemic index and high fiber content make it a healthy choice for those with diabetes or who want to shed some pounds, he says. So Hayes is develop-ing new types of barley for food, including ones crossed with multicol-ored barley from Mongolia, Nepal and Tibet. He’s hoping they’ll have a unique aroma and flavor and will appeal to consumers looking for novel, nutritious grains.
To help tempt consumers, OSU’s Andrew Ross is developing some ambitious recipes. Ross is a cereal, or as he says, surreal, scien-tist who studies what goes on inside bread with all its proteins, starches and enzymes. He’s pushing the limits with barley, replacing up to half the wheat flour in bread recipes
with barley flour. His repertoire includes baguettes, pita breads, sourdoughs, focaccia and even pretzels that have been served in the OSU president’s box at football games. Ross also makes a door-stopping rosette loaf, a real fiber bomb that’s not for the faint-hearted. “Don’t drop them on your toe,” he warns.
Making bread from barley is not without its challenges. You can’t use just any old barley. Unlike beer barley, it has to be high in beta-glucan. Barley flour sucks up water like a herd of thirsty camels, so bakers usu-ally need to add more liquid. And dough made with all barley flour hardly rises because it doesn’t trap the gas produced by yeast like wheat gluten does.
Farmer Tom Hunton is excited about barley’s rising future. “It’s the new super food,” says the co-owner of Camas Country Mill. He grabs a bag of his cracked barley cereal off the shelf at his stone gristmill near Eugene. The cereal is made from a variety called Tamalpais, but he’s eager to replace it with Hayes’ soon-to-be-released multicol-ored Streaker because it yields more and he anticipates that it will turn out to be more nutritious once it’s analyzed in the lab.
Hunton says he’s growing barley, including some of Hayes’ varieties, for the first time in at least three decades. He had stopped because it didn’t pencil out;
grass seed and wheat were more profitable. “I’ve been drinking Pat’s Kool-Aid,” he says of his reason for taking it up again.
Back at OSU’s bar-ley field, the combine is almost finished pour-ing the Alba seeds into the bin. Hayes feels like a composer hearing the public debut of his music. He wants it to be good. He rolls a handful of kernels in his palm.
The golden grains trickle between his fingers. They’re big, blond and bountiful. Hayes couldn’t be happier. His years of hard work in the field and lab have paid off.
“It’s nice to grow them and do research on them,” he says, “but at the end of the day it’s nice to see them in a bin.”
More information on OSU’s barley breeding program is at barleyworld.org.
Tiffany Woods, oregon’s agricultural [email protected]
BarLeyn Continued from page 6
‘‘ ‘‘It’s nice to grow [alba seeds] and
do research on them but at the end of the day it’s nice to see
them in a bin.
Pat hayesHead of OSU’s barley breeding program
courTesy of Lynn keTchuM | OREgOn’s AgRIcuLTuRAL PROgREss
scott Fisk harvests barley from test plots at oregon state university’s hyslop Farm near corvallis.
want. However, I’ll be damned if anyone tells future genera-tions to trust an ancient book written thousands of years ago to be more reliable than people who put effort into learn-ing about our universe.
I do not mind people believing in a religion. Just because I am an atheist does not mean I am a heartless commie.
However, I do mind when people are told not to think but do what they are told. We are people and we think. Anyone taking that away from a child is depriving them of an open mind. We need children to be educated on these sub-jects and to be able to compre-hend them.
In the past century, science has made more progress than we could have imagined.
We have already seen the problems of religion in our lives. I think this would be best exemplified by the religious right-wing movements of the ‘70s and ‘80s that dominated public policy and ultimately resulted in the failure to pass the Equal Rights Amendment, which would have given women a constitutional pro-tection from discrimination.
Moving on to today, we have seen the impact of religiously motivated advances in the classroom. This was especially big back in 2003, when the Discovery Institute, a conser-vative Christian think tank, came up with the smelliest pile of bad decisions.
This idea of theirs, intelligent design, is basically creation-ism without the “God” part. It speculates that the world came about with the help
of an intelli-gent creator, rather than through an evolutionary process. Of course, this totally wasn’t motivated at all by reli-gion — until you look at the guys who made it. Even then, this wasn’t the last
nail in the coffin. No, that was
filled in by the document that was leaked by them called the “Wedge Document.” This was a memo stating the rea-son behind intelligent design, which was to put a wedge in the scientific curriculum of schools. They hoped this would allow them to insert a new idea of Christian non-materialism into something they quite frankly should have stayed far, far away from.
