— LIFE AND ART Column The subtle problems of race By David J Neal ■ ndtana Daily Student Indiana U. 1 can't skip class That’s the first thing 1 think of when someone asks me if there are any disadvantages to being black at a large university. Broad problems like the dearth of minority faculty and the barbs of obnoxious racists don’t really affect my day-to-day existence, but the everyday things that touch minorities are small and irritating Like the attendance situation 1 can't skip class with any sort of impunity As soon as an instructor looks over the class, he knows if I’m there or if I decided the adultery and mental cru elty on I)ivorce Court was more mu-r esting than whatever he had U> say. One of mv classes has a lecture section with roughly 150 students. Any of the other 149 students can take the morning off, knowing their absence will not In- conspicuous. Not me I'm a footprint in the snow The professor once identified me solely on the assistant instructor’s physical description of me I'd bet my Stevie Wonder albums he couldn't do that with anybody else in the class (’an you see the assistant instruc tor trying to come up with distin guishing characteristics for one of my classmates'* “He’s kind of between 5-10 and 6 feet, has black hair wears a corduroy hat. uh, I think he has blue eyes maybe wears a Cubs jacket Tough job. But with me, lin sure it was easy. “Bout 6-2. 6-3. Black guv.” “Oh. yeah.” Then there are those times when people say something, notice you're there, and think they’ve become this year’s Jimmy the Greek. 1 was scanning the magazine rack for the latest issue of Women’s Physique World while three Caucasian junior high girls in front of me flipped through a magazine. One said, ‘‘Tracy Chapman is so ugly I mean, her music is good, but she’s just ugly.’’ The other two girls turned and See RACE. Page 15 Acid House reaches America By Darren Cahr and Stacey Bashara ■ The Northwestern Review Northwestern U., Chicago An N'tstudent strides down Shcndai Hoad, her chest covered with an enor mous, yellow, smiling face The eyes on her shirt are oval and the smile turns up at the sides It looks like a visual homage to Bobby McFerrin, except for one ele ment: a bullet hole and blood sit where the nose should lie In a dormitory room, hunched over a Macintosh computer, senior Adam Buhler manipulates beats and mea sures, baselines and samples, until a mass of rhythm and noise pours from his speakers What these images have in common is acid house, a movement of music and fashion, philosophy and social politics that has already swept across a great deal of England and which is now mak ing inroads in the United Stales. “I like acid house because it allows you to see nirvana and jack your body at the same time,” says senior Jay Haesly And it is that concept of pure hedonism which underpins the appeal of this throbbing collage of sounds and sensation. Buhler, whose in-room studio is an acid house laboratory, says the music is a catylist for “forgetting the superficial class structure and fundamentalist atti tudes” of modem life. Many music critics and trend-watch ers duh acid house a re-emergence of drug culture (though some would argue it never died). A great deal of the move ment involves consumption of large quantities of either Ecstasy, a pill-based drug similar to LSD, or plain old LSI) Since arriving on continent, acid house has left a distinctly bitter taste in the mouths of some local musicians. NU grad student John Kezdy, vocalist for Chicago punk band the Effigies, says acid house may be fated to fizzle out in the United States. “The acid house movement is just the most superficial and vapid thing,” Kezdv says. “It’s not like punk, which was more politically-based. It’s a very fashion-ori ented and hedonistic thing. It realistical ly couldn't be anything but superficial.” Buhler is also skeptical of the move ment’s domestic longevity, but insists there is a message behind the music. “The fashion element is unavoidable,” he says. “It's all that people tend to see because it’s all that’s shown to them. But DARREN CAHR NORTHWESTERN REVIEW NORTHWES - The mutilated smiley face has come to represent the nihilism and nirvana ot the American acid house movement actually, acid house is await ideas that have been circulating since the ’60s. Timothy Leary is often sampled and quoted It's part of a very liberal move ment that wants to nse above this crack down on morality ” Acid house as a music form is difficult to define. Its precursor is house music created in theblackgayclubsofChicago South Side. DJs oscillate soutids, turni11. the beat into something not unlike rhythm orgy held within a digital alarn See ACID. Page 15 19-year-old seeks Scrabble crown By Lisa Luboff ■ The Daily Brum U. of California. Los Angeles UCLA, a school oflen associated with Olympic champions and football stars, is also home to the youngest top-ranked Scrabble player in the country. Brian Cappelletto, a 19-year-old sopho more from Arizona, is just a step away from becoming the number one player in the country. Rankl'd second nationally, (’appelletto has won 11 tournaments in three-and-a half years of competition. He has placed second or third in five other tournaments Scrabble is a popular board game where each person gains points by spelling words in a crossword-like forma tion on a specially marked board. Players pick seven tiles with letters and point val ues pnnled on them The tiles are then used to create words, and players’ total points are tallied to determine a winner. Many of the top competitors Cappelletto plays against at tourna ments are 30 to 40 years old. At a tour nament in Boston, the next-youngest competitor was 28 In addition to tournaments, Cappelletto usually plays between 10 and 20 games a week with local Los Angeles competitors. Although his friends often ask to play Scrabble with him, none of them are at his level “I’m number two nght now and I want to be number one.” he says.“There’s always pnde in doing something when you’re one of the best at it.” Being the best is not easy. Although Cappelietto has played Scrabble since he was 10. he still studies words and ana grams, or letter arrangements, and remembers what letters create specific words. Training for a competition is similar t< athletic training, he says. A positive men tal attitude and preparation are impor tant, as are knowing words and remem bering strategies. When he began competing at the age of 16, Cappelletto studied anagrams even night He now studies about once a week using computer-generated books of ana grams. Although for many Scrabble becomes an obsession, Cappelletto is careful to remember that winning the game is not as important as enjoying it. “Some people are over-engrossed in it. and it can be detrimental," he says.“If 1 couldn’t control it, 1 wouldn’t be in schoo< nght now.”