ARTS he Michigan Daily Friday, July 15, 1988 Page 9 Birthday ba Y TODDSHANKER South Africa Coordinating REMEMBER your birthday parties Committee will be sponsoring a vhen you were a kid? You know, "Birthday Bash" for Mandela (the resents, home movies, friends, former head of the ultra anti- latives, cake, ice cream - all that apartheid African National Congress) ood stuff. that will feature live music from the Well on July 18th, an inspira- Trinidad Tripoli Steel Band and King onal man by the name of Nelson David. The concert/party will dou- dandela will be spending his 70th ble as a benefit to raise money for irthday behind bars, just as he has the Philemon Mahlangu Freedom or 25 consecutive years. Why? Be- College in Mazimbu, Tanzania. ause Mandela is a Black man in The Freedom College was formed vertly racist South Africa, where as a reaction to the cultural genocide he mere utterance of the defiant that Botha and his Boys were in- vords "Amandla Awethu (Power to flicting upon the indigenous Black pe People)" could have you beaten, populations of South Africa. Forc. etained or even killed by Afrikaaner ing Black students to learn only the olice. cultural, educational, and historical On Saturday night, the Free curriculum of the white man was. nds to bash Botha and still is, an attemp the Botha Caribbean music groups. Forget the Botha Partridge Family! Hugh Borde's ca- regime to dissolve the proud ethnic lypso-funk family, better know as roots of Black South Africans. The the Trinidad Tripoli Steel Band, will ultimate result of this racist educa- try to outdo the drought with their tional policy was the tragic Soweto mercury-rising Afro-Latin dance Uprising of 1976, in which at least rhythms. Shimmering West Indian 618 people (mostly Black students steel drums add a special touch to the and children) were killed by band's reggae and soca pieces, while Afrikaaner police. The Philemon the dunked-in-funk horn section Mahlangu Freedom College exists as sends out continuous power blasts a dynamic educational opportunity that will unexpectedly blow-dry your for South African Blacks to not only halr. learn how to read and write, but also rejoice in the discovery of their own King David will also be on hand rich cultural history, to supply their snake-charmer reggae grooves, guaranteed to have you Saturday's benefit "Birthday slithering like a python. The most Bash" will be powered by two of the amazing aspect of King David's Ann Arbor/Detroit area's best sound, however, is the way their compositions unfold like timelapse flower-buds, fusing elements of ur- ban soul, soca, and African music to suddenly explode into technicolor Rasta-reggae. Saturday night's "Birthday Bash" benefit concert is a great opportunity to show your solidarity with the re- sistance movement in South Africa, celebrate the inspiration of Nelson Mandela, and provide aid to the Philemon Mahlangu Freedom Col- lege in Tanzania. So raise your fist in the air and shout it out loud: Amandla Awethu! KING DAVID and the TRINIDAD TRIPOLI STEEL BAND will take on P.W. Botha Saturday starting at 9 p.m. at the Michigan Union Ballroom. Tickets are $6 in advance. Latest 'Qqatsi': The decline )f non-Western civilization BY LISA MAGNINO THE boat sails across the blue faters against a backdrop of gently loping, salmon-colored hills. Its ail billows in the wind, the faded, agtag pieces somehow fitting per- ectly together. The music crescen- oes in the background as the boat ontinues to sall proudly. che sta k beou of the music ccents the bounce of the Peruvian ndian woman's black braids against er bright blue ceremonial dress as he gyrates in a modern, Bacchana- ian dance. The woman's sari rustles as she aises her arm to check her watch. The tick-tock of the wood blocks in he background sound in time to her mpatiently tapping foot as she waits in rush hour traffic. } These scenes become pieces in the mosaic of images and sounds in POWAQQATSI, the second part of director Godfrey Reggio's "qatsi" trilogy. "Powaqqatsi" is an ancient Hopi Indian word that means, in rough translation, a way of life that consumes another way of life out of necessity for its survival - in the terms of the movie, Western civi- lization becomes a carivorous ani- al that devours the traditions of ative cultures. A Western audience may find POWAQQATSI harder to identify with than its predecessor, KOY- ANISQQATSI because of the un- LOOK YOUR BEST! If your hair isn't becom-f ing to you-You should be coming to us! DASCOLA STYLISTS 6i-1321 761-2733 familiar rituals and settings of the Third World. But this is intentional. The photography team of Graham Berry and Leonidas Zourdoumis in- tersperses Diet Slice commercials and pictures of Christie Brinkley with shots of natives. The contrast between the artificial appearances of Westerners and the raw, untamed beauty of the natives is cleverly done, but too obvious in contrast to the film's subtle shadings. Philip Glass' score both harms and helps the mosaic feel of the film. The music is inspiring at times; in the beginning, the hosan- nas of the Hispanic Children's Cho- rus sanctify the trudging footsteps of See QQATSI, P. 10 Spring & Summer Employment - II-HiIIiIN NCIi W - Go Full Time A-ter Classes 996-8890 Due to renovation the Natural Science Library will be open. 3:00-9:00 pm Mon-Fri 10:00 am-5:00 pm Sat. This is effective July 11-August 19 I McDOnaldS HERE'S WHAT WE HAVE TO OFFER: " FREE FOOD DURING SHIFT " DISCOUNT ON FOOD DURING OFF HOURS A O(± " FLEXIBLE SCHEDULES " ADVANCEMENT OPPORTUNITIES " EMPLOYEE OUTINGS " REGULAR PERFORMANCE AND WAGE REVIEWS * 2 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS Apply in person at: 337 Maynard St. 1220 S. University