The Michigan Doily-Wednesday, September 30, 1981-Page 7 Hot kisses on a guerrilla tour Discover Flying for '20 FLYERS By RJ SMITH These days Tom Carson does not exactly believe in ,winning over his readers with sweet talk. This is the opening sentence to his new novel, Twisted Kicks: " Three days after Erica slashed her wrists with a piece of glass from the mirror-she'd smashed in the psycho ward of the hospital where they had pumped ''her stomach and put her back under observation af- '*;'her previous attempt, Dan Lang came back to 40W, THAT IS an intro that makes contact, as the Firesign Theater used to say - like the hot kiss at .AhQ end of 'a cold fist.. .Carson is the phenom of the New York rock critics, > ,graduate from Princeton in '77 who writes w larly on the music for Rolling Stone, The Village ':ce, The Boston Phoenix, and New York Rocker. Carson writes with none of the entertaining wildness endemic to many New York writers; his reviews are dense with ideas, thoughtful, and at their best not for quick scanning. Though it is well-crafted, Twisted Kicks makes the kind of attention-grabbing unruly noises rock writing does not. To make sure that noise gets heard, Carson has embarked on a "guerrilla tour" across the coun- try, packing a station wagon full of copies ofehis book and giving readings in punk clubs, record stores, boarding houses, marinas, Jesuit seminaries - any place that will have him. THE TOUR WILL spend four days in Ann Arbor, starting tomorrow. Carson will give a reading at 9 p.m. at East Quad's Halfway Inn, will be at the Star Bar Friday and Saturday with Ragnar Kvaran and the Flexibles, and with Ragnar again at Rick's on Sunday. He also will be singing autographs at Schoolkids, Sunday at 5 p.m. Just what will happen when he appears on stage is another matter. On his tour through the south, which preluded the Ann Arbor stop, Carson sometimes sim- ply read from his book, on other occasions doing so with recorded accompaniment and even with live bands backing him up on stage (REM in Atlanta). Carson says some of the readings have been taped and may well end up on National Public Radio. A TRUE CHAMPION of new American music, and practically the only writer actually going out and hearing new bands not performing in the media mec- cas, Carson has become a key rock writer since the punk explosion. He says he's taking notes on this tour. "So far I've seen an awful lot that intertests me," he remarked. "I'd imagine at some point I will be writing on individual ban's I have seen, or even as everything." A-rock fiction reading in the '80s? Bongos will be checked at the door of the Half Way, thank you.'Ac- tually, what's happening is Carson is reaching out to find out just who his, and the rock and roll, audience is. It's a gutsy experiment. This isn't the time for happenings and be-ins, but as for twisted kicks, they have never been so in fashion. The Michigan Flyers is offering Lr...J to anyone affiliated with the 44 University of Michigan an introductory flying lessonfor just $20. No matter what you're doing now you could learn to pilot on airplane. For information call 994-6208. See the airplane on the diag from Tues.. Sept. 29 to Fri.. Oct. 2. VAN FROM MICHIGAN UNION TO ANN ARBOR AIRPORT SAT. and SUN.; EVERY HOUR ON THE HOUR 9 A.M.-4 P.M. .j ,. .I Haig-Gromyko talks fail to resolve eonflicts From AP and UPI UNITED NATIONS - Secretary of State Alexander Haig said yester- day his talks with Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko failed to resolve "areas of intense disagreement" between the two superpowers. But he said the, fact they talked at all was a good sign. "I suppose there is progress in any such communication," Haig said of the meetings Monday and last Wed- nesday. "We had a whole host of areas of intense disagreement bet- ween the two powers and we had an opportunity to explore the basis of allthoseissues.' HAIG SAID he and Gromyko agreed between them to say little about the 'meetings. They also agreed to continue the discussions early next year, probably in Geneva., But Haig said he did come away with the feeling that the Soviets are as anguished as the United States over the situation in Poland. Haig had said prior to the meeting he would warn Gromyko against Soviet military intervention in Poland. He said yesterday, "We' have made it very clear, together with our allies, the consequences of Soviet intervention 'would be profound and long-lasting." Meanwhile, Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger, in a presen- tation beamed by satellite to Europe, unveiled a slick gover- nment booklet on Soviet military might yesterday, saying he hopes it will convince Europeans and Americans of a "real and growing" Soviet threat. THE BOOKLET came out less than 24 hours after Secretary of State Haig's meeting with Gromyko and within days of an expected an- nouncement by President Reagan on his decision about the MX missile and bomber programs. Despite-its profusion of facts,, charts and pictures, however, the 99- page booklet titled "Soviet Military Power" provides little in terms of numbers that was not already available in previous assessments by the' government or independent agencies. 