. 0 W 111Cj( SZL4-Il4Zry ~ **~4 iii , )I N! ' ! * , -'Y - . I y; yy N# "w;a "T r :': r4 C f v + kr..31 shouldn't be shocked at the idea of censorship. But one problem that people don't really raise in any courtroom when they're dealing with this, or any classroom, anywhere for that matter, no one ever talks about the consciousness of the masses of the people that listen to this music - music that is deemed obscene, or music that is labeled explicit. No one is looking at . .. everyone is looking at the artist, but no one looks at the masses of people buying the record. Because if you look at the masses of the people buying the record, you have to look at who taught those people to think, and respect what it is they're buying. And if you point the finger at who thought and taught those people.. . who taught those people to respect sex and violence, you have to point to the religious and economic and educational system. (It) plagues our minds everyday and makes us respect sex and violence. So the problem with censorship, I think, is not with the artist. It's with the educational systems that teach the people to hate themselves. It teaches the people to buy 2 Live Crew.,.. and mostly women. It teaches women to respect ... disrespect. It teaches women that if somebody calls you a bitch, you agree. If someone calls you a ho, you agree. You buy the record, and agree with them. "The only way you can be absorbed by this business is if you attach yourself to it. If you attach to yourself to anything, the attachments will absorb you. That's the whole point of "Material Love." If you fall in love with material items, love sneaks right up and snuffs you. So when you fall in love with your industry, your industry is gonna swallow you up. I look at everything as it can come and it can go. Period. I manifest four, five, six different entities at any given time. I'm just giving out two right now. Lecturer, rap artist, period. I have other talents, other things that I can do. I'm a thinker, I can do anything I want to do. . . I'm absorbed in the industry. The industry has already absorbed me, now. But not to the point where I forget what I'm talking about, or forget "A A are tal4 Americ term. A on the c "I tI race." "I m themsei aboutr everyor "I. Rephr "I'M duality Americ Africam were yo "We Ameri Africar readin thougi that's t gives y death, by There'sa good reason your Collegiate Reps know how students think. Tey re students. Bnan Cantoni/Weekend fI-- Is Duderstadt proudly paying a 1.8 million-dollar-a-year cleaning tee to silence student voices or Is it realy an art endowment In disguise? When it comes to knowing what it takes to get your mend the right match for you work done, Collegiate Reps know where you're from the affordable line of coming from. IBM PS/2s They can demonstrate how easily you can use To find out what an IBM an IBM Personal System/2' to write papers and PS/2 can do for you, come in, create graphics and spreadsheets for your classes. or call someone who thinks They can answer your questions and help recom- just like you do. "Art is always and everywhere the secret confession and, at the same time, the immortal movement of its time" -Karl Marx Time magazine reports this week that civilian protest against Syrian President Hafez Assad's military alliance with the United States in "Operation Desert Shield" is showing up "in what is ordinarily an unthinkable sight in the Syrian capital: anti- government graffiti." Managua is covered with political slogans, and all over Latin America, graffiti has long been used to expose mis- information about u.s.-backed death squads. Even closer to home, racism and exploitation are denounced in Detroit with graffiti which transcends "defacing" status, manifested in fantastic murals and splashed slogans. And then there's good-ol' Ann ^rbor.. Local curators speculate that a new politically-charged art movement is sweeping our community. Or is it being swept up? The medium can be any sidewalk or University Building. The message is, "No Guns, No Cops, No Code". And the method has been affectionately termed graffiti cdaling. Political activist and artist Arron Hoxie is a 19-year old Ann Arbor resident. He spent four to five hours a day, for five days, Kris, rapper and edutainer chalking the campus after students held a sit-in in the Fleming Administration Building to protest the deputization of University security personnel two weeks ago. And he sees chalking as a means of personal expression. "A bunch of my friends went in the building to protest deputization," Hoxie said. "I wanted to get involved too. So I decided to chalk all around campus against deputization. I just wanted to inform people." Hoxie says he didn't really consider himself a "political activist" or an "artist" prior to the anti-deputization movement, but now proudly upholds both titles. A variety of organizations including the chalker, the Washtenaw County Democratic Party, the Ann Arbor Democratic Party, the Feminist Women's Union, the Conservative Coalition and even the