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Donations continued from page 1 In the case of St. Olaf, where Buntrock sat on the school's board for 23 years, officials maintain that these are allegations and Buntrock has declared his innocence, that his gift to St. Olaf was a personal one and not from Waste Management, and that Buntrock has long demon strated a commitment to the school. “There's been a whole bunch of good that's come from this partic ular man and this particular fami ly,” says Bill Carlson, chairman of the school's economics depart ment. “The emphasis being on the good that comes from private gifts to any college. That's the way this sector operates. We have to rely upon donors.” Augsburg College in Minneapo lis kept a 1987 donation of $500,000 from an alumnus notori ous for sending anonymous letters urging racial and religious purity, even after the college found out what he was doing. He unsuccess fully sued to get the money back. The University of North Dakota kept a $100 million gift for a hockey arena from an alumnus who threat ened to pull the plug midway through construction unless school officials agreed to keep the school's nickname, the Fighting Sioux. Some Native Americans find the nickname offensive, but school of ficials agreed to keep the name — and the gift — anyway. “It's the sort of nightmare sce nario for a person in a fund-raising position,” says Mark Dienhart, who oversees fund-raising efforts at the University of St. Thomas. “Your in stitutional reputation and what you stand for is a precious commodity.” St. Olaf philosophy professor Ed Langerak thinks the school can use its current situation as a teach ing tool. The school, after all, re quires every student to take an ethics class. “I would just raise the question between ethical constraints and capital exploitation of corporate loopholes,” Langerak says. “I'm not saying Buntrock did anything. (But) this issue would be a good one.” © 2002, Saint Paul Pioneer Press (St. Paul, Minn.). Assisted suicide continued from page 1 Robert McCallum said in a Wednesday statement. If the federal government appeals the case, both sides contend it may go all the way to the Supreme Court. Eli Stutsman, lead attorney for the assisted suicide advocacy group Oregon Death With Dignity, said the 9th Circuit Court has a proven track record of siding with states’ rights on past cases. But Atteberry of Oregon Right To Life maintained that the Supreme Court has a history of overturning decisions from the 9th Circuit Court. “This ruling will be appealed,” Atteberry said. “We’ll continue to fight, and we’re optimistic in the end that the appeal will be up held.” E-mail reporter Brook Reinhard atbrookreinhard@dailyemerald.com. 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