ENTERTAINMENT IN BRIEF Hollywood bid fond f rewell howbiz legend nd friend bid a fond farewell to Redd Foxx, CBS executive were vowing to do all they could 0 eep the how going. of pres , no decision had beenm de to whether or not Foxx would be replaced or his character wri tten out of the erie. The eries, "Royal Family" (which also tarred Della Ree e his wife) at­ tracted better numbers in the Wednesday night time slot than CBS has exp rienced in everal years. Foxx, who was 69, died of a heart attack hours after col­ lap ing on the set of the how. (Personally, I can't imagine who could fill his shoe ). A Sequel for Shaharazad Ali? This time last year, Shaharazad Al i had the African-American com­ munity in an uproar. Her book, "The Blackman's Guide To Understanding the Black­ woman," pointed th finger t - the Black women and offered up a philosophy of female sub­ servience. She got a ton of publicity, sold a lot of booles, and ended up making people either love her or hate her. Looking back, Ali says she. was surprised by the negative response her book got. The main point of contention was it advocated slapping Black women. • Ali denies ever advocating any such thing. But on page _ 169 of her book, she writes "there is never an excuse for' � hi tting. a Blackwoman anywhere but in the mouth. Beca use it is from the : whole ... that all her. rebellion culminates into words. Her unbridled tongue i the main 4 reasooshe can't get along with the Blackman. She often needs a reminder". In the past year, Ali has changed her tune. Meanwhile" next on her agen­ d a is "The B lackwoman 's Guide To Understanding the Blackman", due next year. Strength and spirituality of Reggae music Through the hands of Bob Marley, reggae music was created and shaped into a wellspring of strength and spiri tuality. These same talents were passed down to children Ziggy, Stephen, Cedella, and Sharon, who together form Ziggy Marley and The Melody Makers. They have succeeded with this new blend of art without· hift­ ing from the traditional piritual roots of reggae music. Jahmekya is their third album on the Virgin Records label. The LP represents the artistic prowess and the com­ ing of age of a group of young musicians. Forbe reveal Nation' riche t New Kids on the Block have proven they've got the right stuff to Forbes Magazw's Ii t of the 40 highe t paid entertainers in the U.S. )he group' $115 million gr earning beat out comedian Bill Co by' S113 milion. Oprah Winfrey came in third t 80 million. c If the recent ucce of the la bl eman Robert Johnson' n in­ dication, thin going well for the blue . "The Complete Recordin ," boxed et of John on' entire recorded output, pent week fter week on the Billboard album ch rt over th p t year, hanging in there next to 11 modern. ynUre ized m ic h to offer. Not b d for recordings made in the 19305 by one man and his guitar. AI though Johnson i not around to ba k in his belated recognition (he was poisoned by a jealous husband in 1939 when he was 27), hi legacy live on boldly in the blues. And, while blue mu ic and blues musicians finally may be receiving the re pect and uccess they deserve, . the road has not been easy. The blue was born of what tum­ of-the-century Blacks knew best: hard times, racism and findingjoy in life despite adversity. Built on a musical framework that sprang from gospel mu ic and the call-arid­ response "field hollers" of the cotton rows, the blues grew as a popular form of musical expression among rural Blacks. ' The most' fertile ground for the blue was Mississippi's Delta region, the plain to the ease of the Mi issippi River. Robert Johnson w j t one of the many musicians who grew up there and knew the back roads that led to the Delta' IMny "juke joints" and house partie where a bluesman could earn a few dollars. THE OWNER OF one such . "hole in the wall" was McKinley Morganfield, better known .by his nickname, "Muddy Waters." In ad- c around the country, which hosted blues concerts and events as part of the Benson & Hedges Blues Festival. the 4-year-old festival, which opened thi year in Los Angeles and traveled to Houston, Dallas, Atlanta, New York and Chicago, featured some of the bigge t name in the blue , including B.B. King, Buddy Guy and John Lee Hooker. Hooker, 74, is Originally from the Mississippi Delta town of Clarksdale and cored his first hit in 1948 with' "Boogie Chilum." He remains an active performer and recording art­ ist, with a recently released album entitled "Mr. Lucky" that features guest appearance ,by such well­ known artists as Keith Richards, Van Morrison and current bluesman Robert Cray. HOOKER POINTS TO the barebones honesty of the blues as the rea on it has maintained las impor­ tance through the years. "Every ong I ing something that happened to my life or some­ body else's life in the world," h has said. "If it ain't hitting me, it' hit­ ting omeone else." e rim nd find-ng joy I Ii de pi adv r i y. Public Enemy Strikes Black Redlo.cop .