Author Archives | Eder Campuzano

UOPD arrests man who claimed he had a gun at Knight Library

University of Oregon police officials have arrested a man who had claimed he had a gun at Knight Library on Tuesday morning.

The man, who hasn’t been identified by police, was acting erratically at the library, Eugene police and UOPD officials said. When the man claimed he had a gun, several library patrons called UOPD. That’s when the man fled the library, only to be caught and arrested on 13th Avenue in front of the Red Rooster barber shop.

Officials at the scene said that the incident was unrelated to the false sighting of a man with a rifle at Autzen Stadium earlier in the day.

This story is developing. More to come.

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The UO card office is now accepting selfies for your school ID (But probably not any of these)

You may have heard that the University of Oregon’s card office is accepting selfies for new student ID cards. While that may now be the case, the UO is a bit more discriminative when it comes to your Duck ID than Facebook is when it comes to your profile photo.

So even though you got to take an infamous foot selfie with the PDX carpet before it was ripped up, it’s not gonna work.

The card office has a few requirements for a new ID photo:

• No funny faces
• No cropping off the top of your head
• No costumes, sunglasses or other headgear
• No out-of-focus photos
• No angled pictures

Violate any of the above rules and the card office will ask you to re-take and upload the new picture. Send in three unsuccessful attempts and you’ll have to do things the old-fashioned way.

Card office manager Tamarra White went over a few selfies to give us a better idea of what’s acceptable. Eight of the nine photos below would definitely be sent back:

Raquel DuckFace

(Raquel Ortega/Emerald)

“No funny expressions of gestures. This is your official ID photo. UOPD needs to be able to recognize you. Your professors have access to these photos as well. Make sure you’re not making duck faces for these photos.”

So that rules out the above photo.

Raquel Pac12

(Raquel Ortega/Emerald)

“Busy background,” White said. “There’s other people in the photo.”

No extra points for reppin’ Duck gear and traveling to Levi’s Stadium for the Pac-12 championship game?

“She gets personal points, but that’s not going to work for her photo,” she said.

Meerah

(Meerah Powell/Emerald)

“I could actually crop that and flip it,” White said. “It’s more work, but this one could be okay.”

But as a general rule? Don’t angle your ID photos.

Kevin

(Kevin Camacho/Emerald)

“This one is such a common problem,” White said. “Sometimes when people go for a flattering angle, they end up cutting off the top of their head.”

Kevin and some dude

(Kevin Camacho/Emerald)

“You can’t have another person in your photos,” White said. “In this one, you also can’t see his eyes. You know what he’s doing right, though? At least he’s looking at the camera.”

Andrea Face

(Andrea Harvey/Emerald)

“Nope. No funny faces,” White said. “And we need to be able to see your eyes.”

Eder Burrito

(Eder Campuzano/Emerald)

“Head cropped off at the top,” White said. “Face hidden by food. But at least this one is well lit.”

PBR

(Eder Campuzano/Emerald)

“No beer. Besides, you can’t have your face obstructed by anything. But at least here the background would work.”

White says that there hasn’t been much of a problem with students sending in photos of them with illegal substances (most Duck IDs are issued to people who are under 21.) But there was one student holding an “illegal object” in his photo. White declined to say just what that was.

Additionally, a proper Duck ID will include both sides of your face. No Ariana Grande-esque left-side-only photos.

“We need to be able to see your entire face,” White said.

Raquel Selfie

(Raquel Ortega/Emerald)

So, something like this?

“Perfect,” White said.

Follow Eder Campuzano on Twitter: @edercampuzano.

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Campuzano: New Horizons and the Pluto mission made me feel like a kid again. Thanks, NASA

It’s been nearly a decade since we were told that Pluto isn’t a member of that prestigious gang of celestial bodies surrounding our sun. We’ve been told that the icy world isn’t a planet since 2006, but over the last few days it sure hasn’t felt that way.

That’s because New Horizons, a probe the size of a grand piano launched that same year, has finally arrived and passed by its destination. And with the photos and data the vessel has sent back to Earth, we’re learning more about Pluto than we did in the 70-plus years since it was discovered.

Ever since NASA started releasing high definition images of Pluto last week — the first ever at these distances — I’ve been taken back to my elementary school years, when dinosaurs and space travel ruled my imagination.

As stated time and again by various news organizations and space blogs, this is the first time in a generation that we’ve collected this much new information on another world in our solar system.

