The Michigan Daily -Monday, October 1, 1990 - Page 3 Student finds niche in volunteer work II- by Jennifer Hirl 'aily Staff Reporter Students live in comfortable sur- roundings: heated dorms, beds to sleep in, three meals a day, and clothes on their backs. How often do they open their eyes to face the poverty in the world, or even their surrounding communities? LSA senior Steve Edelstein stands as an exception, however, xtending his hand to the less for- nate not only locally, but na- tionwide. "He is one of the rare people who saw a problem and, instead of joining with another group, started an organization that raised thou- sands of dollars," said Anita Bohn, the project service representative of the Michigan Campus Compact, an organization comprised of 10 uni- rsities and colleges that encourage students to become involved in community service organizations. "What impresses me most is that he has drawn so many people into his organization and he has made a great difference," she said. "He's incredible." Edelstein, a molecular biology student, is always working to help others, whether helping out the Ann Arbor homeless shelters, serv- ing food in Detroit soup kitchens, or restoring an old grocery store into a food bank in a poverty- stricken Mississippi community. His interest and dedication in community service began with his membership in the Alpha Phi Omega service fraternity. From his service in the fraternity's project called Students Working Against Today's Hunger (SWAT Hunger), Edelstein discovered many opportu- nities for continuous growth. His aspirations soon evolved into a sep- arate organization. "The project that Alpha Phi Omega did was called SWAT, but it was different. I expanded it and changed it around. They were going to chuck it, but I made it an organi- zation, got friends involved, and it took off," Edelstein said. SWAT Hunger began as a week- end service project to collect money for the hungry and poor. Now it has grown into a year-round commit- ment for 200 students at eight Michigan universities and colleges. During Edelstein's two-year presidency, SWAT Hunger volun- teers raised over $21,000. He ex- plained that the organization re- ceives most of its funding from campus projects and some corporate donations. Members also travel door-to-door collecting canned food, prepare and serve meals in soup kitchens, and work in homeless shelters. Since SWAT Hunger raised a significant amount of money, Edel- stein wanted to expand community service outside of Ann Arbor. "We were donating a lot of money to lots of groups around the country, but we didn't see where it was going," he said. "We wanted it to be more fulfilling." Edelstein's generosity led him to the census books at the library. "I found that the highest percent of children living under the poverty level was in Mississippi. One-third of all children go to bed hungry... and that's a lot to generate that statistic," he said. Edelstein's inquisition did not stop here. He immediately contacted libraries in the Mississippi Delta Region, and asked librarians for ad- vice on organizations interested in working with SWAT Hunger. Last May, 10 SWAT Hunger members gathered canned food, $6,000 from the group's funds, a grant from USA for Africa, and traveled to a tiny southern Missis- sippi town called Grenada. The students converted a run- down Grenada grocery store into a food bank, replacing the floors, the windows and the bathroom. The walls were replastered, painted, and shelves were put up. The govern- ment and local charities stock the food bank. "There's a lot of poor families that don't have any money. The food banks are how they eat," Edel- stein said. The group's expedition soon be- came known as the "Michigan Adopt a City Program," which en- courages cities with abundance re- sources to adopt and revitalize one less fortunate in another area of the United States or the world. Edel- stein is running the program. As a result of the tremendous community service Edelstein and SWAT Hunger performed, last year he won the General Motors Volun- teer Spirit Award and the Univer- sity's Outstanding Achievement Award. In addition, he was named the Michigan Humanitarian of the Year by the Michigan Campus Compact. This award placed Edelstein as a state level winner of the National Campus Compact's 1990 Student Humanitarian Award. The National Campus Compact consists of 235 colleges and universities nation- wide. 8 r-I Edelstein "One thing I learned, without anyone you can't do anything, but with four or five people you can do just about anything on this cam- pus," Edelstein said. «. x, (.