The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, April 22, 1992 -Page 3 i Earth Day events to take place on Diag by Christopher Scherer Daily Staff Reporter Earth Day festivities will com- mence at noon today, with the bands Southgoing Zak and Hour of Power performing on the Diag. From 1:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m. on the Diag there will be tables full of educational material on various environmental topics. Other events include lectures, panel discussions and hands-on exhibits. In case of rain, the events will be moved to the Michigan Union Ballroom. From 5:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m., bands will perform a benefit concert at Palmer Field near the Central Campus Recreation Building. The bands include Frank Allison and the Odd Sox, °Jonni and Mr. Picasso Head. Nytasha Walters, a research assis- tant at the Institute for Social Research, said the groups that will be on the Diag won't only represent students. "It is a coalition of different groups who want to emphasize envi- ronmental awareness," she said. Some of the organizations sched- uled to be on the Diag are Air Conservation, concentrating on Global Warming, Ozone Depletion and Acid Rain; the Ann Arbor Ecology Center; Greenpeace and the Sierra Club/EPA. "There are 25 different organiza- tions for everyone to attend to get a perspective on a variety of compo- nents of environmental organiza- tions," she said. LSA senior Rachel Rubenfaer said people attending Earth Day would find out how easy it is to con- serve and help the environment in various ways. Rubenfaer said the goal of Earth Day is "for people to be aware of the problem and then to be able to find a solution." Stewert Kaplan, coordinator of the junk mall project, sad the slogan for Earth Day is "Earth Day '92 and You: Small Steps to Big Solutions." Kaplan said his table will collect junk mail then send it back to com- panies in envelopes with rocks in them. "If they pollute our campus then they are going to pay for it." Kaplan related his concern about the environment to a typical child- hood experience. "I've got an anal- ogy - ifs sort of like when our mothers and fathers tell us to clean our rooms. We tell them we'll do it later because we want to talk on the phone, watch TV or something," Kaplan said. "People on the planet are saying they'll do it later. We're starting to realize each year there is no later." ABC's Beth Nissen recalls life since 'U' by Karen Pier7 Daily Staff Reporter ABC correspondent Beth Nissen's warm+ voice and cool demeanor project an unlikely veneer for a journalist who has experienced the 15 years of hard work and struggle which1 have brought her from the newsroom of the+ Wall Street Journal to the battlefields of Nicaragua. Sitting in the peace of her parents' Ann Arbor home, Nissen talked about the contra- dictions of a woman in a war zone, a television reporter who is uncomfortable on television and a woman who - despite her parents' long and stable marriage - is afraid of marriage. As the daughter of LSA Assistant Dean for Academic Affairs Eugene Nissen, her choice of where to go to school was obvious. It was at the University that she discov- ered journalism. "I started to write for the Daily during my sophomore year.... I didn't like the competi- tion for the front page, so I started my own weekly column on the editorial page, called 'Paragraphics' about issues that interested me. "I had enormous fun with the column. I did my writing and interviewing outside of the Daily, and then I would bring it in or send it in through campus mail. I think I was doing that because I realized that if I got too close (to the Daily) I'd get hooked." But she did. "Once I got involved I was hopelessly wedded to this business." She continued her education in journalism when a professor encouraged her to go to Columbia University for graduate work in journalism. That professor told her, "even a year in New York would be good for my Midwestern soul," she said. As part of a Pulitzer fellowship she won there, Nissen had a pro forma interview with The Wall Street Journal. At that time, it had no openings. Later, however, there was an opening at the Journal's Dallas bureau, and she immediately went to talk with the bureau chief. In Dallas she faced a special challenge: the bureau chief had never hired a woman willingly. Nissen was interested. She went to Dallas, and got the job in an unusual way: "I think I basically out-drank the guy." As her new assignment, Nissen began to cover Central America, mainly because at that time nothing was happening there, she said. Shortly afterwards, Nicaragua had a revo- lution, and Central America became a politi- cal hotbed. Death visited her beat frequently. Dean Nissen recounts something his daugh- ter had told him. "She was crossing a street under fire, holding the hand of a little eight- year-old girl. The next thing she knew all she was holding was the hand. The rest of her was blown away." "I thought in a macho