APRIL 1988 Life And Art U. THE NATIONAL COLLEGE NEWSPAPER 23 APRIL 1988 * Life And Art U. THE NATIONAL COLLEGE NEWSPAPER 23 Freshman pens ovel, wins book contest By Danielle Storer * The Daily Californian U. of California, Berkeley Before coming to U. of California, Berkeley, many students worry about vhether they will be able to write the required papers. But before 18-year-old Michael Behrens came to Berkeley last fall, he spent the summer composing a 200-page novel. Late last December, Behrens found out that his novel had won first prize in a national writing contest. The book, which he calls Devil and the Deep Blue Sea, will be published next November, and Behrens will receive a $2,500 adv- nce against royalties. Behrens learned of the Avon Books-sponsored contest from a flier in his English class, which called for "books for young adults, about young adults." Behrens said,"It looked so inviting; I figured, 'How many kids my age write novels?'" The framework of Behrens' novel is his own experiences. "I wrote about a kid moving in his mid-teens from one side of the country to the other, which is what I did. It's as good a place as any to start. Some characters are based on people I know, and some aren't at all." White rapper can jam with the best By Evan Gahr The Daily Pennsylvanian U. of Pennsylvania I may brag but Isure don't lie/I like baseball and hot dogs and apple pie/ I'm the all-American kid from an Ivy League school/Who likes to take a book and change all the rules. College senior Scott Shahmanesh claims to be the only Ivy League- educated rapper in the business, and says his background provides an in- novative approach to rap which makes his success in the industry in- evitable. He said he is working with deejay T. K. Blade on some demos to send to major record labels, and ex- pects to be signed by one of them. A friend and member of Shahmanesh's entourage, dental stu- dent Jay Selznick, said U. of Pennsyl- vania students were initially skeptic- al about Shahmanesh's planned career in rap "because it isn't one of the stereotypical professions-busi-, ness, law, medicine." Shahmanesh acknowledges he is not the only rap- per with lofty aspirations, but asserts his music is not a spurious attempt to cash in on the growing rap industry. He added that audiences are some- times hostile nevertheless when he takes the stage. But Shahmanesh is not deterred by their attitude. So you say I'm white and I should be black/And you got this idea that white boys can't rap/This may be true but not in my case/I'm gonna throw down now and rap in your face. Shahmanesh's self-described "all- American kid background" is not a sheltered one. He lived the first 12 years of his life in Flatbush, a racial- ly-mixed Brooklyn neighborhood. Lorenzo Penn, a Philadelphia-based rap manager who advises Shahmanesh, saidthatgrowingup in Brooklyn gave Scott an understand- ing of the rap culture. "He has the culture behind the style," Penn said. That image will help Shahmanesh succeed, said manager Penn. He notes that those people who often use the ghetto background of some rap- pers to dismiss their legitimate musical form as a "second-level genre" would be unable to dismiss Shahmanesh as "a second-rate think- er who's pursuing silly antics." Ideals Continued From Page 17 to explain Vietnam to a five-year-old, and I thought that Watergate was the name of a farm. How can we be expected to develop- to want to develop-a meaningful phi- losophy of life, when we grew up in a fundamentally disillusioned society? And how can we, as the first generation to grow up with nuclear normalcy, be expected to have faith in the future? Money, at least, provides a bit of security. There's a comfortable routine in earning it. Skeptics are out there, no doubt, raging against the gimme- gimme attitude of today's depraved youth. But I see the desire to "be very well off financially" as a craving for sta- bility. Lacking confidence in the future, today's freshmen want something tangible, present, now-and money is an immediate reward for one's daily labor. Developing a meaningful philoso- phy of life seems too much of a commit- ment, placing too much stock in the fu- ture. Besides, you can't eat philosophy. It won't keep you warm. And a meaning- ful philosophy of life is useless in a world that baffles the senses. Pundits predict the trend of the '90s will be "cocooning" as "coach potatoes." Meat loaf, gravy, and rice pudding are replacing mesquite-grilled baby quail and pine nuts. The very definition of "financially well off' is changing; in- stead of providing access to luxury and status, it's becoming a way of securing yourself against the cold. Comfort me, n hold me, feed me. Though that's too basic to be philosophy, it's essential in, the sense of being primitively, univer- sally true.. Is this the meaningful philosophy of life those freshmen of 1967 claimed was a "very important" goal? If so, they're not looking for higher consciousness any more than my generation is out for the big bucks. What we all really want is a safe, warm place to hide. f Size: S M L XL (circle one) ADDRESS APT CITY STATE ZIP Offer expires 12/31/88 or when supply is exhausted. 5gel',OM21660