In a sense, maybe I don’t like religion. But really, I don’t like religion in places it doesn’t belong.
t
hunter Murga is a freshman in chemistry. The opinions expressed in his columns do not necessarily represent those of The Daily Barometer staff. murga can be reached at [email protected].
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[email protected] • 737-2231 Tuesday, April 23, 2013 • 7
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MEDIAPOSITIONANNOUNCEMENT
• Summer Barometer EditorJune 17 – August 16
This position is open to any bonafide student at Oregon State University.To be considered, an applicant must: (1) have earned a g.p.a. of at least 2.0 from Oregon State University, (2) be enrolled for at least 6 academic credits Spring 2013 and intend to be enrolled for at least 6 academic credits Fall 2013, (3) not be on disciplinary probation, and (4) be making normal degree progress.To apply, applicant must: (1) complete an application form obtained from the Student Media Office, MU East 118, (2) sub-mit a transcript, (3) submit a letter of application, (4) submit a resume, and (5) submit a letter of recommendation. Deadline to apply is Friday, May 3 at 5 p.m. Position open until filled.Applicants will be interviewedby the University Student Media Committee on May 17 at 3 p.m.
Hui ‘O Hawaii with Polynesian Cultural Club Presents Oregon State University’s
58thAnnualLuauJourney Through Polynesia
Saturday, April 27Gill Coliseum Doors open – 4:30 p.m.
Dinner – 5:00 p.m.Show – 6:00 p.m.
Concert – 8:30 p.m.Concert artist:Spawnbreezie
Ticket sales through Friday in MU QuadPre-Sale Ticket Options:Gold $25 (dinner/concert/show)Silver $15 (show & concert)Tickets at the door: Additional $5
To request disabilities accommodations please call 503-875-8211. Tickets are non-refundable; Will call pickup 3-4:30 p.m.; Contact Halia Parish, [email protected]
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Designed By: Mo-Kim Mohammad Almoussaoui
ContactDon Iler, Editor-in-Chief, [email protected] or stop by 118 MU East/Snell Hall
MurGan Continued from page 3
‘‘ ‘‘I do not mind people believing in a religion. Just because I am an
atheist does not mean I am a heartless commie.
... I don’t like religion in places it
doesn’t belong.
ryan Mason Is a soPhoMore In GraPhIc DesIGn.
(CNN) — Canadian authori-ties have arrested two men accused of planning to carry out an al Qaeda-supported attack against a passenger train traveling between Canada and the United States, a U.S. con-gressman told CNN on Monday.
“As I understand it, it was a train going from Canada to the U.S.,” Rep. Peter King, R-New York, chairman of the coun-terterrorism and intelligence subcommittee, said.
The news follows an announcement earlier in the day by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police that they had arrested Chiheb Esseghaier, 30, and Raed Jaser, 35.
The two men are charged with “receiving support from al Qaeda elements in Iran” to carry out an attack and con-spiring to murder people on a
VIA railway train in the greater Toronto area, Assistant Police Commissioner James Malizia said.
“When I speak about sup-ported, I mean direction and guidance,” he said.
Despite the allegation of links to al Qaeda in Iran, there was no evidence to suggest the planned attacks were state-sponsored, Malizia said.
Iran vehemently denied the allegations that al Qaeda was operating inside its borders.
“Iran’s position against this group is very clear and well known,” according to a state-ment released by Iran’s mission to the United Nations.
“Al Qaeda has no possibility to do any activity inside Iran or conduct any operation abroad from Iran’s territory, and we reject strongly and categorically
any connection to this story.”Neither the Canadian
authorities nor King identified the exact route of the targeted train.
Essenghaier, of Montreal, and Jaser, of Toronto, will make their first court appearance on Tuesday, police said.
Authorities said the suspects were not Canadian citizens, but declined to identify their nationality or how long they had been in Canada.
Essenghaier has been a doc-toral student at the National Institute of Scientific Research at the University of Quebec since 2010, Julie Martineau, the university spokeswoman, said.
He was conducting research on nanosensors, which are pri-marily used for medical treat-ments or to build other nano-products, such as computer
chips, she said.“I cannot comment on any
behavior issues. He seemed like a normal student,” Martineau said.