Greek System have voiced their opposition to the deputization of campus security. But Hoxie, along with other crusaders of the chalk movement, remains convinced the "guerrilla art" remains more effective - and perhaps a little more adventurous. Hoxie recalls fleeing campus security a few times when they spotted him chalking. He's always managed to get away so far. Others haven't been as lucky. One University student was actually arrested for the recently- defined high crime ofrdalking. "I'm on a lecture tour right now, as we speak. It's just, I'm home for these two days, and then I'm outta here ... I did St. John's University the night before last, and last night I did Fashion Institute of Technology. I'm just in New York today ... We have a few shows within these lecture tours. What happens is, all of that ends around November 21, my entire schedule is over and I go to Jamaica for ten days. Why? Because I'm doing Ziggy Marley's new album. He's flying us out to Jamaica to talk about the album ... When I get back, we work on Shabba Ranks, who just signed to Epic. He's real huge in reggae right now. "And then after that, the HEAL project will be out, Human Education Against Lies project will be out, which is a record called Heal Yourself. Which features, uh:.. . Latifah, Lyte, Big Daddy Kane, 3rd Bass, Run-DMC, L.L., me, Melody, Harmony, Kid Capris, Freddy Fox. And the proceeds from the record will pay for a book, called Civilization Versus Technology, a free book that will go to the high schools and to the colleges. We're looking to press up about sixteen million of these books.., and uh, that's it." Public Enemy, Paris, Too Black Too Strong, Professor Griff, Boogie Down Productions, X-Clan, and many other contemporary rap artists are taking an extremely intransigent, radical, even militant stance these days, some of whom Iam sure Kris was refering to on the back of Edutainment. One of the bigest problems in this method of raising people's consciousness is obviously the basic format. Anyone with a vague knowledge of the '60s and an awareness of today's trend of commodifiedsocial consciousness can see the paradox in using the music business, a corporate industry, in attempting to change the world. "Music can change people for the better or for the worse. But it's really up to the artist, in terms of what music they're gonna say and do. Not in terms of how the music is gonna influence the masses of the people. Like in other words, music isn't gonna change people. Education will. And if the artist is educated, then he can change the masses of the people. And that's an opinion, that's not a fact. "Rap ... I think rap is the best form of, the best tool we have to influence changing people's perception, the way they see things. Mainly because rap is not limited by bars and notes and whatever people call real music. Real music is limited. Rap music is not limited like that. Even off-key is on-key. And to all the people who would not normally listen to music that is on-key, 'cause they think it's too soft, or whatever or whatever, will listen to rap. That's the whole generation of youth rising up now. The whole generation of youth can care less if music is on-key or off-key, hip-hop, whatever. They want something they can relate to. And rap music is the only thing that the masses of people can really, really relate to." "Where do you think rap is headed? Do you think that rap will break the system? Or do you think that rap will be broken by the system?" "I think ... I think both. I think in the scheme of rap breaking the system, it itself will be broken. But it will break the system. But it will die too. Because rap is generated by the corruption of the system. So if the system falls ... rap falls with it. "The idea of censorship ... is truly American. And I think we Why fight the snow, ice, wind and traffic. Universit cated right On campus just minutes from most U. o All of our apartments are completely furnished and kitchen and bathroom facilities. " 4 MONTH WINTER TERM LEASES -"6 -8 -12MO . FREE HEAT " FREE WATER . FREE CABLE " FULLY EQUIPPED EXERCISE ROOM - IN HOUSI . 1 - 2-3 BEDROOM APARTMENTS " EFFICII ".24 HOUR ATTENDED LOBBY " GRAD STUDEN' " SINGLE LIABILITY LEASES * " STUDY LO " KEY ONLY ENTRY AFTER 5 P.M. " MTS COMPUTER ROOM " G AME ROOM -~ Unive~r Tow( 536 S. Forest Ave. Ann Arbor, MI 48104 313-761-2680 * (if you live in a shared apartment you are only responsible for your portion of the rer if your roomate should leave for any reason.) For more information please contact your local IBM Collegiate representative at (313) 663-0330 This of fer is available only to qualified students, faculty, staff and institutions that purchase IBM Selected Academic Solutions through participating campus locations. Orders a subject to availability. Prices aie subject to change and IBM may withdraw the offer at any time without written notie. IBM, Personal System/2 and PS/2 are registered traden; International Business Machines Corporation. T IBM Corpoation 1990 WEEKEND November 30,1990