UP FRONT SUSAN LUDMER-GLIEBE Special to The Jewish News R achel Stevens can not remember the origi- nal Earth Day, April 20, 1970, when an estimated 20 million people joined to af- firm the need to heal the earth, an earth increasingly tarnished by human activity. Sosh Oleinick, Linda Rosenfeld, Juliette Cher- buliez, Amy Sabin, Jodi Goldman and Kyle Bettigole can not remember Earth Day either. They were babies in 1970. "Twenty years have come and gone and environmental problems have grown, affec- ting the very air we breathe and the water we drink," says Stevens, 21, a history major at the University of Michigan. Stevens and the others, all Jewish, are on the eight- member Earth Day 1990 Steering Committee which has been feverishly planning a broad array of U-M campus events for the week of April 2-7. "This is a critical decade," says Stevens. "We hope with Earth Day 1990 we can revitalize interest in the en- vironment." Waking Up Just In Time It's been one of those days. The car broke down. The kids got in trouble at school. The boss was unhappy with your latest project. The dog bit the mailman. Your mother-in-law announced she's coming for a visit — a six-week visit. Sounds like you need Charlie Brown. Psychiatrist and author Rabbi Abraham Twerski, and "Peanuts" creator Charles M. Schulz, have joined forces to produce a book that shows how every- one can use the 12-step pro- gram, pioneered by Alcoholics Anonymous, to overcome human foibles and everyday problems. Illustrated with cartoons of Charlie Brown, Lucy and the rest of the "Peanuts" gang, Waking Up Just in Time is geared to helping individuals correct misperceptions of reality, make an optimum adjust- ment to reality, achieve an "I think people (especially those on campus) care a lot," notes Sabin. "But people don't know what to do." As with the first Earth Day, the planners hope it will serve as a call to action as well as education. "We don't want people to feel hopeless," says Stevens. Scheduled events include the continuous showing of the film The Thinking Ark, a technology fair, a not-for- profit flea market called "Use It Again Sam," and a Green- ments, faculty and staff are contributing. "I see the university as being a great resource center," says Bet- tigole, an English major who has also been taking courses at the School of Natural Resources. Adds Stevens, "We have a muti-disciplinary ap- proach. It's not just biolo- gists." Engineers, philoso- phers, lawyers, theologians, business faculty and repre- sentatives from technology companies are all on the Earth Day agenda. Seven of the eight planners of the Ann Arbor event are Jewish. Although the experts will present the facts and figures, the students have a perspec- tive born as much from the heart as the head. Much of it comes, they say, from their Jewish background. "I think Judaism cultivates a sense of community and values," says Bettigole. "It develops a sensitivity to others by way of the environ- ment, by realizing that one must be responsible for one's actions for they can be detrimental to others." Oleinick, who is working towards a degree in solid waste management — "I've always liked garbage," she says — hopes to use her skills when she makes aliyah after graduation. fair featuring businesses that offer products and services that are ecologically sound and socially responsible. There will be dozens of seminars, workshops, teach- ins and panel discussions. As in 1970, consumer advocate Ralph Nader and en- vironmentalist Barry Com- moner will visit the campus and give key addresses. Although the U-M ad- ministration has not formal- ly involved itself in the ac- tivities, many U-M depart- Dan iel M. Rosen Jewish Consciousness Involved In Michigan Earth Day Revisited U-M's Earth Day committee: standing , Jodi Goldman, Juliette Cherbuliez, Rachel Stevens, Linda Rosenfeld, Kyl e Bettigole; kneeling, Sosh Oleinisk, Amy Sabin and Yuman Lee. She points to the land-based kibbutz movement and the importance of Tikkun Olam. "The concept of fixing he earth, that's something so in- tegral to Judaism," she says. Stevens and Sabin mention the influence of their families. "My parents always stressed the need to make this world a better place," says Stevens. Sabin recalls that at her bat mitzvah her parents asked the guests to donate trees to Israel instead of giving gifts to their daughter. "At the time I didn't really unders- tand it," says Sabin. Now she does. Even before she got involv- ed in Earth Day II, Sabin was active with campus projects designed to make more people aware of the need for recycl- ing. In an attempt to get U-M to ban styrofoam, she and others erected a styrofoam pyramid on the Diag. "The Egyptians built their pryamid 2,000 years ago (sic) and it's still standing; our styrofoam will be here 2,000 Continued on Page 14 ROUND UP MERE NE COMES AGAIN... EVERY DAY THIS SENIOR CITIZEN WALKS 6Y, AND WHEN WE SEES ME, WE EOES,'WOOF WOOF' I ALWAYS WONDER WI-IAT IT IS ME THINKS ME'S SAYINS A cartoon from Waking Up Just in Time accurate self-appraisal, rid oneself of character flaws and help others who have similar problems, Rabbi Twerski said. Send A Book To Soviet Jews The Chicago Action for Soviet Jewry (CASJ) has in- itiated Project Sefer, through which individuals may send books and tapes to Jewish families in the Soviet Union. For a tax-deductible gift of $18, the CASJ will mail books and tapes of Jewish interest to a Soviet family. In addition, the CASJ will affix a bookplate in the name of one being honored or memorialized. Books and tapes are selected according to re- quests placed by the Soviet Jews; families to whom the material will be sent are chosen at random. To send a book, mail an $18 check to the Chicago Ac- tion for Soviet Jewry, Project Sefer, 555 Vine Ave. Suite 107, Highland Park, IL. 60035, or call (312) 433-0144. Arabs Investigate Pro-Israel PACs The Washington-based Arab American Institute is conducting a study of pro- Israel political action corn- mittees (PACs), some fin- dings of which are expected to be released this week. The study will include an analysis of 1983-89 contribu- tions by pro-Israel PACs and how they influence voting behavior; a preview of 1990 pro-Israel PAC contribu- tions; an examination of "the pro-Israel 'fat cats' who fund the PACs and direct them"; and a preliminary analysis of the role "big money plays in legislation and in shaping the foreign policy debate on Middle East issues," according to an AAI report. "Too many (House and Senate) members are either PAC'd or afraid and, as a result, Arab Americans have been locked out of electoral politics one too many times," said AAI Executive Director James Zogby. "It is my hope that our research will shed much needed light on this abuse of our democratic system and generate some movement for reform." Federation Meets With Arafat Aide Los Angeles — Fifteen leaders of the Jewish Fed- eration of Greater Los Angeles joined in a meeting with Khaled al-Hassan, a top aide to Palestine Libera- tion Organization leader Yassir Arafat and a co- founder with Arafat of the Fatah terrorist organization. The meeting was organiz- ed by Stanley Sheinbaum, who met with Arafat last year in Stockholm. The Jewish weekly The Heritage reports that among those attending the meeting with Hassan were Marcia Volpert, chairman of the Federation's Jewish Corn- . munity Relations Council; Rabbi Harvey Fields, chair- man of the JCRC's Commis- sion on the Middle East; and Hebrew Union College Pro- fessor Gerald Bubis. The Heritage also reports that Sheinbaum took Hassan to meet with editors of The Los Angeles Times, the RAND Corporation and members of the Center for international affairs at the University of California at Los Angeles. Compiled by Elizabeth Applebaum THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 5