Copyright c 1996, The Globe and Mail Company r U.S. election reveals his and her politics Educated women have different agenda By Graham Fraser Washington Bureau WASHINGTON - Bill Clinton's re-election has shone a spotlight on a widening difference in views between men and women in the United States, particularly among those with a university education. "Men and women, if college educated, agree about very little," Celinda Lake, a Democratic pollster, told a conference organized by the Brookings Institution yesterday. "Men and women would have elected a different president, a different Senate, and a different House of Representatives," Ms. Lake said. She pointed out that "men and women are coming to some pretty different conclusions" about the role of government and the importance of social programs. Polling has shown that women believe the government can play a positive role in solving social problems, while men feel that government is a problem, and that it is a good day when they have not been hurt by it, Ms. Lake said. "On our side of the aisle, we're beginning to wonder what a college education does for a man," she said. ... http://web.theglobeandmail.com/web/cgi-bin/ DisplayPage?SITE=web&KEY=961108.GlobeFront.UGUYSM