UO to adopt new vaccine to combat risk of meningitis BY EMILY SMITH NEWS REPORTER The University Health Center will re place its current meningitis vaccine with the new, more expensive vaccine, Menactra, which the Food and Drug Administration approved Jan. 14. The Centers for Disease Control and Pre vention recommends that college freshmen who live in residence halls get the new vaccination. Health center officials are dis cussing whether the new vaccine will be required. Menactra will cost students at least $10 more per shot than Menomune, the $80-per-shot vaccine the University currently uses, and student health in surance does not cover vaccines. Health center Director Tom Ryan said the University is working with the drug manufacturer, Sanofi Pasteur, to trade the $2,000 worth of Menomune in stock for the new vaccine in an ef fort to avoid wasting student money. Both Menactra and Menomune protect against four of the five serogroups of meningococcus; how ever, neither provide immunity against serogroup B, which Ryan said “causes almost 50 percent of meningococcal infections in Oregon.” That percentage is lower nation wide. While Menomune lasts about three to five years, Menactra can be used as a booster, and, Ryan said, “re search suggests a longer duration of activity ... three to five times longer.” While infants under age 1 are most at risk, the FDA reports that the num ber of meningitis cases peak, again dur ing adolescence and young adulthood. College freshmen living in dorms are six times more likely to be infected with the debilitating illness than others of the same age, according to the CDC. A required dose of Menactra could have prevented the death of Jill Dieringer, a University freshman living in the residence hails who died of meningitis in 2001. Living in close proximity to others in her sorority, her infection could have easily spread to other students on campus. In 2003, the death of one Eugene high school student and the illness of another were caused by bacterial meningitis linked to a show at WOW Hall that both girls attended. While the disease isn’t airborne like a cold or flu, activity involving the exchange of res piratory or throat secretions, such as sharing kitchen utensils, cigarettes or kissing, can pass it from one person to another. In addition to the high risk for students living in close quarters, stu dents who smoke and frequent bars also show higher rates of infection. If the virus form causes‘the illness, it’s less severe and may resolve itself. The bacterial form, however, must be treated immediately with antibiotics. The health center offers free antibiotics to students who have been exposed to meningitis. Treatment may reduce the risk of death to less than 15 percent. According to Sanofi Pasteur, the most common adverse reactions to Menac tra include “pain, redness, and indura tion,” or hardening of the skin at the site of injection, as well as “headache, fatigue and malaise.” The vaccine is not recommended to anyone “with known hypersensitivity to any compo nent of the vaccine or to latex, which is used in the vile stopper. ” The FDA reports yearly case counts in the United States during the past four decades varying from 1,323 to 3,525. Meningitis, while rare, is a seri ous illness that kills approximately 1 percent of infected individuals. Of the survivors, about one in five suffer per manent disabilities, such as brain dam age, hearing loss and limb amputation. The early symptoms of meningitis can develop over several hours or days and may include high fever, headache, stiff neck, nausea, vomiting, discom fort looking into bright lights, confu sion and sleepiness. Later, the infected patient may start to have seizures. emilysmith@dailyemerald.com IN BRIEF OSU grants suspended due to decline in ethics PHILOMATH - The Philomath based Clemens Foundation, which has paid for thousands of rural Benton County high school graduates to at tend college, plans to suspend grants for students who go to nearby Oregon State University. This year, it says it provided more than $1.6 million in tuition for 600 stu dents. About 150 of those are at OSU. In a news release, the Clemens Foundation said its board had “serious issues with the quality of education at OSU, ranging from a shift in academic purpose to a declining moral ethic, which has prompted the decision to suspend the grants.” In 2003, the Clemens Foundation made national news when it issued an ultimatum to Philomath School Dis trict officials to make administrative changes, claiming the local schools had become too "politically correct.n However, tax forms show the foun dation’s contribution level rising. From 1999 to 2003 the value of scholarships climbed from less than $1.1 million to $1.5 million. The Associated Press P Planned Parenthood FREE Birth Control Supplies A Health Services For Men A Women. "Call to see if you qualify Three locations: 1670 High St, Eugene 334-9411 793 N. Danebo, Eugene 463-9731 225 Q St, Springfield 744-7121 WWW. What do I know about me? I'm informed healthy. I take care of myself. Senate: Still more to discuss, Isenberg says Continued from page 3 student athletes, reducing athletic scholarships in the face of inade quate academic eligibility and ban ning competitions during non-tradi tional seasons. Isenberg said the IAC discussed the issue of collecting data on stu dent athletes based on their course selections, which would allow the University to see if any particular courses were serving as safe havens for student athletes swimming in mediocrity. The IAC needs more time to discuss the other issues, Isenberg said. “We found we didn’t have time for the two, let alone the other 50,” Isenberg