Oregon daily emerald. (Eugene, Or.) 1920-2012, October 28, 2005, Page 7, Image 7

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    IN BRIEF
ggar*
Courtesy
■
Graduate Teaching Fellows
protest wages at rally
Nearly 50 graduate teaching fel
lows and supporters rallied on the
steps of the University’s administra
tion building Thursday, protesting
what they called low wages and ask
ing for fair contract negotiations.
“We are below the federal
poverty level,” graduate teaching fel
low Jey Strangfeld said during the
rally, which included a march
through Johnson Hall and the Lillis
Business Complex. “We got a 2 per
cent increase this fall, but the past
two years we’ve been put under a
wage freeze. ”
University President Dave Frohn
mayer said he hopes the cordial and
friendly relationship between
the administration and the Graduate
Teaching Fellows Federation
will continue.
“We hope for a contract that will
be helpful to everyone,”
Frohnmayer said.
The current GTFF contract offi
cially expires in March.
— Nicholas Wilbur
In Wilma's wake, people
line up for necessities
MIAMI — Many Floridians strug
gled another day to find food, water
and fuel after Hurricane Wilma on
Thursday, with lines of people and
cars forming around home improve
ment stores and gas stations.
President Bush arrived in Miami
to visit the National Hurricane Cen
ter and boarded a helicopter to get
his first look at the damage wrought
by Wilma in Florida, where about 2
million homes and businesses were
still without power.
Many gas stations that had fuel
were without electricity, and others
that had power ran out of supplies.
Shouting matches started at some
stations when people tried cutting
in line.
“Get gas down here. This is crazi
ness,” Connie Rodriguez, 23, said
Thursday while she and her fiance
tried to get gas at two stations
across the street from each other.
Progress was being made: Port
Everglades had power back for most
of its fuel depot, which supplies sta
tions across South Florida. About
700 trucks will be picking up gas
there to deliver to stations Thurs
day, down from the normal 1,000,
said Carlos Buqueras, director of
business development at the Fort
Lauderdale-area port.
Clash between Shiites,
Sunnis leaves 15 dead
BAGHDAD, Iraq — Sunni Arab
militants killed 14 Shiite militiamen
and a policeman Thursday in a
clash southeast of Baghdad — an
other sign of rising tensions among
Iraq’s rival ethnic and religious
communities. The U.S. military re
ported three more American sol
diers died in combat.
The Shiite-Sunni fighting oc
curred after police and militiamen
loyal to radical Shiite cleric Muqta
da al-Sadr raided a house in
Nahrawan, 15 miles southeast of
the capital, to free a militiaman tak
en hostage by Sunni militants, ac
cording to Amer al-Husseini, an
aide to al-Sadr.
After freeing the hostage and cap
turing two militants, the Shiite mili
tiamen were ambushed by the Sun
nis on their way out of the
religiously mixed town, al-Husseini
said. Police Lt. Thair Mahmoud said
14 others — 12 militiamen and two
policemen — were wounded.
The incident underscores ten
sions among hard-line elements in
Iraq’s rival religious and ethnic
communities at a time when the
United States is struggling to
promote a political process seen as
key to calming the insurgency so
that U.S. and other foreign troops
can go home.
—The Associated Press
I can’t believe
you didn’t go to ^
The Parlour!
Eugene’s Finest
Tattooing
Since 1996
1097 Willamette St
Eugene, OR
541-345-6465
Directory of -
Spiritual
-Tograms
Oregon Hillel:
The Foundation for Jewish Campus Life
SHALOM! Free Shabbat services and dinner Fridays at 6:00 p.m
Stop by anytime.
1059 Hilyard, 343-8920
Check our website for a full listing of events: www.oregonhillel.org
IHpiStopal Campus Jflimstrp
Please Join Us For
Thursday Night Fellowship
5:30 p.m. • 1329 E. 19th Ave
For more information call 968-8760
www.uoregonecm.org
HOUSE
Loving God, Loving People
Worship • The Word ‘Prayer
Fellowship • Serving
Join us Fridays 7:30 p.m.
1850 Onyx St. (behind Hayward Field)
n _ . _ _ . _ “Let your vision be world-embracing
4* I5AHA I Jr AITH rather than confined to your own sell
- Baha’u’llah
Sunday Devotionals, 10 am
Childrens classes & adult sessions, 10:30 a.m.; Friday Open House, 12 p.m. - 2 p.m
== Baha’i Faith Center • 1458 Alder Street
gj To learn about the Baha'i Faith and our activities in the Eugene/Springfield area
§ call 344-3173 or 1-800-22-0MITE or visit our website at www.bahai.org.
Orthodox Christianity
Looking for a Bible-based church? Why not the
3 Church that gave you the Bible? Sunday service 10 a.m.
For more information: 683-3519
JL
Central Presbyterian Church
Sunday Worship Schedule
9:00 A.M. Traditional Service
10:15 A.M. Christian Education
11:15 A.M. Contemporary Service with praise
band and lots of singing!
www.centralpresbychurch.net
555 E. 15th Ave. • 345-8724
What’s under your feet?
^Sooted
Sundays at 6 p.m.
at the Wesley Center
1236 Kincaid Street
(next door to the UO Bookstore)
www.FindSacredGround.net
Campus Ministry
Grace Lutheran Church
18th & Hilyard (just west of campus)
Sundays at Grace
Worship services: 8:30 am & 11:00 am
Student Dinners: 6 pni
rsd«yS- Bible Study: 7 pm
Grief support group: 7 pm
Contact Dave at 342-4844 • david@glchurch.org • www.glchurch.org
M
Feathers t#ffled?
Duck into Newman.
St. Thomas More Newman Center
Catholic Ministry
Sunday student Mass 7 30 p m
Midweek Social & student Mass
Wednesdays, 9:00 p.m.
rcia weekly Wednesdays 7 P.M.
Friday, Oct. 28
Com Maze and Scary Movies
7:50 p.m.-12.30 am
Saturday, Oct. 29
Student Sunrise Mass
5 a.m.-12 p.m.
Early morning hike to Spencer Butte
for a Sunrise Mass
2 1850 Emerald Street (south of Hayward Field) • 346-4468
| Visit our Web site at www.uonewman.org
s or send us an e-mail to peermlnlster@uonewman.org