'At the news conference Wein- berger said the new booklet's value is in presenting "more information onthe USSR's armed forces than had been previously available under one cover." Body Heat (Continued from Page 5) as he stares, wild-eyed, into Walker's home from outside, and on her face as she stares back, nostrils quivering. He grabs a chair, smashes it through a glass door, and. dashes for her; simultaneously, the camera lunges forward behind him and does not move from the couple's.reckless embrace. } William Hurt and Kathleen Turner are wonderfully cast here; they are two performers who simply exude sexuality. Kasdan deliberately uses newcomers to the medium as his stars; this is Hurt's third film and Turner's first. As a result, the acting feels fresh and uninhibited, the characters completely~genuine. Body Heat is not without its flaws. Kasdan gets so wrapped up in creating atmosphere that he occasionally forgets about emphasizing character. Because of this there is, at times, an emotional distancing from Racine which does not serve any real purpose. These problems, however, are minor considering Kasdan's cinematic achievements here. Body Heat un- deniably establishes him as an impor- tant new director. THURSDAY, OCT. 1 7;30 p.m. Coalition against The Family Protection Act MICHIGAN UNION Wekler Room Discussion of Legal, Social, and Political aspects of The Family Protection Acf. __ _ r' T-APPY-'HOUR UNTO. C LO5e MEZ,1CALaN ' t'EnTAL STuEEThS EX CDJK P IL. Financial markets face uncertainty -I __ lh _ gy' 4 i Rsr' _ - - - FE NCEL GRA~ioN * I. From AP and UPI NEW YORK - Financial markets, always a fragile system of exchange, iseem increasingly frazzled as well in a world of mounting economic uncertain- ty. The evidence is abundant: in stock and bond'markets, in foreign exchange trading and in commodity markets. Prices have beei' yo-ybing,'.and some people have been talking about "'worldwide recession" and "panic." THEGLOOM may be overdone, but the jitters remain. Wild gyrations in the world's stock markets this' week were only the latest and most dramatic example of how extraordinarily sen- sitive the markets have become. In Tokyo, 'for example, the stock market suffered its biggest single-day loss in history Monday. Then in a spec- tacular reversal, it rallied yesterday to its argest one-day gain in history. Analysts said overseas markets took a cue from Wall Street, which exploded in an 18.55 points rebound Monday despite American market guru Joseph Granville's grim forecast for one of the worst routs in U.S. financial history. MOST FOREIGN traders ignored Granville's latest prophecy that Wall Street's strong showing Monday was merely a "bounce" and that the market soon would resume its dramatic decline before hitting bottom in 1982. On the London stock market, which sustained severe losses Monday on Granville's prediction that an inter- national market crash would follow the projected bloodbath on Wall Street, prices closed sharply higher. Marty stock market analysts at- tribute the worldwide slump to fears about the effects on the U.S. economy of chillingly high interest rates: Many in- vestors also fear that if the Reagan administration fails to meet its goal of budget cutting, extensive government borrowing could keep rates high and lead to a severe recession. SAlse underrmining confidence, in curgncy a ad other markets are growing doubts, particularly in Europe, about the administration's commitment to fighting inflation. Many market specialists suspect the ad- ministration is pressuring the Federal Reserve Board to ease its tight-money policy, which is aimed at controlling in- flation, in order to avoid weakening the economy. RYEMUSIC 1 z ,- . I I , . I - 44 Fr4 , I Ib e Graduating in Engineering, Computer Science, Accounting or Finance?* Consider ANR's career possibilities OIL & GAS EXPLORATION & PRODUCTION... NATURAL GAS TRANSMISSION4, STORAGE, DISTRIBUTION ... COAL GASIFICATION & SYNTHETIC FUELS DEVELOPMENT... 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