EDITORIAL City Council shirks government duties When does a government stop working for the peo ple? After the elections of course The newly elected Eugene City Council will take office on Jan. 1, after which they will have the authori ty to make policy decisions. Hut until then, the incum bent City Council remains Eugene's governing body. The incumbent council, however, has postponed action on a proposed restaurant tax because new coun cil members are opposed to the idea. Never mind that the incumbents are still in power, or that the restaurant tax was the only tangible result of the Eugene Deci sions process. Essentially, the incumbent City Council lias given up its governing powers for the wrong reasons. When a council is elected, it is to govern for the duration of its term. Seeing as how this term does not end until Jan. 1. the council still has a month and a half to govern the city. It is the current council's responsibility to imple ment changes as it sees fit. If a restaurant tax was on the agenda before the election, it should be on the agenda afterwards. Hut instead the incumbent council is waffling on its responsibilities be* cause the new council has a different porspec tive. If the same City Council were serving next term, it would continue its plan to put the tax before the vot ers. A government should not stop govern ing when u seat changes hands. President Bush Now the council Is downplaying the Eugene Decisions process — and the $400,000 spent not arriving at a solution. is not about to lift the gag rule (Hi abortion clinics just because Bill Clinton won the presidential election. The City Council needs to take a hint from the two biggest office-holders on how to transfer power Clin ton has repeatedly said he will not try to tell Bush how to do his job. His task is to prepare for the upcoming administration, not to influence the current one. And even though Bush has been cordial toward Clinton’s transition team, he will not change his poli cies during his final two months He proved he will run government the same as before when he vetoed a congressional tax bill shortly after losing the election. Eugene Decisions was originally supposed to find the most palatable solution to Eugene’s budget short fall. Participants suggested a restaurant tax and the council indicated it would put the idea before tin; vot ers. Now the council is downplaying the Eugene Deci sions process — and the $400,000 spent not arriving at a solution. If the City Council doesn't want to finish what it started, all the members should ask why they wanted to be elected in the first place. It could have saved a whole lot of trouble. 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I have convened the Finest Economists IN THE NATION To PRODUCE A CONSENSUS 1+pDEL... 7 »•*»!? •i&fn T** froataio wfi-r Error 41 ...TWfcv t*/£'u ^ *lWCHt'AO WAY IT Pc/NTS OPINION Promotion supports stereotypes Colleen Pohig It was all very cute and nice not tn mention dangorous ly subliminal Students who picked up the little i ardlxiurd boxes the pink ones for the femules and the blue for males that the University Bookstore was giv ing away free last week got more than hair treatment and shaving cream, Thev also received a subtle message from the University and advertisers that women should let feminine and sexy toward men, and males need to Imi strong, smart and appealing to women. Oh yeah 1 can hear the dis gusted voices of some men and women right now saying, "Not another uptight feminist who finds something sexist about everything and anything," In fact, even while talking ulxiut this in the office just now. someone said to me. "Colleen, you always get so mad — how cute " Cute? I have better things to do with my time than be "cute” and complain about meaning less things. I’m writing this be cause 1 realize it's the little things, like these boxes, that perpetuate sexism and discrim ination Last Monday I saw several students carrying these little boxes with the word "FRLb" on them Amazingly, that word seems to jump out at students anywhere, anytime, so I decid ed I'd check it out. Out of curiosity, 1 picked up both the male- and female-la beled lx>xes At my first glance of the ''female'' box. I was stoked to have some Cornnuts and some O.B.s. However. I could have definitely done without the perfume and hair treatment Next. I opened the blue box and was surprised to find shav ing < ream. cologne. deodorant, a f t e r s h a v c, T v I e n o I a n d Cornnuts Tim message 1 got just from these boxes was that I was sup posed to smell "nice" and have shiny hair Also, because my box didn't have Tylenol or de odorant, I figured being a wom an means there's no real stress in mv life, so I am never sup posed to get headaches — or sweat From the male box, I gath ered that all men should be clean shaven, smell like some thing you clean the floors with, and they should stop their stress-related headaches with Tylenol Oh yeah, and when they sweat (unlike women, re member) they smell like Old Spice. Well, at least the bookstore had the sense to know that both sexes share u common love for Comnuta. I ventured further to look at the advertising Included In the lioxes and grow even more an gered at the different ads and the messages conveyed. The men received ads rang ing from Inside Sports swim suit editions to shaving bro chures. The women had glossy pamphlets with catchy phrases like "the Beauty Difference" on them. Something even more unbe lievable caught my oye. On the flaps of the male box was a "special offer" for a computer modern and Prodigy, which is an on-line computer database Sounded like a good deal — until 1 checked out the female box. What a joke. Printed on those box flaps was an ad for AT&T Student Saver Plus. Oh yeah, I got it now. While men are getting headaches and sweating over their computers, women are merely talking on the phono all day — when they're not washing their hair, that is. Has the University ever heard of "generic"? Why not have one box labeled "studont" that has shampoo, soap, tooth paste and condoms - things that both women and men pur chase For the last 20 years, the bookstore has hough! the boxes from Campus Source, a nation wide company that sells pro motional items primarily to campuses Jim Williams, general manag er of the bookstore, told me it has no control over the items in the box and that it had "no in tention of being sexist." I believe the bookstore stalf had no intention of being sex ist, but that's not the point The point is that the bookstore obvi ously didn't see the division of products and ads for women and men as stereotypical. Yes, I'm a woman, and be lieve it or not, l sweat. So why wasn't there deodorant in the female box? Isn't that sending some sort of subliminal mes sage that while men sweat und need deodorant, women don't? I know - I’m ungry about the advertising and the University isn't pushing those products, supposedly. Nobody is forcing the Uni versity to buy these promotion al products. Next year, it should make the decision to ei ther not buy the boxes or strongly suggest to Campus Source that they should pro duce one generic box that has items everyone uses It's a joke when your univer sity requires you to take a race and gender class and then turns around and promotes things that define women and men in stereotypical ways. And one final note: 1 used more of the items from the box labeled "male" than from the “female" one Hmmm ... maybe that means I'm not the carefree "lady" I’m supposed to be. Call the gender police. Colleen Pohllg is an associate editor for the EmeralJ.