ARTS The Michigan Daily Wednesday, February 19, 1986 Page' Poetic inuence F By Alan Paul R ESIDENTIAL College sophomore Phillip Barnhart is from Byron, Michigan, population 7,000. Though the town is only an hour's drive away from Ann Arbor, Barnhart is the first Byronian in almost twenty years to attend the University. Barnhart is also a recent Hopwood (writing) Award recipient. "Byron has been a big influence on my writing. I'm not unhappy to be from there or anything, I'm just really happy to be here. Ann Arbor is too small now," Barnhart said Barnhart, who last month won $225 in the Hopwood poetry division, studies prose in Warren Hecht's Creative Writing tutorials for two terms. Only this semester has he concentrated on poetry with Ken Mikolowski. "I write narrative poetry," Bar- nhart said. "Every poem tells a story. The Hopwoods gave me a big confidence boost," Barnhart con- tinued. "I've been writing regularly - two or three times a week." Below is one of Barnhart's award winning poems. Monday I I get up on time because it's Monday and Cycles are beginning again. Fifteen degrees At Seven Forty-Five with the wind blowing, Snow is flying. A newspaper blows across The street and is flattened against my Ancient apartment building. Like Laurence Of Arabia I Make my way up the sidewalk Underdressed and cold. II The long weekend has made tiny lush islands Of mold in the leftover coffee. I look into The cup on my desk and I see ships sailing to Hong Kong and Singapore. I see a black sea With islands covered by golden willow trees. Hiding behind the trees is embroidered silks. I can hear them rustling on the ground. III After two cups of coffee, fresh, you can hear the Word Zing! around every corner - The happy elevator takes you from the basement to The seventeenth floor in a matter of seconds And that's cool. Waitingrfor the happy elevator You exhale and feel a surge of static awareness. IV By eleven o'clock you've had four solid hours To reflect - the week is passing by and starting Again. Crazy and big. You shut the door to the noisy Corridor, lean back in your chair. The woman On the Wollensak tape machine is singing about Her mad existence-Have I said too much? V Monday reflects the residue of the weekend Like tapping your fingers on thecover of A book you've just read - wanting to start Another but afraid you haven't felt all There was to happen in the last. -Phillip Bamhart Kevin Bacon and Larry Fishburn race each other in the new movie 'Quicksilver.' Quicksilver: a flash in the pan Books- Mr. Moto Is So Sorry by John P. Marquand $3.95, paperback publisher: Little, Brown & Company 288 pages This book, more of an adventure *novel than a spy mystery, tells the story of American Calvin Gates' jour- ney into China in search of a man to whom he must lie. But, it being 1936, his travels are complicated by Mr. Moto-an intelligence agent for the Imperial Japanese Empire. During this time, Japan and Russia were both eyeing the Chinese mainland for territorial conquests. Their maneuvers took place in a fragmented China where princes ruled over individual monarchies. The MaGuffin in the book, a silver cigarette case, has an ornate design of birds and grasses carved into it. However, to knowledgable people, the design= "conveys more information than just an artistic scene. The game of espionage that Gates stumbles into is played by a large, colorful cast of characters : Boris, a Russian acting as guide to Miss Sylvia Dillaway, an American artist; Cap- tain Sam Hamby, an expatriate professional soldier; Major Ahara of the Japanese Army; Lou Holtz, a local "businessman"; the Prince of Ghuru Nor (an independent monar- chy in China); General Shirov of the Russian Army; and Dr. Gilbreth, the man that Calvin Gates must deceive. Moving among these people, yet truly always alone, is Mr. I.A. Moto. Respected and feared, he is not to be ignored either as adversary or friend. Mr. Moto never changes. Throughout the story, he is portrayed as the quintessential stereotype of the Japanese, as seen by the Western World in the 1930's. He is presented as subtle, scheming, somewhat comical and not to be trusted. However, Mr. Moto possesses more brains than anyone else in the novel. As a matter of fact in one paragraph, Marquand redeems himself by going beyond the -lw n~r Tir m r 0 . "Ur By Kurt Serbus UESTION: What has a gi soundtrack, a shmaltzy, tab e storyline, zero ch