Coalition wants to highlight environmental injustice ■ Students voice concerns about the placement of environmental hazards By Simone Ripke Oregon Daily Emerald The Coalition Against Environ mental Racism is giving students the opportunity to fight the uneven distribution of environmental haz ards and burdens on minority, low-income and under-represent ed groups in society. CAER unites students from the Multicultural Center, ethnic stu dent unions and other campus or ganizations in an effort to have a collective voice against unfairness in the placement of environmen tal hazards. “This movement involves every organization on campus,” said Joy Dilday, a senior majoring in envi ronmental studies and general sci ence who is one of the three co-co ordinators for the coalition. Dilday said she and the other co-coordinators for the coalition attend meetings of various student unions regularly to spread aware ness of common issues that can only be resolved with joint enorts. The goal of the coalition is to raise awareness at the University and in the community about links between environmental issues and social inequalities. Dilday and co-coordinator Matthew Peckham, a junior major ing in environmental studies, are two of 21 University students who had the chance to learn more about environmental justice is sues at the ECOnference 2000 last weekend in Philadelphia, Pa. “The energy was absolutely in credible,” Peckham said. The two coordinators came back to Eugene with numerous ideas for their own annual confer ence on campus, which is sched uled for Jan. 21 and 22,2000. The coordinators said the con ference in January is one of the main reasons for the coalition’s existence. It will provide a vehicle for students to speak up, get edu cated and make themselves heard. Co-coordinator Sarah Harpole, an environmental studies major, said she hopes to bring some in sight about issues of.environmen tal injustice and racism to this cam pus and the community. Harpole said that nationwide 75 percent of hazardous waste is dis posed of in predominantly African American neighborhoods. Bringing different groups togeth er to help solve these problems is imperative to Harpole and the oth er coordinators for the coalition. “We are all facing the same bat tles in a lot of ways,” said co-coor dinator Peckham. For Peckhain, coalition-building is a major as pect of the movement. Last Monday, the main topic of the coalition’s weekly meeting, which is open to the public and takes place in the Multicultural Center, was brainstorming for ideas ranging from how to accom modate visitors and deciding which speakers to invite to the conference. The coordinators said their ideas for the conference are in a rudimentary stage at this point but will develop and clarify dur ing the next few weeks. They hope to attract more permanent, self-motivated members who are willing to pursue their ideas and make them a reality. Scott Barnett Emerald General science and environmental studies major Joy Dilday discusses plans tor a CAER sponsored environmental conference to be held January 21 and 22 at the University. Dr. Hughes Continued from Page 1A any person that has a lump grow ing some place should,” Hughes said, went to the doctor and had it checked out. “I knew as I walked in the office that it was cancer,” he said. “I’ll never forget the look on the face of the doctor.” The causes for male breast can cer are unknown. It is thought that genes and certain DNA changes could be a reason, but this is only a theory. Heavy alcohol use, obesi ty, irregular exercise, estrogen treatment and environmental ex posure to pesticides are also con sidered risk factors, according to the American Cancer Society. Men should look for any unusu al “swelling, skin dimpling or puckering” of the breast as possible signs of the cancer. If these are evi dent, they should consult their doctors to see if a mammography, or X-ray of the breast, is necessary. Men, as well as women, should also explore their family history for relatives who had breast cancer. Men are about 20 percent more likely to have the cancer if male or female relatives had the disease. Hughes thought he was one of the lucky ones that conquered the cancer after undergoing surgery. Unfortunately, Hughes started having back pains in 1996. He then returned to the doctor to find that the cancer had spread to his spinal cord and his lungs. Cancer is “ranged” from 0 to 4 on a scale of severity; Hughes’ cancer is a 4. Now, the Princeton University grad lives in a dichotomous world of receiving medical care and ad ministering it. Every Monday he re ceives his chemotherapy, coupled with a shot of Cortisone to enable him to work at the health center on Tuesdays. He said the nausea, a side effect of the chemotherapy, does not affect him much at work on Tues days because of the Cortisone, but by Wednesdays, his already weak frame is feeling the strain of the radi ation and the chemicals. “But by the weekend, I am ready to go again,” he said. When he’s strong enough, Hugh es enjoys playing golf as much as he can, but his real love is traveling. “My wife is a travel freak,” he said. The cancer, however, has weak ened his body and cramped some of his traveling. “I was in New Zealand and my back was hurting so much that I had to lay reclined in the car as my wife drove around,” he said. Hughes said he looks ahead to traveling in the spring, but he does not plan much more in advance than that. “Every once and a while, when we start talking about doing some thing next year, you think, ‘I hope I will be doing this next year. For now, Hughes is enjoying spending time with his wife and working at the health center. “Not everyone enjoys working with students, but I do. UO Cultural Forum Presents David Spade at Mac Court Saturday, October 30th at 9:00 n.m. After the game, come to David Spade 007686 Reserved Seating Tickets: UO Students $10 (plus service charge) General Public $20 (plus service charge) Tickets on sale now at EMU Ticket Office and all Fastixx Outlets! For information please call the UO Cultural Forum at 346-4373 r P.O. Box 3159, Eugene OR 97403 The Oregon Daily Emerald is published daily Monday through Friday during the school year and Tuesday and Thursday during the summer by the Oregon Daily Emerald Publishing Co. Inc., at the University of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon. A member of the Associated Press, the Emerald operates inde pendently of the University with offices in Suite 300 of the E(t> Memorial Union. The Emerald is private property. 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