THE SEAHAWK/ 11 Arsonists, Swollen Members and DJ Swamp play Fall Fest Tara Dwney The hip-hop sounds t)f Swollen Members, the AiscmistsandDJ Swamp filled the Warwick Cen ter Ballroom last night as part of the Fall Fest line up. This week the trio of bands will hit venues from North Carolina to Massachusetts and back to New York City. The Arsonists and Swollen Members are both rising underground hip-hop groups released by Battleaxe Recads. DJ Swamp usually woks alone, but he has toured with Beck for the past four years. Swollen Members is on tour promoting their new CD, Bad Dreams, whkih will be released Nov. 13. The CD offm a variety of hip-hop vibes. Some songs have an edger gangster-rap style with pow erful, in-your-face lyrics, while others boast a bounce-with-it kind of groove that shows the Screen Gems receives award Katie Trapp Screen Gems Studios was recently given the G. Lynn Nisbet Award for Outstanding Tourism Contributions. The award is given yearly by the Travel Council of North Carolina to a business or oiganization that has benefited or fsomoted tour ism in North Carolina. “Screen Gems has become involved in tour ism and has brought national and international recognition to this state,” said Connie Nelson, publicist for the Cape Fear Coast Convention and Visitors Bureau. With television shows such as “Dawson’s Creek” and numerous filins shot in Wilmington, people from all over the country are exposed to the North Carolina scenery. “When North Carolina appears on the silver screen, we are showcased in a way that our state’s limited budget cannot afford,” said Judith Grizzel, who i»esented the award to Screen Gems Studio President Frank Capra, Jr. Grizzel is aboard mem ber of the Travel Council of North CaroUna and president of the Convention and Visitors Bureau. Another benefit to having the laigest film pro duction facility east of Hollywood is that film makers come to this area and spend out-of-state dollars on accommodations for themselves, ac tors and crew. “Screen Gems has wc«ked closely with Cape Fear Coast Convention and Visitors Bureau, UNCW, Cape Fear Community College and the Town Council,” Nelson said. ‘They have cer tainly impacted tourism on many levels.” Capa said that this is a major award in North Carolina and it was nice to be recognized through the filmmaking and touts. “[The Travel Council of NC] gave us a beautiful clock and a lovely din- Jaxxf rufik, Cigarm O' Coffee Ncrr S-s> Oct 27 oet 31 Itopa* o-rqcinix HoHoween isTov x6 Mama, TJhXJ band’s diverse nature. “They are very cutting edge in ihe beats they put together and the lyrics they use,” said Tracey Henry, a pubUcist for the band. Swollen Members’ latest single “Fuel In jected,” ptxluced by Kemo, is a hard-hitting proc lamation of their arrival onto the music scene and illustrates their determination to stay afloat in the music WMid. It’s a fiinky, beat-laden, bob-your- head song that is a worthy representation of the CD. They have also collaborated with numerous hip h(^ artists. “We’re both very passionate about what we do and I think it shows through in our music,” band member Prevail said. The Arsonists are widely known for their cha risma and elaborate stage shows. They have a cre ative style that adds to their immense following. The Arsonists have played at venues around the worid with artists such as Public Enemy, the Roots andHiaroaheMonch. Their debut album. As r/ie World Bums, received critical acclaim and is in stores now. The Arsonists are currendy working on their second album. DJ Swamp has just released his debut album Never is Now. He recently finished touring with Beck and is now out and about promoting his solo r Swollen Members played for Fall Fest. album. He has recorded on studio tracks with Beck, Kid Rock, Crystal Method, Hanson, The Bloodhound Gang and the Dady Warhols. He has also been featured on the “Grammy Awards,” “American Music Awards,” “The Tonight Show,” ‘The Late Show” and ‘The Late Late Show.’' Rolling Stone and Spin magazines have done fea tures on his unique style and insane performances. He’s been known to abuse his records in various ways while performing. The trio of groups performed last night in the Warwick Center Ballroom at 8 p.m. For more information about any of these bands, visit their Web sites: www.hiphop-elements.com, www.arsonists.net and www.Djswamp.com. Frank Capra, Jr. receives the award. ner that was very well attended,” he said. The Award for Outstanding Tourism Contri butions is named for Gilmore Lynn Nisbet, a North Carolina journalist and chatter member of the Travel Council of Nwth Carolina. He served as its president fiom 1960 to 1961 and wrote a daily column about his many miles of travel through out the state in the Raleigh Bureau of the North Carolina Association of Afternoon Dailies. Businesses and organizations that have re ceived this award in the past include The North Carolina Azalea Festival, The State Magazine, Southern Shows and Piedmont Airlines. Tours of Screen Gems Studios are given ev ery Saturday at noon. These tours begin at the fiDnt entrance of the facility, which is located on Nc*th 23'" Street Producticxi workers take visi tors to two active “Dawson’s Creek” sets and other sights of the studios. Book Review; “Nightmare: A Schizophrenia Native” Op«rt From 97»tn-a«»w, 7 Day0 a Wfeele 3S K Front eft/Damntxnm Jessica Chaffin _ Wendell Justin Williamson shot and killed two people and injured 13 others. Williamson suffers fiom a brain disorder called schizophrenia—of ten called multiple personality disorder—and he tells his true story in “Nightmare: A Schizophre nia Native.” Wendell Williamson’s gruesome and shock ing autobiographical tale begins with Williamson’s graduation from Chapel Hill with an honorary degree in English. Wdliamson continues by de picting himself as a typical young adult, with friends and activities such as going to bars and joining a band. Williamson’s nightmare begins at a fraternity party where his band is performing. As Williamson strains to reach the high notes of each song he begins to feel a great physical pressure in the right side of his brain and diaphragm. “My head was spinning and my ears were ringing. It was hard to think,” Williamson said after finish ing the concert Later that evening Williamson begins to hear the thoughts of others. These delu sions progressively worsen over the next few years, finally leading Wdliamson to believe with absolute certainty that he is telepadiic. The intense account leads into Williamson’s thoughts and later actions during his three years enrolled in Chapel Hill’s law school. He heard voices from a variety of people including Presi dent Clinton, various war generals, Kurt Cobain and John Lennon. WiUiamson’s experience of hearing voices coupled with his paranoid delu sion that the people around him were denying he was a telepath eventually led to his attempt at mass Initially placed in Nath Carolina’s Maximum- Security Penitentiary until he was later found not guilty by reason of insanity, Williamson is now a patient at Dorothea Dix hospital in Raleigh. Williamson’s disease has symptoms of hallu cinations, difficulty with speech and delusions. The Surgeon General’s Report on Mental Health states that almost 3 percent of the adult popula tion suffer from mental illnesses such as schizo phrenia. TheTreatmentAdvocacyCenterdaims that 1.4 million Americans are not receiving ad equate treatment for their mental illnesses. Williamson went without treatment due to the supposed negligence of his therapist at Chapel Hill, who believed that his illness was due to brain dam age resulting from drug use. Williamson wrote “Nightmare: ASchizophre- ’ nia Native” in hopes of correcting the unfair im age that he gained as a result of the media. “Nightinare” grips the reader from the begin ning. On one page the reader is led to believe that Wendell is a normal college student somecme that might be frln to hang out with on weekends. Then, on the next page, there is a completely different person who is thinking about committing suicide because of the voices in his head. “Nightmare” is emotionally stressing, but die realities in Williamson’s book can be a great asset in preventing fiirther tragic events. The book is wcMth reading simply as a source of infomation.