development, and a cast that even conjugate the verb "to at Flashdance? Footloose? B Well, it's all of the above, ro one called Quicksilver, the h try in the tried-and-true "go-f dream s-you-crazy-bastar genre. In this one, Kevin Bacon st stock analyst who loses it trades in his three-piece suit f speed bicycle as a delivery bo Quicksilver Messenger Sei New York. garish That may seem a little iml ath." at first, until you consider that use one the other delivery boys are happen college professors, mayora re one- and prizefighters. n they The script is chock-full of n plots types, including a tough-but ies the street urchin who lies about i parents do for a living, gth, it Hispanic who shows up in a read. powder-blue tux when told nice for a loan application. i rummthere's Voodoo, the Angry Black Man who picks up side-money running drugs. Being both angry and black, he naturally blames his od awful situation on the Man. It's not the predic- Man who keeps you down, one of the aracter bikers tells him. "It's your bitter- couldn't ness." Heavy stuff, kids. ct?" Writer-director Tom Donnely ap- reakin'? parently studied Flashdance frame- lled into by-frame before conceiving this joke, atest en- and in emulating that movie he or-your- doesn't miss a trick. Jack Casey d" film (Bacon) lives in a huge, sparse loft with his girlfriend Randi (Whitney ars as a Kershaw) who is an aspiring dancer. all and This allows for a super-neat scene in or a ten- which Randi does a series of dance y for the steps which Jack comically emulates 'vice in on his bike. Ha ha, Jack and his bike are so zany, you'll laugh 'till it's pain- ?lausible ful! t most of There's even the obligatory strut- former your-stuff sequence, in which the d aides, bikers set up a jam-box in the middle of the street and take turns doing all stereo- sorts of bitchin' tricks on their bikes. t-lovable Some of the stunts are pretty good, what her but this scene will look awfully and an familiar to anyone who's logged a few ruffled, Mountain Dew commercials. to dress As far as acting goes, well, it And then doesn't. Kevin Bacon looks fairly Young promising during his initial suit-and- tie scenes, but after about 20 minutes he seems to just give up. The rest of the cast is a complete waste. Quicksilver does have one redeeming factor: it's so horrible that it's kind of fun. It's a little tQo sluggish to be a really good/bad movie, but for the most part it's just inept enough to make the grade for those of you who dig flicks like Reanimator and The Howling 11. Otherwise, save your money to buy a copy of Flashdance for the VCR. At least it's got Jennifer Beals. sentimental man, moving in a world of intrigue and sudden de The book is fun to read becau doesn't know what is going to h next. Some of the characters a dimensional, but the terrair move though is so enmeshed i and counterplots that it carr people along. At 288 pages, a good len makes for a pleasant -Mickey Br Special Student / Youth Fares to SCANDINAVIA, On Scheduled Airlines! The inexpensive way to get to Scandinavia and other destinations in Europe, Asia, Africa and the Middle East. Winter Rates to Scandinavia New York to Copenhagen, Oslo, Stockholm from $240 one way, $400 roundtrip New York to Helsinki from $270 one way Chicago to Copenhagen from $240 one way, $400 roundtrip Chicago to Oslo, Stockholm, Helsinki from $280 one way, $480 roundtrip and tours designed especially for students to the SOVIET UNION For Information Call: WHOLE WORLD TRAVEL Youth and student travel experts for over a decade 17 E. 45th St., New York, NY 10017 (212) 986-9470 Summer Fares Now Available! The Center for Western European Studies. announces the SUMMER PROGRAM IN SEVILLE JUNE 15 - JULY, 26,1986 Classes in Spanish literature and linguistics, art history, history or political science taught in English or Spanish $1700 fee includes 6 upper-level credit hours of U-M tuitition, lodging and some meals For applications and further information, please contact CWES, 5208 Angell Hall, 764-4311 I - i Sig Programs at home Q Over 200 graduate and undergraduate courses Q Approaches to Teaching Writing Q English as a Foreign Language Q Government Internships Q High School Programs E Intercultural Training Programs abroad Q Antwerp, Belgium-Int'l. Trade E China-Chinese E Dijon, France-French E Fiesole, Italy-Italian E Leningrad, U.S.S.R.-Russian E Oxford, England-Business Administration