EDITORIAL HEP needs more respect in future If you have driven down Agate Street, you may have noticed the small wooden shacks across the street from legendary Hayward Field. These are not storage sheds or maintenance shacks some of them house the University’s High School Equivalency Program The 23-year-old program prepares migrant or sea sonal farm workers for their (IKl) exams. It is time for the administration to find some ways to bring the pro gram out of the barrios of Hast campus and into the mainstream HEP. which has a graduation rate of 85 percent, has a $425,000 budget per year from the federal gov ernment The program pays the University for both dormitory use and student services However, mem bers of the program must tak<* classes in the shanty town atmosphere provided for them on Agate Street. Their access to mainstream University (lasses is limit ed. keeping HEP students on the other side of the campus.” If a goal of the University is to provide equal op portunity education to the people of Oregon. HEP needs to receive more respire! Making HEP students feel that they are less important than the rest of the University community in some way is not a positive way to foster in them a desire for education. Although half of HEP’s graduates go on to college, program Director Steve Marks Fife said the majority of them choose to go to school at Oregon State Universi ty. This could her due to better recruiting methods on the part of OSU. but more likely it is because HEP members may feel they are not. or never will be. com pletely accepted by the University community It was nice of University President Myles brand and other administrators to visit the program the first time administrators have visited HEP in quite a while. But a once-a-year visit with a few pats on the back is not good enough. Brand and the gang from Johnson Hall should come up with some serious ideas for bringing one of the University's most successful programs in line with the rest of the University. The hard-working students in the HEP program deserve to be treated like the rest of the students at the University. wm TUC NEWS? K STUDY 5M5 WOMtN SMARTER TUW MSN, BETTER DRWEBS MN MEN tW BETTER EDUCATED TUfcN MEN. so? vmw's TUE. NEWS? Garage plans parked, now build housing The parking garage plans for the Alder Street tennis courts have been put on indefi nite hold. That's good news. The University needs affordable student housing much more than it needs additional parking space. We say no parking structures, period. It only encourages people to drive their cars. That encourages the consumption of oil. Which, in turn, encourages the United States to send 500,000 troops to the Middle East. There are many other alternatives to cars. Every fee-paying student has a bus free bus pass for three months. It might take an additional 10 or 15 minutes to get to school, hut the savings on gas and car care would compensate. Bicycles are already used by manv stu dents. Sure, the rain can be a problem, but if one cares to read about U S. history, we have faced greater obstacles than getting wet. Car pools, park-and-rides and shuttle systems could be set up to accommodate people for all times of the day. Too many single-occupant vehicles are driven to cam pus today. The University took neighborhood resi dents' concerns into consideration before moving ahead with parking garage plans. Although it’s a $150,000 too late, at least the University is willing to look into alterna tives. Forget any new parking structures near campus. The University needs inexpensive housing near campus. If students are close enough to walk, they won’t have to drive. LETTERS Flag team flop I'at Hansen's letter {ODE. Nov. 7) would like us to "sit beck, appreciate, and above all. enjoy watching perhaps the premier marching band in the nation." While the marching hand is Ok (Stanford's is certainU more creative, humorous and exciting), thi' flag team is an emharrassmtmt My friends and 1 cringe when they take the field. As a team they seem to lack even the most fundamental < oordination skills, their outfits are pathetic and the movements appear to have been choreographed by a dead fourth grader. We watch Ixxause we have to. we laugh because we must and we cry because someone outside our fine state might see them. let's save some money and use the flag tram to guard the goalposts or something Kawika Holbrook Student Proud I'm sure many of us can now better appreciate the compas sion of our greek fraternity sys tem, as partially embodied by Fred Roellig {ODE, Nov H). Some people might ask “Gracious me. what organiza tion would possibly want to harbor individuals who deliver veiled threats, practice mind less violence (and then trv to deny it), exhibit intriguingly primal social skills and gener ally act like puerile, obnoxious human beings?" I pity the naive and ignorant And what was Amy Hope thinking, trying to fight I mu k legally? Sillv girl The whole incident was her fault in the first plat e We all know that only the Greeks have to pav tuition and student fees. They an- the ones responsible for funding the ath letic programs and keeping up general maintenance at Aut/.en Stadium Therefore, why on Karth should we object when they de cide to appropriate a small part of the stadium for their person al use? So, congratulations to the fra ternity members involved, ku dos to the ever-vigilant security people and thank you so much for making me proud to be .1 pari of the system Mary K. l-ocke Klein Student Vicious tripe The letter to the editor [ODE. Nov HI on the “thrashing on the security crew by the stu dent body" is one of the most asinine < ommentaries | ever hope to read in the h'nwrald Its writer, who is obviously getting little from his educa tion. is apparently under the impression that it is OK to do stupid and dangerous tilings, up to and including injuring other people, in order to "get rowdy ami have a good time." This is an increasingly com mon. and IhoroughK con temptible. perception these days The writer ol that letter should Ih- thoroughly ashamed ot having written such vicious tripe as should the Emerald. lor printing it Michael h. Stamm hnglish Dept. Reality brief We can’t legislate choice. People always have a choic e A person could choose to kill me, and if they evert* < lever enough, never get caught At the present time then- are laws whic h tell people "don’t kill Bob." This reminds them of what the soi iety has deemed as right It doesn't remove their choice. On election night I was asked tn a woman next to a "no on H and 10" sign il 1 had voted yet I soberly said "ves. but if mv mother had exercised her choice another time. 1 wouldn't even be hen? to answer you " For a moment she just stood then- Her whole cause had just been knocked out from under her by a brief encounter with reality She then turned to someone on the other side of the street corner and began ask ing them the same question I have no desire to "force people to think my way." All I ( an do is share w hat is true in hopes that someone will know the joy 1 know. C.od loves me He was suffi cient tor Noah in a world where there was "only evil all of the time." so I sure don't need a majority believing what I do to he content in this world. It might have been cool hav ing an older brother growing up. though. If the law had been there. 1 probably would have. My mom regrets the choice she made, but she has one son who loves her. Bob Weigel I.ab Tech Disco library Hey. why go to Guido's? Why not just go to the main li brary on a weeknight to social ize? Everyone else does. We might as well put up a strobe light and bring in a disc jockey. I figure since it is impossible to study at the library, why not party? If I were to rate the noise lev el of the library on a richter scale of one to ten. it would re ceive a seven. The other night in the li brary. 1 kept hearing this ob noxious voice constantly ram bling on and on. I looked up and to my astonishment it was one of the ladies that works at the library. 1 thought to myself, what a great role model for the way students should behave in the library. Enough with the sarcasm. All I'm trying to say is that the li brary should be a place to study, not socialize. Brett johnson Eugene LETTERS POLICY The Orttgon Daily Emerald will attempt to print all letters containing comments on topics of interest to the University community. Comments must be factually accurate and refrain from personal attacks on the char acter of others.