mm A promising new brain-scan machine at the UO is one of only two in the nation. Pages Sports The quarterback controversy heats up as the Ducks hit the home stretch of spring drills. Pace 9 Wednesday, April 17,2002 Since 1 900 University of Oregon Eugene, Oregon Volume 103, Issue 131 Construction catnap Adam Jones Emerald While some construction workers labor hard (near right) | to make the , * University’s I business school | future (far right) a | reality, others | take a more 1 relaxed approach | (above). Thomas Patterson Emerald Complex to yield 600 new seats Construction for the Lillis Business Complex is well under way, with crews working to complete the four-story, 196,500-square-foot renovation project for the Charles H. Lundquist College of Business. Funding for $40 million facility came mostly from private-sector gifts, including $14 million from business college alumnus Chuck Lillis and his wife, Gwen. Officials say the complex will maximize environmental sustainability and energy efficiency through the use of solar energy panels, water conserving fixtures, a floor plan that harnesses prevailing breezes for cooling, “smart” electrical controls that turn off lights and nonessential items when not in use and building materials that are recycled or created using sustainable methods. To be completed for the 2003-04 school year, the project will result in an added 600 classroom seats, as well as a new auditorium, for the college. Death with Dignity Act feces legal decision ■ Oregon is the only state with assisted suicide, but the U.S. Attorney General says it violates Controlled Substances Act By Brook Reinhard Oregon Daily Emerald Federal District Judge Robert Jones is expected to rule today whether ter minally ill Oregonians can end their life with a doctor’s assistance, and advocates from both sides say they will appeal the decision within the month. Oregon’s Death with Dignity Law was challenged Nov. 6, 2001, when U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft wrote a memo stating he would use the Controlled Substances Act to prose cute physicians prescribing lethal dos es of drugs. Oregon is the only state in the nation that permits physician-as sisted suicide. The state and two groups in favor of assisted suicide obtained restraining orders on Ashcroft’s action from a Port land federal court; those orders are ex pected to expire pending a ruling by Judge Jones today. Both advocates and opponents of the law are confident the case will be decided in their favor, even if it has to be appealed. “I don’t know which way it will be ruled (in federal court in Portland), but I’m confident the opinion of the De partment of Justice will be upheld,” even if it has to go to the Supreme Turn to Death, page 4 Student groups work to ‘get out’ vote ASUOand OSPIRG hope to register 1,000 students to vote by the end of the month By Danielle Gillespie Oregon Daily Emerald The ASUO and OSPIRG have teamed up to hand out voter registra tion cards, talk to students in classes about voting and work at voter registra tion tables during the next few weeks to encourage students to vote in this year’s primary elections as well as in future elections. The two groups have hopes of regis tering 1,000 students by April 26 be fore the upcoming primary elections, about 200 more than were registered during the ASUO’s fall voter registra tion campaign, ASUO State Affairs Co ordinator Sandy Newton said. Newton said although the biggest race this year is for the state governor seat, the primary elections are just as important as any other election. “This year is especially unique for primary elections because there will be a University student running for the Eugene City Council, which we have never had before,” she said. Junior Maco Stewart will be running for Eugene City Council Ward 3, and the ASUO has plans to hold a debate at the University between Stewart and his opponent, City Council President David Kelly, before the elections, New ton said. Newton said Ballot Measure 13 will also be of importance to University stu dents in the primaries. “This measure basically pits higher education against secondary education and could affect many students at this campus,” she said. Turn to Vote, page 4 Residence halls lose heat during weekend One residence hall lost heat April 10 and another lost hot water over the weekend, forcing some residents to run their showers for heat and others to bathe in nearby facilities. Hamilton complex director Pe ter Erschen said three halls in the complex lost hot water Saturday, but it was restored Tuesday. He said some residents of Tingle, Mc Clain and Cloran halls showered in nearby bathrooms. Hamilton houses 780 students. Some floors of H.P. Barnhart lost heat, according to Kari Van Orsdel, the building’s food service manager. University Housing maintenance worker Steve Partridge stopped by Friday to ask the kitchen staff if utilities were working properly as he checked Barnhart’s seven floors, Orsdel said. The hall is home to 450 students. “He said it was off on some and on others/’ she said. Several Barnhart residents said Partridge told them April 10 the pump for the hot water heater had hroken and would be fixed overnight. Others said Partridge told them the heat was shut off to save electricity during last week’s balmy weather. Orsdel said the Barnhart kitchen didn’t lose either utility “If we didn’t have hot water, we’d have to go to paper/' she said of the dining room plates. “It’s important for us to have it.” Eric Martin