Oregon DAILY EMERALD Tuesday. November k. I WO Eugene. Oregon Volume d2. Issue 50 Almanac Today is Election Day. Please remember to vote. lumping off a bridge at tached to a laige rubber band may not be every one's idea of a good lime, but :tOO i Iniversity stu dents have done it and lived tt> tell the tale. See story. Page 5 Dan Williams, Univer sity vice president for ad ministration. told his side of the Grateful Dead con troversv to a group of planning, public polk \ and management stu dents Monday afternoon Williams said input from Kugene residents and business owners about drug use at Dead concerts led to the dec i sion to keep the band away from Aut/en Stadi um next summer. VANCOUVER, Wash. |AI*| - An explosion of steam and ash Monday at Mount St Helens appar ently created a small mudflow, but no damage was reported and scien tists said they bad no evi dence a bigger event was in the offing. The explosion did, however, spew ash 30.UO0 feet into the air, scientists said. See story. Page 12 The Washington Hus kies clearly deserve the No. 1 spot in the Associ ated Press' Top-25 (ol lege football poll W ilh "powerhouse" Notre Dame's loss to Stanford earlier this year, it's time to recognize Washington as the best in the country See 'From the Sidelines. See story. Page 4 Regionally Page !t Oregon accepts 'unofficial’ bowl bid Fiom stall and wee reports For the first time in school history, Ore gon's football team will lx* going to bark to back bowl games. Oregon, at 7-2 overall and ranked 20th in this week's Associated Press poll, will bo playing in the Anaheim Freedom Howl in Anaheim. Calif on Dec. 2‘i against the sec ond-place team from the Western Athletic Conference which would appear to be Colo rado State. Howl bids cannot officially be extended until Nov. 24. but that rule is often over looked so that bowls can lock in a pair of teams before that date The Ducks have been a strong choice of the Freedom Howl committee since bowl scouts were first allowed to scout prosper live bowl teams on Oct 11 The freedom Howl committee has report edly l icon very impressed with Oregon's home crowds .it Aut/.en Stadium and liked the fact that the Dm ks would lie able to bring a large contingent of fans to the howl game, as thev did a year ago when Oregon went to the Independence Howl in Shreve port. lac The f reedom Howl would be played in the t>7.()(Hi seat Anaheim Stadium, and Ore gon Athlete Director Hill Hyrne has report edly promised freedom Howl of fit nils that Oregon could bring somewhere between 12,000 and IB.000 fans to the freedom Howl Hyrne. who has boon very tight-lipped about a bowl selection, had little to say Monday other than Ori'ituu will accept the invitation "Under the rules, that's about all I can say." Ilyrne said "Aside from that, we're thrilled by the all attention hut right now we've got to concentrate on beating Califor nia.” The Ducks travel to Berkley, Calif., to fac e the Colden Bears Saturday and close out tin regular season at Oregon State Nov 17 The Freedom Bowl game would kii k-off at T> p m PST on Dei 29, a date in which lour other bowl games will tie played The game will he televised by the Rave uni Net work but would likelv be televised hack to Oregon through the Oregon Sports Net work mm wmmmmmmmsmm HEP instructor Donna Wong (left) discusses a grammar lesson with student Christina Casas, who is originally from Mexico City and now lives in Salem. About H5 percent of HEP stu dents graduate, and half of those no on to university study. Students succeeding in H EP classes By Cathy Peterson Emerald Reporter Students in Donna Wong's writing and grammar c lass are edgy Today, half of them will take the writing portion of an exam that grants them tin; equi valent v of a high school diplo ma. "I admire them." Wong said “They work so hard to learn another language Their time here is so pret ions I eni ourage them tt> dream their biggest tl reams." The 10 students in the gram mar class have all worked as migrant or seasonal farm lalxir ers I or them, the skdls course is one more stop toward earn mu a high si limil diploma and getting on with their lives. (Established at the University in 1 •»<>7. the High School Ki|ui valency Program is open to anyone regardless of race, creed or color w ho has been a migrant or seasonal farmworker or has family members who have done farm-related work The applicant must he a high school dropout >11111 he .it lens! 17 years old Students attend small i lasses in one of the program's several buildings on 17th Avenue five days >i week seven hours a dn\ The program is free lor the students, who live in dormi tories or commute Students also rei eive a weekly stipend of $10 Willi .1 budget of $400,000. University IIKI1 Director Steve Marks fife said the program serves 1.12 people a year, dur ing three eight to 10-week se mesters Although the average person in the program is a Latino male. IP to I'll years old with at least .i 10th grade education. Marks l ife said Native Ameri can. white and Asian students round out th*' i lasses "The program is very good." student \ u tor Magdaleno said "It gives liispanics a second chant e to make something of themselves It makes us feel better alxiut ourselves Magdaleno, 1said he dropped nul of a Portland -area high si houl at thr beginning of his si-nior yi'ar mm ause hr was spending ton much limn par lying After working in land scaping with his father, hr de cided to give si hooi another try After he graduates from Hid’ Ntagcfaleno said he wants to study computer program ming m c ol lege Student l.upe Campos. 1H. who said she dropped out of si liool hn ause of family prob lems. t ailed HEP "an opportu nity to see how far you can reach "Kven though you've fallen you ( an get up and make some Turn to PROGRAM Page 6