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Some Principals Ban Dance With Gang Ties




Teens: Officials fear that the Crip walk, a popular solo step, could incite violence.







By ERIKA HAYASAKI

TIMES STAFF WRITER





June 4 2002


The C-walk, a tiptoe dance that some people joke looks like skipping
"hopscotch on crack," has caught on among teenagers nationwide.



But the solo performance dance, usually done to fast-tempo hip-hop and
rap music, alarms school administrators. Because of its origins in a
notorious street gang, some in Los Angeles are banning it from campus
parties and proms. The C, after all, stands for Crips, a name
supposedly spelled out in foot motions of some C-walkers.



"The Crip walk is a no-no," Crenshaw High School Principal Isaac
Hammond said. He and other educators complain that the dance glamorizes
gang life and could trigger retaliation from rivals such as the Bloods,
even if most youngsters C-walking are not in the Crips, or any gang at
all. Hammond outlawed the dance on campus and at this year's prom,
which took place last week. Manual Arts and Washington Preparatory high
schools, also in Los Angeles, forbid the dance, too, and will issue
warnings or even suspensions if it causes fights.









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"We tell students you might be somewhere
doing that dance and it could end your life, or get you seriously
hurt," Hammond said
. However, he and other principals could not point
to any particular altercation triggered by the dance at their schools,
and law enforcement officials could not recall any serious violence
related to the Crip walk.



Teenagers know the gang started the Crip walk a decade ago, but say it
will cause a fight only if performed in the wrong neighborhood and
while flashing gang hand signs. They dance it for fun and consider it a
badge of honor to master its complicated moves like the rap stars who
popularized it--hopping on tiptoes as if weightless from foot to foot
in a circular pattern with knees bent.



The school administrators are taking it way too seriously, young people complain.



"The C-walk shouldn't be a problem," said G'Angelo Glover, 17, a
student at Washington Prep who was practicing it on a recent Friday
after school with his dance competition group. "Everybody does it."



Kaylen Pandy, 14, a student at Crozier Middle School in Inglewood, said
most kids "just consider it a regular dance. This is what kids do to
keep out of trouble. We spend all of our time dancing instead of being
out on the streets."



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