There was no link between the Canadian investigation and the Boston Marathon bomb attack, an official with the Royal Canadian Mounted Police told CNN on condition of anonymity.
Canadian authorities were tight-lipped about the planned time frame of the alleged attack except to say it was in the plan-ning stage and not imminent.
“We are alleging these two individuals took steps and conducted activities to con-duct a terrorist attack,” Jennifer Strachan of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police told reporters.
“They watched trains and railways in the greater Toronto area.”
The alleged attack included a plan to derail a passenger train, she said.
The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation quoted “highly placed sources” as saying the suspects were under surveil-lance for more than a year.
The CBC reported that the investigation was “part of a
cross-border operation involv-ing Canadian law enforcement agencies, the FBI and the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.”
Al Qaeda has long studied the possibility of attacks on railroad systems — seeing them as cheap, relatively easy to carry out and with potentially devas-tating results.
The organization and its sympathizers have plotted attacks on railway systems in Spain and Germany. More than 200 people were killed and 1,700 injured in an attack that targeted several commuter trains in Madrid in March 2004.
In a document seized during the raid in Pakistan that left Osama bin Laden dead was evi-dence of an al Qaeda discussion to target rail lines in the United States, a law enforcement offi-cial told CNN in late 2011.
According to the document, al Qaeda members discussed as early as 2010 a plan to derail trains in the United States by placing obstructions on tracks over bridges and in valleys.
The plan, according to the document, was to be executed to coincide with the 10th anni-versary of the September 11
attacks, though no specific rail system was identified, the offi-cial said.
News of the arrests Monday came the same day Canada’s parliament debated an anti-terrorism bill.
Traditionally, al Qaeda’s membership is seen as Sunni-dominated and not Shiite.
As a result, al Qaeda and Iran have not been viewed as allies.
“We have very little intel-ligence on al Qaeda in Iran,” King said.
What is known is that bin Laden’s son-in-law, Sulaiman Abu Ghaith, fled Afghanistan for Iran after the fall of the Taliban in 2001.
According to U.S. documents and officials, in addition to Abu Ghaith, other members of bin Laden’s inner circle ended up in Iran, including the formi-dable military commander of al Qaeda, Saif al-Adel, and Saad bin Laden, one of the al Qaeda leader’s older sons who has played some kind of leadership role in the group.
Saad bin Laden also helped one of his father’s wives and several of his father’s children to move from Pakistan to Iran, officials said.
8• Tuesday, April 23, 2013 [email protected] • 737-2231
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D AVE.
CO
NIF
ER P
L .
D OUG LA S AVE.
DIV
ISIO
N
ST.
SU
NSET
DR
.
OTANA PL.
UN
KN
OW
N
FAIR OAKS PL. MY
RT
LE
W
O O D
WY
.
JU
N
I PER PL .
TAYLOR AVE.
JAN
ET
WY.
JON
P L.
DO
CK
SI D
E D
R.
F I LL MOR E AVE.
ANT ELO P E PL.
INGER PL.
RO
TH
S
T.
23
RD
ST
.
SH
ER
WO
OD
PL .
WY NO OCHEE DR .
NORW OOD DR.
IRONWOOD AVE .
LINVILLE LN.
BR
UN
O P
L.
R
O L F PL.
PINTAIL PL .
POLK AVE.
LINCOLN AVE.
UNK NOW N
FILLMORE AVE .
TAYLO R AVE.
WA
YL
AN
D S
T.
WESTERN BLVD.
J E ANICE PL .
VAN B UREN AVE .
A
PL
.
15
TH
S
T.
S ILKT ASSEL DR.
RO
OS
EV
ELT
DR.
26
TH
S
T.
T ERRACEG REEN PL .
TY LER AVE.
FILLMORE AVE .
MO RGA N P L .
LYM AN DR.
JAM
ESON D R.
JACK SON AV E.
CLEVE LAND AVE .
PIE RCE WY.
13
TH
S
T.
F IRE
WE
ED
PL.
L I NN AV E.
KI R ST EN PL.
CO
LE
PL
.
PA
IGE
ST.
S IS KIN D R.
TYLER PL.
WILLOW AVE .
ADAM S AVE.
PO
WE
LL
PL
.
17
TH
S
T.
PAR P L.