It’s exciting stuff.

I lost hours at a time catching up on the research and images that NASA released as the week went on. It was like discovering the solar system for the first time all over again. Picture after picture, news story after news story formed questions and mental exclamations as I read through explainers and watched videos on the mission.

What’s the heart-shaped valley on the bottom right corner of that photo?

Mountains? Why are there mountains on Pluto?

That tiny ball of ice hasn’t orbited the sun even once since the American Revolution? Really?

It’s that same child-like wonder that had me drawing maps and models of the planets back at Memorial Elementary School in McMinnville. While teachers droned on and on about multiplication tables, adjectives and nouns, I was sketching Jupiter’s Great Red Spot and imagining what it might be like to visit Neptune (Admittedly, at the time I thought it was all one big ocean.)

Since then, I’ve harbored a minor interest in space — it’s insanely beautiful, after all — but years of developing the right side of my brain more or less made me file away whatever desire I had to truly pursue it with a passion.

Seriously, just look at this picture of the Milky Way over Big Sur. (Creative Commons photo courtesy of Flickr user Yan L)

Seriously, just look at this picture of the Milky Way over Big Sur. (Creative Commons photo courtesy of Flickr user Yan L)

Besides, the sheer amount of math required to pass the midterm and final exams in the astronomy classes I’ve taken at the University of Oregon had me cursing silently right up to the moment I handed them in.

Even so, whenever I go camping, I make it a point to sneak away alone for a moment, gaze at the sky and ponder the vast expanses of space and the relatively tiny worlds that pepper our solar system. In my mind, we’ve still got 10 planets, even if experts say otherwise.

Pluto gets a pass, just like I did as an honorary member of my high school’s cross-country team for a month one summer. (That’s how my presence at team events and games of ultimate was justified.)

For one week, it also felt like Pluto was back in the same club as Earth, Mars and Jupiter in the eyes of the rest of the world. At the same time, I was right back in that third-grade classroom, neglecting whatever practical lessons my teacher was drawing up on the blackboard and imagining what it would be like to visit another world.

Thanks for that, NASA.

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Campuzano: New Horizons and the Pluto mission made me feel like a kid again. Thanks, NASA

It’s been nearly a decade since scientists decided Pluto isn’t a member of that prestigious gang of celestial bodies surrounding our sun. We’ve been told the icy world isn’t a planet since 2006, but over the last few days it sure hasn’t felt that way.

That’s because New Horizons, a probe the size of a grand piano launched that same year, has finally arrived at its destination. And with the photos and data the vessel has sent back to Earth, we’re learning more about Pluto than we ever have in the 85 years since it was discovered.

Ever since NASA started releasing high definition images of Pluto last week — the first ever at these distances — I’ve been taken back to my elementary school years, when dinosaurs and space travel ruled my imagination.

As stated time and again by various news organizations and space blogs, this is the first time in a generation that we’ve collected this much new information on another world in our solar system.

It’s exciting stuff.

I lost hours at a time catching up on the research and images that NASA released as the week went on. It was like discovering the solar system for the first time all over again. Picture after picture, news story after news story formed questions and mental exclamations as I read through explainers and watched videos on the mission.

What’s the heart-shaped valley on the bottom right corner of that photo?

Mountains? Why are there mountains on Pluto?

That tiny ball of ice hasn’t orbited the sun even once since the American Revolution? Really?

It’s that same child-like wonder that had me drawing maps and models of the planets back at Memorial Elementary School in McMinnville. While teachers droned on and on about multiplication tables, adjectives and nouns, I was sketching Jupiter’s Great Red Spot and imagining what it might be like to visit Neptune. (Admittedly, at the time I thought it was all one big ocean.)

Since then, I’ve harbored a minor interest in space — it’s insanely beautiful, after all — but years of developing the right side of my brain made me file away whatever desire I had to truly pursue space with a passion.

Seriously, just look at this picture of the Milky Way over Big Sur. (Creative Commons photo courtesy of Flickr user Yan L)

Seriously, just look at this picture of the Milky Way over Big Sur. (Creative Commons photo courtesy of Flickr user Yan L)

Besides, the sheer amount of math required to pass the midterm and final exams in the astronomy classes I’ve taken at the University of Oregon had me cursing silently right up to the moment I handed them in.

