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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 13, 1992)
r$joo | l>M<laii|Sub j 5CT * HaNluh I_ SUBSHOP ny o9wr tfocounto o» coupon*. ■ 122S ALDER 345*2434 * _I Two profs to head for Chernobyl By Daralyn Trappe Emerald Associate Editor Two University professors will travel to the site of the Chernobyl nuclear accident next week, along with newly developed computer programs, in an effort to help assess the continuing dangers of the 19Bfi accident University researchers re ceived a $100,000 equipment grant from Apple Computer*, Inc: that Is making the project possible. The project, one of 19 internationally to receive Apple grants this year, aims to inde pendently identify and confirm ongoing health and environ mental risks in the soil, water supply and food chain. john Baldwin, associate pro fessor of planning, public poli cy and management and David Hulse, associate professor of landscape architecture, will SAVE ON FALL BEFORE FALL EVEN BEGINS! FIRST CALL BUTTON FRONT SKIRTS sale 29.99 ORIG. 40.00 Easy to wear belt ed skirts in two classic styles, both with back elastic waists. A. Softly pleated rayon blend gabardine skirt in taupe, black, hunter, sable or navy B Pleat front soft cotton denim skirt ini stonewash. Sizes 6-16. STIRRUP PANTS SALE 29.99 ORIG. 36.00-40.00 A. Rayon-blend, pleat front stretch stirrup pants with elastic back waist, side button closure. Black, navy, hunter, purple, cherry or cognac. Sizes 6-16. SALE 29.99, ORIG 36.00. B. Elastic waist cotton Lycra* stirrup pants in three tartan patterns or solid red, black, navy or ivory. Sizes S.M.L. SALE 29.99, ORIG. 40.00. ENTIRE STOCK OF MILL VALLEY SEPARATES 20% OFF Cotton separates in a large assortment of colors and styles. Shown - textured giant poloshirt Sizes S.M,L SALE 46.40, REG. 58 00 Pleated cotton Lycra* stirrups, sizes S,M,L. SALE 46.40, REG. 58 00 1 TARTAN SKIRTS SALE 19.99 X Pleated, rayon-blend skirts in four patterns. Sizes 6-14 CORDUROY SHORTS SALE 1 9.99 ORIG. 26.00 Belted, cotton corduroy shorts in black, navy, wine, hunter, saddle or ivory. Sizes 6-16. head for Moscow Wednesday to spend aixiul three weeks in the area. Baldwin and Hu Iso will also help launch two Information centers, including the Moscow Center for Environmental Con trol, to be headed by Andriy Demydnnko, who is in Eugene this week. The centers will eventually house the computers systems being taken there For the computer project, Baldwin and Huiso will join Kussian and American col leagues to map the extent of ra dioactive contamination In a 200-square-mile region down wind of the damaged reactor Demadenyo, who lives in Kiev, about 100 kilometers from Chernobyl, said residents living in the area need to learn how to live with the problems, not necessarily !>o told that they should leave. For example, people will be told if a change in their water source is necessary, if different grain should lx) given to their livestock or if different typos of crops should he grown. “It's impossible to resettle a 30 million population, so wo have to learn how to live wilh this. It's not easy to change your place of living and find new' work," Demadenyo said. "We have some different ap proaches," he said of his Amer ican colleagues, "but the goal is the same." That includes giving people specific information about the extent of the contamination on their property, something Hulse said the government hasn't done enough of The public understanding of health risks is minimal, he said, duo to lack of access It) verified scientific information and the central government’s lack of credibility us an information source. Pooplo living in the area will be able to locate their farm or homo on a computer screen, model the behavior of the radi ation on the land over time and usk the computer about the na ture of present and future radi ation risk. The system will pro vide detailed suggestions to help farmers raise uncontami nuted crops An estimated 15 million people live in the areas contam inated by Chernobyl fallout. More than 300,000 people wore evacuated within an 18-milo ra dius of the root tor. But evacua tion efforts have lieen stymied us people have begun returning to their ancestral homes, de spite warnings that radiation continues to be a threat. The project was initiated in 1991. Indore the fall of the So viet government, at the person al request of Gennady Yagodln, then minister of the Soviet State Committee on Public Edu cation. He approached Baldwin and Hulse, while they were in Russia on an academic ex change program, about the fea sibility of developing an inde pendently managed study of ra diation hazards and quickly se cured funding for preliminary field work, which began last June. Special software was devel oped specifically for this pro ject by Hulse; Kit Larsen, a sys tems analyst at the University Computing Center; and Michael Hamilton, director of the Uni versity of California's James San Jacinto Mountain Reserve. The study is supported by the Russian government.