The Michigan Daily - Friday, October 23, 1992- Page 7 I Puerto Rican group helps bring musical heritage to campus New radio show to help tenants I by Pete Matthews When 2nd year linguistics stu- dent and Puerto Rican Solidarity Organization (PRSO) member Marta Cruz heard Taller Campesino's performance in Chicago this summer, she and other PRSO members wanted to bring the group to Ann Arbor. Cruz said an Ann Arbor appear- ance by the group would provide "an opportunity to expose the community to our rich musical her- itage and our children to our roots and to help them define their identity." The group agreed to visit the U- M campus the next time they were nearby. After flying to Chicago from Puerto Rico and performing last Saturday, Taller Campesino rented a van and drove to Ann Arbor. Sunday, the group gave a work- shop on traditional Puerto Rican music, followed by a free concert performed before a standing-room- only crowd in Angell Hall. Sunday's visit - sponsored by PRSO - was funded by several sources, including the School of Music, which sent four classes to the workshop. Puerto Rico, since the U.S. in- vasion in 1898, has been deluged with American culture. Although the U.S. government made many concerted efforts to assimilate the Puerto Rican people - including a nearly forty-year prohibition on the use of Spanish in the classroom - there has been intense cultural resis- tance and even a resurgence in tra- ditional culture. In some U.S. cities - notably New York and Chicago - Puerto Rican music, theater and cuisine has flourished. PRSO - pronounced "preso," which is Spanish for "prisoner" - emphasizes the plight of Puerto Rican militants held in U.S. jails. The group defines itself as a "non- partisan political organization" that "supports the struggles which ad- vance the self-determination and independence of Puerto Rico." "There are, many reports of psy- chological and physical abuse," said Gerardo Gomez, a PRSO 'We want both North and Latin Americans to know we are Puerto Ricans and our traditional culture is alive and not yet Americanized.' - Arturo Santiago trovador member and fourth year graduate student in Pharmaceutics. Currently there are 14 prisoners, six of whom are women, who PRSO believes de- serve the status of "political prison- ers." Gomez claims the United States refuses them this status as it "would fortify the independence movement." PRSO members say they are also concerned about how culture can be a medium of political resistance. Taller Campesino performed before a mixed crowd including many families. The group plays tra- ditional music of the jibero style. by Tim Greimel If your landlord is causing you trouble, student radio station WCBN-FM has a new program for you. "Tenant Talk," aired on 88.3 FM from 6:30 to 7 p.m. Mondays, is sponsored by the Ann Arbor Tenants Union (AATU). The goal of the show is the "distribution of Tenant Union infor- mation to more people," said Pat Lesko, co-host of the show and AATU volunteer. The first half of the "Tenant Talk" format involves Lesko dis- cussing facts about topics such as heat and repairs, withholding rent, privacy, sexual harassment by land- lords, and organizing tenants. The second part consists of lis- teners calling in to the station to ask the host questions or to just let off steam about their latest landlord hassles. Monday will mark the fourth', broadcast of the show. Jeri Schneider, AATU director, said, "We've talked about doing (the show) quite a few times in the past couple years." Only recently, how- ever, were people willing to host the show. Pat Lesko said she has received positive feedback on the show so far. "Most people I've talked to say it's a good show and people should hear it. "People are afraid to approach the landlord about their rights ... they have more rights than they think," she added. Those involved with the show say the AATU tries to match the show's subject matter with the time of year. For example, security de- posits were talked about at the end of summer. Sometimes the hosts refer listen- ers to Student Legal Services for "sticky questions," Lesko said. FILE PHOTO/Daily People wear traditional "vejigante" costumes during a parade in Ponce, Puerto Rico. The jiberos are mountain peasants of mostly Spanish descent. Jibero instrumentation includes guitars, the guitar-like cuatro, guiros (made from dried gourds), congas and bongo drums, a flute, and a vocalist -the trovador. Taller Campesino's trovador, Arturo Santiago, challenged the au- dience to "see if you can listen to this music without moving your head." Self-consciousness didn't stop the bobbing and swaying. "It's fantastic to see North Americans so receptive to our mu- sic," Santiago said. "We want both North and Latin Americans to know we are Puerto Ricans and our tradi- tional culture is alive and not yet Americanized." Luisa Loubriel, a graduate stu- dent in the School of Natural Resources, said, "This event en- ables us to let other students know who we are ... to experience our real feelings and pride." Francisco Calderon, a graduate student in Crop and Soil Sciences, said he "felt at home sometimes" during the performance. AIDS Continued from page 1 Kitel cited as an additional prob- lem the difficulty doctors have in de- termining the actual dosage taken by patients smoking marijuana in cigarette form. "Medicine tries to be more precise," he said. The Bush administration, advised by scientists at the National Institute of Health, determined other drugs were at least as effective, if not bet- ter than the use of marijuana, Kitel said. Marinol-megace is such a drug. Megace, a synthetic hormone ap- proved by the Federal Drug Administration for cancer treatment, causes an increase in appetite that works against the HIV wasting syn- drome, Kitel said. But Marinol - a drug that uses a synthetic form of the active ingre- dient in marijuana, THC - only makes the patient tired, Ostrow said. Some U-M student groups are pushing for the government autho- rization of marijuana for use by AIDS patients. Adam Brook, president of the campus chapter of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML), labeled synthetic marinol the "yawn drug," adding that it has been used for years, but is ineffective. NORML does not advocate the use of any drugs, but favors a system of gov- ernment regulation and control which would enable marijuana to be legally attained. Pattrice Maurer, a member of the AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power (ACT-UP), said the government's decision to end its medicinal mari- juana program "was a misguided move which will result in much un- necessary suffering for people with AIDS." Dismayed by the Bush adminis- tration's decision, some AIDS ac- tivists said they are optimistic that a Clinton administration could bring change. Woods said that the Clinton cam- paign recognizes the needs of the 'AIDS is more than a political issue, it's a human issue, a violation of peoples' civil rights,' - Steven Woods MAPP educator AIDS epidemic and has made AIDS funding a priority of its party platform. A coordinator for the Clinton- Gore AIDS Plan said its policy ad- vocates increased funding for new initiatives in research, prevention and treatment, speeding-up the FDA approval process of new treatments, and fully funding the Ryan White CARE Act. The Ryan White CARE Act, es- tablished in honor of the Indiana hemophiliac who died of AIDS, is presently only at one-third of its $800 million endowment. Kitel said that the Ryan White CARE Act funding is still in con- gressional committees. Woods added that The Names Project AIDS Memorial Quilt, com- posed of over 21,000 panels, has not been officially viewed by President Bush or former President Reagan, although it stands at the base of the Washington Monument. The quilt, which Woods dubbed a "mobile cemetery," commemorates Americans who have died of AIDS. "AIDS is more than a political is- sue, it's a human issue, a violation of peoples' civil rights," Woods added. Woods said frustration runs deep after years of inadequate funding, and that he is hoping for a "president that gives a damn." - ---Eq a A i *1 I Free Hepatitis B Vaccine . 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