culture a blond gringa like me would be safe.... Then I real- ized if white blond American nuns could be killed, they could kill me too. "I knew my parents were concerned about me," Nissen said quietly, "but they also trusted me (to use good judgment). Sometimes I abused that trust" After covering Central America for Newsweek, she taught at Columbia University. While there, Amnesty; International invited her to speak on a panel about human rights, along with ABC Nightline host Ted Koppel, who had just re- turned from South Africa. Following the panel, at the reception, Koppel said he was impressed with her, and asked if she was interested in broadcast journalism. "I made some flippant remark saying something like, 'Every time I think about it, I lay down until the feeling passes."' Koppel persuaded her to visit the Nightline set, telling her it was a serious show, and she did come visit the set. Nightline did not have the money to hire her, so she was transferred to ABC Nightly, News as a trainee. On her second day there the Iran-Contra scandal broke. Since then, Nissen has become a correspon- dent on "The American Agenda" segment of the ABC Nightly News, which covers American problems such as poverty, AIDS and drug abuse. What is it? If you don't know what this is a picture of, you obviously have not started your term paper yet. This plethora of geometric shapes watches over students as they squint and sweat, cry and create in a garden of technical delights. Next time you get writers' block, look up for a glimpse of this scintillating scene. Fa~rtwILaft-d (rood Lu c v-1fi Svc, 'one lea n" +e D;, joi4f ck4 r od of {fayccv UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL Announces its Summer Sunday Schedule 9:30 a.m. May - August 1511 Washtenaw 663-5560 Alyu R , Ven - vier miss a . China land wars evict peasants from fin BEIJING (AP) - Small, bloody land wars are breaking out in the Chinese countryside as local officials looking for quick profits push peasants off their land and sell it. Although technically no land can be bought in socialist China, businesses are buying "land use rights" and evicting peasants who know no other life but farming and have no way to obtain new land or jobs. "Deng Xiaoping doesn't care about us," one dispossessed peasant said after appealing in vain to authorities in Beijing. W RIT E OR T HE M IC HIG AN D A IL Y' CONGRATULATIONS! Jodi Wilktowski Darlene Ray Johnson Reinaldo Schumann You are the three lucky winners of a $50 gift certificate for dinner at Bella Ciao. Please bring a picture I.D. to The Michigan Daily 's Senior Staff Office, located on the second floor of the Student Publications Building before April 30th to claim your prize. __________________________________1' THE LIST What's happening in Ann Arbor today Ann Arbor's DEADQUARTERS i0 ootbags d jewelry clothing Meetings Ann Arbor Coalition to Un- leash Power,Michigan Union, Crofoot Rm, 7:30 p.m. Hindu Students Weekly meeting B115 MLB, 8 p.m. Korean Students Association, weekly mtg, Michigan Union, Ander- son Rm, 5 p.m. LatintAmerican Solidarity Committee, weekly mtg, Michi- gan Union, Michigan Rm, 8 p.m. Rainforest Action Movement, weekly mtg, 1046 Dana (School of Natural Resources), 7 p.m., AIESEC, general meeting, 1276 business Administration Bldg, 6:00 p.m.. Students Concerned About An- imal Rights, weekly mtg, Do- ininick's, 7 p.m. American Advertising Federa- Lion (AAF) 3040 Frieze Bldg. 6:00 p.m. U of M Shorin-Ryu Karate-Do Club, Weekly meeting, CCRB Mar- ' ial Arts rm, 8-9 p.m. }Iscussion of Objectivism: The philosophy of Ayn Rand" )Business meeting, Chapter 5, 2212 MLB, 8:00 p.m. Speakers 4Chemistry Speaker: The Pauson Khard Reaction in Organic Synthesis," 1 6 4 0 Chem, 4:00 p.m. ing service. Sun-Thurs 8 p.m.-1:30 a.m., Fri-Sat, 8 p.m.-11:30 p.m. Stop by 102 UGLi or call 936-1000. Also, extended hours: Sun-Thurs 1:30-3 a.m. Stop by Angell Hall Computing Center or call 763-4246. today is Last Day of service, Northwalk, North Campus night- time team walking service. Sun-Thur 8 p.m.-1:30 p.m. Fri-Sat 8:00 p.m.. 11:30 p.m. Stop by 2333 Bursley or call 763-WALK. Today is last day of servicef Undergraduate Psychology Peer Advising, Undergraduate Psychology Office, K-108 West Quad, 9:00 a.m.- 4: 00 p.m. ECB Writing Tutors, An- gell/Mason Hall Computing Center, 7-11 p.m. U-M Taekwondo Club, Monday workout. CCRB Martial Arts Rm 2275, 6:30-8 p.m. Beginners wel- come. East Quad/RC Social Group for Lesbians, Gay Men, and Bi- sexuals, weekly mtg, 9 p.m. U of M Ninjitsu Club, practice, I-M Bldg, wrestling rm, 7-8:30 p.m Canterbury House, Eucharist, 4:10 p.m. Lord of Light Church Stress and Time Management, Consultations with peer counselors available, 3100 Michigan Union, 1- 3 p.m. Editor's Note: For weekly events returning next year, a new list form 215 S. STATE Ann Arbor 995-DEAD (upstairs) i " "; lf discs risbees + f crystals an alternativec I - .. j a0SL" JMMEK ATF ID MUCH RATHER BE : THE MALL! 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