w ** W E 0 09 U *9 . 0. ® -, heMihiga Dil WdnsdaDcme DISASTER From page 7B teaches a class on extreme weather and last year led students tornado chasing in Oklahoma and Texas. The destructive power of torna- dos has been well demonstrated, and it's not just confined to the Great Plains: a Flint tornado in 1953 killed 116 people and injured 844. Over the years, Southeastern Michigan has seen several F-2 tornados, which support winds as high as 157 mph and can uproot large trees. Samson and DPS officials say the best way to react in a tornado is to do what you learned in elementary school: go to a room in the center of a building, away from windows and loose objects and cover your head. "If there's an approaching storm, take it seriously," Samson said. "Get yourself into a tornado shelter or a basement." On the whole, terrorism, fires and extreme weather pose little threat to students' daily lives. In his Extreme Weather 101 class, Samson routinely asks students to list, in order, the most substantial threats to their lives. Inevitably, someone always lists a drastic scenario. "Weather ends up being a thou- sand times less risky than smok- ing or obesity and a whole bunch of other stuff. On the big scale, it's not all that risky," he said. "Prob- ably more people have died from (car crashes cause by) fog than have died from tornadoes in Washtenaw County." A history of flopped catastrophes Emergency planning has rapidly evolved over the 20th and 21st cen- turies at a rapid pace. In the early decades of the 1900s, Ann Arborites were mostly at the mercy of the ele- ments. A fire could whip through rows of wooden boarding houses with a vengeance. A good rain could overrun the city's water system and flood Central Campus. A new fear cropped up in the Cold War. Mass media and government propaganda instilled apprehen- sion of nuclear war. The University wrote bomb drills into its safety codes and secured fallout shelters to house refugees of atomic war. A pamphlet published in the early 1950s by the Detroit Office of Civil Defense advised Michiganders that their chances of living through an atomic attack are "better than you may have thought." While a nuclear war never mate- rialized, Cold War preparation developed general emergency-plan- ning techniques. State agencies had to learn how to work with munici- palities and emergency experts had to find a way to communicate their messages to the public. Purported disasters that famous- ly never came to be gave more tan- gible contributions to emergency planning. The University poured man- power into preparing for the inevitable pandemonium that was supposed to accompany Y2K, fig- uring out how to keep students, faculty, research projects and even research animals safe in the event of a disaster that was supposed to wipe out phones, electricity and computer systems. When Jan. 1, 2000 proved large- ly peaceful, safety officers found themselves with a large stack of plans and no emergency. It seemed they had planned for something that wasn't going to happen. Not so. During the sweeping power outages that blackened almost one-third of the country in August 2003, administrators dug out the old plans. Thanks to back- up energy and redundant water mains, the hospital maintained operations - even air condition- ing. "It wasn't like everything was well-lit. We were all pretty dark. The planning from Y2K was very important there," Brown said. The University's power plant has developed intricate contingency plans in case of a disaster. Sept. 11, 2001 helped evolve than 100 calls reporting suspicious emergency planning even more. white powder. Emergency plans had chapters on "None of them ever got close to natural, nuclear, electronic and being anthrax," Brown said. biological disasters, and admin- Most of the dust turned out to istrators had practice executing be drywall or laundry detergent. them. Still, the threats kept campus In the following months, a sus- attentive and DPS responsive. picious campus stayed fearful. University officials learned how to Several politicians and journal- handle a deadly threat that could ists in Washington and New York be mailed, released into air vents received letters with traces of or dispersed in water supplies. anthrax. Half a dozen people died. Had anything really happened, During a period of several the infrastructure was there and weeks, DPS responded to more response teams were ready. 0 M University Unions League a Pierpont a Union