ARTS Monday, March 6, 1989 The Michigan Daily Page 7 Philadelphia's punk rock guys|Belton balances Today New Zealand, tomorrow the world for Milkmen BY BRIAN JARVINEN intuition, discovery 0 4 JIM Walewander. OK, I've got that out of the way. As all loyal Free Press and record sticker readers have already guessed, The Dead Milkmen appear at the Nectarine Ballroom tonight. Philadelphia. Quartet. Fourth al- bum. Beelzebubba. Actually recorded in Texas. "Punk Rock Girl." Obligatory comparison-to- someone-more-famous: Camper Van Beethoven minus the violins. Every time they take an instrumental break I keep waiting to hear them break out singing "Club Med sucks/ Au- thority sucks/ I hate golf." And now, A Few Words With... Dave Blood. He plays bass, accord- ing to most, but not all, of their press releases. The grain of salt you take with this is only as big as you make it. On Touring: "We usually tour the North in the winter and the South in the summer. It helps us get a lot of diseases that we build up antibodies to, so when we stop touring we won't ever get sick again." On Hipness: "Being a hip band is not really important. Hip bands come and go. We're a band that's probably gonna outlast even the Rolling Stones. At least for the summer anyway. We're not really after hipness, we're after World Conquest. World Conquest kind of bypasses hipness. Hipness is maybe "Punk Rock Girl" is the first U.S. single from the Dead Milkmen's fourth album, Beelzebubba, but another track, "Howard Beware," has become "the 'Stairway to Heaven'" of New Zealand radio, says Dave Blood, second from left. three years in a row, ummm, critics like you. By the time the critics that would make us hip, you know, would be dead, we'll still be kicking around and selling millions of records. Monopolizing all the air- time on MTV and stuff to keep Def Leppard videos off the air." On Their Van: "It's a Ford. It has big lights on the top like police lights. On the back it says 'Don't Laugh Your Daughter May Be In Here' on this big wheel in the back, you know, it has a cover on it. And it's painted. It has a dragon painted on the side of it. Actually, it's a minivan. It really looks cool. Oh, wait a minute, my manager told me we got this big license plate on the front that says 'If This Ford's A- Rockin Don't Come Knockin."' On The Future: "It ('Howard Beware,' from Beelzebubba) turned out to be a smash hit. In New Zealand it's considered the 'Stairway To Heaven' of radio now. They play it like at least five times a day. We were really surprised by it because we hadn't even released the record. These people got a hold of an import copy. And radio stations are just playing it. They're playing off that track, I mean they've disregarded all of the other tracks. We're pretty ex- cited about that. The thing is we weren't thinking of touring New Zealand but now the offer is there and we just can't refuse it. It's gonna help us get an Australian tour be- cause we were haying trouble getting Australia but now with this New Zealand thing coming up it's gonna pay. The gigs in New Zealand are so lucrative they're gonna pay and we'll be able to tour Australia. It's fasci- nating how this crazy business really works." THE DEAD MILKMEN will play tonight at the Nectarine Ballroom at 10 p.m. Tickets are $10.50 in ad- vance. BY JAY PINKA AT the age of four, Philadelphian Don Belton, now a University Pro- fessor, was sitting at his Tom Thumb typewriter and "imagining that I was going to be a writer." Fascinated by great works such as Babes in Toyland, Belton "learned how to put words together before I went to school." The author's inter- est in paradoxical themes of "love and isolation" was foreshadowed in junior high when he directed No Exit and wrote a novel, which concluded tragically - and tragically concluded in the waste dump. "People are afraid of themselves," says Belton, "that's the greatest form of isolation. We live in a society that tells you not to acknowledge what you feel. If you're tired, have a cup of coffee." Fortunately, some of Belton's other works have survived his exis- tentialist approach. The writer, who earned a B.A. in literature from Ben- nington College (1981) and an M.A. in creative writing from Hollins College, V.A. (1982), published his first novel, Almost Midnight, in 1986. Belton's integration of "intuition with an action" in his writing portrays a realism shown in his comments on the book. "It ends hopefully. Happiness is relative. Everybody can't live in suburbia." Internally motivated Bel- ton thinks writers should focus on "intuitive voice," not external ap- proval. He respects author Alice Walker for her "willingness to take risks that other contemporary writers lack in their overeagerness to be- come commodities." Belton expands his work through self-knowledge: "I start out by caring about what I write about... I write to heal myself." Belton's sense of good writing as founded in a spiritual attitude toward character shows in his affinity for work by Dosto- evesky, Chekov, and Tolstoy. He plans to learn Russian for fuller ap- preciation. Concluding the list with strict revisionist Flannery O'Connor, Belton, who doesn't re- vise extensively himself, affirmed the necessity for industry. "One has to be willing to work - to make personal sacrifices... a commitment to developing and sharing one's vi- sion." Belton's sense