ROOS EV ELT DR.
ROB B PL .
AR
BO
L PL.
ROYAL OAKS PL.
GRE ELEY AVE .
ACEY WY.
MO
UN
TAIN
L AU
RE
L P
L .
18
TH
S
T.
UN
KN
OW
N
ELMW
OO
D D
R
.
MASON PL .
QUA IL GLE NN DR.
SH
ATT
OC
K P
L.
TWINBER RY PL.
DON OVAN
P L.
POLK AVE.
DIX
ON
S
T.
L INCOLN AV E.
JACK SON AV E.
MAP LE AVE.
TY LER AVE.
B LUES T EM P L.
M ADISON AVE.
HE M LOCK AVE .
TYL ER AVE.
POLK AVE .
TAS
MA
N P
L.
KE
NN
Y D
R.
17TH
S
T.
MC
C
AL
L
WY
.
ADAM S ST.
PENDLETON
PL .
COLLE GE ST.
ARTHUR AVE .
EV
ER
GR
EE
N S
T.
RO
BIN
H
OO
D
ST.
D IA NE PL.
MAY WY.
CE
DA
R P
L.
25
TH
S
T.
SO
ME
RS
ET
DR.
PE
ON
Y S
T.
G RE EN PL.
GRA NT ST.
ASH S T.
ESTAVIEW PL.
AVONDA LE PL.
17TH
S
T.
WILLOW LN.
12TH
S
T.
R EDT O P PL.
CEDAR S T.
CORLISS AV E.
18TH
S
T.
LANCE PL .
MAP LE ST.
JOHNSON AV E.
LEP
MA
N S
T.
HOF F MA N AV E.
W OOD BIN E PL.
STA RK ER P L.
NEER AVE .
DE
BO
RAH
PL .
KL
I NE
PL.
KL
ON
DIK E CT.
P INN ACLE PL.
ALL
EY
WAY
C LO VE R P L.
R EI MAN AVE.
31
ST
S
T.
27
TH
S
T.
BYRON PL.
LEG A CY P L.
15TH
S
T.
AGATE AVE.
J
OY
L
YN PL
.
POLK AVE.
DU
CH
ES
S
PL
.
TAY LO R AV E.
ZE
DW
ICK
ST.
21
ST
S
T.
C LUB HOUSE PL.
19TH
S
T.
11TH
S
T.
BOXWOOD
DR
.
M ONROE S T.
JACK SON AV E.
16TH
S
T.
VIN
TA
GE
ST
.
HO
NEY SUCK LE P L.
BOXWOO
D P
L.
Q
UIE
T
CRE EK D R.
FIR
WO
OD
PL
.
FL
INT
LO
CK
P
L.
JONQ UI L P L.
WE
ST
WO
OD PL.
APPLEGATE ST.
LAN
GT
ON
PL
.
LIN
DA
ST.
ALL
EY
WA
Y
PINEW
OOD P L.
LISA PL.
WI DGEO N PL .
A UTU MN
PL
.
SE
AV
Y P
L.
H AWK CRE ST
DR.
FO X PL.
GO
LD
FIN
CH
PL
.
ALL
EY
WA
Y
F RAZ IE R CREE K RD.
MIN
K PL
.
10TH
ST.
ALL
EY
WA
Y
13TH
S
T.
FAIR OAKS DR.
11T
H S
T.
NIG
HTINGALE
PL .
JEF
FR
EY
PL
.
GEL LATLY WY.
15TH
S
T.
SKY VIEW AVE .
JASM INE P L.
10TH
S
T.
MICAH
PL
.
P LEAS ANT HI LL DR.
TANGENT DR.
CHIPMUNK PL .
COU N T RY H ILLS DR.
16TH LN.
LATH
RO
P L
N.
RO
YA
L O
AK
S D
R.
SO UT HW OOD DR.
PINTA
IL
LN.
16
TH
S
T.
8TH
S
T.
14
TH
S
T.
ELMWOOD DR.
ALL
EY
WAY
6TH
S
T.
10TH
S
T.
LAWNDALE PL.
2ND
S
T.
11TH
S
T.
AL
DR
IN P
L.
CO
LL
INS
PL
.
MA
RY
S C
IR.
6TH
ST.
ALL
EY
WAY
2ND
ST.
L INCO LN S T.
8TH
S
T.
MC DONALD PL.
