The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, October 30, 1991 - Page 7 VIDEO Continued from page 5 has been realized as a ballroom gig, complete with dancing girls, wherein Prince can close the fissures of his rock star/sex symbol self- invention to an almost impermeable luster. Prince sings to everyone and no one. The two pearls stare with unparalleled boldness into the this video, Prince's admitting lust and paying homage to white women, becomes little more than an inert pastiche. The detached statements made of and by his indomitable sex- ual identity just float in a sleek vac- uum of sterility. As a reporter says in the beginning of the clip, Prince is having sex with these two women, and we know it. And the Imp's harshest sting comes with the defining of this PARTY Continued from page 5 attend lectures about the historical significance of Black leaders. The political explorations, though admirable, cannot be supported by the shallow characters and plot, and ring false in their cut- and-paste nature. House Party 2 does stand apart from much of African- American pop culture in its recognition of feminism and the oppression of women at the hands of men who wax eloquent about their own racially-derived experiences of discrimination. But the movie itself dresses women in tight spandex, and the male protagonists continually objectify female characters. The purported ideology of the film is very overt, but it is implicitly undercut by the movie itself. House Party 2 is, at the least, interesting. It's trying to do something that hasn't been done much before - depict African- Americans in higher education dealing with intellectual as well as personal experiences. But it fails the first House Party miserably. Even in the worst of hip-hop films, the music and dance scenes entice young viewers and entertain despite nonexistent plots. In Clouse Party 2, even the party scenes fizzle. Visually, this romp through the retronuevo has been realized as a ballroom gig, complete with dancing girls, wherein Prince can close the fissures of his rock star/sex symbol self- invention to an almost impermeable luster HOUSE PARTY 2 is playing Showcase and Fox Village. at camera, as if their very existence hinges on our recognition of their beauty (which they're already absolutely convinced of), closing a circle of assumptions tightly. We have little choice but to hate them. Yet the true center of purpose in "Cream" and its origins, ending the video with an extreme close-up of a pearl's smiling lips and mouth. The powers of implication and assump- tion come full circle in a calculating way that America needs to see. -Forrest Green III U 0 0 WHAT'S HAPPENING Prince's new video, "Cream," is brilliant. The above shot is a preview of his next effort, a remake of U2's latest single, "The Fly." GUILD Continued from page 5 aspect of his writing. "It is primarily social/political commen- tary, and less surrealistic than my other work," he explains. "I work on a few different levels. I write a fair amount about the experiences I had growing up. I write about ,;political issues that seem important to me. My short stories deal a lot with middle class suburban life... The older I get, the more I get back to my roots, the rebellious teenager. By the time I get to Ann Arbor, I should be fifteen." Lawrence Pike has a considerably different style of writing. He has published stories, poems and essays in many different magazines, and he has a recent book, Pierced by Sound. Pike's writing, usually told in the first person, inspires an empathic feeling in the reader, as in "On Dying": "'Hang on,' I said, before the coma, / as if there was a chance. / I'll try, she told me. 'It's what I'm good at now,' is how she put it. / Later, when she lay still, / skin gone cold, / I slid my hand along her thigh." "If my work has such a personal feel, then I'm hitting on some- thing," Pike says. However, he says that his writing does not come di- rectly from personal experience. "It doesn't require me," he explains. "I borrow, but not always. I want the stories to be taken by themselves." There are several other themes that Pike deals with, particularly the way in which male-female relationships occur. Pike also writes about "what you're supposed to be, and what you are." "When I write, I find that humor is as significant as grief, and I like it if they tell me I cut one with the other," he says. I found Gay Ruben in the midst of a struggle with her family's new puppy, Murphy Brown. The prob- lems faced by the modern family are what she frequently explores in her prose. "My stories often deal with people struggling to find their place in families and people who leave their families," she says. Ruben's work has appeared in several periodicals, including the current issue of The Bridge. She is currently writing fiction exclusively. "I write about the ironies in people's lives," she says, "about what they expect versus the realization of the outcome." Despite these themes, however, Ruben sees humor as being of the greatest importance. "Humor is im- portant to my life as well as my work," she says. "In my new collec- tion, many of the stories have a comic resolution. Humor is the uni- fying element." She goes on to ex- plain that the humor is often subtle, but crucial. All three writers stress the importance of entertainment in a reading. "I give readings the way I like to hear them," says Liebler, ex- pressing a thought reiterated by both of the other writers. "I try to make it interesting. There is definitely an aspect of showmanship that is important. The performance must be relevant to the audience." Liebler feels that the growing interest in poetry and poetry readings he has seen on college campuses is the result of an abstract yearning in the human soul. "In the sixties and seventies, people needed music," Liebler observes. "Now people need poetry. There's something being said that people) need to hear." Check out the WRITERS SERIES every Monday evening at 8:30 p.m. at the Guild House, 802 Monroe Street (across from the Law library). Admission is free. For more info, call 662-5189. RECREATIONAL SPORTS Intramural Sports Program All Campus Golf Tournament CONGRATULATIONS TO THE FLIGHT WINNERS AND RUNNERS UP! Championship Runner Up 1st Flight Runner Up 2nd Flight Runner Up Dan Taylor Todd Kozlowski Damon Campbell Derek H. 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Ann Arbor, Mi 48104 Ph: 63-5800P Hours: Mon.-Thurs. 9 a.m.-10 p.m. PRINCE& THE Frl-:sat. 9 a.m.-11 p.m. NEW POWER GENERATION Sun. 11 a.m.-8sp.m DIAMONDS AND PEARLS S TL RING: CREAM " GETT OFF " DIAMONDS AND PEARLS Hey! We have a CD Listening Centre where your ears can browse through six different alternative releases... Expose yourself TODAY! If Prince were in PRINCE &H town, he would. 2 v1a 1i:: 99 on Hurry, this sale price ends10,1991! Novemer10,1991 Please Note: Open to all interested students. Your attendance at the Information Meeting is a prerequisite to your interviewing process. Please attend. Refreshments provided! Casual attire. INFORMATION MEETING: Date: November 18, 1991