Oregon Daily MONDAY, FEBRUARY 7,1994 Jt I I P*StAYt ">»akl Chapman Hall's eponym Is among Eugene's notables burled In The Masonic Cemetery at 25th Avenue and University Street. Vandals, years obscure history Monument: Eugene’s first cemetery struggles to weather tests of time By Mog Dedolph OrQQon Q&tly l 'm&akf If you had been bom in IH50. the year Kugene's Masonic Cemetery began selling plots, you would have been able to take i lasses at the newly opened Iniversity of Oregon by the time you reached ollege age Your j irents probably came west on the Ore gon Trail in the 1840s and celebrated Oregon s statehood in 1850 Thr Nph York Tinu's best seller list, had it existed, might have included Charles Dickons' A Tain oj Two Citirs. and Charles Darw in's On giri of Sprcips, both published in 1850. Today. Dickens and Darwin are familiar friends to must high school students, and the Oregon Trail is encapsulated in « roadside inter pretive i enter near Maker City Met the Mnsonii Cemetery, founded by Eugene's early Musonit Lodge, is neither familiar nor blessed with .in interpretive < enter to remind people of its place m history. A short walk through the town's first cemetery, located on a lull at 25th Avenue and University Street, reads like a street map of Eugene and the University. Mlair. Spencer. Chandlers. Hendricks, Collier, Condon, Friendly, Johnson. Kim aid - here these names occupy not only street signs and building lintels, hut granite ami sandstone memorials Turn to MASONIC. Pago -l LOCAL City Council amends ballot’s proposed title Bridge: Language changed to reflect true nature of Ferry Street Bridge proposal By Jim Davis (kgQOti Daily f nwfnkl \ proposed ballot title for the Ferr> Street Bruise plan was amended by the kugene City Council last week in an effort to make the title more easily understood The measure, if passed, will change the kngene ( liar ter to allow lor the expansion of the Ferry Street Bridge to six lanes for motorized vehicles and to Ivvu lanes for pedestrians and bicycles The ballot title will he given to the voters in the Nov H general election. After several votes concerning the spei ifii language of the ballot title, the City Council voted tel to accept the revised version. The title originally was drafted by the city attorney's office the body of the ballot title of any measure to fie ini tiated or referred is limited to a concise and impartial statement of not more than H5 words summarizing the measure and its major effect Opponents of the title said the amendment offered a slight improvement hut cited wordiness and a general lack of information as flaws to tin- previons and amend ed ballot titles "I feel better because 1 requested the changes, said David Sweet, one of three people who appealed the orig inal amendment Turn to FERRY. Paye J Fan dance Ju-LIng Shlh performs as pari of China Night, which look place In the EMU Ballroom on Sunday. Proqram in Chile open to students Study:Three-week immersion trip offers new type of foreign exchange By Amy Columbo l iv Oregon Daily t menud A husband-and-wife team is providing a three-week immer sion program in Santiago, Chile, for college students who want to get a taste of the culture and not miss any school. Dr. Fred Smith and Consuelo Miranda-Alboni«.a are offering a new type of for eign exchange program. Smith is a resource economics professor at Oregon State Uni versity. and Miranda-Albonica, a native of Chile, owns the com pany Anglatin. which organizes and implements programs designed to bridge the culture between Chilean and American people. The Chilean Immersion pro gram began in fall 1U9.1 it is open to students at the Univer sity. Oregon State University and Lane Community College "It's not just a Spanish class, Smith said. "We emphasize really on the social sciences, you'll have workshops and sem inars about the history of Chile, the culture of Chile, and the economy of Chile, and then some on literature and women's role in i-alin America. "The other thing that is unique is that we are not tied to any specifii university, so you're not living in a dormitory or with home-stays," he said "You're living in apartments." " The other study abroad pro grams are usually administered through an academic depart ment. this is an experiment, it's a new approach," Smith said "With Ballot Measure 5 and the cuts, the departments just aren't able to administer these things Vanessa McDonald, a Univer sity student who parti< ipated last fall, said the program was excellent. "It gave me a lot of confidence in the language," she said. Turn to CHILE P.i-i" GOOD MORNING p MEDFORD (AP) — Gov Barbara Roberts said Saturday if she had more time to cope with the death of her husband, former state Sen Frank Roberts, she might be seeking re-election "If I had six months more of mending time to adjust to Frank's death, and if I had not had other family difficulties, I don't think there's any question that I would have been back," she told Medford’s The Mwl-Tri bune “But I think there is a point at which you have to focus on what really is necessary in your life when you're dealing with a big personal loss. That’s what I've HIGH 40° / l O w 20° / done." Roberts, the first woman to be elected governor of Oregon, decided last month that she would not run for re-election. Roberts had announced more than a year ago she would run again But since then, her hus band of 19 years died of prostate cancer, and her only sister has developed lung cancer