Even so, whenever I go camping, I make it a point to sneak away alone for a moment, gaze at the sky and ponder the vast expanses of space and the relatively tiny worlds that pepper our solar system. In my mind, we’ve still got 10 planets, even if experts say otherwise.

Pluto gets a pass, just like I did as an honorary member of my high school’s cross-country team for a month one summer. (That’s how my presence at team events and games of ultimate was justified.)

For one week, it also felt like Pluto was back in the same club as Earth, Mars and Jupiter in the eyes of the rest of the world. At the same time, I was right back in that third-grade classroom, neglecting whatever practical lessons my teacher was drawing up on the blackboard and imagining what it would be like to visit another world.

Thanks for that, NASA.

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Don’t call him ‘Mr. President’: Michael Schill keeps things casual as he steps into office

Lauren Garetto is also an author on this story.

Just call him Mike.

Not Mr. Schill. Not Mr. President. Not Michael.

The University of Oregon’s newest top administrator doesn’t introduce himself with a formal title. When he toured campus on his first working days, every employee he shook hands with — from cooks to operations folks to administrators — was asked to address him by first name.

Just Mike. That’s the way he rolls.

Michael Schill spent his first week on campus meeting with department heads, getting the lay of the land and amassing a trove of treats.

As students trudged to their morning classes on Tuesday, Schill cheerfully strode to Johnson Hall after a brief meeting with campus operations employees. As he approached the building, he balanced a briefcase, a bag full of Oregon goodies from his meet-and-greet and a plate full of sweets. A duck cookie topped the mound of brownies and other treats.

He spent his second morning on campus touring the university’s power plant and recycling facilities, ooh-ing and ah-ing as he went. Schill nodded, joked and laughed with every faculty, staff, student or alumni.

He was routinely running late for his next appointment. He took time with everyone he met, asking about their hometowns, their relationship to the university and about their jobs. A tight schedule didn’t keep him from finding out as much as he could.

He learned that the UO’s backup generators can power all of campus in the event of a blackout and that the campus recycling program has reached a point where the university recycles more material than it brings in.

On Monday, July 6, he toured the Carson central kitchen, where much of the university’s food is prepared before it’s shipped out to other buildings. He chatted with chefs and other kitchen personnel.

That’s when his sweet tooth came out.

UO President Michael Schill reacts during a conversation with central kitchen chef Bron Smith. (Eder Campuzano/Emerald)

UO President Michael Schill reacts during a conversation with central kitchen chef Bron Smith. (Eder Campuzano/Emerald)

Schill told the staff that even though neither of his parents was an ace in the kitchen, there were always plenty of treats at home. (Even if they were usually prepared by Betty Crocker and Duncan Hines, he joked.)

He capped off his visit to the kitchens with a short tour of the bakery, where an employee cut cookie dough into a familiar shape.

Those duck cookies eventually made their way, along with Schill, to Allen Hall for a welcoming reception on Monday afternoon.

The atrium was packed before Schill arrived. The seating area next to the entrance was bustling with staff, faculty, students and alumni waiting to meet the university’s newest president.

As he entered the building, a microphone and speaker system waited for him in the hallway next to the Hall of Achievement. But 45 minutes in, event staff realized the microphone may have been ill-advised. Schill maneuvered through the crowd like he was wading through honey — as he finished one conversation, he would immediately enter another.

He shook hands. He smiled and posed for pictures. The speaker system was disassembled as Schill stood roughly 15 feet from where he entered.

Schill talks with UO Public Safety Officer Herb Horner. (Eder Campuzano/Emerald)

Schill talks with UO Public Safety Officer Herb Horner. (Eder Campuzano/Emerald)

People liked the guy.

“It’s clear that he is passionate about being here. He is excited about the U of O,” said Carolyn McDermed, chief of the UO Police Department.

“I was really excited to see his energy in person,” said James Chang, director of the alumni association’s Duck Career Network. “He seems so personable and so experienced in complex organizations.”

Although Schill naturally wove his way from person to person during the welcoming reception, that gift of familiarity didn’t necessarily translate to geography — he got lost en route to campus for his second day of meetings.

As he drove down Fairmount Boulevard from his home near Hendricks Park on Tuesday, he took a wrong turn that made him a few minutes late.

“When I was coming down I thought it was a right to get to Agate,” he said. “Of course, it was a left.”

This is Schill’s first long-term stint anywhere near the Pacific Ocean. He has spent most of his professional career on the East Coast.