~ ' I Event to iddress population problems by Bethany Robertson Researchers from New Delhi, Scotland, Indonesia, and Moscow ill gather at the University this eek for the International Sympo- sium on Population-Environment Dynamics. The symposium, organized by the University's Population-En- vironment Dynamics Project, will address the connection between hu- man growth, migration, and mortal- ity and the environment. "The focus of the conference is to ok at the complexity of the rela- tionship between population and the environment," said symposium co- ordinator Susan Sharpe. The keynote address today at 4:00 by University of Chicago professor William McNeill will be a highlight of the symposium, Sharpe said. McNeill, author of the books "The Rise of the West" and "Population nd Politics Since 1750" will speak n the historical perspective of pop- ulation and environment dynamics. Other speakers will address popu- lation trends in Southeast Asia, agri- cultural modernization in Brazil, and population-environment effects on the atmosphere. All events of the symposium, which continues through Wednesday, will take place in the fourth-floor ssembly hall in the Rackham build- ing. However, the address by McNeill will be held in the Rackham Amphitheater. Sharpe said seating is limited. The Population-Environment Dynamics Project was started in 1988 by the School of Public Health and the School of Natural Resources. The project has expanded to in- clude numerous research projects, *ncluding one in Zimbabwe, Mexico, and Indonesia which coordi- nates information about public health, agriculture, and industrial technology for a global perspective on the environment and world popu- lation. Demonstrators rally for i emigration of Soviet Jews iet' by Sarah Schweitzer Daily Staff Writer Approximately 200 Ann Arbor residents and University students marched from the Diag to West Park yesterday to show their support for Operation Exodus, the world-wide ef- fort to aid Soviet Jews in their emi- gration to Israel. The march and rally were orga- nized by a coalition of the Jewish Community Association, the United Jewish Appeal, the Frankel Center for Judaic Studies, and Students' Struggle for Soviet Jewry. The crowd, mostly composed of Ann Arbor residents, met on the Diag at 12:15 and marched to West Park - located near Huron and Seventh streets - carrying banners and signs. Marchers were welcomed with the sounds of Israeli music upon arrival at the park. Among the speakers at the rally were Matt Levin, nephew and repre- sentative of Senator Carl Levin (D- Michigan), and Lana Pollack, a state senator from the Ann Arbor area. Pollack told the crowd that what is needed most right now is to "keep the pressure up on the Soviets to prevent what we fear most, a pogrom. Keynote speaker Political Science Professor Zvi Gitelman said recent developments in the Soviet Union have allowed for a greater number of Soviet Jews to emigrate to the United States and Israel than ever be- fore. He said, however, the imple- mentation of glasnost - "openness" - policies have led to an up- swelling of anti-semitism sentiment. "People are coming home... a major branch of the Jewish family is being grafted back onto the Jewish tree. We must help the Jewish state welcome back the Jews of the Sovi Union," Gitelman said. David Belenky, a recent Soviet- 6migrd and another speaker at the rally, asked the crowd to remember that "anything can happen to Jews in the Soviet Union. Anyone could be in a Russian Jew's shoes." First-year law student David Saperstein said he attended the rally because of his concern for the anti- semitism he had seen while visiting Eastern Europe last April. He realized during his tour ot Poland, Czechoslovakia, and Hun- gary there is "real danger" for Jews in the Eastern Europe. "Many students view the problem (anti-semitism in the Soviet Union) as something in the abstract, but it is a real problem which we need to deal with," Saperstein said. r M y i ,, . 8 MICHELLE GUY/Daily Grupo Las Americas, a Venezuelan music and dance group, entertains the audience as part of the Latino Arts Extravaganza Friday. 1 Islam may replace Communism in Uzbekistan .y TASHKENT, USSR (AP) - Dozens of KGB and police officers gathered recently around the blue mosque in Tashkent's crumbling old city and listened warily as an Islamic cleric boomed out a call for political action. "Allah Akbar (God is Great)" shouted thousands of male voices in response to the mullah's call for Is- lam to replace Communism. A few miles from the mosque, workers were building an iron and concrete fence around the Uzbekistan Com- munist Party headquarters, which is being converted to a presidential palace, local newspapers report. Workers said the fence will be electrified to hold back any mobs that might attack Uzbeck leaders, as Romanian mobs did during a revolu- tion in that Balkan nation last year. "They fear the Romanian vari- ant," said Abdulrashid Sharif of Berlik, an Uzbek popular movement. He said public anger was rising against the reported corruption of Uzbekistan's Communist leadership. Uzbekistan, a central Asian re- public of 20 million about the size of soon-to-be united Germany, is a backwater of poverty at the edge of the democratic reform sweeping other parts of the Soviet Union. Some local leaders have called for political unity among