3 Meet Annetta Miller, Wayne State's queen of green arely 5 feet tall with a froth of gray hair and oversize tortoise-shell glasses, Annetta Miller walks with a spring in her step that belies her 87 years. She's got a twinkle in her eye, but don't let that fool you. Miller is a force to be reckoned with. And though she may not be comfortable with the title of rabble- rouser, she has definitely rattled some cages. B Miller entered public service to oppose the Vietnam War in 1970. She ran for the U.S. Congress to try to prevent the election of a candidate who defended the fighting. Though she lost that bid, her numerous supporters convinced her to seek a seat on the state Board of Education. She was elected to three back-to- back, eight-year terms and became a champion for quality public education. She then took her passion for education to Wayne State, winning a position on the Board of Governors in 1996 and again in 2004. Her current fight is for the environment, as her lapel button, "Give Earth a Chance," testifies. In September 2006, she presented a Resolution on Environmental Concerns to the Board, urging Wayne State to work continuously toward sustainability and protecting the earth's resources. It became the impetus for the Task Force on Environmental Initiatives and the university's Living Green efforts. "As a university, we need to be setting an example in this important area," she says. The group's first order of business was to create a comprehensive plan for a viable recycling program on campus. Today, recycling receptacles for paper, plastic and aluminum can be found in more than 60 buildings and battery recycling containers are located all over the university. The group's most recent project focuses on transportation, specifically trying to reduce the amount of vehicle traffic to and from Wayne's campus. Task force members are encouraging alternative transportation ideas as simple as mass transit and car pooling. They support the light-rail transit line proposal being discussed in the Michigan legislature. Miller has the ear of Wayne State's Facilities Planning and Management Office and is pushing for solar retrofitting initiatives, installing green roofs on university buildings, and striving to meet or exceed LEED Green Building Rating System standards on new construction on campus. "The new engineering building is the closest we've come," she says. "People don't seem to know that we each have a responsibility. If that is something that everybody accepts, I think we will be successful in making the college actually green," she adds. Miller's life of service began during World War II, when she was a young woman working overseas as an army nurse, achieving the rank of second lieutenant. She was stationed in a military hospital in England caring for prisoners of war. In an ironic twist of fate, a number of her patients were German officers. She met her husband, Sydney, a physician, in England and moved back to the Detroit area with him after the war ended. The couple has been married 63 years. "People don't seem to know that we each have a responsibility. If that is something that everybody accepts, I think we will be successful in making the college actually green." — Annetta Miller Over her many decades in public office, Miller has been lauded by everyone from the Michigan Federation of Teachers to the Michigan Association of School Boards to the ACLU. The Detroit City Council gave her the Spirit of Detroit award in 2005. And in November, she was honored by Wayne State's Irvin D. Reid Honors College for Outstanding Lifetime Contributions to the Community for her tireless advocacy for students and the environment. What really excites her, however, is not the award itself but its origin. "I was more pleased that it was coming from the Honors College, which we finally achieved, than that it was actually mine," she says. "I appreciate the fact that we now have an Honors College that is so well organized that they are giving awards." With all her many interests and passions, why is Miller so focused on the environment? "I've got seven grandchildren," she says without hesitation. "I want the world to be a healthy, safe place for them to grow up in." Have you downsized or plan on moving soon? If the answer is yes, and you are 65 years or older, then we're looking for you! Wayne State University's Institute of Gerontology is conducting research to understand how people downsize and move in later life. Participants receive $35 Mark Luborsky, PhD, and Cathy Lysack, PhD, co-principal investigators. For more information call (313) 577-2297 and ask for the downsizing study. WAYNE STATE UNIVERSITY' Institute of Gerontology