He earned his A.B. (equivalent to a bachelor’s degree) in public policy in 1980 from Princeton University, and received his J.D. from Yale Law School in 1984. He is a first-generation college student and specializes in real estate and housing law.

Before he was hired as the UO’s newest president, Schill served as the dean of the Harry N. Wyatt Law School at the University of Chicago. Before that, he was the dean of the law school at UCLA.

A map of Schill's education and career. (Jack Graham/Emerald)

A map of Schill’s education and career. (Jack Graham/Emerald)

Schill’s selection at UO came from a closed search; none of the candidates or finalists were announced.

Even though Schill hadn’t spent much time in Oregon until he moved here, the school’s reputation made a mark on him.

In Chicago, Schill says he saw a lot of love for the UO. When a coworker heard about his new job on the West Coast, her husband immediately congratulated him on becoming a Duck.

Of course, Schill will have his work cut out for him.

Six months before his hiring, the university announced a $2 billion capital campaign, the largest in the university’s history. Much of Schill’s job will entail seeking donors and hunting down sources of cash to reach that goal.

He’s also taking the reins as the university grapples with the issue of sexual assault, from ongoing litigation in the 2014 men’s basketball case to the series of surveys and recommended actions from the UO Senate’s Task Force on Sexual Assault.

Schill says he’s intent on overcoming those challenges and several more, including the state’s disinvestment in higher education and what he says is the university’s negative portrayal in the media. He wants to stress that there is more to the university than athletics.

“We want to win the championship. We want to win more Nobel prizes,” he said. “I want to proclaim the good parts.”

 

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Nobody hurt after two-alarm fire on Hilyard and 19th displaces 3 UO students for the night

Lee Burlingame was eating dinner when he heard a rap at the window.

That’s when the junior music major was told by a neighbor that his attic was on fire. Burlingame immediately got up, ran across the street shoeless and saw smoke coming from the roof.

He dialed 9-1-1 immediately.

The fire at 1908 Hilyard St. was out within 20 minutes, said Eugene Springfield Fire Department Bureau Chief Jeff Kronser.

Crews arrived shortly after Burlingame’s call to put out the two-alarm flare, which officials say didn’t cause any major damage to the home. Nobody was hurt, either, but the house’s three residents would have to find a place to stay for the night.

Northbound traffic on Hilyard Street was detoured for a little more than an hour as crews got the fire under control and cleaned up afterward.

Kronser said that most fires in that area are a result of overloaded power outlets, particularly when the weather gets warm.

“Most of the time it’s people doing something the house wasn’t designed for,” he said. “They’ll overload electrical units because there’s too many fans plugged in.”

Kronser also said that Tiki torches, barbecue grills and “anything that goes along with summer activities” also often lead to unexpected fires.

“Have a hose ready if you have a Tiki torch,” he said.

Follow Eder Campuzano on Twitter: @edercampuzano

 

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A drag then, legal now

Editor’s note: We’ve transcribed the original archive stories that cover Annette Buchanan’s case as it happened. You can find all of the pertinent articles from the ’60s here.

It’s finally legal to smoke and tell in the state of Oregon.

When the clock struck midnight on July 1, any fear of having to cough up $500 or $1,000 for carrying even an ounce of marijuana was lifted as the legalization clause of Measure 91 kicked in.

Social stigma surrounding the drug has slowly been evaporating since it was decriminalized in 1973. But it wasn’t always this way.

Forty-nine years ago, Annette Buchanan was drawn into a flurry of litigation and appeals after publishing a story where seven of her fellow University of Oregon students admit to toking up.

The 20 year-old Oregon Daily Emerald managing editor faced a subpoena by the Lane County District Attorney, a Grand Jury and finally a circuit court trial. She burned the notebook containing the names of her sources before she could be forced to give it up.

Buchanan’s story, titled “Students Condone Marijuana Use,” was published in The Oregon Daily Emerald in May 1966.

Buchanan, a junior who had just been appointed as the Emerald’s next managing editor, published her article in response to an earlier Emerald story in which Dr. Herman Cohen condemned pot smokers, saying they would soon turn to harder drugs such as heroin and LSD.

After coverage of Cohen’s talk published, seven students wrote in to The Emerald. They said their hobby was mischaracterized as something more dangerous than it actually was.

Buchanan took their case and published their arguments. She knew the names of five of them.