the Central Asian republics against the ethnic Russian-dominated leadership in Moskow. Unrest has already broken out in three areas of Uzbekistan, and the republic's Communist officials appear to be girding for more demonstrations. "We see on television what is happening in the Baltics, in Russia and Moldavia," Sharif said. Unlike their counterparts in the Baltic and Russian republics, the Uzbek Communist Party has kept its grip on power. It banned demon- strations in February and suppressed a democratic opposition movement, activists said. "In Uzbekistan, the power of the Communists has not changed since the days of stagnation," said activist Igor Kadirov, who lives in the indus- trial city of Almalyk. The "period of stagnation" is the Soviet term for the 1964-82 rule of Leonid Brezh- nev. Uzbek reformers have their eyes. on the new president of the Russian: Federation, Boris Yeltsin, who quit, the Communist Party in July and, has persuaded the legislature to ap- prove sweeping political and eco- nomic changes. Uzbekistan has already exploded: in ethnic, economic and political vi-" olence in the Fergana, Andizhan and' Parkent areas. As many as 800 were, killed in June in Uzbek-Kirgizd, clashes in Osh, just over the border' in Kergizia. Public universities suffer cuts in funding by the Associated Press State budget problems are leading to more crowded classes, fewer teachers, and higher tuition at many public universities across the coun- try this fall. "We're in a situation that's dete- riorating very rapidly," said Richard Novak, director of state education policy and finance of the American r THE LIST What's happening in Ann Arbor today Speakers Meetings "Researching Organizations and "Students For the Exploration Employers" --- 4:10- 5:30 pm. and Development of Space" --- CP&P Room One. 7pm Michigan League, Room D. "Interviewing"-- 4:10- 5:00 pm. "Indian and Pakistani American CP&P Conference Rm. Students' Council Weekly "Employer Presentation: Smith Meeting" --- 6:30pm 219 Angell Barney, harris Upman & Co."--- Hall, for more info call 998-1791. 5-7 pm Business School- 1016 Furthermore Paton. Greek Dance Class --- 8 p.m. "P4S4 Pyrite, y-Brass and 4703 international center, Call Eleni 434- other compounds Explained" --- 1496 Inorganic Chemistry Seminar, Free tutoring in lower level math, Professor S. Lee, Chem bldg. rm. science and engineering courses - 1640. ---M, W, TH 8-10 pm, Rm 307 "Sukka Building" --- Progressive UGLi. Zionist Caucus, 4pm. Minnie's Co- "'Smoke-Free'- A Stop Smoking op 307 N. State. ", Program" --- First day of a four "A Panel Disession on the GuIf week Stnn Smokina nmum 1o m - Association of State Colleges and Universities. "What's happening in Northeastern and Midwestern states is spreading...They are facing sharp cuts that will have untold impact on those institutions. Among examples found in an Associated Press survey: The Florida Board of Regents has told the state's nine universities to come up with $49 million in cuts to help make up a $521 million state shortfall. Among the possibili- ties: eliminating the first summer school term. The City University of New York, faced with $42 million in budget cuts, is tightening enrollment procedures, cancelling 2,000 classes, dropping 670 adjunct teachers, and cutting library hours. This year the state reduced its contribution to CUNY's four-year colleges by $29 million, and the city pared its con- tribution to the community colleges by $13 million. After three years of sharp fund- ing decreases, Maryland Governor William Schaefer has asked that higher education funds be cut $41 million during the current fiscal year because of a $150 million shortfall in state revenue. Students staged a "Save UNC" rally this fall at the University of North Carolina to protest cuts that have led to fewer classes and students sitting on the floor in others. However, public campuses in Iowa, Louisiana, Utah, Idaho, Texas, New Mexico, and Arizona are enjoy- ing increased state appropriations and relatively modest tuition increases. "We were losing renowned pro- fessors to other states," said Marvin Roubique, assistant commissioner for finance of the Louisiana Board of Regents. "We were not able to com- pete on a regional and national level for professors. "I think the Legislature, the ad- ministration, and the higher educa- tion community in general have rec- ognized that we need to address the problems of higher education." But schools in at least 15 states - most of them in the East and Midwest where state financial prob- lems are most severe - are operat- ing on restricted budgets that have led to program cuts, fewer and more crowded classes, and reductions in faculty positions. NOWs Opinion Photo** Join the Daifl{ Call II . - 'I- RAINED OUT AT FESITFALL!! Still need your help!! Volunteer to recruit students to U of M: " High School Visits " Phone Call Outs " Host students " Student Panels ( MASSIT UNDERGRAD I V N. i t i I VmiETING UATE ADMISSIONS MC A R 7 1 a