The Christian McBride Quartet brings the world of jazz to the Power Center tomorrow at 8 p.m. Check out the fantastic talents Of the group as it passes through Ann Arbor. Tickets are $10, available at the Michigan Union Ticket Office or a Ticketmaster outlet nearby. Call 763-TKTS for information. Ulie £cIt=mx&dl Monday in Daily Arts: ABC celebrates 30 years of Sesame Street with Elmopalooza. The Daily will have a review of the show as well as interviews with Sesame Street's own Bob McGrath and The Mighty Mighty Bosstones' Tim Burton. Friday February 20, 1998 Concert blends music and poetry EMILY NATHAN/Daily On Wednesday, bell hooks read at Borders Books and Music in Ann Arbor. Author hooks A By Erin Diane Schwartz Daily Arts Writer Black feminist writer bell hooks -look the packed Borders by storm -Wednesday night as she read from her new lyrical novel, "Wounds of Passion." hooks called this book, "The sexy bell hooks book, the ex-rated one. "Wounds of Passion" varies in point- of-view between first person, which is written in the present tense, and third person, written in the past tense. This technique allows hooks to analyze and reflect on her past while writing bell hooks her immediate views to the audi- ence. Borders "Not everyone Feb. 18, 1998 goes to poetry readings to find ., love. She did. Growing up poet- ry had been the sanctuary, that space in which ing o bwords were long- ng to be spoken - nobody in her world understood," hooks read from the memoir. "Throughout this book there is a lot of stuff having to do with Christianity," hooks said, "and for those of you not familiar with this memoir, it is about a relationship I had with another black male writer/intel- lectual, and I am very interested in the degree to which Christianity has shaped American sexuality. So in this book there are a lot of references to Christianity - how its effected my particular sexuality." After she read a passage, hooks addressed current social issues. "I actu- ally think that for people of color, par- ticularly, and many groups who never articulated our sexuality, what we do isn't really just private because it is so impinged upon by a universe beyond ourselves. Just our attempt as black women to have a freedom of sexuality in this society, where we are constantly being devalued. Or if we are in any way sexual, people tend to think ... I hear so much about hoes and I think, haven't we gotten past that notion that a woman who expresses her sexuality is ... a ho?" hooks' ideas resonated through the crowd as she boldly spoke about impe- rialism, capitalism, black women in sports, sexual abuse, AIDS and the film, "Amistad." Her strong voice and daring words brought insight into cur- rent racial and social issues. hooks' ability to blend humor with these seri- ous issues added to the brilliance of her discussion and forced the audience to hang onto every word. By Lucija Franetovic For the Daily Music and poetry join together to celebrate creativ- ity at the Michigan League Underground tomorrow when the University Activities Center and Rude Mechanicals sponsor Ann Arbor's first State Street Poetry Project Concert. Members of the State Street Poetry Project, a fresh and rapidly expanding new club on campus, will present four bands as well as two experienced poets as part of the night's entertainment. The University talent is gathering for an anniver- sary celebration of the founding of the State Street Poetry Project (SSPP). "We're celebrating how much has been accomplished in a year - that's how long we've been around," publicity director Rachel Arfa said. "It's going to be a fabulous event for musicians and our poets to share their work and entertain peo- ple." The line-up for the night's performances includes Ann Arbor's own folk-rock singer Lisa Hunter, psyche- delic space rock music by "Aurora" Ann Arbor hip-hop group "Athletic Mic League" "The Original Brothers and Sisters of Love," a diverse, multi-instrument folk-rock act and "Sugar Pill," a band '$?r describing itself as "infectious, State Street introspective, poetic rock." The Poetry Project evening will also feature poetry Concert performances by an award-win- League Underground ning student poet, Saladin Ahmed, and professional poet and recent University of Michigan graduate J. Kidd. Director and founder of the State Street Poetry Project Greg Epstein said the concert will have a casual, mini-indoor festival atmosphere. Epstein said he hopes that it will inspire people to do great things. Tables of student activist organizations will be set up so that people can wander and learn about such groups as ENACT, SAPAC, Amnesty International and ProjectSERVE. "The most important reason they're here is because the SSPP is more than just entertainment," Epstein said. "We want to have impact and helping the community is the next biggest thing to putting on a show people will love." Lisa Hunter was co-founder of ENACT while she was a student at the University. "I wanted to make the issues more of a presence on campus,' Hunter said. "Now I talk about them through my music." Her inde- pendently promoted and established musical career has been highly influenced by Ani DiFranco. "I have this weird way of strumming," Hunter said. Courtesy of Adrian vyyi Lisa Hunter, co-founder of ENACT, will perform at the State Street Poetry Project Concert. "I use fake nails as picks, and this allows me to play my guitar differently. I use all parts of my hand - it's very percussive:' While a student in Ann Arbor, she participated in the New England Literature Program. This nature-focused environment, along with the unique music experience it provided her, inspired her to buy a guitar of her own and to start writing songs herself. "My music is an expression of myself - it helps me to clarify things in my life," Hunter said. "It's about what it means to be a woman in the 20th Century." Her 1996 CD, "Solid Ground," will be fol- lowed by "Flying" this spring. The State Street Poetry Concert's main focus is music, but the State