0170811 LOU/fstice* • New/used furniture and re-built beds starting at $99 a set. • Name brand and vintage clothes • Major appliances with 90-day warranties starting at $99 dePaul’s St Vincent deP&nl Sodety 6 locations in Eugone to sonro you: ^ 555 High St., 344-2115 (our newest location across from Sth St. Market) • 2345 West Broadway, 284-5024 (huge warehouse of used furniture) • 705 S. Seneca, 345-8036 (lots of clothes and misc. household items) • 1880 W. II th, 683-8284 (great selection of appliances and new furniture) • 201 Division Ave, 762-7837 (clothes, books, furniture, beds, appliances) • 450 Highway 99,607-4541 (our huge car lot) We've got sp at www.dailyemerald.com State legislators need to oppose federal gas tax In 1758, philosopher David Hume wrote: "Nothing appears more surpris ing ... than the easiness with which the many are COMMENTARY governed by __ the few; and the implicit submission with which men resign their own sentiments and passions to those of their rulers." Today Hume would surely marvel at how easily each year a few highway barons on Capitol I lill, with help from like-minded special interest groups, collect hundreds of millions of dollars from Oregon motorists and then par cel out highway Hinds to Salem with all kinds of costly strings attached. Authority for the federal highway program expires Sept. 30. But the new authorization winding its way through Congress to extend the program six more years has yet to address an issue costing American motorists more than $20 billion each year: What should happen to the federal gas tax? Most members of Congress simply assume the federal tax will either stay where it is, at 18.4 cents per gallon, or go up. The American Road and Trans portation Builders Association wants a two cent per gallon tax hike in each of the next six years, and Rep. Don Young, R-Alaska, has proposed raising the federal gas tax to 33 cents per gal lon over six years — a whopping 79 percent increase. But there is another option. Last year, Sen. James Inhofe, R-Okla., of fered a bill to return all but two cents of the 18.4 cent federal gas tax to the states in the form of a block grant. Under Inhofe's plan, Uncle Sam's take would have been only $27 million in 2001 instead of the $252 million Ore gon motorists actually paid into the Federal I ligh way Trust Fund. Right there, on page S.7929 of the Congressional Record for Aug. 1, 2002, LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Councilor favors pro-growth faction As president of UndWatch Lane County — a group whose mission is to protect famis, forests and open space Inhofe says his bill, "Restores to states and local communities the ability to make their own transportation decisions without the interference ofWashington. ... I have long believed that the best deci sions are those made at the local level. Unfortunately many of the transporta tion choices made by cities and states are governed by federal rules and regula tions. This bill returns to states the re sponsibility and resources to make their own transportation decisions." The two-cent federal tax would still be enough to maintain the Interstate system, build roads on federal lands, address highway safety issues and conduct some research. Road-build ing, after all, is traditionally a state and local responsibility. The 41,000 mile federal Interstate building era, which officially ended in 1991, was a - one-time exception to that tradition. So why haven't Oregon's two U.S. senators and Oregon Gov. Ted Kulon goski, along with elected officials from other states, rallied around Inhofe's proposal and demanded its passage this year? Why would Oregon's gover nor and state legislators resign their own self-interests and welcome Wash ington's intrusion into their affairs? Some say once the federal govern ment launched the Interstate pro gram, special interest groups captured it and helped make sure it was well funded. And with the passage of time the states have became reluctant to challenge the entrenched status quo. As the U.S. Congress gears up to meet the Sept. 30 deadline, this is a fine time for Oregon motorists to contact their Washington, D.C., repre sentatives and ask why the Inhofe proposal isn't yet part of this year's new highway bill. Dr. Ronald Fraser, who writes on public policy issues for the DKT Liberty Project, a Washington-based civil liberties organization, lives in Burke, Va. from sprawl — I'm delighted to leam that Ward 7 City Councilor Scott Meis ner is "concerned about community growth" ("Legal eagle," ODE, Aug. 20). Me says he doesn't want his community to be like others "that have grown badly Turn to LETTERS, page 9A Sorority Recruitment! October 3rd - 8th Orientation begins October 3rd at 5pm in Columbia 150. Fraternity Recruitment October 3rd - 8th Recruitment begins at Splash Waterpark Transportation provided, meet Oct 3rd, 9pm, at the Greek Life Office. Be a part of the largest student group on campus. o UNIVERSITY OF OREGON Get Involved! Friendship - Leadership Scholarship - Community Service For info and to register go to: http://greeklife.uoregon.edu1