PIONE ER ST.
EN GLEW O O D AVE .
BECK ER DR.
7TH
S
T.
COLLE GE ST.
FISC HER LN.
AP
PL
ETREE
PL .
PIONE ER ST.
BIG OAK
P
L .
CO
UN
TR
Y C
T.
STE WART PL.
6TH
S
T.
1ST
ST.
DAV IS M EA DOW S P L.
COOPE R LN.
TILL
ICU
M PL .
A N G EL EE PL.
BLU
EBELL PL .
LINCO LN CT.
MI S T LETO E C I R.
CH
AR
LO
TT E PL .
WISTERIA PL.
57
TH
ST.
TW
INB
ER
RY
ST
.
AZ T EC AV E.
WAK E ROBIN AV E.
RICHARD PL.
GR
OV
ES
LN
.
MEA DOWLA RK DR.
BE
EC
HW
OO
D P
L.
MU
LLIG
AN
PL
.
PR
OF
ES
S
I O NA L DR.
H ATHAWAY
PL.
WIL
D IR
IS L
N.
MA
RT
IN S
T.
H IDDE N
VA
LLE
Y R
D.
MO
SE
LLE P L.
HELEN AVE.
ALL
EY
WAY
VE
LL
E S
T.
VIN
IFE
RA
ST.
CAS CARA
LN.
OAK AVE.
S TA DIUM
AVE.
LI VE OAK DR.
MO
NT
EREY
PL .
PO
WD
ER
HO
US
E R
D.
DOROTHY AV E.
ZIN
FAN
DE
L L
N.
HAYES AVE.
RO
BIN
PL.
VI LLAGE
GRE EN PL.
HARVES T DR.
CAB ERNET PL.
MARION AV E.
MULKE Y AVE.
STAR KER AVE.
34T
H P
L.
3 M ILE LN.
VI RGIN IA PL.
HAZEL AVE.
W O O DLANE DR.
21
ST
S
T.
RENN IE PL.
ST
ON
E S
T.
DE NMAN AVE .
GL
EN
RID
GE
DA KOTA AVE.
SW
ALLO W DR.
AR B OR GROVE DR.
FU
CH
SI A
DR
.
PA
RK
TE
RR
. ST.
BECA AVE.
LO
WR
IE L
N.
BL
AC
KB
ER
RY
LN
.
VIS
TA
P
L.
TH
IST LE P L .
LONG
WHITBY AV E.
OA KSHA DE DR.
20
TH
S
T.
DIX
ON
ST
.
JA
NS
SE
N S
T.
GA RDEN AVE .
C O LUM BINE DR.
ALL
EN
A
VE
.
GRE ELE Y AVE.
WONDERLY LN.
WH
ITE
OA
K RD.
WI NDF LOW ER D R.
DA IRY CE
NT
ER
HAWTHO
RN
PL
.
N
I AG
AR
A P
L .
BUNT ING
DR
.
AL
AS
KA
WY
.
DRESDE N AVE .
WE
ST
HIL
LS
PL
.
LARK PL .
WAT TENPAUGH AVE.
ME A D OW
RIDG E
PL .
8TH
S
T.
CO
UN
CI L
TR
EE
LN
.
VE R O NICA PL.
AP
PA
LO
OS
A
LN.
SECHE R LN.
E LDE R B
ERRY LN .
AS
BA
HR
PL
.
A L LE
YW
AY
GE
RO
LD
ST.
CE NTE RPOINTE
D
R .
MCKINLEY DR .
KALA
PUYA CIR.
SA
FE
HAR
BO
R S
T.
HI LLT OP DR.
MCKE NZI E AVE .
SUM MERTON
WY.
CHINQUAP IN PL.
WE
ST
VIE
W P
L.
HU
ND
RE
D O
AK
LN
.
FR
EE
MA
N L
N.
P
INE C O NE W Y.
14TH PL.
SUNF LO WER
LN .
SK ILLIN GS DR.
VILLA
DR.
GA
RR
YA
NN
A
ST.
WIT
HAM
D
R.
YUK
ON
DR
.
13
TH
PL.
BROOKS IDE W
Y.
MAN Z AN
ITA
PL
.
ST
ON
EY
BR
OO
K S
T.
JAMES ST.
UNKNOWN
BELL AV E.
MAPLE AVE.
CONWAY LN.
