J T xhlb on focu on th oct I problems and ius which 11 ct n urban community. uch a hom Ie n ss, Ingle p r ntlng. poverty, nd jobles n . This exhibition Is the cr tlon of photogr ph r Charz e Torr nee. Torrence is currently a student at Detroit's C nter for Cr tiv Studl s, and will grad e In April. T how runs until arch 21, 1993. I For inform lion (868-134n. ...__----- ---J I WED ESDA Y, I GING ALTERNATIV S: WAR OR PEACE? - A P rmanent ARCH 3 col etlon from March 1-11, 1993 at the Swords Into Plowshares Peace C nter & Ga lery, 33 E Adam. For Information (965-5422). THE VIOLENT UNIVERSE - A forty-five minute program every Tues. and Thurs. March 1-25 at 7pm. The program Is narrated by veteran actor Vincent Price. This sky show takes planetarium vi Itors on a tour of 'thlngs that go bump In th night.' Location: The C rr-Fles Planetarium of MCC, 221 S. Ouarterllne Rd In Mu egon. For Information (777-0289). A ERICAN LIFE COLLECTION GALLERY - A howca e for furniture and decorative Items reproduced from the museum's coltectlons. A dealer resource center provldes gallery visitors with spec at-order Information and a list of available sizes, colors and finishes plus the names of retailers who n American LJf Collection products near their home towns. Henry Ford Museum, 20900 Oakwood Blvd In Dearborn, MI (313/271-1620). (313/577-2972). A PIECE OF MY HEART - By Shirley Lauro, p rform March 6-22. This Is a earlng portrait of six women who leav for Vietnam rn the spirit of adventure and are sub quently lowly beaten down by the reality of bloodshed and brutality. When the women return, I they experience many of the same TUESD,AY, I THURSDAY, difficulties re-adjustlng as do the " MARCH 4 men to whom they mlnlsted. MARCH 2 . Inspired by Keith Walker's book of ____________ __, STARTING HERE STARTING oral histories, also entitled A P/eCIJ , , of My Heert. Earl D.A. Smith VISIONARY VIEWS: SOCIETY IN NOW - By lyricist Richard Maltby Theatre (McNichol campus). CONFLICT - The current art Jr. and composer Richard Shire, Brochure available. exhibition at the Detroit Repertory opens at WSU Studio Theatre on (313/993-1130) Theatre, (13103 Woodrow Wilson). Mafch 4-14. Tickets are $6. . Starting Here, Starting Now Catherine Worth, Chet Holowicki and Dianne Sievers appear in the musical revue "Starting Here, Starling Now" in the Studio Theatre, located downstairs at the Hilberry Theatre, March 4 thrQugh 14. For tickets and information, call 577-2972. All proceeds go to the Blakely Scholarship Fund. Photo by Mary Jane Murawka. continu d from 81 Bridge .and Ford Fairlaine. He also starred in a pair of network TV comedies, including the criti- cally acclaimed N ttitude. But musi . ha: alway .cn the m an which M rri expres hi e . 'nee b st. Atter a rics of i nt m, tiOlnl concert dates fol­ lowing th J ( Tim runion, Morris took "time [f" t chart hi next r ativ' 'v lution. "I wantco t wher I hadn't been' befor " "i how the artist summed up hi stra1 'gy r a new }o album. "it'� an ev r-chang- ing n out ther " ut it' . nevcr nou 1h t ju ,t jump on the lat t tr ml. Y u'v ot to do mething mm ' ... somethIng t mak it y ur own. or instan • I want d t d a lot of hip-hop n thi . album. But the rap I'm d lin '1 was my wn thm '... mcthin I'd be'n dev'}­ )PIJl for ten y aI'S. II But rnp is only part f the pure pi asur' 0 this lat t Morri. Day ff rin . "I m d in more ing­ in "he explain. "I w, nt t get acr . s a wh le range ol Ie ling and attitudes, which i wh I I want d t rnak .ur a f w ballads w re includ d in the mix. I wa working n instinct...putting what worked together with wha: was hap ning igo't n w, to me and my music." The re: ult i Guafan­ t .cd "This is the album I've ( 1- way want d to make." enthu es M irri . " or a long tim I think .op! aw and heard rn in only on Ii rht. Thi. i my pportunity 0' continued from 81 FO R cc Ii in the to how everyone that th rc's a whol lot of ways to be Morris Day." With a izzling new album in the can, and hi' wn company G r .cnnous Prod uctions, con­ tinumg t d .velop acting and pro­ ducmg po sibilitie , Morris Day i poi ed t pr v that talent, style and attitude 1 a c mbination that can ',t b b at. And that s guaran- te d. ' United Kingd m, O· eal admits that it' n t enougJt. "This is my Ii c. I want always be doing this," h Y , "when I'm old, I till want to b sin ing song that make people feel good, ong that pc pIe can make I ve to and engthen relation hips with." I making quality, pa ionate and r mantic m JC 1 what k ps AI xander 0 - eal ing, Lo . � Make No ense . h uld k cp hi oing, at 1 a t until his n xt pre �c t. DC c.m.r of Pa1Iorm.� 3·3 OJOU Powerful Wom n Or tor - SOJour r Truth kn w r m Ion w om God. S w ed from podium to podium cro N w Engl nd, the Ea ern Sa bo rd, th South, nd Mldw t, proclaiming Truth bout Negro right , wom n' right nd hum n right. A Sojourner for Truth, he fin lIy ettJ d In B ere, MI. H r Itf nd ow rful p eche perform d on our t g , demonstrating her strength nd : wi dom. (70 mlnut •. Or d 4 to 12). 3-4 ESCAPE TO FREEDOM By Ossle Davis - Frederick Dougl Insist d on I mlng to r d at tim when It w III gal for Negroes to read or write. He kn w reading wa his true freedom. His plrlt and determln lon, In spite of Incredible ob cles, I d to hi car r as one of th gr e or ora of the 18008. He spoke out for abolltlon,and became an advisor to President LIncoln and we the first Black U.S. Statesman. (grad .. 