said. The IAC’s final vote on the resolution was four in favor and six opposed, Isenberg said. Isenberg said the overall intent of the document was good but there is much concern surrounding what it would mean to approve the docu ment. It is not clear whether the document mandates certain points that may need to be discussed fur ther, Isenberg said. The senate approved the resolu tion in a vocal vote. meghanncaniff@ dailyemerald. com Baldwin: Friends recall his contributions Continued from page 1 Baldwin said. “Many of his students became his friends and he contin ued to mentor them even after they left the University.” taught them, adapting it to their own country’s situation. “One of John’s most lasting pro fessional legacies is probably that network,” Hulse said. Baldwin did much in ternational work in the field of sustainability during his life. He was a member of a group of University pro fessors that traveled to the former Soviet Union after the 1986 nuclear accident at Chernobyl to help with re-inhabiting the area. Baldwin’s job was to educate locals about the lingering dan gers of radiation and JOHN BALDWIN \SS0CIATE PROFESSOR OF UNIVERSITY PLANNING, PUBLIC POLICY, AND MANAGEMENT one ciuse-iu-iiume project Baldwin be came involved in was working in rural Benton County studying long term growth in the Willamette Valley. Cur rent Senior Assistant Counsel for Metro Richard Benner, who first met Baldwin at the University in 1992, said he worked with Bald win while Baldwin was working on the valley nrmirtK nrnioM iicip menu icdcuic ddiciy. “It became very clear that peo ple are not changing very danger ous behavior patterns in reference to radiation, and they really need to,” Baldwin told the Emerald Benner said leaders from around the state discussed Baldwin’s work at a gathering regarding future growth in the valley. knew Baldwin since she came to the University in 1983. She said Baldwin was “one of our leading faculty members in the area of sustainability. ” Baldwin had a class in which he and students would get on a bus and travel around Oregon and study sustainability projects, she said. “I never got to take his class,” Johnson said. “I regret it now.” Eben Fodor said he met Baldwin when he came to the University for graduate school in 1990. “We spent a lot of time together at the University and worked to gether on many projects,” Fodor said. “John’s just been one of the heroes and environmental icons for me ... I think every student he had is going to have favorable memories of John.” University journalism and psy chology student Erin Baldwin, John Baldwin’s daughter, said m Knro K at in 1992. University landscape archi tecture professor David Hulse, who helped launch the project in the former Soviet Union and who traveled to the region with Baldwin between six and He loved nature and the outdoors. He loved sitting in his chair with a blanket and his kitty. ” Erin Baldwin | Daughter father’s laugh. “He did have a really quick wit and he was kind of an old soul. He just had a depth to him where he really appreci ated what was important” she eight times, said Baldwin was the best person he’s ever seen when it came to communicating with peo ple in the region with energy and enthusiasm. When Hulse was “dragging,” Baldwin would still be full of energy and ready with the right compliment for the right host, he said. “He was full of life. He was viva cious. He was optimistic,” Hulse said. “He was really future orient ed, even in the face of really naughty problems, like Chernobyl ... That was one of the reasons I re ally enjoyed working with him. I’ll miss him. ” Hulse also said Baldwin created a network of associates, friends and former students around the world, and he was the enthusiastic hub of that network. Many of his students returned to their countries and took the land-use planning knowledge he I-“ “That was one of his wonderful contributions,” Benner said. Benner, who was scheduled tc teach a class for Baldwin during spring term, said Baldwin was in terested in holistic planning on a regional basis, linking regional en vironmental quality with planning. “(His students) were very in spired by his forward-thinking ap proach,” Benner said. “He was passionate about environmental planning and it was infectious. II was easy to become infected with his enthusiasm ... That’s an awful ly valuable attribute for a teacher.’ Baldwin also had a large impact on the University campus as a member of the University faculty since 1980. Karen Johnson, assistant dear for external relations at the Schoo of Architecture and Allied Arts 1 saia. He iovea naiure ana me outdoors. He loved sitting in his chair with a blanket and his kitty. ” “We already really feel his loss,” she said. Baldwin is survived by an imme diate family that includes his wife, Karen, and three children, Erin, Ian, and Will. A memorial service for Baldwin, who will have a scholarship creat ed in his name, will be held on campus on March 18, from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. in the Gerlinger Lounge. Baldwin’s family will be in atten dance and the public is invited to attend. Those who wish to speak at the service are encouraged to contact the PPPM department at 346-3808 or by e-mail at pppm@uoregon.edu. jaredpaben@dailyemerald.com 1 Since 1948 FZEST>\UFZS\NT BEST BFtEAKEAST IN EUGENE BY THE EUGENE WEEKLY 2004-2005 OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK 7.-00-3-00 1689 WILLAMETTE 343-1542 20-70% Ski Equipment Downhill*Cross Country Snowboards • Clothing On Now! FREE 50th Birthday Refreshments! 13th & Lawrence* 683-1300 • www.bergsskishop.com Your place for NEWSreader classifieds archix/pq nd more www.dailyemerald.com