AM
BE
RW
O O D
AV
E.
CAL D E RWO OD DR .
JAME S PL.
ASTER S T.
HOB ART AVE.
S PAR
RO
W P
L.
C ANBERRA DR.
MIR ADOR PL.
LAWRENCE AVE.
PHEASAN
T C
T.
RID GEWO
OD
PL
.
QU
AIL
LN .
RANDALL WY.
HIGHL AN D D ELL DR.
SE
AV
Y
CIR
.
TAKE
NA
DR
.
SHE RW O OD
WY.
M OSS RO CK DR.
PA
NO
RA
MA
DR
.
HAYES AVE.
CH
UR
CH
ILL
WY.
R IBIE R
PL.
P IO N E E R
PL.
ST
OP
P
PL
.
STA
MM
P
L.
AS
HW
OO
D
DR
.
WILLIA M WY.
RAMON A LN
.
WANETA DR.
PLE ASANT PL.
STO KES LN .
S HAMR OCK L N.
HOUS ER LN.
L AN
DM
AR
K D
R.
33RD
PL.
GL
EN
EDE
N D
R.
SH
AS
TA
A
VE
.
UNK N OWN
CORNE LL AV E.
GO
OD
PA
RK
ST.
RH
OD
A W
Y.
PO
PL
AR
P
L.
R U SS ELL PL.
CH
RIS
TI N
E S
T.
DA L E
DR
.
ME
NL
O
DR
.
STARLIG HT WY.
DAY L ILY AVE .
TAFT AVE.
SW AN LN.
VIN
EY
AR
D D
R.
AU
DE
NE
DR
.
ED
GE
WO
OD
DR
.
H IG HLAND
TERR
. PL .
54
TH
S
T.
OVE RL OOK
DR.
WIS TER
IA
W Y.
CHI CO RY L N .
PO NDER OS A AVE.
TONKA D
R.
16
TH
ST
.
DE
SC
HU
TE
S S
T.
GUM WOOD AVE .
LO
CK
E C
EM
ET
ER
Y R
D.
T IMBERL I NE D R.
BRIGHT
ST
AR
LN
.
56
TH
S
T.
HORSE FARM LN.
NE
WC
AS
TLE
PL.
WA
LD
O
PL
.
WA
PA
TO
PL
.
BO
ON
EV
ILLE
DR
.
LAR CH AV
E.
KARLE NE DR.
SNOWBIR
D L
N.
EL
IZA
BE
TH
DR.
LLE W ELLY N RD.
15
TH
S
T.
LE PRECH AUN LN.
MI TCH E LL DR .
SN
OW
BR
US
H DR.
LANC ASTER ST.
I NDUS TRI AL W Y.
ARTHU R DR.
ORCHA RD AVE.
CAMPUS
WY
.
JAM ES AVE .
MEM ORY LN.
MAYB ERRY AVE.
JOHNS TO NE
DR
.
CYPR ESS
AV
E.
7T
H S
T.
H ONEYSUCK LE DR
.
HARVES T DR.
M EADOW VIEW
D R.
FO
UR
A
CR
E
PL
.
SEAVY AVE.
SP RIN G MEADOW DR.
UNKNOWN
55
TH
S
T.
STA NDISH AVE.
EX
CO
R
RD
.
BE
NT
ON
P
L.
SU
MA
C D
R.
9T
H S
T .
MORRIS AV E.
HAY ES AV E.
ME
AD
OW
PA RK CIR.
66T
H S
T.
HO
LLY
AC
RE
S S
T.
RO
SS
L
N.
GRE EN ST.
SEAVY
AVE.
LO
OK
OU
T
DR
.
GENTRY
ST.
CRA NBE RRY DR .
WO RT H
WY.
LONG AVE.
HU
MM
ING
BIR
D D R .
THOUSA ND OAK DR .
BLU
EB
ER
RY DR.
CARROLL DR.
HOP KINS AVE.
CU
SH
MA
N
RD
.
HO
LID
AY
S
T.
WO
LC
OT
T S
T.
AVALON
PL .
KE ST R
EL
HILL L N.
SEQ UO I A AVE.
NO
ON
RD
.
EG
AN
DR.
AVERY AVE.
GA
GN
ON
S
T.
LI LLY AVE.
LEWIS BURG AVE.
MA
DR
ON
E W
Y.