Buchanan interviewed Bill, Joe, Sue, Ed and Bernard — pseudonyms for their protection — and got their perspectives on the drug.

“Pot sensations are different from those of alcohol,” they told Buchanan. “There’s actually no comparison.”

William Frye, the Lane County district attorney at the time, took issue with these opinions.

By June 3, 1966, Frye had ordered a subpoena to force Buchanan into divulging her sources’ names.

Buchanan refused. And by June 13, Buchanan appeared in front of a Grand Jury.

During testimony published by then-editor Phil Semas, the district attorney and Emerald managing editor had a series of tense discussions. During one such hearing, Frye asked Buchanan what she knew about local marijuana laws.

“I don’t think that applies here,” she responded.

The source of tension between Buchanan and Frye was complicated. Rumors circulated that his vehemence stemmed from the Emerald having endorsed his opponent for a congressional seat. Others said it was a knee-jerk response to a newspaper staff that was getting too big for its britches.

Mike Fancher joined the Emerald staff in September 1966, five months after Buchanan’s article published. Fancher said that faculty, administrators and even students were often split on the topics covered by reporters.

Emerald staffers wrote stories about student discontent during the Vietnam War. They penned editorials criticizing the UO’s registration system and tuition increases for graduate students. And they wrote about an evolving attitude toward drugs that made waves across campus.

“We learned quickly what it was like to be on the firing line,” Fancher said.

Fancher was appointed editor in chief the year after Buchanan’s controversial article published.

According to him, Buchanan’s article received mixed reviews from UO faculty. Those differences of opinion were reflected in the courtroom.

As evidenced in news stories about the case and some of the questions Frye pitched during his inquiries, he and Buchanan approached their arguments with two distinct ideologies:

To Frye, it was a matter of hunting down a group of kids who had broken federal drug laws.

Buchanan saw it as a matter of freedom of the press.

The Grand Jury found Buchanan guilty of contempt of court, which could result in a $300 fine and six months in jail.

She didn’t have to serve time, the jury decided, but had to pay the $300, which was covered by a fund set up by professional journalists who took an interest in her case.

According to an article published by the Emerald on Sept. 27, 1966, Buchanan “paled slightly” and “dropped her head to her hand” upon hearing the ruling.

Buchanan and her attorney appealed to the Oregon Supreme Court, which upheld the lower court’s ruling.

Kyo Ho Youm, the UO School of Journalism and Communication’s foremost authority on media law, is editing a book on the theory of shield laws — the kind of legislation that would have strengthened Buchanan’s case.

Although Buchanan’s case didn’t spur Oregon legislators into action immediately, Youm said the managing editor’s story is an important case study in the history of reporters’ protections.

“It was a very important case, especially before the Supreme Court of the United States refused to recognize a journalist’s right to protect their source under the First Amendment,” he said. “It’s probably the first case of its kind.”

In 1973, the Oregon House of Representatives passed shield law legislature, which was later signed into law by Governor Tom McCall (Another UO alumnus and former Emerald reporter.) The Oregon law allows reporters to refuse revealing their sources.

“The Oregon shield law is one of the most media-friendly laws in the United States,” Youm said. “It’s very extraordinary.”

Youm said the most important people in solidifying better protection for journalists are advocates for freedom of the press, lawmakers and academics.

The federal case that Youm references is Branzburg v. Hayes, which bears striking similarities to Buchanan’s.

While the letter of the law had much to do with Buchanan’s defeat in the courts, attitudes toward marijuana use did just as much to get her in front of a judge to begin with. When Semas, the editor of the Emerald in 1966-1967, rallied his staff to pen an editorial calling for legalization, the move wasn’t exactly common or popular.

“It was very provocative at the moment to call for the drug to be legalized,” Fancher said. “Faculty questioned the freedom of expression the newspaper had. Everything felt like a lightning rod.”

Things have calmed down since then. Straight-laced kids in the ‘60s would make a beeline for the exit if they heard that a few of their peers were lighting up in the next room.

Buchanan died in February of 2013, one year before Oregon voters approved the use of recreational marijuana and two years before the law’s implementation. But her story — the words she penned and the aftermath — stand as major footnotes in the state’s path to two major pieces of legislation.

Follow Eder Campuzano on Twitter: @edercampuzano

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What we know about the Civic Stadium fire so far (live updates)

One of Eugene’s longest-standing historic landmarks went down in flames on Monday.

