WILDERNESS FEES Protest in Bend About 50people rallied in Bend Monday to voice their concern over what they call the corporate slant of the Forest Service PAGE 4 SPORTS Cox is making the changes The Emeralds rookie center fielder has had to adjust to a neu> town, a neu’ league and a new kind of baseball bat to get by in Eugene PAGE 5 TUESDAY, JULY 28. 1998 TODAY Mad Duckding) Theatre has an 11 a.m. show on the Robinson Am phitheater laum. WEATHER Today Sunny I ligh 96. Low 62. Wednesday Sunny High 92. Low 61. Young student excels in Japanese An 11-year-old taking summer session said she isn’t daunted by classes with students twice her age Amy Goldhammer Oregon Daily Emerald Among the many summer session stu dents trying to survive the heat and won dering how they’re going to get through the next three weeks and eighteen cred its, one stands a little apart from the rest. Eva Sylwester could be classified as an average 11-year-old. She plays video games, likes to draw, has three birds and loves the Beatles. So of course she has chosen to spend her summer, not run ning around and playing, but studying Japanese at the University. Steve Sylwester, Eva’s father, said she has always been one step ahead when it comes to education. “She taught herself to read when she was two years old,” Steve said. Eva’s parents said they felt the public education system was holding her back. Around her second-grade year, they ap plied for her acceptance at an accelerat ed school in Eugene. “You have to submit to a lottery and it doesn’t matter if your child should be in this school or that school,” Steve said. “It’s by luck of the draw. If you’re in, you’re in. If you’re not, you’re not.” When Eva wasn’t chosen in the lotteiy, her parents turned to the Yujin Gakuen School, which focuses on computers and Japanese. “My wife did not want to consider the option of home schooling, so we looked at their Japanese immersion program,” Steve said. So Eva learned Japanese. This summer, Eva is in second-year Japanese at the University, currently maintaining an A average in her 200-lev el courses. “I wanted to keep up on my Japanese, so my dad suggested I take classes here,” Eva said. “I just had to take a placement test to see what level I would study at [this summer].” Eva said she doesn’t want to let her Japanese go to waste and hopes to visit Japan one day. “I’d like to go,” Eva said. “It’s kind of Turn to JAPANESE, Page 4 LAURA GOSS/Emerald Eva Sylwester’s father, Steve, suggested she take summer classes at the University. Chaney’s life celebrated by family, friends Community members gathered Friday to remember the unique University anthropology professor who died last week By Peter Broaden Oregon Daily Emerald Friday’s memorial service for University anthropology professor Richard Paul Chaney was reflective. Friends and family filled St. Thomas More Catholic Church for the service. A mass was held in memory of the pro fessor who died July 20 of a heart attack. The service concluded with an open mi crophone for people to come forward and share their feelings and stories about Chaney. The stories told of humor, elation and spirit. Chaney’s next-door neighbor described how she and Chaney extinguished a fire on a new section of his house, doing so with out calling the fire department or waking anyone inside the home. One of his long-time colleagues de scribed how Chaney had wall-papered a room in his house with aluminum foil, leaving rough spots for texture. A more recent student of Chaney's re membered the dialogues that would extend for hours with Chaney. The student left one six-hour session to find that his car had been towed. The time of sharing brought out many doleful chuckles along with an abundance of tears for Chaney’s passing. Graduate student Bill Stephens com mented, “Richard was a higher example as a person ... he used to say, ‘Who do you say I am?’” Almost everyone who shared mentioned Chaney’s energy and spirit as a person. He was a person who will be remembered and felt as much as he will be missed, they said. “Surely goodness and mercy will follow me for all of my days," Rev. Vincent Benoit read from the Old Testament’s Psalm 23. “And I shall dwell in the house of the Lord for years to come.” Non-custodial parents may not have to pay tuition A wide effect could be felt if the state appeals court upholds a previous ruling By Charles E. Beggs The Associated Press SALEM — A dispute between two divorced par ents led to an appeals court hearing Monday on whether a parent can be obliged by law to help pay college expenses. Marianne Groom, ex-wife of Dennis Crocker of Portland, took the case to the state Court of Appeals after Crocker won a ruling that a law requiring such support payments is invalid. Multnomah County Judge Paula Kurshner last fall overturned the law as unconstitutional. She agreed with Crocker that the law violates equal pro tection provisions of the state and federal constitu tions because it gives privileges to adult children of divorcees that aren’t received by comparable chil dren whose parents are married. Her ruling for now affects only the single case. But officials said it could have a wider impact if the appeals court goes along with the trial court. A brief submitted by state attorneys speculates that eliminating the law could make the obligation to support 18- to 21-year-old students "the respon sibility of the state.” Crocker and Groom were divorced in 1987. A court ordered Crocker in 1995 to financially help his oldest daughter with her education. He brought the legal challenge when his ex-wife attempted in 1997 to get similar aid for a middle daughter, who was 18 at the time. The state says non-custodial parents can be re quired to pay support until a child is 21 under cer tain conditions, including that they attend college and maintain at least a C average. Barry Admamson, an attorney for Groom, said the law doesn’t make support a duty but gives judges discretion. The attorney general’s office, in a brief filed with the court, said that laws on distributing benefits based on marital status will survive challenges “if they are a responsible attempt by the Legislature to address a perceived problem.”