4 to 12). ' 3-5 MARTIN LUTHER KING - I Have A Dream (th moral leader of the Civil Rights Movement) - His dream and the Civil Rights Movement are pow rfully portrayed on our tage with th ongs, the speeches, and the peopl who marched with him. See Rosa Parks ays ·No·. Exp rlence the marches and the hi orlc events reenacted. See MLK and his dream come alive. , By Tureka Turk And Karen Kelly The mini eries "Queen" is a tep ba kwards for the advancement of fi lrns chronicli ng the life and times of Black people. The series, based on an idea of Alex Haley' and the end­ ing chapter in the famed novel "Roots" pampers white viewers by giving them a reason to believe that lavery war a dark tunnel with a light of hope at the end. "true love". Constantly introducing chara ters th�. nfirm Bla k tereotypes and unreali tic portrayal of African peo­ ple. "Queen" i another version of "Gon With thewind", only in black­ fa e. The tory begins on The Forks of Cypre , a euphoric plantation in Floren e, where the laves arc treated o well it justific the pi t of a young lave girl Ialh ng madly in love with her master. Easter, played by Jasmine Guy, consumed by passion and love for her owner, Jame Jackson Jr. (Tim Daly). bears a child from thi forbidden love. The child i called Qu en. When th Civil War com ,James Jack! on Jr., oes to fight for the di 1_ nity of the South. and Easter and Queen are th completely upper­ tive of hi bing a part of fforts to keep the t�o of them and their peo- ple opp ed and legaily enslaved. Consideri ng that 99.9 P reent of the bicultural children conc ived in thi time w re conceived out of VI -' loot and frcq uent -rdP make' CBS' mim- erie a hard pill to swallow for Afncan Americans who know the painful reality. The thought of love a tually being a �art of a relationship that r b 'd on the ownership of one individual ver an th r i incompre­ hensible. vharity Clark, David Ram y, and Stacey Herring, all De­ troit residents, appear in � rraine Hansberry's powerful drama about cultur�identity, integration and family unity, �A Raisin in the Sun H, playing arch 5 through March 14 at Ithe Bonstelle Theatre. Perform nces are Fridays and Sat­ urdays at 8pm., and Sundays t 2pm. For tickets and information call 577-2960. Photo b Pat Clay. II 'U royal pain or rican Am T W RD MU TT, usu- ally atta hed to person belonging t par nt of differ nt ethnic b k­ grounds, lit rally m ans a mule, a hybrid from a ho and an . The French and Latin meanin th ub- ri e to thi definition and the dic- tionary r lat mulatto a� kn wn II • I • ncan for their endurance and ure f oted­ ne s. The term "mulatto" is wed consi - tently and ca ually throu hout the film. and throughout di cus 'ion of . th film. The otlcnsivc term w . given to the "mulatto" .hildren on the plantati n 4 years ago by the 'Ia� mas ter him 'elf and has stained the English language '\'l;r since. "Mulatto" like. "quadroon" and "octaroon" irnpf that African bin d resembles som type of .ava rc or bea t blood type. " uadroon" and " ctaro n", m aning a pers n having one-fourth or ne-ci hth "ncgroc blood". Queen a bicultural child born of the plantation, I tortured by a con­ stant truggle for her wn identity (She goes from. "Ou .cn, you's whi te girl now", re erri ng to her pas - i ng for white, to "I' ra" when' he find' that th mulatt . 0 the ra re faced with continual double-edged sword. When white w n't work­ i ng, he became a "ne ra"). African by culture, are nurturin and communal peopl . but there w notrace f thcse charactcn: uc inthe film. Calling Queen nam such ( "white bit h" and con tantly r jcct­ i ng her place in the Black community was not only unreal but unchar eter­ i tic of the treatment Bla k peopl' how(ed' to n ton icultural . hut light-�kinncd Bla ·k. ( w II. t to ay that I n m d . mlt ' I t 1 - tw n different had' f Bla k '0- pIe but the 0 ert f C on the derual o one Blacb oman', rol in a Bla k communal r' k flav r.' ethni make-up and one i with a � whit man who violently rapes her upon hi di covcry f her bicultural b kground. The only love he ot in life arne from Black people. Her father and white family all di re- arded h r and were di .graccd by her hem. nc of the only Black men in "Que nil portrayed as being a proud and confident Black man. ti the :t .rc type of bein 1 filled with hate. wen today, a Black man who loves hims If. and make' it kn wn that he i: P -Black i u ually marked anti-white a t rcotypc that is en­ for .ed rep atedly in the film. One of the mai n arguments a ainst the mili c.; tant movement of the ixtie: includ­ ing the Black Nation list m v ment and the tea hing. '0 Malcolm X, were that th 'e idcol zics all . ub­ sen c to thc teaching of hate. Thi tervotypc tainted the haract r por­ trayal of Queen's fi rst Bla k love th father of her first n, and ended with hi. burned body win ring from a tree lik a trange fruit. If "Queen" th main tr am b 'lief 0 m rica' id a 0 'lavery, then men a 1. well de' tvcd. h continual force(eeding f "Go With l Wind" typ tories that dramatize lav life in �arly America will result in a rude awak- nin f r th Am ri 'an p pic. If r m 'mh 'lin ,,1m' I tOI m TI 'a i (t� nml' I tahk dncl lomantIc a. memones I the "dl tntlted ' uth" and. uthern ho pitality. Am nca is r mem 'flng an illw'ion that w nt dO\"n WIth the' n 1 rate fla .