STELLMA CHER DR.
IN TRA MURA L W Y.
BA
RT
ON
R
D.
TE
XA
S
ST.
DIX
ON
S
T.
12
TH
S
T.
11T
H
ST.
FAIR
MO
NT
D
R.
L INDE N AV E.
FAIR
A
CR
ES
S
T.
JEFFERSON WY.
CAMP US WY.
PIN
O
AK
S
T.
BA
I LE
Y
ST.
MO
RN
ING
S
T.
RALP H MI LLE R LN.
FI R
CR
EE
K L
N.
KA INUI DR .
11TH
S
T.
ME
YE
R
LN.
C ONI F ER BLV D.
MARSHAL L
DR
.
ST
OU
T
LN
.
CA MPU S
WY.
BLUEROCK LN.
SHADY
OA
K D
R.
FO RES T S PRINGS RD.
OA K LN.
DIM
PL
E H
ILL
RD
.
WELTZIN AV E.
UNKNO WN
TW
IN M
AP
LE
LN
.
VIE WMONT AVE .
NEW G AT E DR.
BRIDGE WAY AVE.
SPRUCE AV E.
RICHLA ND AV E.
CA
ME
LL IA DR .
HO
OD
VIE
W C
IR.
VINE AV E.
AC
OR
N
R IDGE DR.CH IN
OO
K
DR .
WE SLINN DR.
CA
RP
AT
HI A
N
DR .
MC
BE
E R
D.
SKI
PAN
ON
DR.
HYSLOP RD.
SYCA MORE AVE .S
IST
ER
S P
L.
STOVALL LN.
PHEA SAN T AVE.
FALC
ON
PL.
BU
LLE
VA
RD
S
T.
BRO WNLY HEIG HTS D R.
WATE R W O RKS
AV
E.
OLD PE AK RD.
ARM ST R O NG
WY.
LINDSAY DR.
PE
TE R
SO
N
RD .
MC DO UG AL C IR.
STEELE AV E.
EL
LIO
TT
C
IR.
AIR
PO
RT
P
L.
INAVAL E W Y.
JA CKS ON CR EEK RD.
AURORA LN.
HARMA N LN.
W YATT LN .
VEN ELL L N.
PLU
MLE
Y PL
.
NI COLE DR .
RIT CHI E LN.
CARD WEL L HIL L
DR.
HER ITAGE HILL S
R D.
CLE
ARWATE
R D
R.
EMP ER OR D R.
CONV ILL AV E.
PE NLA ND
DR
.
MIN
NE
SO
TA
A
VE
.
RA INTRE E DR.
EC
HO
HI L
L S
RD .
BONNEY DR.
WIN
TE
RC
RE
EK
DR
.
MC
C ORMI CK LN .
PU
GH
R
D.
CHAPARRAL DR.
PAYNE RD.
MIC
HE
LLE
DR .
ABRA HAM LN.
PLU
MLE
Y
ST.
SA
MA
RIT A
N D
R.
WALNUT DR.
EL
LIO
TT
C
IR.
BE
LDE
N C
REE
K R
D.
CU
TLE
R L N
.
MALE Y RD.
ERVIN RD.
PL
EASA
NT
V IEW DR.
53
RD
ST.
SMITH LP.
GR ANG E HALL R D.
POWE LLS RD.
BR AT TAIN DR.
OA KVILLE
RD.
SENE
CA
PL
.
AVERY PARK
DR.
RY
AN
S
T.
TR EL L I S DR .
TW I N OA KS C IR.
GA
RR
YA
NN
A S
T.
26
TH
S
T.
HI LLCR
ES
T D
R.
17TH
ST.
AU
TU
MN
ST
.
24
TH
S
T.
BE
TH
EL
S
T.
ROS EBE RRY S T.
ANJ NI C
IR.
EA
ST
S
T.
BAYS HORE CIR.
AS
PE
N S
T.
25
TH
S
T.
23R
D
ST. FA
IRL
AW
N
ST.
AC
AC
IA
DR.
HEATHER D R.
27
TH
S
T.
UN
KN
OW
N
BURKE PL .
FO
XTA
IL S
T.
AU
DE
NE
PL .
WALNUT P L .
49
TH
ST.
MA
XIN
E
CI R.
27
TH
S
T.
BE
LVU
E
ST.
ALT
A
VIS
TA
D
R.
