Duck volleyball falls in Civil War match | 5 Oregon Daily Emerald An independent newspaper at the University of Oregon www. dailyemerald. com Since 1900 | Volume 107, Issue 39 | Tuesday, October 18,2005 Meredith Fleming pins a purple ribbon on her jacket Monday afternoon in support of YWCA's Week Without Violence. The YWCA will have a pledge table outside the University Bookstore all this week. Nicole Barker | Senior photographer YWCA Purple Hands Pledge raises awareness of violence University activists ask students to not use words or hands to discriminate against women and minorities BY KATY GAGNON NEWS REPORTER In an effort to raise awareness about violence against women and minori ties, the University’s YWCA is encour aging students to take a pledge to re frain from using words and hands to discriminate and thereby disrespect women and people of racially diverse backgrounds. The YWCA’s annual Week Without Violence Purple Hands Pledge began Monday. Throughout this week, labeled National Week Without Violence, members of the YWCA will be stationed at various locations on campus encouraging students to sign a petition agreeing to not use violence. Students who sign up will be given a pur ple ribbon. Supporters who wear the ribbon will help raise awareness about violence against women and minorities, said Stephanie Carriere, executive director YWCA, page 3 University might feel effects of tax repeal Government report predicts that $25 billion could be lost if 'death tax' repeal passes BY NICHOLAS WILBUR NEWS REPORTER In the next year, the U.S. Senate will decide whether to repeal a tax on inherited estates, a move that some say could drastically cut do nations to nonprofits and universities. While one University expert doesn’t expect any dras tic effects to the University’s current fund-rais ing campaign, a government report estimates up to $25 billion could be lost nationwide. The estate tax, sometimes referred to as the “death tax,” is one of the oldest and most common forms of property taxation. When an owner dies, the federal govern ment taxes the remaining property if it’s worth $1.5 million or more. The issue has been postponed in the Sen ate because of Hurricane Katrina, but politi cians and media pundits still debate the ef fects a repeal would have on nonprofit Organizations and universities. Also, be cause the federal government would experi ence a drop in tax revenue, some people are expecting cuts to federal grants and con tracts to universities. A Congressional Budget Office report pub lished in July 2004 found that the amount of charitable giving to universities, hospitals, museums, churches and many other non profit organizations would drastically de crease because donors would no longer ben efit from tax write-offs. The report said 30 percent of taxpayers do not pay income tax on charitable donations. The University has raised $371 million to date in private donations as part of Campaign Oregon: Transforming Lives, a fund-raising project shooting for $600 million to support the future development at the University. University Development Gift Planning Di rector Hal Abrams said that he has been fol lowing the estate tax repeal but said that it likely won’t have a significant effect on char itable donations to the University because the majority of donations come from people with “mega-estates” worth $20 million. Those with $5 million dollar estates might be less likely to donate if the tax is repealed, he said, but the bigger estates usually have bigger effects. ESTATE TAX, page 4 HANDS-ON PSYCHOLOGY ssmmm Psychology professor brings human brain to class Students in Michael Anderson’s Psychology 201: Mind and Brain course were given a first hand look at their subject of study on Monday. Anderson, an associate professor of cognitive neuroscience in the psychology department, brought a human brain to class. “This is an exceptionally rare opportunity,” Anderson said. “The vast majority of people on the planet Earth never get to have this experience. ” Anderson said he has been bringing the brain, which is kept in Huestis Hall, to class for about four years. At the end of class, students had the opportu nity to don gloves to protect against the skin-ir ritating preservative the brain is bathed in and handle the brain. The preservative made the brain feel harder to the touch than brains are in their natural state, Anderson said. “When I picked it up, it felt like an eraser,” sophomore Japanese major Nici Grigg said. Junior human physiology major Craig Jordan said seeing the subcortical regions on the un derside of the brain was the most interesting Kate Horton | Photographer part for him. “They were a totally different texture than I’d seen before,” Jordan said. Anderson didn’t know anything about the brain donor’s life or the circumstances of the donor’s death, although he said because brain size is proportional to body size, the donor was probably a large person. “This was somebody who was thinking about lunch, thinking about what they were going to do next week,” Anderson told his 325 students. “This was a person just like all of you.” Eva Sylwester New director takes office at Lewis Center Scott Frey's goals for the neuroimaging center include garnering departments' interest and clarifying use of defense funds BY EVA SYLWESTER SENIOR NEWS REPORTER A new director of the Lewis Center for Neu roimaging began work Monday. Assistant professor of psychology Scott Frey hopes to increase the number of departments that use the center — a component of the Uni versity’s Brain, Biology and Machine Initiative — and hopes to attract more students to work as research assistants or perform research projects. He also hopes to allay fears about the center’s research that is funded by the Department of Defense. “We want to kind of transcend being exclusive to any small handful of departments,” Frey said. The center, located on the north end of Straub Hall, is built around the Siemens Alle gra 3 Tesla, a machine that performs function al magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) scans of the human brain. The machine is essential ly a large magnet that tracks brain activity by measuring the flow of blood and oxygen to various regions of the brain. While the actual operation of the machine must be done by trained operators, Frey said most aspects of designing a study that uses fMRI technology could be done by an undergraduate honors student. Currently, most of the research done with the machine is from the departments of psychology, biology and human physiology. Some of the cen ter’s current projects include the effect of drugs on adolescent brain function, the role of being left or right-handed in stroke recovery and a simula tion of how a congenitally deaf person sees, ac cording to the center’s Web site. LCNI, page 8