Directory of * 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 , “Let your vision be world-embracing BAH A. I r AITH rather than confined to your own self Baha’u’llah Sunday Devotionals, 10 am Childrens classes & adult sessions, 10:30 a.m.; Friday Open House, 12 p.m o Baha’i Faith Center • 1458 Alder Street To learn about the Baha'i Faith and our activities in the Eugene/Springfield area ft call 344-3173 or 1 -800-22-CINITE or visit our website at www.bahai.org. 2 p.m. Om< H O U S E Loving God, Loving People Worship • The Word • Prayer Fellowship • Serving Join us Fridays 7:30 p.m. 1850 Onyx St. (behind Hayward Field) iEptetopal Campus Ministry Please Join Us For Thursday Night Fellowship 5:30 p.m. • 1329 E. 19th Ave For more information call 968-8760 www.uoregonecm.org Orthodox Christianity Looking lor a Bible-based church? Why not the Church that gave you the Bible? Sunday service 10 a.m. I For more information: 683-3519 jJJL Central Presbyterian Church Sunday Worship Schedule Free home cooked dinner Wednesdays 5:45 p.m. with student ID 8:30 a.m. Contemporary Service 9:45 a.m. Brunch - everyone invited 11:00 a.m. Traditional Service www.centralpresbychurch.net 555 E. 15th Ave. • 345-8724 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 pm Thursdays. Bible Study: 7 pm Grief support group: 7 pm Contact Dave at 342-4844 • david@glchurch.org • www.glchurch.org What’s under your feet? ^Sacned Sundays at 6 p.m. at the Wesley Center 1236 Kincaid Street (next door to the UO Bookstore] www.FindSacredGround.net j $ m St Thomas Mi-** NEWMAN Ct-VrEH Feathers urf\ led? Duck into Newman. St Thomas More Newman Center Catholic Ministry Sunday Student Mass 7:30 p.m. Midweek Social ft Student Mass Wednesdays, 9:00 p.m. rcia weekly Wednesdays 7 P.M. Friday. Nov. 11 Event with OSU 7:00 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 12 Little Duck Days 10 a.m. - 3 p.m. _ 1850 Emerald Street (south of Hayward Field) • 346-4468 § Visit our Web site at www.uonewman.org & or send us an e-mail to peerminlster@uonewman.org Preparation: Campus plans to give shelter Continued from page 1A 5 million square feet of open space that could temporarily serve people dis placed by a disaster. Open areas, such as the turf field be side the Student Recreation Center, could potentially serve as staging areas or triage centers, he said. Supplies for staging a major shel ter are currently not on campus, but ONHW is talking with the Federal Emergency Management Agency staff about storing critical supplies on campus before a disaster strikes, LeDuc said. In six months, the University plans to test a new plan, Department of Pub lic Safety Interim Director Tom Hicks said. A test emergency scenario would ensure all people involved are comfort able with their roles and responsibili ties during a disaster, he said. “You can develop a plan,” he said, “but you don’t know if it'll work until it’s done.” The Department of Public Safety currently follows ICS protocol. Under ICS, one person is delegated the inci dent commander position, but that po sition may change as more qualified emergency officials arrive at the scene of an emergency, Hicks said. DPS was required to adopt the system to make it eligible for federal grant money, he said. If DPS headquarters in Straub Hall is damaged or made inaccessible, the department would move to the Student Recreation Center, Hicks said. Hicks said DPS’ emergency re sponse plan was moderately tested and proved successful in February 2003, after a violent windstorm. “We’re further ahead than where we were five years ago,” Hicks said. City response plan Similar to the University, the city will use ICS and NIMS procedures in the event of a major emergency. Andre LeDuc, program director of the Oregon Natural Hazards Workgroup, shows the field by the Student Recreation Center as a potential shelter site during emergencies. Unlike the University, the Eugene Fire Department uses the ICS system everyday, said Chuck Solin, Eugene emergency program manager. For years, Eugene has had an ICS plan governing who has authority on scene, he said. However, the city did n’t adopt NIMS until May 2005. “Federal, county, city and local gov ernments will all work together within NIMS,” Solin said. In the event of a major emergency, city officials and incident commanders will work out of the city’s Emergency Operations Center, a new facility locat ed inside Fire Station 6 near Sheldon High School. City officials assigned to an inci dent command post may not be do ing something they normally do, but they have had training in that area, Solin said. Solin said city agencies or organi zations aren’t eligible for federal money unless they can demonstrate NIMS compliance. In the event of major disaster, the city would collaborate with other or ganizations, such as the American Red Cross, to set up emergency shelters, Solin said. Shelter locations would vary de pending on the type of disaster, Carrick said. People should listen to the radio after a disaster to learn where emer gency shelters will be located, Carrick said. Preparing emergency kits At least one person in each house hold should be trained in CPR and first aid, Carrick said. Nationwide, 1 in 7 people have a disaster supply kit, she said, and 1 in 10 people are prepared for a disaster on the West Coast. “It doesn’t matter who you are, where you live, take some responsibili ty and get prepared,” she said. Contact the crime, health and safety reporter at kgagnon@ dailyemerald, com Nov. 5th & 6th GRAND OPENING CELEBRATION! * ■* *OB #no**LUCi - FpS stuff for every cuetome • SNOWBOARD GEAR raffle 349-0087 4TH*«JI»MWP»CB«T. BQARDTACnCS.COM fen’s and women’s fashion sho] 1331 Willamette f 023645 f Jj I &Grames [ and crosswords too ] On stands Wednesday! Oregon Daily Emerald The independent campus newspaper for the University of Oregon