WH I T ES I D E
DR
.
SC
OT
T S
T.
NE W TO N ST.
DE
AR
MO
ND
D
R.
B EALS AVE.
H AT
HA
WA
Y D
R.
AR
RO
WO
OD
CIR .
AR
RO
WO OD
C IR.
13
TH
S
T.
B ARLEY
HI L
L D
R.
SU
NR
ISE
S
T.
VIN
C
ENT ST.
FERN
WO
OD
C
IR.
H
ON E Y SU
CK
L E D
R.
LAN
CASTER
ST.
BE
LH
AV
EN
DR
.
28
TH
S
T.
GA RRYANNA DR.
TOP
AZ
ST.
17
TH
ST.
HA
PP
Y V
AL
LE
Y D
R.
VERA
AV E.
45
TH
P
L.
14
TH
S
T.
CREST DR.
8TH
ST.
SU
NS
HIN
E
AV E.
KI N
DE
RM
AN D R
.
TA
M A RAC K DR .
GOL D R U SH
CIR
.
SK
YL
INE
DR
.
ST
EW
AR
T
ST
.
SH
OR
EL I
NE
DR
.
MO
NTE
RE
Y D
R.
33
RD
S
T.
ESTAVIE
W D
R.
GR
EE
NB
R
IAR PL.
NE
AB
EA
CK
HIL
L D
R.
13
TH
ST.
FAW
NEE DR .
HOLLY HOCK
CIR
.
L O CUST AV E.
MER RIE
DR.
25
TH
S
T.
DE
ER
RU
N S
T.
31
ST
S
T.
LA
NC
AS
TE
R S
T.
PA
RK
CIR.
RO SEW O O D PL.
TIM
IAN
S
T.
CO N CO RD D
R.
WH
ITE
P
INE
R
D.
TA
NA
GE
R D
R.
DO
RC
HE
STER W Y.
FIREFE
RN
PL
.
B AVE.
BR
YA
NT
S
T.
LA
NC
E W
Y.
11T
H
ST.
WH
ITE
OA
K R
D.
WH
ITE
OA
K R
D.
30
TH
ST.
23
RD
S
T.
PLY
MO
UTH
C
IR.
32
ND
S
T.
15
TH
S
T.
35
TH
S
T.
LO
NG
HIL
L S
T.
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CORVALLIS
OREGON TRANSPORTATION MAPShowing Functional Classification of Roads
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Mounties arrest two suspected in plot to blow up train headed to US from Canada
(CNN) — Boston Marathon bombing suspect Dzhokhar Tsarnaev has told investigators his older brother Tamerlan was the driving force behind last week’s attack and that no international terrorist groups were behind them, a U.S. gov-ernment source said Monday.
Preliminary interviews with Tsarnaev indicate the two brothers fit the classification of self-radicalized jihadists, the source said. Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, wounded and held in a Boston hospital, has said his brother — who was killed early Friday — wanted to defend Islam from attack, according to the source.
The government source cautioned that the interviews were preliminary, and that Tsarnaev’s account needs to be checked out and followed up on by investigators.
And a federal law enforce-ment official told CNN that while investigators have seen nothing yet to indicate the suspects were working with anyone else, a lot of work remains before they can say confidently that no others were involved. That official would not comment on any motive or specifics on what Dzhokhar Tsarnaev has communicated to officials.
The 19-year-old has been charged with using and con-spiring to use a weapon of mass destruction resulting in death, and one count of malicious destruction of prop-erty by means of an explo-sive device resulting in death. He was heavily sedated and on a ventilator at Beth Israel Deaconess Hospital, but was “alert, mentally competent and lucid” during the brief
initial court appearance at his bedside on Monday, U.S. Magistrate Judge Marianne Bowler found.
During the hearing, Tsarnaev communicated mostly by nod-ding his head, though he once answered “No” when Bowler asked him if he could afford a lawyer, according to a tran-script of the proceeding. A public defender was appointed to represent him.
Investigators have been ask-ing Tsarnaev whether there are more bombs, explosives cach-es or weapons beyond those already found by police, and if anyone else was involved in the attacks, a source with first-hand knowledge of the investi-gation told CNN. Investigators are going into Tsarnaev’s room every few hours to ask ques-tions in the presence of doc-tors, the source said.
Source: Bomb suspect says brother was brains behind attack