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<text id=89TT3282>
<title>
Dec. 18, 1989: Let Earth Have Its Day
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
Endangered Earth Updates
Dec. 18, 1989 Money Laundering
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
ENVIRONMENT, Page 71
LET EARTH HAVE ITS DAY
</hdr>
<body>
<p>But the biggest demonstration in history should be only the
beginning
</p>
<p>By Jeanne McDowell
</p>
<p> It will begin at sunrise on April 22, with church bells
pealing for the health of the planet. In tiny chapels and grand
cathedrals, Sunday sermons will stress the moral responsibility
of environmental awareness. And in thousands of communities
around the world, citizens will stage a cacophony of events:
parades, proclamations, protests, teach-ins, trash-ins and
eco-fairs. In Seattle, residents will demonstrate against
pollution in Puget Sound. Environmentalists in West Bengal,
India, are planning a bicycle procession. Schoolchildren on
Mauritius, a tiny island in the Indian Ocean, will plant trees.
And a team of climbers from the U.S., the Soviet Union and China
intends to reach the summit of Mount Everest and clean up debris
left by previous expeditions. If all goes as planned, at least
100 million people will take part in the largest global
demonstration in history: Earth Day 1990.
</p>
<p> The April 22 date has special meaning for
environmentalists: it marks the 20th anniversary of the first
Earth Day. In that memorable 1970 mobilization, which evolved
from an idea by Senator Gaylord Nelson, more than 20 million
Americans, many of them students, rallied under the banner of
Mother Nature. Their plea for action helped lead to the passage
of the Clean Air Act and the creation of the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency.
</p>
<p> The organizers of Earth Day 1990 hope it will have a
similar galvanizing effect, that it will change individual
behavior and launch a decade of environmental activism. This
time the event will be international, reflecting the recognition
that all the major environmental threats are global in scope.
More than 100 countries, including Hungary and Uganda, have
started to form committees and plan activities. Says Denis
Hayes, a San Francisco lawyer and chairman of Earth Day 1990,
an international umbrella organization: "The whole thrust of
Earth Day as we go into the 1990s is an environment that is much
brighter, a far more diversified movement and, hopefully, a
working agenda for the next ten years."
</p>
<p> If Earth Day 1970 was almost spontaneous, next year's
sequel has become a strategic operation. Hayes, who was a
25-year-old Harvard law student when he temporarily dropped out
of school to help organize the first Earth Day, is the driving
force behind the current campaign. With principal funding from
foundations and individuals, Earth Day 1990 has a 115-member
American board of directors that includes prominent
environmentalists, politicians, business executives, religious
leaders, celebrities, labor officials and journalists, among
others. There is an international arm with representatives from
33 countries.
</p>
<p> At Earth Day 1990 headquarters in Palo Alto, Calif., 20
staff members are plotting strategy as if the event were a
political campaign. "We're organizing neighborhoods, regions and
special constituencies," says communications director Diana
Aldridge. The group has taken a few marketing cues from Madison
Avenue as well. As part of a drive to raise $3 million, Earth
Day 1990 is licensing its logo, which will be plastered on
everything from coffee mugs to windbreakers. Posters and ads
will soon appear carrying the slogan EARTH DAY 1990: WHO SAYS
YOU CAN'T CHANGE THE WORLD?
</p>
<p> But Hayes' group is not trying to run the whole show. It
will organize nationally and regionally and offer support for
local groups, making suggestions for setting up events. Several
smaller organizations are extremely active. Earth Day 20, a
group based in Seattle, is planning a week-long exposition in
a natural amphitheater in the Columbia River Gorge during the
seven days leading up to Earth Day. The events, which will
combine exhibits, musical performances and speeches, will be
broadcast live by satellite to screens in shopping malls and on
college campuses around the U.S. Earth Day 20 is also
co-sponsoring grass-roots action by the National Toxics Campaign
to urge companies that release excessive amounts of pollution
to sign good neighbor agreements on reducing toxic emissions.
</p>
<p> One of the main goals of Earth Day 1990 is to help broaden
the environmental movement far beyond its upper-class,
bird-watcher base. Six national labor unions have already
endorsed the event, and in February a group from Earth Day 1990
will embark on a nationwide tour to urge minority-group members
to get involved. Observes Gerry Stover, executive director of
the Environmental Consortium for Minority Outreach: "In this
country 4 out of 5 toxic-waste dumps are in or near minority
communities. These people have as much stake in what happens as
mainstream America, maybe more."
</p>
<p> Above all, the organizers hope to have political impact.
Says Christina Desser, a lawyer and executive director of Earth
Day 1990: "Whereas 1970 awakened people to the issues, 1990
needs to make the environment the screen through which all other
decisions are made. I want to see millions of people
metaphorically standing in the same direction and yelling the
same thing to policymakers: `Hey, get it, you guys? We mean it.
If you don't respond, we'll find someone who will.'"
</p>
<p> Earth Day 1990 will show how much people care about their
planet. The challenge of the next decade will be to channel
that concern into strong and sustained action to save endangered
earth.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>