• Th Column From &lIey Bro.dc."'ng SemeN VI. Serra Syndlc.tlon "Apocalypse 91: The Enemy Strikes Black" rna kes Pub lie Enemy's foruth time out of the box. Still hard-to-the-core, Public Enemy has turned it's Black Nationalist eye on the African- , American community. Starting with their first album, "Yo Bum Rush The Show", the group has pushed it's agenda forward with each successive and successful album. Public Enemy takes dead alm at Black radio and it's refusal to play any kind of hard core rap. With "Apocalypse 91: The Enemy Strikes Black", group leader Chuck D. says it was time to look inward at what ails .us. Not only are we the subject of PE's close scrutiny but so too IS Black radio, the State of Arizona and The New York Post, among others. In the cut "How To KillA Radio Con­ sultant", Public Enemy take's dead aim at Black radio and it's refusal to play any kind of hard rap. Then too, Chuck D.'s waging his own private war �ith the dltion to running his bar busin Waters played guitar and ang. In 1947, Waters decided that he had had enough of rural Missi ippi and followed the huge po t- World Waf II 'migration of Southern Blacks to the North. • Waters found a better life in Chicago. Amplifying his Delta­ blues style to suit the rowdy taverns of the city's South Side, Waters helped create a tough, new electric tyle of music that would come to be known as "Chicago Blues." Recording 'for the Chess Records Corp., Water and artists like Howlin' wolf, Little Walter and Wil­ lie Dixon forged orne of the greatest and most important American music ever. Rock 'n' roll still w years away when Waters was cutting powerhouse recordings like '!Ro Stone," a song that later would in­ spire the name of the famous British rock band. Chicago became the country' blue mecca and, today, maintains a vital blues performing and recording scene . The blues tradition has been celebrated this year in various cities CONFUSED? We are. Why was Rap star Ice Cube - shown here with Prince Akeem - at the Nation of! lam's Savior's Day Tribute to the Honorable Elijah Muhammad. Ice Cube pushe St. Ides, a powerful malt liquor marketed to young Black males. The Mu lim preach ab tlnance from alcohol. Maybe no- more t. Ide commercials for Ice Cube? powers behind St. Ides Malt Liq­ uor. 'In August he filed a S5 million dollar' law uit agains the Me­ Kenzie River Corporation, the marketing company behind S1. Ides. They used Chuck D.'s voice in a radio commercial without his permission. Even if they had asked they wouldn't have gotten it. Now, he says "I'm suing the hell out of them". In the meantime.Public Bnerny maintains its position as a trendset­ ter in rap music. Recognizing that the next wave in rap may be it's combination with rock music, Public Enemy has re-recorded their 1988 single "Bring The Noize" with the rock group Anthrax. . This past summer, they did orne tour dates with Sisters of Mercy and the punk rock Gang of Four. (Ice-T and EPMD are two other rap acts that toured this sum­ mer with rock bands. And of course Run DMC did it with Aerosmith on "Walk This Way" back in 1986). Churck D. says the connection is a natural one. All in all, the point Public Enemy lead Chuck D. keeps making on "Apocalypse 91" is that the Black community has run out of excuses and is running out of time. It's time to get on it, before it really is "Apocalypse. 91. " (f yo are a local entert iner would Ii to b featured on our Ent rtainm nt pag end in phot s along wi hi 'tory behind your gr u or ac. - nd to: Michiga . izen P.O. Box 03 �O, Hi hi nd P r 1.482 Not if the membe of the loc 1 AACP Beverly Hill /Hollywood chapter fol­ low through on their vow to take the national office to court, eeking an injunction to top the ceremony, 1 ed for January 11th at the Wiltern Theatre in Lost Angel . The di pute between the two chapters cente on con­ trol of th how, which w organized nd nurtured by the Hollywood chapter. The wards gala h m d tremendou gain in popul ri ty and is teLevi ed yearly. It is hoped that serie of both chapters will olve the dispute. In the meantime. nomin tions for thi ye r' ceremonies were recently an­ nounced, and this year unlike many others, was reflective of a bumper crop in Hollywood film ctivity. Up for best motion picture were "Boyz N' The Hood", " "The Five Heartbeats", "Jungle Fever", "New Jack City", and "To Sleep WiCh Anger". Best motion picture acting nominations went to We ley Snipe ("New Jack City"), Danny Olover ("To S�ep WithAnger"), and Larry Fishburne, Cuba Gooding Ir., and Ice Cube: aU for thell\Parts in "Boyz N' The Hod". In music, among the top vote getters were Natalie Cole, new Motown Sensation "Boyz II Men",and Luther Vandross. 'The First Ladies of Rap' for her rapid, but clear poetic lyrics, and M.C. Lyte, the 20-year-Old diva who w the first rap tar to perform at Carnegie Hall, are also earning rave review for their unique, and. sometimes political approaches to: rap. . However, "Naughty Girl" Nikki D, the only female on the Def Jam Label, expresses frustration at fans who "listen and watch your videos, but won't come ee you"; and rap's first successful diva, Roxanne Shante, who is 1984 hit the airwaves running with her cl lc "Roxanne Roxanne, " explains ho'Y sbc was not taken seriously when she first ex­ pressed intere t in the ne music .. Superstar M.C. Lyte adds that the, heavily male-populated field is final­ ly beginning to open up to women, "slowly, but surely.'" With versatile performers such as SaH-N-Pepa's spirited members, Queen Latifah, Monie Love, and M.C. Lyte leading- the pack, Ebony explores the triumphs and struggles of "The First Ladies of Rap", in this month's issue. Rap's new wave of female rap­ pers are fresh, young and adding new dimension to urban music's newest genre. The sassy three-member team ofSalt-N-Pepa, the first female .. group to earn platinum success in rap music, are proving that they are legitimate forces to be reckoned with by rap notables, M.C. Hammer, Big Daddy Kane, L.L. Cool J and others. The regal Queen Latifah, the 21- year-old phenomenon whose singles feature screaming horns and har­ monious vocals, and London-born Monie Love, also 21, who's known YoYoh