Street Poetry Project has put on three gala poetry shows in the past year. These huge performance-style festivals have brought together some of the best writers from Ann Arbor and across the coun- try. The next planned national poetry gala will be April 16, hoping to bring in up to 1,000 people to enjoy in the mix of poetry, art, dance and music. "The event has a diverse, unifying, educational quality of entertainment," Epstein said. "I think poet- ry has a directness and clarity to it which gives it something special above the other arts. Where other arts may be a symbol of people's hearts being in the right places, poetry can be an instruction manual." Epstein's vision is strong and determined. He sees poetry taking a new place in the heart of a communi- ty swarming with writers and souls ready and waiting to welcome it. "I think 20 years from now poetry will be set to music more often. It will be on CDs and radio - at a time when issues in our society are so potent iall' threatening that it is no longer adequate to just dint a the dangers they pose, more voices will be heart speaking their minds and hearts through the art o. poetry," Epstein said. Anyone interested in submitting a sample of thei poetry to be part of a selection process that will choose performers for the April show should submit their worl, to the UAC office (4002 Union) by Feb. 28. The cntrie: should be eight minutes in length when read out loud. Arfa, who has been a big part of the organizati6', i: also working on an after school outreach progan with local schools. The intention is to share the e pe rience and inspiration of University students with th, younger generation of emerging artists. "Before I was offered the opportunity to readm: own poetry I thought of it as a private thing I did fc myself, but now I've been able to see that thereae: lot of other people like me who write and I've seen; whole community emerge," t rfa said. The Rude Mechanicals have, supported this iewl: emerging group and have presented all the shows u to this point. "I was intrigued by Greg's idea for"th SSPP and his notion of "performance poetry,".saic Leslie Soranno, Rude Mechanicals member who~ha also helped out with the shows, "but prior to 1a February's show, my experience was limited to theater The project really opened my eyes to the diversity c talent at the University of Michigan." "The success of the project made me realize thy: SSPP was responding to an unfulfilled need on cam- pus." x.. Near East art finds its way to Midwest By Allison Fong For the Daily A small museum sits quietly on State Street, next to the unmistakable orange-bricked LSA building and opposite the grand columns of Angell Hall. Imact Dance Theatre Mendelssohn Theater Tonight at 7:30 The Kelsey Museum of Archaeology is something of an unknown to most students, a little building housing almost 100,000 objects from the ancient cultures of Greece, Rome, Egypt and the Middle East. A permanent exhibit of Greek East and Egypt" will be permanently installed in the other gallery of the Museum. Todd Gerring, a program assistant and public relations contact for the Kelsey Museum said that an exhibi- tion can take as long as four years to put together. But because "The Ancient Near East and Egypt" collection is com- prised mainly of pieces recovered in University expeditions, it was a bit easier to realize. "This exhibit took about a year or so to organize," and as an internal exhibit there were "less problems and hassles," Gerring said. One of the topics to be explored in the exhibit includes "Materials, Technology and Society," with a focus on the practice of sealing in ancient cultures. The seal was usually a small, cylindrical object much like a bead with a unique design, distinctly identifying the owner, carved around the outside. It was rolled across documents or over other materials to signify the owner's claim to the material. This collection will also look at writing in its ancient forms. Another area will focus on arti- facts relating to the practices sur- rounding death and the afterlife, such as a fire altar and bronze incense burner and also guardian lions. The exhibition opens today, and admission is free to the general pub- lic. Museum hours are Monday- Friday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. anc Saturday-Sunday from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. There will be an illustratedlec- ture, "Worlds Without End:.Thc Quick and the Dead in Ancioni Egypt," given by Lorelei"H. Corcoran, assistant director at. thc University of Memphis Institute. o; Egyptian Art and Archaeology, today at 5 p.m. in Angell Hall Auditorium D. Friday, February 20, 1998 3:30- 4:30 p.m. Registration Hutchins Hall, 4:30 - 6:00 p.m. Presentation Student Notes Room 236 and Roman artifacts occupies one of the two main galleries. On Friday, a collection from Egypt and Iran called "The Ancient Near The University of Michigan School of Music0 Friday, February 20 University Choir Sandra Snow, conductor " music by Mathias, Bach, Morrison, Allaway, Dennard Hill Auditorium, 8 p.m. Monday, February 23 Guest Master Class Julia Studebaker, principal horn, Concertgebotiw Orchestra Britton Recital Hall, E. V. Moore Bldg., 4:30 p.m Guest Lecture/Recital Glennis Stout demonstrates her collection of flutes from Baroque to Boehm. Special guest Philip Dikeman, pianist Room 2043, E. V. Moore Bldg., S p.m. Vocal Arts Lab Britton Recital Hall, E. V. Moore Bldg., 6:45 p.m. cTo aeeja. nk, ahrs i Aov Hutchins Hall, Room 236 Saturday, February 21, 1998 8:00 - 9:00 a.m. Registration and Continental Breakfast 3 Hutchins Hall, Room 236 9:00 - 9:10 a.m. Welcome Address Dean Jeffrey S. Lehman, University of Michigan Law School n Hutchins Hall, Room 250 ' 9:15 - 10:45 a.m. First Plenary: Immigration Hutchins Hall, Room 250- 11:00 a.m. - 12:45 p.m. Secondary Plenary: Affirmative Action Hutchins Hall, Room 1f. 4 -, 250 IMmumnA - -A nMA dP AhI AI 3:00 -4:45 p.m. Third Plenary Gender and exuality Hutchins Hall, Room 250 f,. .nn L.2n ...,,