A fire at Civic Stadium, long the home of the Eugene Emeralds, was first reported to Eugene Police at 5:25 p.m. At 5:26 p.m., Eugene Springfield Fire officials were combating the blaze.

Just before the fire started, South Eugene High School’s summer baseball team had been playing when coach Danny Sales noticed a fire growing in the press box. He immediately called 9-1-1. As he spoke, the fire spread until he told the dispatcher, “You guys need to get down here.”

Forty personnel battled the blaze, according to EPD spokesperson Melinda McLaughlin. The fire was contained by 7:02 p.m., although northbound traffic on Willamette Street was still restricted.

The next morning, the stadium was declared a total loss by Fire Chief Randy Groves. Willamette Street was fully open by 11 a.m.

On Wednesday, EPD arson investigators received a tip that led them to four young boys, aged 10 through 12. They are being charged with the fire, although their names have not been released because of their juvenile status.

A press conference will begin at Eugene Police Department headquarters on 300 Country Club Road at 10:15 a.m. on Thursday. The Emerald’s Joseph Hoyt will be at the presser with live updates:


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Four young boys charged in Civic Stadium fire

Eugene Police announced on Wednesday evening that four juveniles will be charged for the fire that took down Civic Stadium.

Arson investigators received a tip that led them to the boys, aged 10 through 12, on Wednesday. A press release from the department indicates that fireworks were not a factor in the blaze.

Police say no names will be released because of the juvenile status of those charged. It took nearly 40 people to put the fire out, as The Register-Guard reported Tuesday. It’s still considered a crime scene by police.

The stadium was most recently acquired by Eugene Civic Alliance, which bought the site from Eugene School District 4-J and planned to renovate the fields into youth soccer facilities. Its last long-term tenant was the Eugene Emeralds, who took to the field at PK Park on Tuesday night in retro uniforms as an homage to their former home.

Construction was supposed to start on the Civic Alliance renovations early this month.

Eugene Police will host a press conference at 10:15 a.m. on Thursday at 300 Country Club Road.

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Here’s everything you need to know about marijuana legalization in Oregon

You can finally toke up in Oregon without legal recourse.

Well, as long as you’re doing it at home or in any other private residence. And you’re going to wait a while if you want to walk into a store and buy some bud from a retailer.

There are a few quirks in the Oregon legalization initiative. Here’s your guide to the new recreational marijuana laws, with a map detailing the location of every dispensary in Eugene-Springfield.

Let’s cut to the chase: Where can I get some pot?

For now, you’ll have to rely on the kindness of strangers with a medical marijuana card. They’re the only ones who have access to weed from a state-certified source — dispensaries. But card-holders are only allowed to give away their ready-to-consume stock, not sell it.

Applications for industrial growing and retail sale won’t be ready until Jan. 4, 2016, so the state’s retail infrastructure won’t be ready until that fall.

Obviously, if somebody already has some weed to share, that will make things a lot easier.

That’s no problem. I have a friend coming in from Washington next week.

Not so fast. Even though recreational marijuana is legal in both states, you can’t take product from Oregon across the border and vice-versa, even if it’s okay to grow and consume on either side of the Columbia River.

Wait. What was that about growing?

You can keep up to four plants at home, either inside or outside. They just can’t be visible to the public. On top of that, you can have up to 8 ounces of usable marijuana in a private residence.

So I can walk around with 224 blunts in my pocket?

That’s really good math! You can roll roughly 28 blunts with an ounce of weed. Multiply that by eight and you’ve got 224. But no. When you’re out in public, you’re limited to 1 ounce.

I’m definitely rolling a J for the walk to my summer classes

Don’t be too sure about that. Recreational marijuana use is still only allowed indoors at private residences. And because the University of Oregon receives federal funding, you won’t be toking up on campus anytime soon, either.

It’s the same for federally-funded institutions in Washington and Colorado.

What if I’m in my car?

No. Driving while you’re stoned is illegal.

Jeez, it’s not like it’s alcohol

Actually, marijuana is regulated through the Oregon Liquor Control Commission, the agency that does the same for booze. That might account for some of the parallels between marijuana and alcohol laws.

So, does that mean …

Yep. You’ve gotta be 21 or older if you’re to legally partake in this new era of Oregon history.

Even if I just want a brownie?

Sorry, kid. The law’s the law.

What’s your source on all of this?

The OLCC. Now, we promised a map, so here it is:

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