- Last Updated:Fri, 7/04 10:42 am

This is an updated version of a Gargoyle news story that originally ran on Feb. 27.
THE UNI STUDENT organization United For Uganda will host a hip-hop benefit concert for Come Let’s Dance tonight at the Urbana-Champaign Independent Media Center, 202 S. Broadway, Urbana.
The show, which begins at 10 p.m. (a change from the originally scheduled starting time of 8 p.m.), will feature local rappers and breakdancers. Entrance is open to all ages; tickets cost $6. The first 25 people to arrive will receive free T-shirts. Performers will include:
"Sorry for the late notice," UFU said on its Web site, "but we've just been informed by the IMC that the show can't start until 10 p.m., but from 8 to 10 we will still be there, chilling and talking about the conflict and our cause. Feel free to drop by an hour or so early, educate yourself, guarantee your free T-shirt, and get some free refreshments while you're there."
All proceeds will go to Come Let’s Dance, a grassroots organization in northern Uganda helping former child soldiers and war-torn communities recover from the country's almost 20-yearlong civil war, according to senior Shara Esbenshade, one of UFU's organizers.
United For Uganda is a student group working to understand and spread awareness about the conflict in northern Uganda.
UFU hosted an information assembly about Come Let's Dance on Feb. 8 in Uni Gym. The group also sponsored a junior/senior lock-in Feb. 9-10 to raise money for CLD.
Tonight's concert kicks off "UFU Month." During March, UFU plans to show several movies: the documentaries "Uganda Rising" and "Diamonds in the Rough: A Ugandan Hip Hop Revolution" along with "The Constant Gardener," a 2005 movie starring Ralph Fiennes and Rachel Weisz about a corrupt pharmaceutical corporation doing business in Kenya.
The movie nights will be free and will take place at Uni. Dates and times will be announced.
UFU will also sponsor a personal sacrifice campaign throughout March. Anyone is welcome to participate by giving up something they like — such as a daily cup of coffee — and donating the money they would have spent on that. A prize will be given to the person who raises the most money through their sacrifice.