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About Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012 | View Entire Issue (May 21, 1997)
University of Oregon Eugene, Oregon WEDNESDAY. fYlAf 21. 1997 INDEX Opinion News Campus View Sports Scoreboard Classifieds C\J CO CO 05 05 O TODAY Local band Jacob Marley’s Ghost will performfrom 5 to 8 p. m. on the EMU East Lawn. The concert is free and open to the public. INSIDE The Oregon women’s golf team will compete in the national championships starting today An amended bill would prohibit student groups from using incidental fees for political lobbying WEATHER Partly Sunny. High 70. Low 40. Measures fail to net 50 percent ■ ELECTION: Eugene city and Lane County measures 20-83 and 20-84 needed higher voter turnout to pass By Jennifer Schmitt Community Editor The ballots are in, and according to num bers released by the Lane County Elections office at 9 p.m. Tuesday night, Lane County and Eugene officials will have to go back to the drawing board and find other ways to raise funds for public services. Measure 47 requires that local measures pass by a double-majority. This means at least 50 percent of the registered voters must KEY RESULTS Election results as of 9 p.m. Tuesday. Both measures failed to achieve the 50 percent voter turnout necessary to pass. ■ 20-83: 12,734 yes 13,346 no ■ 20-84: 32,806 yes 31,298 no cast their ballots, and then a majority of them must vote to pass the measure. Although official numbers will not be released for 10 days, according to the pre liminary numbers released by the elec tions office Tuesday night only 36 per cent or 66,387 of the registered voters in Lane County re turned their ballots. The voter turnout percentage for the city ot hugene was 34 percent. This means that unless the official per centage of voter turnout is above 50 percent, the two local measures will not have passed. Measure 20-83, a city levy to raise money to replace funds lost because of Measure 47, failed by more than 1,000 votes. According to numbers released from the Lane County Elections office at 9 p.m„ 13,346 people vot ed against the three-year levy and 12,734 people voted in favor of the levy. The county levy (Measure 20-84) which would have added 48 beds to the Lane Coun Tum to ELECTION, Page 5 ALCOHOL AWARENESS WENDY FULLER/Emera ult’s amazing, the number of people who knew people killed in alcohol related accidents. ?? Linda Devine Assistant Director ot Student Life Marisa Roche, a Junior Journal ism major, looks at the tomb stones in the grass outside of Chapman Hall Tuesday after noon. A wrecked car sits on the street near the tombstones (below). Alcohol Awareness Week promotes safety ■ DRINKING: Several groups are joining together this week to educate students about the dangers of alcohol By Daniel Pearson Higher Education Reporter Memorial Day weekend is traditional ly associated with drinking and driving, and with that in mind the Office of Stu dent Life is sponsoring University Alco hol Awareness Week this week. “It’s a time for us to remind people to have a safe weekend,” said Linda Devine, assistant director of student life. “We want people to think twice before they drink.” Devine, in coordination with the Stu dent Health Center, University Housing Resident Life and the Greeks Advocat ing the Mature Management of Alcohol (GAMMA) has put together several WENDY FULLER/Emerald events around campus to get their mes sage across. Most visible was the Grim Reaper Pro ject on Tuesday at the Knight Library Quad. Students were invited to erect a headstone representing people who have died in alcohol related automobile accidents. As of 12:30 p.m. Tuesday there were about 40 headstones scat tered around the northern section of the quad. “It’s amazing, the number of people who knew people killed in alcohol relat ed accidents,” Devine said. The headstones displayed the vic tim’s name along with details of the ac cident, such as one that read, “Amy: rid ing passenger in the car of a drunk driver who drove off the road into a ravine. She was not wearing a seat belt and died instantly.” Students could also purchase T-shirts and Frisbees promoting the project’s message and receive free information on topics ranging from drunk driving to myths about alcohol. University health educator Annie Dochnahl said the purpose of Alcohol Awareness Week is not to promote a “just say no” message but to encourage students to drink responsibly if they do indeed make that choice. Turn to DRINKING, Page 7 Future remains uncertain for research park development The last in a three part series ■ TODAY: The changing future of the riverfront urban renewal district ■ MONEY: A loss offunding for the urban renewal project would affect infrastructure and road development at the Riverfront Research Park By Eric Collins Community Reporter As far as city property tax money is con cerned, the Riverfront Research Park may lose all support in the coming months if the City Council decides to terminate funding of the urban renewal district with which the research park is associated. While the research park itself will not be in danger of shutting down, the loss of ur ban renewal funds would affect the planned roads, parking lots and bike paths to be built during future expansion of the park. Diane Wiley, project manager for the re search park, said the urban renewal pro gram money is combined with state and de partment of transportation funds to provide the streets and infrastructure for the project. “If we don’t have [the urban renewal money], we’ll have to look for another mechanism to create those kinds of im provements, but we don’t have a ready source identified at this point to do that.” The Riverfront Research Park District, a 148-acre area bordered by Franklin Boule vard, the Willamette River, the Interstate and the Ferry Street Bridge, was created in 1985 to assist in developing the site. It is one of two districts currently active in the city limits, the other located in downtown Eugene. Since 1990, urban renewal money has been used to create the Millrace bike path and Millrace Drive. This year, $325,419 of urban renewal money was spent on the bi cycle roundabout on the southern side of the Autzen Footbridge, $83,000 is set for property improvements on the Franklin Parcel and $650,000 is slated for the exten sion of Millrace Drive this summer. With the budget cutbacks the City Coun cil is making because of Measure 47, the question of funding the urban renewal dis tricts while cutting community centers and arts organizations has been asked more Turn to MONEY, Page 5 Ixis law I in danger j Eugene’s Toxic Right-to-Know law eeuld be under mined if a new amendment to an Oregon Senate Bill passes. Under the 1 last-minute addi tion only Portland would be allowed to collect fees from companies. See story, page 3