of inspirational insight as nurturing is implicated in his humanistic individualism. "One has to stand up in one's own truth. Nobody could write my novel for me. I had to write it for myself." The author, who teaches Myth and American Community and an advanced creative writing workshop, offers insights that bring a sanctify- ing humility to the educational ap- proach to literature. "Fiction isn't a cartoon... it's a kind of mystique. See Belton, Page 8 GUADALAJARA SUMMER SCHOOL University of Arizona offers more than 40 courses: anthropol- ogy, art, bilingual edu- cation, folk music and folk dance, history, phonetics, political sci- ence, Spanish langu- age and literature and intensive Spanish. Six- week session. July 3- August 11, 1989. Fully accredited program. M.A. degree in Span- ish offered. Tuition $510. Room and board in Mexican home $540. EEO/AA Write Guadalajara Summer School Education Bldg., Room 225 University of Arizona Tucson. AZ 85721 (602) 621-4729 or 621-4720 And We Sold the Rain: Contemporary Fiction from Central America Edited by Rosario Santos Four Walls Eight Windows $9.95/paper "The key," writes Salvadoran writer Manlio Argueta, "is to learn how to hide your emotions. That's very characteristic of this war. We're not even allowed to cry." Argueta's "key" not only unlocks the tension buried at the heart of his story "Microbus to San Salvador" - one of the best in this collection - but dramatizes the psychic toll that 'Central America's nightmarish con- ditions are taking on its wearied, in- creasingly despairing peoples. Emo- tions are often a luxury in countries where, as Argueta succinctly states, "if we speak out, they kill us." And even in countries like Costa Rica and Panama - Where such an im- mediate threat tolife rarely exists - the cost of confr nting the daily dose of subjection fnd humiliation ac- companying U.S. political and eco- nomic domination is often unbear- ably high. As one might imagine, the U.S.- sponsored wars engulfing Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, and El Salvador provides the vivid background against which these writers struggle to express the inex- plicable. In "Microbus," a young woman rides the same bus to San Salvador on which, a year earlier, she had watched the National Guard seize her since "disappeared" husband for union organizing. Though she is eloquent in defending the political life she and her husband chose, she is more circumspect in describing her personal life, as if that which might kill her for speaking is less the Guard than her own poignant memories. In Rodrigo Rey Rosa's "The Proof" and Arturo Arias' heart- wrenching "Guatemala 1954 - Fu- neral for a Bird," two strangely similar Guatemalan boys try to un- derstand the meaning of death, which, particularly in the latter case, surrounds the protagonist in the nightmarish forms of decaying corpses. Unable to comprehend or confront what it means for so many people - including his own father - to die, the boy in "1954" partici- pates in a solemn funeral for an or- dinary bird, displacing his crushing grief onto a life whose death he can actually absorb. It is the trauma of wartime child- hoods like these which, in so many of the stories' adults, creates person- ality disorders severely distorting their ability to feel and project emo- tions. In Pedro Rivera's "Tarantulas of Honey" and Samuel Rovinski's "Sodom," machisimo and its humiliating degradation of women provides men with a sense of importance in a world where they consistently feel inadequate, while the lingering suspicion that "their" women wish to exploit male insecurities leaves these men even further from the possibility of ever relating to each other - let alone See Rain, Page 8 YEI UR MPUT II AIPLICATACAT [ON ILDD a G a a e ' 4 F 1 . Some things are better the second time around - applying to Medical school isn't one of them! Did you know that only 1 in 4 students accepted to U.S. Medical schools is a repeat applicant? That's why it's important to make sure your grades and your MCAT scores measure up ON THE FIRST TRY. How? The BEST way is professional test preparation at the Stanley H. Kaplan Educational Center. We've been giving intensive care to MCAT candidates for over 30 years. We start with a free diagnostic test and a personalized computer evaluation of each student. Then we help you master all five subtests with live classes, homestudy notes, strategy clinics and audio practice labs. Call us now. Get it right the first time. 11 KAPLAN STANLEY H. KAPAN EDUCATIONAL CENTER LTD. MCAT REVIEW Your future is worth it. BE WORTH PAPER 1 5, 0 . . M :-< "' . En'I Ibc Zenih Vat~A*-toms Enter Zenith's Masters Of Innovation Competition while there's still time! Maybe you've written a class paper on an original personal computer application that addresses an issue within your field of study. Or perhaps you're planning to write one soon. If so, here's your chance to make those ideas pay off. Just enter your paper in Zenith Data Systems' Masters Of Innovation Competition, and win a $5, 000* Zenith Computer System. You don't even have to be a computer wiz to do it! So dig up one of your computer application papers right now. Or write one from scratch. Then enter our Masters Of Innovation Competition today. After all, you could be sitting on $5,000 and not even know it! A /_: a I i r or your tree entry 'acKet,