news ttaliOs )ag e ] rs W >H bt ; s - He sam 11 guide ^ d >' goes and be imiu 1a y coo| l,es and cai sa id Lop|| ■ tud ent Q -ment mj s that are mi 5 y passM lated. i t Senate wj ' Heeds to (; nc reaseafie ake theinec.; w said ion Fee i ocess for 4 off-caS a long-ten - and to pay and die facilities« »the Ai.\| Veb site, j h. theAAM f Reg» 'nation Fee ntplemenied ■'ill increase fall, sprint r semesters, or five-wed increase will )lul in po:- which cost J $300,000. arted." Weis rt replacing ruses), that's more than dace." sultanis wil vel the fee tore in order ; rate where any buses arsold. iht now is ry thing we and there's rchasecapi- , "Joshu^obso^^^^^^UONI .ontracl. the J ) afor (left), a senior English major, Kirk Ehlig (center), a junior journalism major and Andre "Dre" xreanworx- , ? Se ?' or e,ec,r| cal engineering major are all rap artists attending A&M. Williams is the first mem- nejfWulnot r 15 ami y to attend college and will graduate this month. His rap, "Graduated,” chronicles his strug- ler.bumW t f** 1 success toward graduation. Die pay for , to msi nightoniTS- iger. imaiely IS proval of a states how ill mn and can be pur- Aggielife The Battalion 3 • Monday, May 3, 2004 LHOEOT Graduation, life subjects of student raps By Lauren Smith THE BATTALION To ch) tuhaf mc5f bvotfr&lA' UorCf Uo -«Vv OOrvurntArvCC^ 'T/viz- omTTTJ^c- ^pm- iejltiew xty' 'Xo &&■ rVi y. pvecC&Sf '7 / lcv&v 4C£-'$ic> clcuj whe+y, 7 tyU’ydtMX&d' So begin the lyrics to senior electrical engineering major Andre Williams’ college graduation-inspired rap, “Graduation,” Somewhere between the Dixie Chicken and the Memorial Student Center lies a hip- hop community full of people with a passion for paint ing pictures with words, bringing social issues to the forefront or simply making people get up and dance. Williams started honing his rapping skills when he was 12 after his middle school football practices. He started networking, which he said is an essential part of making it in the hip-hop world, with an after school job of putting up posters for a local hip-hop manager in Houston. “When I first got to college, working was plan A, and rapping was only a hobby,” Williams said. “Deep in my heart, I just want to take care of my future wife and family. Hip-hop has become my plan A. Even if 1 get a record deal, it will not compare to the pride 1 feel about graduating.” ') rw "to rwote '$vcy»y / 888 e*yyf yef, ■veacswc- MVS’ <* whok- zccfooty, oj 'five* SX&diivrvi/ /vtx'tet 1 Jysrudhj rvy&clc- yrf 'Wosy l^f, 800^, 7 dory’O guxctvitC&cl' From the “gangsta rap” that originated on the West Coast with Dr. Dre and others to the more modern “conscious” Common rap, Williams classifies his rap somewhere in the middle of the two. “1 call what 1 do ‘reality rap’ because I write about what I see day to day. Gangsta rap is a form that expresses what is going on in the slums with a lot of songs about violence, drugs and guns,” Williams said. “Conscious rap is the more positive side of rap with more soul and more wholesome concepts.” Kingsley Okafor, a senior English major, has col laborated with Williams on three rap songs and has been rapping for five years. “I have three different categories of how I rap: bragatocious (self-promotion), conscious (social issues like the struggle of inner city youth and prob lems like racism), the state of hip-hop, obsession with money, and fun-loving,” Okafor said. “Sometimes rappers do not have to say something educational, and a lot of rappers tend to pigeonhole themselves.” Among the misconceptions about hip-hop is that rap and rhythm and blues are synonymous genres. “Rap is a subset of hip-hop, and it is the more of the expressive spokesman for hip-hop,” Okafor said. “R&B is based more on the emotion of love and pret ty formulated. Rap hits on a range of topics, and there is no set way to do it.” With movies such as “8 Mile” and live coverage of MC Battles on MTV, freestyling has become a more publicized part of the rap world. While some argue that freestylers do not come up with their lyrics on the spot, there are others who will claim to the death that the words to their song came to them in the moment they are on stage. “Freestyling and battling do not make you a good artist. The best artists are the ones who put songs together,” Okafor said. “The way to spot if a freestyler is truly authentic is whether or not they are talking about something about the environment they are in. A lot of people have lines in their head.” Rapper and junior journalism major Kirk Ehlig See Delight on page 4 How does your religion view organ donation? Assembly of Goo Baptist Bltoohist G atfi o lic Christian Scientist Episcopal Hindu Independent Evangelical Islam Judaism (All Branches) Eutheran Tvl ETH O DIST Donation is highly supported by the denomination. The decision to donate is left to the individual. Organ donation is encouraged as an act of stewardship and of compassion for those who are suffering. Donation is a matter of individual conscience. A high value is placed on acts of compassion. Organ and tissue donation is an act of charity and love. Pope John Paul II has stated that Christians should accept this as a challenge to their generosity and fraternal love. The decision to donate is left to the individual. A resolution in 1982. recognizes the life-giving benefits of donation. All Christians are encouraged to become donors M as part of their ministry to others in the name of Christ, who gave His life that we may have life in its fullness/' The decision to donate is left to the individual. Organ transplantation can be used to alleviate the suffering of other human beings. The decision to donate is left to the individual. Nothing in Scripture contradicts organ donation. Muslim scholars belonging to various schools of Islamic law have cited the principle of the priority on saving human life and have permitted organ donation and transplantation as a necessity to procure that noble end. Organ donation is a contemporary Mitzvah. When a human life can be saved, it must be saved. Donation contributes to the well being of humanity and can be M an expression of sacrificial love for a neighbor in need.’* The United Methodist Church encourages all Christians to become organ donors as part of their mininstry to others in the name of Christ. Presbyterian Members are encouraged to be organ donors.